by Unconquered
The master of Wyndsong sat quietly amused by the endless chatter of the three ladies who had already spent the day catching up on the news of the last four months. Miranda, according to her mama, had missed a wonderful winter at Torwyck.
“I have had a wonderful winter here,” said Miranda. “It is really preferable, Mama, to spend one’s honeymoon with one’s husband.”
Amanda giggled, but Dorothea looked shocked. “Really, Miranda, I cannot imagine Jared approves of your immodesty.”
“On the contrary, my dear Doro, I encourage my wife in such immodesty.”
Miranda blushed, but her lips twitched with suppressed mirth. Since she had returned home Dorothea had attempted to force Miranda back into being just a daughter, thus unwittingly undermining Miranda’s position as mistress of Wyndsong. Jared’s remark annoyed her. Amanda, her cornflower-blue eyes round with delight, was obviously in cahoots with them, and it made Dorothea feel old, which she most certainly was not. At that moment, Dorothea decided it was time for her news.
“Well,” she said, her pretty, plump, dimpled hands fussing with the snow-white linen napkin, “I shall not remain here at Wyndsong much longer, my dears. A mother-in-law is a welcome guest only if her visit is a short one.”
“You are welcome here always, Doro. You know that.”
“Thank you, Jared. But I married Tom young, and I am still young, though I am a widow. This winter at my brother’s home I had the opportunity to spend a great deal of time with an old friend of the family’s, Pieter Van Notelman. He is a widower with five fine children, of whom only the eldest is married. Just before we returned to Wyndsong, he did me the honor of asking me to be his wife. I have accepted.”
“Mama!” the twins exclaimed at once.
Dorothea looked extremely pleased at the reaction she had elicited from her daughters.
“My felicitations, madam,” said Jared gravely. He had been willing to offer his mother-in-law a permanent home until he saw her effect on Miranda. Dorothea could not live comfortably at Wyndsong, now that her daughter was its new mistress. It would be far better this way.
“I do not recall Mynheer Van Notelman, Mama,” said Miranda.
“He owns Highlands. You and Amanda were there for a party four years ago.”
“Ah, yes! The great house on the lake up in the Shawgunk Mountains behind Torwyck. As I remember, there was a son who looked like a large frog, and was always trying to get Mandy and me into dark corners where he might kiss us.”
Amanda took up the story. “He managed one wet kiss, I shrieked, and Miranda came flying to my rescue. She blackened his eye. He spent the rest of the party telling people he’d walked into a door.”
Jared laughed heartily. “I think, pigeon, that a kiss from you would be worth it. Lord Swynford is a fortunate man.”
Dorothea spoke again. “I am distressed to hear, even at this late date, of such an unsavory incident,” she chided her daughters. “The young man of whom you speak died in a boating accident on the lake three years back. It was his demise that brought on the death of Pieter’s first wife, from melancholia. The boy was, you see, the only son.”
“And of the five remaining daughters one is plainer than the other,” said Amanda mischievously.
“Amanda, that is unkind!” scolded Dorothea.
“Have you not taught me to be truthful, Mama?” answered Amanda demurely while Jared and Miranda chuckled.
“When is your wedding to take place, Mama?” asked Miranda, not wishing to distress her mother.
“In late summer, when we return from London, dear. I would not think of marrying Pieter until I have Amanda safely settled with Adrian.”
Jared took a deep breath. He hadn’t intended to speak of this tonight, but now he had no choice. “Amanda cannot go to London. In fact none of you can. Not right now. With President Madison’s decree against trade with England there are no ships sailing for London. The French are still seizing American vessels. It’s much too dangerous, ladies. I received the New York papers today, and our minister to England has returned home. It’s not possible for us to go to London now.”
“Not possible?!” Miranda’s eyes were blazing. “Sir, we are not speaking of a casual pleasure trip! Amanda must be in London on June twenty-eighth for her wedding!”
“It is impossible, wildcat,” he answered with such finality that Amanda began to weep. Jared looked at her pityingly. “Pigeon, I am sorry.”
“Sorry!” shouted Miranda. “You’re deliberately destroying my sister’s life, and you say you’re sorry?! The church was booked a year ago! Her trousseau awaits its final fitting at Madame Charpentier!”
“If he loves her, Adrian will wait. If not, it’s better the wedding be cancelled entirely.”
“Ohh!” wailed Amanda.
“Adrian would wait,” snapped Miranda, “but his mama will not. She was furious at his engagement to an American colonial as she insists on calling us. Adrian adores Amanda, and he is perfect for her, but Lady Swynford is strong-minded. If Amanda postpones the wedding Lady Swynford will use it as an excuse to separate them forever. Adrian will find himself married to some meek miss more acceptable to his mama.”
Amanda sobbed loudly.
“War may break out any minute between England and America,” said Jared.
“All the more reason for Amanda to get to London on time. War has nothing to do with us. If the stupid governments of England and America wish to fight, then let them. But Amanda and Adrian will be happily wed.”
“There are no ships,” replied Jared irritably.
“You have ships! Why can’t we sail on one of them?” she persisted.
“Because I will not lose a valuable vessel and endanger a crew even for you, my dear wife!”
“We will go!” she yelled.
“You will not!” he thundered back.
“Miranda! Jared! This is most unseemly,” chided Dorothea.
“Mother! Be silent!” snarled Miranda.
“Oh, Adrian! Oh! Oh!” hiccoughed Amanda.
“Dammit, be quiet, all of you! I will have peace in my own house!” roared Jared.
“There’ll be no peace in any part of this house, Jared Dunham, unless you get us to England by June,” Miranda warned ominously.
“Madam, are you threatening me?”
“Was I not clear enough, sir?” she replied with false sweetness.
With a final waii Amanda fled the table. Miranda, with a furious look at her husband, followed her sister.
“I suppose we must postpone the birthday cake,” said Dorothea seriously, and when Jared burst out laughing she looked at him strangely. This was not the Wyndsong she was used to.
In Amanda’s room Miranda comforted her twin. “Don’t worry, Mandy, you’ll be safely wed to Adrian. I promise you.”
“H-how? Y-y-you heard what Jared said. There are no ships!”
“There are ships, twin. One simply has to find them.”
“Jared will stop us.”
“Jared must go to Plymouth. He held off on the trip because of our birthday, but he’ll be gone within a few days. When he returns, we will be gone. You’ll be married at St. George’s, Hanover Square, on June twenty-eighth, as planned. I promise you.”
“You’ve never made a promise you didn’t keep, Miranda. This time, however, I fear you’ll not be able to keep it.”
“Have faith, little twin. Jared believes I’ve become a tamed house cat, but I’ll soon show him how wrong he is.” Miranda smiled a strangely mischievous and seductive smile.
“We have no money but what he gives us,” said Amanda.
“You forget that today half of Papa’s wealth became mine to do with as I please. I will inherit the rest when I am twenty-one. I am a rich woman, and rich women always get what they want.”
“What if Jared is right, and there is war between England and America?”
“War, fiddlesticks! Besides, if we do not get to England you will surely lose Adrian. Jared is b
eing a fussy old man.”
There was a knock, and Jemima’s head popped around the door. “Master Jared says you’re both to come downstairs for dessert and coffee in the front parlor.”
“We’ll come directly, Mima.” The door shut firmly. “Pretend to be devastated, but resigned to Jared’s wishes, Mandy. Just follow my lead.”
The sisters descended to the main parlor of the house, where their mother and Jared awaited them. Miranda seated herself regally at the dessert table and sliced the cake. “Mama, will you pour for me?”
“Of course, dear.”
Jared looked at his wife suspiciously. “Surely you cannot be resigned to my wishes so quickly, Miranda?”
“I am not resigned at all,” she answered pertly. “I believe you are wrong, and I think you are ruining Amanda’s happiness. But what can I do if you won’t take us to England?”
“I am relieved to find that you are maturing enough to accept my decisions.”
“Please reconsider,” she said quietly.
“My darling, the seriousness of the times—not I—have made the decision. I am going up to Plymouth tomorrow, but when I return in around ten days, if the situation has eased we’ll sail for England immediately. If war still seems imminent I’ll write to Lord Swynford myself on Amanda’s behalf.”
The Dunham family yacht had barely cleared Little North Bay the following morning when Miranda was riding across the island to Pineneck Cove, where she kept her own catboat anchored. Leaving her horse to graze by Long Pond, she sailed across the bay to Oysterponds and, tying her catboat at the village dock, made her way to the local tavern. Despite her boy’s garb, it was obvious that she was a woman and she received much clucking disapproval from the village wives as she passed. She strode into the Anchor and the Plow, much to the consternation of the landlord, who hurried toward her from behind the bar.
“Here now, miss, you can’t come in here!”
“Indeed, Eli Latham, and why not?”
“By cricky, ’tis Miss Miranda, or rather Mistress Dunham. Come round to the dining room, ma’am. It’s not seemly you bein’ in the taproom,” said the older man nervously.
She followed him into the sunshine-filled room with its mellow golden oak tables and benches. The shelves were filled with polished pewter tankards and chargers, and there were blue glass vases of yellow daffodils on either end of the carved oak fireplace mantel. Eli Latham and his wife, Rachel, were proud of their dining room. The Lathams fed travelers going across the water to and from New England.
Miranda and the Lathams sat down at a table in the empty room and, after declining cider, Miranda asked, “What English ships lie just out of sight of the coast, Eli?”
“Ma’am?” His bland face looked innocently at her.
“Dammit, man, I’m no customs agent! Don’t tell me your tea, coffee, and cocoa tins are bottomless, for I know better. English and American trading vessels lie off this coast despite the blockade. I need a reputable English ship.”
“Why?” asked Eli Latham.
“Amanda’s wedding is scheduled for June twenty-eighth in London. Because of this damned blockade my husband says we cannot go, but we must!”
“I don’t know, Miss Miranda, if yer husband says no …”
“Eli, please! For Amanda. She is devastated, and I fear she will pine away entirely if I cannot get her to England. Lord, man, what do we care for politics?”
“Well, there is one ship I’d trust to carry you safely. He’s some highborn milord so’s I expect he’s all right.”
“His name?” she asked eagerly.
“Now hold on, Miss Miranda. I can’t be givin’ his name to you unless I’m sure he’ll be willin’ to take on passengers,” said Eli, glancing at his wife.
“Then have him contact me at Wyndsong.”
“The house?”
“Of course at the house, Eli.” Then she laughed, realizing his predicament. “My husband left today for Plymouth and won’t be back for ten days.”
He demurred. “I just don’t know if it’s the right thing to do, Miss Miranda.”
“Please, Eli! It’s not for a silly whim. It’s for Amanda. I’d as soon never see London again. It’s a fearfully dirty and noisy place. But my sister will die of a broken heart if she cannot marry Adrian Swynford.”
“Contact the Englishman, Eli! I’ll not have that sweet child’s sorrow on my conscience,” said Rachel. “Morning, Miss Miranda.”
“Morning, Rachel, and thank you for sticking up for us.”
“Yer mama know ye’re doin’ this?”
“She will. I’m taking her with us. We can’t go without her chaperoning us.”
“She’ll not be happy ’bout it. I hear she’s planning to marry again.”
“How on earth did you—Oh! Jemima, of course.”
“Well, she is my sister, and lives with us when she’s off-island. You go on back home now, Miss Miranda. Eli here will get in touch with the ship we got in mind, and her captain’ll come to see you.”
“I don’t have much time, Rachel. I’d as soon be gone a good week by the time my husband returns.”
“He’ll come after you. Never saw a man so plum crazy ’bout a woman as he is ’bout you.”
“Jared?” Miranda looked genuinely surprised.
“Lord, girl, ain’t he never told you he loves you?”
“No.”
“You ever tell him you love him?”
“I don’t.”
Rachel Latham laughed heartily. “It’s as plain as the nose on yer face that ye’re in love with the man, and he with you, and both of you prob’ly too stubborn to admit it to the other. Didn’t that featherhead mama of yers ever tell you that honesty is the firmest cornerstone on which to build a good marriage? When he catches up with you, girl, tell him you love him, and I guarantee you’ll escape the thrashing he’ll have been planning to give you.” The older woman gave Miranda a hug. “Run along home now, girl. Eli will help make everything right.”
Miranda sailed her little boat back to Wyndsong, and moored it at its dock in Pineneck Cove. She found her horse browsing by Long Pond where she’d left him. Mounting, she rode slowly home musing on what Rachel Latham had said. Jared in love with her? How could that possibly be? He never said so, and he was always teasing or criticizing her. She hardly considered that love, and as for Rachel’s silly accusation that she, Miranda, loved Jared, it was poppycock! He was an arrogant, stubborn man, and while she didn’t hate him, she—she—Miranda stopped her horse, confused. If she didn’t hate him, what did she feel? She guessed she didn’t know any longer. Annoyed with herself, she kicked Sea Breeze into a canter, and hurried home to tell Amanda the news.
“Who is this captain?” was her twin’s first question.
“The Lathams wouldn’t tell me, but they feel he’s reliable.”
“What if he isn’t? We could be ravished, and sold into slavery. I hear there are plantations in the West Indies that breed white slaves, and they’re always looking for beautiful women to … to use.”
“Good Lord, Amanda! Whoever told you a thing like that?”
“Suzanne, of course. A young girl in the village where their country house is located was accused of stealing a squire’s horse. She hadn’t really, she’d only borrowed it on a dare, but the squire pressed charges and she was sentenced to be sold as a bondslave in the West Indies. When she finally was able to smuggle a letter to her family two years later, she told of being forced to mate with certain white slaves in order to produce other slaves for their master. She already had one child, and was expecting another.”
Miranda shuddered. “That is disgusting,” she said. “I am appalled at Suzanne’s repeating such a tale. I am sure it is not true at all. And besides the captain Eli has in mind is an English nobleman. Perhaps he even knows Adrian.”
“Have you told Mama yet?”
“No, and I shall not until it is all settled.”
They were at dinner that night when Jemi
ma appeared, pursing her lips with disapproval, and announced in a tart voice, “There’s a man here to see you. I put him in the front parlor.”
“Do not disturb us,” said Miranda, rising from the table and hurrying out of the room. She smoothed her fair hair as she went, and brushed crumbs from her sapphire gown. Placing her hand firmly on the parlor doorknob, she turned the handle and walked confidently into the room.
A man of medium height with wavy ash-brown hair styled, amazingly, in the London fashion stood by the fireplace. He turned and came toward her smiling a sweet smile, and she noticed how perfect and white his teeth were. He appeared to be a little under thirty years old, and his dark blue eyes sparkled with good humor.
“Mistress Dunham, I am Captain Christopher Edmund of the Seahorse, out of London. I’ve been given to understand that I may be of aid to you.” His dark eyes quickly took in her youth, her unusual beauty, the expensive gown with exquisite hand-made cream-colored lace at its high neck and at the ends of the long, tight sleeves. The cameo brooch at her throat was magnificent, of the best workmanship.
“Captain Edmund, how do you do.” She offered her hand, he kissed it politely, and then she waved him to a chair. “Pray be seated, sir. May I offer you a brandy?”
“Thank you, yes, madam.”
She walked slowly to the table that held the decanters and glasses, poured the amber liquid into a Waterford snifter, and served him. He sniffed and his eyes widened in appreciation. She smiled. Putting the liquid to his lips, he sipped, and then said, “Now, ma’am, how can I be of service to you?” He had the speech of a highborn English gentleman. Relaxing a little, Miranda sat down across from him in a matching cream brocade chair.
“I need immediate passage to England, sir, for myself, my sister, and my mother.”
“I am not a passenger vessel, ma’am.”
“We must get to England!”
“Why?”
“I am not in the habit of discussing personal business with a stranger, Captain. Suffice it to say that I will pay you double the usual passage, and supply our own provisions and water.”
“And I am not in the habit of taking a beautiful woman aboard my ship without knowing a bit more than ‘I must get to England.’ I repeat, ma’am, why?”