“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to be gruff,” he said. He scrubbed his face with his hands to stifle a yawn. “I was under strict instructions to bring some important documents with me. It would be my hide if I lost them.”
She visibly relaxed, his apology apparently accepted. He reached out his hand. Olivia placed the letter by the plans and accepted his embrace.
“I thought you looked tired when you arrived,” she said. “How much sleep have you really had over the past few days?”
“How long was I asleep upstairs?”
“No more than a couple of hours.”
“Then I’ve had five hours since Thursday.”
He accepted a look of reproof with a grin.
“Polly always has something special on the menu for Saturday night. Why don’t you see to locking up the house and I’ll saddle the horse and pack everything here away,” he said before bringing his lips down to hers. He was pleased to feel her respond to the kiss. He deepened it until it burned away his fatigue.
Adam waited until he heard her reach the first floor landing before going over to the table. He picked up the letter and unfolded it again.
Meet at the Four Cross. Three hours after midnight.
– W
Had Olivia read it?
Dear God, he hoped not.
The mile ride back to the tavern didn’t leave any time for talking and as soon as they arrived, Olivia excused herself to freshen up before dinner.
Adam lashed his satchel to beneath the bedsprings so if anyone swept under the bed, they would find nothing. The dueling pistols were secure now at his lodgings in Plymouth. When he returned to the dining room, Harold caught his attention with a wave. Adam indicated two beers from Jory who stood behind the bar before joining his friend.
“You look like shit.”
“Thanks.”
“Did you just ride in?”
Jory dropped two tankards on the table. Adam nodded his thanks before taking a large draught.
“A few hours ago,” Adam shrugged.
Harold hesitated over his beer.
“What’s on your mind?” Adam prompted.
“Last Saturday and your disappearing trick. Forgive me if it’s none of my business but,” Harold now whispered, “how deep are you in with the Society?”
Adam took another drink and frowned, pretending he didn’t understand what his friend was talking about.
Apparently, Harold wasn’t buying it.
“You tell me some cock-and-bull story to make me feel better about changing my mind, but you went to their meeting. What the hell is going on? Is Olivia part of it?”
Adam’s frown deepened. “Why would you mention her?”
Harold shrugged, as though that was explanation enough.
The beer soured in his stomach. He shoved the glass aside. “What the hell are you saying?”
“Steady on!” Harold raised his hands defensively, then lowered his voice when one or two patrons looked in their direction. “You never used to be like this – secretive, furtive – and you’ve only been that way since you met her.”
Adam closed his fist and squeezed it. The crossed anchor tattoo stood out.
“I’m your friend.” Harold continued. “We’ve been friends ever since I was a wet behind the ears cadet who had barely earned my commission. You’ve been a mentor to me, a man I’ve always looked up to. But you’ve become a stranger, and I’m not the only one who says so. Other men from the Andromeda have said as much. If I can help, let me, but whatever you decide, you don’t have to do it alone.”
Adam retrieved his tankard and gripped the handle. He stared down at the remnants of the amber beneath.
“You are a friend,” he conceded. “One of the truest I’ve known. I wish I could tell you what’s happened over the past few months, but…”
Adam shook his head to gather his thoughts.
“You trust me, don’t you, Harry?”
Harold Bickmore nodded and cautiously picked up his own mug.
“I can tell you nothing more, but your worst suspicions about The Society for Public Reform are not unfounded.”
The young man’s dark eyes widened, reminding Adam so much of the green youth Harold was ten years ago.
“How bad is it, Adam? I mean, we’ve all heard rumors of Boney’s spies and—”
Adam shook his head sharply. “Ask me no questions, I’ll tell you no lies. But I will ask a favor of you.”
“Anything. Name it.”
“Be a friend to Olivia, even as you are my friend. If she ever comes to you in need, remember our friendship.”
Harold’s frown deepened. “I don’t like the sound of this.”
“You don’t have to like it…just make that promise, will you?”
“So…it’s that serious?”
Adam knew the question could be answered in more than one way. Whichever way Harold took it would be mostly right in any event. Best to leave it like that. He suspected he had already stretched the bounds of what he ought to communicate anyway.
He caught a glimpse of light brown hair and the familiar blue dress. Olivia scanned the room looking for him – he hoped. He put up a hand to attract her attention and rose to his feet. Her smile lifted the black weight that had pressed down on him during his conversation with Harold.
Harold rose also and said under his breath, “Then you have my promise, old friend.”
*
Despite his avowal of love, she still wasn’t sure how Adam felt about her. She knew her reasons for wanting to become his lover but she was not certain of his. Now with the deed done, would he be dismissive of her? He’d certainly been out of sorts this afternoon. It would be easy to blame his ill-temper on his exhausting ride.
So she took her time entering the tavern’s dining room, hesitating at the threshold. Adam was in deep conversation with his friend, Harold. Olivia started looking for other places to sit, where she would not intrude, when Adam caught her eye.
He was the most handsome man she knew. Not even Constance’s florid girlish descriptions of him as a youth could do justice to him now as a grown man.
And his expression of warmth and delight on seeing her gave Olivia confidence to join him and his friend. She accepted Harold’s hand.
“It’s always a pleasure to see you, Miss Collins.” He bowed over her hand like the naval officer he was. Olivia dropped a curtsy, then looked to Adam. His intense look ignited the banked embers of desire within her, sparking memories of that afternoon. If they were alone, she would gladly take the promise she saw in his eyes.
Adam took her hand and squeezed it, then let it go before pulling out a chair for her. She almost forgot herself and their need for discretion. Olivia masked her disappointment.
“Harold has just been telling me he’s finally closer to deciding how he plans to occupy his time when he becomes a gentleman of leisure,” said Adam.
The expression on Harold’s face told her the statement was a lie. But to the young gentleman’s credit, he recovered himself nicely.
“Well, yes, as it happens. I’m viewing a townhouse in Truro at the moment.” Then the young man’s face turned sly. “Father tells me I should settle down and do something useful after I leave the Navy. I might thwart his ambitions for me once more by going into politics, instead.”
They all laughed. Beneath the table, she felt Adam take her hand, his fingers twining with hers.
“Now, Miss Collins,” Harold continued. “I have need of a lady’s opinion and I’m hoping you will oblige. It is my sister Elspeth’s birthday in September and I am to remember a gift on pain of death. I know nothing of these things. May I call on you in the next week to draw on your expert eye?”
“I’d be delighted, Lieutenant. How old is your sister?”
The young man looked panicked.
“You don’t know!” Adam roared with laughter. “You don’t even know your own sister’s age!”
Bickmore had the grace to look sheepish.
“Then you understand, Miss Collins, why I need to make amends this year.”
Olivia grinned and decided to put the poor man out of his misery. “I’d only be too delighted to oblige, sir.”
The early part of the evening passed just as pleasantly, as the three of them shared amusing stories, even Adam, who always seemed so serious. Later, the local blacksmith approached and persuaded Adam and Harold into playing skittles. Olivia was invited to join in a game of cribbage by the curate’s wife.
By the time Jory called for last drinks, Harold had departed for Truro. Olivia was ready to retire. She stopped by the tables and had a word with those who remained before finally bidding goodnight to Adam and the group of men who continued with their game.
She ascended the stairs in the company of Polly who was taking up some fresh linens. A new guest, no doubt.
“I’m glad ye be gettin’ on so well with Adam,” she said. “He’s a good man.”
Olivia knew full well what Polly was hinting at. But this relationship, such as it was, was too new to be even spoken of, and to call the words that would conjure it into being could very well destroy it.
A noncommittal answer was all she gave the innkeeper. “He would appear so,” she said.
“Does that mean ye’re goin’ to be stayin’ in Ponsnowyth?” Polly asked, making a valiant attempt to not sound too curious.
“It’s too early to say. I’ll certainly stay for the summer. The earliest I would be expected to start a new position would be in September.”
Olivia paused at the door to her room and wrestled momentarily with her key. Polly continued two doors down and, before Olivia entered her room, she saw Polly look back and give her an assessing look.
She closed the door behind her, removed her shawl, and worked the buttons free from the back of her dress. She examined her face in the small oval mirror on the wardrobe door. The glass was pitted and foxed with age.
Did she look like a woman in love? In truth, she had spent just as much time in Peter Fitzgerald’s company as she had in Adam Hardacre’s and not once had Polly ventured an opinion of a match in that direction.
Polly was fond of Adam, to be sure, and had known him for many years. So perhaps it was the wishful thinking of a matchmaking romantic.
In the mirror’s reflection, Olivia saw her door open. By the time she turned, the door was closed again. Adam stood before her, a finger to his lips to indicate silence.
He crossed the room in a few short steps and she was pulled into his arms.
“Polly will flay the both of us if she catches you in here,” Olivia whispered. “She runs a respectable establishment.”
Adam dropped kisses on her neck, his hands warm on the exposed part of her back.
“Then we’ll just have to be quiet,” he whispered in her ear, sending tendrils of delicious pleasure down her neck.
“You can’t mean to…here, I mean…so soon after we…”
He slowed his kisses then stopped, resting his forehead against hers.
“I have to leave again for a while,” he said.
“So soon?” Olivia hated herself for asking the question. It made her sound like a needy ingénue. She should be glad of it – after all, she got what she asked for. Already, her resolve was at a tipping point. If Adam stayed, it would make it harder for her to agree to marriage with Peter Fitzgerald.
She swallowed a sudden panic and forced herself to calm down.
“When?”
“A few hours from now.”
“Why? What takes you away at such an hour?”
The deep shadows in the room suddenly made Adam seem dangerous, a stranger.
“No questions, Olivia, please.”
“Will you return?”
“All going well, yes.”
“Does it have anything to do the scroll you had with you today? What is it? Plans?”
Chapter Twenty-Three
Does it have anything to do the scroll you brought with you today? What is it? Plans?
Even as the words were being spoken, Adam willed her to stop. He even gripped his jaw so tight his teeth twinged, and it was all he could do to get the words out.
“Never, ever ask, do you hear me?” he ground out.
Olivia’s hands went to her mouth. She tried to pull out of his arms, but he couldn’t let go. He wouldn’t let go.
“I…I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to pry. I…”
He crushed her to him once more to help stifle her sobbing he felt through her chest. “Oh, Olivia. One day, your curiosity may kill us both,” he said hoarsely. “It’s not safe to ask questions. Promise me you will never, ever speak to anyone about me or what I do.”
Adam held her while he battled a maelstrom of emotions that stirred through him also – anger, fear and regret were chief among them.
He wanted the woman in his arms with a desire that nearly made him abandon his duty to King and Country – to hell with Ridgeway and that weasel Major Wilkinson. To hell with the whole bloody lot of them!
By the time Olivia had composed herself, he, too, had calmed enough to hold her by the shoulders far enough away to see her large brown eyes in a deathly pale face. Adam allowed her to see the anguish in his.
He wished he knew what words to say that would reassure her.
“One day, I will tell you the truth. And one day, you may actually forgive me for hiding it from you. I want you more than I’ve wanted any woman in my life, but my life is not my own and I can’t explain to you why.
“Worse than that, I can’t even ask you to wait for me.”
Olivia lowered her chin and let out a shuddering breath. Adam wondered whether he’d forced her to tears once again. But when she lifted her head, her eyes were clear and the set of her jaw resolute.
“Then hold me for a while, Adam Hardacre,” she said. “If we are to part, then let us part with pleasure as our final memory and not sorrow.”
Midnight was supposed to be the witching hour, but it was the early hours of the morning which were the most dangerous. Men on watch grew drowsy. Accidents happened toward the end of the middle watch. On ship, it was least favored shift of all.
It was not much better on land either. The waning moon offered barely enough light to see more than three feet in front. Adam decided to let the horse pick its own path. He reckoned on taking an hour to traverse the three miles from Ponsnowyth up to the Four Cross, so named for the meeting of the crossroads leading to Falmouth, Truro, Redruth and Helston.
Tempted though he was to look back at the inn, he did not. There lay temptations of many different sorts.
One was the woman who invited him into her bed; second was the temptation of giving her his whole heart also. Then there was the third temptation – that of the life he could have as a former sailor with no commitments other than finding a wife and keeping a roof over their heads. And more and more, that temptation was taking the form of a pretty brown-haired governess whose doe eyes made him want to promise to give her everything.
Despite her offer of intimacy, Olivia had been more than content to lie with him on her bed in quiet communion until sleep claimed her. At least, he assumed she slept. Perhaps, she feigned sleep to avoid an awkward parting.
Adam forced himself to focus on the job ahead. He had debated the wisdom of leaving his dueling pistols in Plymouth. Instead, he carried knives. One strapped to his waist, another at his right ankle, and a third sheathed on his horse. Hung around the saddle horn was one of his looped rope wrist restraints. The other was in his pocket.
It wasn’t much but it would have to do.
He approached the road from the east, his way guided by a large stone obelisk on the ridge where the roads met. It was an ancient monument, said to date to the time of the earliest Christian saints of Cornwall. It stood nine feet tall and was made of grey granite but mottled black in places by centuries of weather.
The north and south faces had been carved with sinuous plaits, from the plinth up toward the top, where th
e carving spread out around a hole in the stone, making it resemble some kind of ancient needle as much as a cross.
Wilkinson had chosen the rendezvous location well. The windswept ridge provided no obvious ambush points and clear views for miles around.
Nowhere for any of Ridgeway’s men to cover him, either…
A black carriage waited beneath the cross. Adam reined in his horse to a stop a good ten yards away.
A figure emerged from the back of the carriage and approached until he was only five yards away. Adam wheeled his horse about to half-face the direction he’d come from. At the first sign of a threat, he would urge the horse back down toward the valley.
“Hardacre!”
Adam recognized Dunbar’s voice. He didn’t acknowledge the hail. After all, who else would it be at three o’clock in the bloody morning?
“Wilkinson wants to see ye.” The man nodded his head toward the carriage.
“Tell him to come out here.”
The man grunted and started to turn back when the carriage door opened. Major Wilkinson emerged from the coach.
“Do come along, Hardacre. We have business to transact. It’s too bloody cold and late to be arguing about it in the middle of the road.”
Adam ignored Dunbar and, instead, spoke over his head to Wilkinson.
“Nothing doing. The minute I get off my horse, your thug here kills me and steals the plans. I want my safety guaranteed.”
“You have my word as an officer and a gentleman.”
Adam waited a moment, then reluctantly dismounted.
“Tie your horse to the back; we’re going on a journey.”
Adam’s heart beat a little faster. It was risky. He would have no idea where he was going. Worse still, no one else would know either.
“Come now, The Collector is waiting.”
Adam unbuckled the satchel from his saddle and swung it over his shoulder. He led the horse to the back of the carriage and secured its reins to a rail.
Barons, Brides, and Spies: Regency Series Starter Collection Volume Two Page 87