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The Caged Countess

Page 4

by Joanna Fulford


  The light of day had revealed all the details of his appearance to her curious gaze. She could see now that his skin was lightly tanned and the hair that in candlelight looked to be between brown and blonde was the colour of ripe wheat. Moreover, the contrast between the injured and uninjured sides of his face was stark. It reinforced the notion that he must once have been classically good-looking, the kind of man that women noticed. His injuries had changed that significantly: he was not just attractive; the damaged face lent him a sombre and dangerous edge that was both enigmatic and exciting. He roused her curiosity as no other man had ever done.

  Becoming aware of that intense scrutiny he turned from the window and his gaze locked with hers. His good eye was a clear and vivid blue, the blue of a summer sky. Just for an instant it seemed disturbingly familiar. The familiarity wasn’t concerned with him since they’d only met for the first time yesterday; rather he reminded her of someone. An old memory stirred and struggled to surface, but the more she tried to retrieve it the more it eluded her. Then he spoke and the thought disappeared as quickly as it had come.

  ‘You look worried. Are you?’

  ‘No...at least not so much as I was. Do you think we are being pursued?’

  ‘I think we’d have seen some evidence of it by now. All the same we can’t afford to be complacent.’

  He was certainly right about that. There were many other things she wanted to ask him too. His manner just then didn’t seem quite so forbidding so she put a toe in the water.

  ‘How did Fouché’s men find out about Alain?’

  ‘Someone betrayed him and, along with him, potentially an entire section of the British intelligence network in Paris.’

  ‘A double agent?’

  ‘It looks that way,’ he said.

  ‘Do you have any idea who it might be?’

  ‘Not yet.’

  ‘I never knew who Alain’s other contacts were. Do you think he managed to warn them in time?’

  ‘Let’s hope so.’

  ‘Yes.’ She felt suddenly cold as the full implications became apparent. More than ever she was aware of the narrowness of her escape and, like it or not, of how much she owed Duval. ‘It still begs the question though: why were they betrayed?’

  ‘For knowing too much. Alain was on to something of great importance but he wouldn’t say what it was until his sources had verified the facts. Unfortunately, they must have aroused suspicion somehow, because the police closed in before anything more could be passed on.’

  ‘I see.’

  ‘How on earth did you get involved in this débâcle?’ he asked.

  Claudine hesitated. She had never been able to talk to anyone about her clandestine activities. Indeed to have breathed a word of it would have brought ruin and disgrace. At first she had hugged the secret with quiet glee, but as time went on it became something of a liability. The chance to be able to speak freely to someone who understood was almost irresistible.

  Duval heard her hesitation. ‘You need not be afraid. Whatever is said here stays here.’

  Something in his tone made her want to believe it. She knew so little about him but, in spite of everything, her instinct was to trust him.

  ‘My brother was with the army in Spain. He was killed at Talavera.’

  ‘I’m sorry.’

  She smiled sadly. ‘Henry had given his life for his country while I was living in luxury and ease far from the dangers he had faced daily. His death made me question the life I was living, and suddenly it seemed shallow and worthless. I wanted to do something for the war effort on my own account but, short of joining the army myself, I could not imagine how.’ She paused. ‘Then I remembered that Peter, one of my cousins, worked at the Foreign Office. I wrote and asked him to call upon me.’

  ‘I imagine he was surprised by the nature of the conversation.’

  ‘He was at first, but he had also been very fond of Henry and perhaps that inclined him to listen sympathetically. Anyway, some days later he returned with a colleague, a man called Gabriel Viaud.’

  Duval’s brows drew together. ‘Viaud?’

  ‘Yes. Do you know him?’

  ‘We’ve met.’ He paused. ‘But I’m interrupting. Please, go on.’

  ‘I have a property on the south coast of England, an ideal location for getting informants into and out of the country unseen. Viaud asked if I would sanction the use of the coastal access for that purpose. Of course I agreed.’

  Duval had been listening intently, his curiosity thoroughly roused. Was she English then? Her spoken French was impeccable. Her use of the first person hadn’t escaped him either and yet she wore a wedding band. The reminder was oddly unwelcome although he had no right to find it so.

  ‘Did your husband not have something to say about the matter?’

  ‘I live alone, apart from the servants of course.’

  ‘You are a widow?’ Unaccountably he found himself hanging on the answer.

  ‘Not exactly.’ She hesitated. ‘It’s just that I haven’t seen my husband for...some time. He has been serving abroad with the army.’

  ‘I see.’ It was not unusual. He should have expected it. The knowledge brought him back to earth; she was forbidden fare in every way.

  Claudine said nothing. He did not see at all, but she wasn’t about to go into a lengthy explanation of her personal circumstances.

  He sensed her reticence and knew he had no right to probe. ‘Forgive me. I digress. You were saying that you allowed your property to be used...’

  ‘Yes. Then, a few months later, while I was in London, I was approached again by the same gentleman to find out whether I was willing to become more closely involved. The work involved minimal risk—it was merely to act as a courier taking coded messages between London and the coast.’

  ‘And you agreed.’

  ‘It was easy and it was something worthwhile, far removed from the giddy social round.’

  ‘And then?’

  ‘Then, about six months ago, I was introduced to Paul Genet. His department was looking to recruit suitable candidates for overseas intelligence. He knew of the work I had done for his associates; I could speak French and was then entirely unknown to the authorities in Paris. I was ideal for what he had in mind.’

  ‘I can well believe it. He must have rubbed his hands in glee.’

  ‘What’s that supposed to mean?’

  ‘He recognised a tool he could use for his purpose.’

  Her eyes sparkled angrily. ‘It wasn’t like that.’

  ‘No?’

  The sarcasm was overt, as Duval had intended. Could she really be so naïve as to think Genet hadn’t used her? Part of the émigré population who had fled their homeland during the revolution, he had lost no time in establishing a new spy network, this time providing valuable information for the British. However, he was also working with those who sought to overthrow Napoleon and restore the French monarchy. Genet and his confederates were prepared to use any means to achieve that end.

  ‘No,’ she retorted. ‘It was my choice. I could have refused.’

  ‘The adventure could have got you killed.’

  ‘I was aware of that.’

  ‘And it didn’t deter you?’

  ‘No, why should it? The risks were explained and I chose to accept them. Genet is not to blame.’

  ‘Women should not be placed in dangerous situations.’

  Claudine lifted one finely arched brow. ‘And yet men do that to them all the time.’

  ‘How so?’

  ‘Men expect their wives to bear children, do they not? Yet there is no more dangerous activity for a woman.’

  He frowned. ‘It’s not the same thing at all.’

  ‘No, on balance, this is much safer,’ she replied.
‘In any case, it’s my life and I’d rather spend it doing something to benefit my country than living some kind of butterfly existence in London.’

  ‘It’s a laudable aim, but it’s over now,’ he replied. ‘This part of the network is finished.’

  ‘This part perhaps, but I’ll find another posting eventually.’

  He stared at her in disbelief. ‘Was this not a close enough brush with disaster?’

  ‘It was unfortunate, but it’s the nature of the business.’

  ‘A business you would do well to stay out of in future.’

  ‘Will you stay out of it in future?’

  The tone was quietly challenging, something that rarely happened in the sphere of Intelligence work, and it provoked in him an upsurge of annoyance. ‘This is my occupation, not an amusement that I took up to help me overcome boredom.’

  Claudine’s hands clenched in her lap. ‘I do not deny boredom, but I do deny that this is mere amusement.’

  ‘I’m relieved to hear it.’

  ‘Genet employs me because I am good at what I do.’

  ‘You still required rescuing.’

  ‘And of course no-one else ever does.’ The sarcastic tone was an exact imitation of his. ‘In the entire history of espionage I’m the first.’

  ‘I don’t know about the first, but I’d wager that you’re the most argumentative.’

  ‘Oh, I’m sorry. I forgot. A woman mustn’t do that, must she?’

  The lowered eyes and dulcet tone didn’t fool him for a minute. Her manner was impudent and provocative in equal measure, the kind of quiet insubordination that would have been easy to deal with in a man. In this case the options were severely limited.

  ‘I cannot imagine what is troubling you,’ he replied.

  ‘It doesn’t.’ She eyed him speculatively. ‘May I ask how you came to be involved in all of this?’

  He was tempted to refuse; the past was an area he preferred to leave alone. However, she had been open with him to a surprising degree.

  ‘Originally I was with Wellington in Spain,’ he said, ‘but then I was injured and rendered unfit for active service.’

  For a brief instant he was back in the field hospital after Vittoria, lying on the makeshift operating table in the surgeon’s tent where the air was heavy with the stench of blood and sweat and fear. Through the red haze of pain he could hear the screams of the poor wretches under the knife and the saw. He’d lost an eye that day along with half his face and a large quantity of blood from the sabre slashes to his shoulder and arm. They’d stanched the bleeding and sewn him up as best they could. Initially, he had lost much of the function in his left arm, although time and careful exercise had mended it eventually. Nevertheless it was the end of his army career in the Peninsula.

  ‘Do you miss it?’ she asked. ‘Active service, I mean?’

  ‘At the time it was a blow, but there is no point in lamenting what cannot be changed.’

  He had understated the case. Separated from his erstwhile comrades and the life he had loved it had been like a form of exile. Having to deal with men like Genet did nothing to enhance the experience. Even so, what was the alternative; to go back to England? To go home? He hardly thought he’d be welcome there, given the circumstances. In any case it was too late to mend fences now.

  Although she could not follow his thoughts, Claudine sensed the tension in him and sought to change the subject.

  ‘Have you relatives in England?’

  ‘Yes, though I have not seen them for some years.’

  ‘That must be hard.’

  ‘There was little affection in our family, especially not between me and my father. Besides, he is dead now and I am quite sure that my absence has occasioned little heartache for the rest of my relations.’

  The words were spoken in a matter-of-fact tone but, again, she had the sensation of having moved into dangerous territory.

  ‘Families ought to be united, although I know it is not always the case.’

  ‘Have you any other brothers, or sisters perhaps?’ he asked.

  ‘None who survived into adulthood.’

  ‘Then you must have been all the more precious to your parents.’

  ‘My mother died when I was eight. My father hired a governess and considered his paternal duty done. It wasn’t until I grew older that he took any interest in me, and then only as a commodity in the marriage market.’

  ‘He arranged a match for you?’

  ‘Yes. I had no say in the matter.’

  The words sounded quite dispassionate but he sensed anger beneath them. His curiosity increased. There were so many things he wanted to ask, all of them intrusive. It was none of his business. Arranged matches were commonplace, and, if love followed, the couple might consider themselves fortunate. If not they made shift as best they could, as he knew all too well.

  ‘And your husband?’

  ‘He was likewise compelled to the match by his family.’

  The story was so similar to his own that it struck a chord. Yet, in spite of her outspokenness and misguided thirst for adventure, there could be few men who would complain about gaining such a wife; unless of course their affections were engaged elsewhere. However, Duval wasn’t about to delve there. To do so would be to awaken sleeping dogs. At the same time he could empathise with her situation; it seemed they had a surprising amount in common.

  ‘Even so, he could not willingly have left you.’

  The tone brought warm colour to her face. ‘He went without a backward glance. I think he could scarcely wait to go. Oh, we exchange dutiful letters from time to time, but he has never given any indication of the desire or intention to return.’

  ‘I’m sorry.’

  ‘Don’t be. He has his life and I have mine.’

  Again Duval felt the words chime, but then it was familiar territory. ‘Did you never feel lonely?’

  ‘Sometimes,’ she admitted, ‘in the early days, but not now. Besides, I have grown accustomed to having my own independence and would not willingly relinquish it.’

  ‘I can see why you might not wish to, but the war in Spain is over.’

  The implication brought with it a twinge of unease. She had meant it when she said that she valued her independence. The advent of a husband after all this time was distinctly unwelcome. Had there ever been the least affection or esteem in the case, anything on which they might have founded a hope for the future, she might have been willing to try and build bridges. However, there was no shared experience to build on, no affection, nothing to bind them but a piece of paper. She found it hard now even to recall what Anthony looked like. Besides, time had a way of changing people. What he had looked like then might not be what he looked like now. He was a stranger to her in every way.

  Although he could not follow her thoughts Duval could see the inner disquiet that they created. Had she disliked the thought so much? If so, her husband had much to answer for. Not that it was any of his business. Nor did he have any right to criticise.

  ‘We have lived separate lives up to now,’ she replied. ‘I see no reason why we cannot continue to do so.’

  ‘The situation is not unknown.’

  ‘No.’

  He saw the fleeting expression of bleakness in her face and with it her vulnerability.

  Both touched him more deeply than he had expected. The future she described was bleak indeed; an ocean of emptiness in which love and fulfilment had no place. The years would claim her youth and her good looks but they would not offer the consolations of a loving relationship and children. It was, he thought, a criminal waste.

  ‘You might take a lover,’ he said.

  Claudine reddened. Ordinarily the very suggestion would have been an insult to a lady, but a second’s reflection showed he hadn�
�t intended it that way. The words had been spoken with casual ease and they served to underline what he thought her to be. Under the circumstances she could hardly blame him though. To express indignation now would sound like total hypocrisy.

  ‘And leap from the frying pan into the fire?’ She shook her head. ‘The thought does not appeal.’

  Her reply surprised him, not least because it had sounded genuine. He searched her face but could see no trace of duplicity there, only a very attractive blush. That surprised him too. All the same, it was hard to believe that she had never taken advantage of the relative freedom that her situation afforded. After all, had he not briefly experienced the heady sensuality beneath her outwardly cool demeanour?

  ‘What will you do then?’ he asked.

  ‘I will go back to Sussex.’

  ‘To your house by the sea?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘In what part of Sussex does it lie?’

  ‘About ten miles from Hove.’

  He stared at her intently for a moment, an expression that did not go unnoticed.

  ‘Are you familiar with the area at all?’

  ‘Yes,’ he replied. ‘I know it, but I have not been there for many years.’

  ‘Of course, how should you?’ She paused. ‘You have family there perhaps?’

  ‘No, my relatives reside in London for the most part.’ It was true as far as it went, he thought, and he was reluctant to embark on a more detailed explanation. Family was a complex and difficult topic. As for the rest it was merely coincidence. Thousands of people lived in Sussex.

 

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