Dilemma in Yellow Silk

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Dilemma in Yellow Silk Page 24

by Lynne Connolly


  Even that ten miles had worried Marcus, but he could not work out how to get his wife back to the London house without anyone seeing. Particularly as they did not know who was watching them. Julius had promised to keep a watch, or rather, put his mysterious “people” to watch them, but he had reported nothing so far.

  Too late now.

  They would be on the heath very soon now. Nobody would attack them before that. The Heath was just too tempting a target. As, Marcus hoped, were they. To overcome the people they had with them, the Pretender would need a troop of some size.

  “How do we introduce Viola to Imogen?” he asked Tony.

  “As Viola and Imogen. They have certain physical similarities.” Tony paused. “So much so that I miss Imogen more now. She is waiting for me. They are not so foolish. They’ll guess. Imogen will be overjoyed to have a sister at last. I hope Viola will be, too.”

  “Since she recently lost the man she still regards as her father, I think she will be delighted to find she is not alone anymore.” He paused. Even if Imogen and Viola took instant dislike to each other, Viola would never fear that melancholy fate again.

  They were within a few minutes of the Heath now.

  Sparse trees and scrubland adorned this bleak area north of London. Once they had passed the Spaniards Inn, they would be on Hampstead Heath, a notorious area for highwaymen and footpads.

  Their luck held, and no coach waited by the inn. Sometimes coaches would wait until several came along, and then they would band together for safety. That was the last thing Marcus wanted. He drew his pistol and laid it on his lap. On the floor, Tony noiselessly drew three swords and laid them where they could reach them easily. He had a beltful of pistols, two one side and three the other, looking like nothing so much as a pirate readying to board a vessel.

  Even then, a stray shot from anyone lying in wait for them could prove fatal.

  The coachman had a prearranged signal, and so did the footmen.

  Half way across the heath, Marcus despaired. Surely they would not have to continue as far as Leicestershire?

  But a yell and the sound of thundering hooves from outside told them they had been right, and their attackers were upon them.

  “Stand and deliver!” came the words that fooled nobody.

  Highwaymen generally worked in ones and twos, but approaching the coach now was a veritable phalanx of men on horseback. Marcus counted six as he waited for them to come within range. “Don’t forget I want one taken alive.”

  “Shame,” Tony said.

  The coaches came to a halt, seemingly obedient to the command of the men confronting them. They all wore their hats pulled down low rather than masks and sported clothes more suited to the ragbag than a person, no doubt in character.

  The coachman drew the horses to a halt.

  In contrast to their appearance, the weapons they held were lethal in appearance, modern and well cared for. Most had other weapons thrust in their belts.

  “When I give the word,” Marcus said. “Attack. If they are highwaymen, they deserve this fate. If not, they deserve it anyway.”

  “What do you do if one of Northwich’s sons is among them?”

  “That is his problem. We are attacked by highwaymen, we must defend ourselves.”

  “To the death,” Darius said grimly.

  That almost came true when a bullet pierced the coach at the level of the doors and whistled out the other side.

  Darius gave a strangled yelp. “The bastard caught me!”

  He had spoken too loudly. Another shot came through the window, too high to hurt anyone. They could not stay in here. They were sitting ducks.

  Tony had his hand on the door. He counted. “On three. One, two, three!”

  At that instant, he opened the door and leaped out, a pistol in each hand. Darius, his sleeve covered in blood, crouched behind him, holding his pistol higher. One of the men outside screamed and fell from his horse on Tony’s first shot.

  Highwaymen would have turned tail and run for it. These men did not.

  Marcus aimed his own weapon at one of the men and managed to wing him. The damned pistol shot to the left, but at least he’d rendered one side of the bastard harmless.

  He grabbed another pistol, cocked, and fired it. The store under the coach seats held a dozen. Then they would have the satisfaction of hand to hand fighting.

  His pistol refused to discharge. If he had not dropped it in the same moment, he might have had his hand blown off. The pistol fell to the scrubby ground outside the coach, already a mess of black powder and flames.

  One of the horses screamed and bolted, its rider clinging on for dear life.

  From a tree they had just passed, another rider galloped out, his black horse going full tilt. Were there more?

  The six men who had lain in wait for them were shocked, but fought back. They whipped out their weapons as fast as possible, but they were no match for Tony. The ex-soldier had two of them off their horses and writhing on the ground before they’d had a chance to fire. One shot went over Marcus’s head as he followed his cousin and brother from the coach.

  Ivan had a sporting rifle and a shotgun behind him. He stayed in the coach, hampered by his skirts, but perfectly able to hold a gun to a man’s head.

  Marcus flung himself across the short distance and dragged one of the men’s feet from his stirrup, disturbing his balance as he was about to fire. He kicked back, catching Marcus in the ribs, but his shot went wide, lost in the scrubland of Hampstead Heath.

  Marcus gasped and clapped his hand to his side, but fought on. He had his sword in his hand, but instead of slashing the rider, he cut the girth under the horse’s belly. The man teetered sideways, unseated, but as he went down, Tony shot him. He was dead from the hole in his head before he hit the floor.

  They had killed them all, except for the one that got away.

  The melée had given them no time to think. Five men lay dead on the ground. Tony kicked at one disconsolately. “No doubt about it. My aim is as true as it ever was. Perhaps their bodies will show us something.”

  “That’s hardly likely,” said someone from behind them—a voice Marcus knew.

  Lord Alconbury was in the process of sheathing a wicked looking saber. He had the reins looped around his wrist and a pistol in his other hand. Once he’d sheathed his sword, he changed the reins to his free hand and unhurriedly shoved the pistol in a pouch of his saddle. “Excellent shots,” he said calmly.

  The man who had tried to escape was sitting on his horse, his head down.

  “You think to kill us personally?” Marcus asked.

  Alconbury rolled his eyes. “I told you. This is none of our doing. This is the Pretender’s idea, and in my humble opinion, a foolish one. Which is why this fellow will return with you and admit it for me. I want no part of this ham-fisted affair. It would offend me if it were put at our door. My father is too subtle to throw men at a plan like this. He would have known what you were at instantly, as did I. I merely wished to prove this fact to you. This is your prisoner, gentlemen. Do with him what you will.”

  Calmly, he turned around and cantered across the wide stretch of ground between them and the inn on the edge of the Heath.

  Tony made haste to motion the man off his horse with a twitch of his pistol before handing his weapon to Darius. He strode across to fasten their prisoner’s hands behind his back. The man stubbornly refused to move until he shoved him in the back.

  Then he came out with a torrent of Italian. They had not even the wit to employ an English speaker. Nothing would have proved his guilt as much as that, someone speaking the language of the court in exile.

  Marcus beckoned to Tony and murmured to him, “I’ll have him talking before we reach the house, and I care not what language he uses. I presume the others have nothing to identify them. We shall report the unfortunate incident on our return to town.”

  “We’ll do that,” Darius said. “No need to even say you were there. A
ccording to our story, your wife was taken ill and you decided to cut your journey short. Tony and I decided to go ahead to Leicestershire.”

  “And what about me?” Ivan demanded.

  Darius snorted. “If you think I’m taking you to Leicestershire looking like that, you had better think again.”

  Marcus turned his back on the carnage. The men were evidently dead. Their horses nuzzled at their bodies, but they would leave the animals here. The next traveler along would find them. The air stank of blood and burning powder, a pungent, offensive smell he would probably associate with this scene for some time to come.

  “I have business ten miles away,” he said. “This is done.”

  Chapter 19

  Viola had not ridden astride for some time, but she found the task easy once she recalled her childhood racing around the estate. Once learned, never forgotten. She hardly noticed the distance as she rode, surrounded by her protectors, for ten miles. The journey was uneventful, and in other circumstances, she would have enjoyed it, but anxiety for her husband took all pleasure away for her.

  If she had been less concerned, the house they arrived at would have enchanted her. A riverside villa, the sun warming its honey stone, greeted their eyes. The man at the gate swung it open for them, as if expecting them. Of course he was. Marcus had been meticulous in his preparations. He would not have been Marcus if he had not.

  Her stomach in knots, she let Val help her dismount, gave him a brief word of thanks, and let Tranmere take her indoors.

  They entered by a side door into a cool, black-and-white marble tiled hall. A maid bobbed a curtsey. “Good afternoon, my lady. May I show you to a room where you may change and refresh yourself?”

  “Thank you.”

  The cantilevered stairs led to a broad corridor painted cream with landscape paintings adorning the walls—very restrained and not at all like what she would associate with the flamboyant Julius. This appeared more like the home of a moneyed Cit or a well-to-do gentleman.

  Tranmere and she followed the maid to a set of double doors.

  The maid opened them with a flourish and bowed her through. “You need to get something to drink and perhaps rest,” she said.

  The redoubtable footman shook his head. “I’ll stay here, my lady, until somebody comes to relieve me. Master’s orders are to guard you until he comes, or until we receive news.”

  Her heart sank when she heard the rider. That meant he didn’t know if he would come or not, the implication being he could be killed. Her throat tightened in anticipation of tears she refused to allow to fall. Not yet. Not at all. She refused to think of the alternative.

  A simple but pretty caraco jacket and petticoat were laid out on the bed. The jacket was in that shade of forget-me-not blue that was almost Julius’s calling card, although this was an outfit he would never wear.

  The maid helped her wash and change and did Viola’s hair in a simple but effective style. Viola sat in the chair like a statue, letting the maid have her way, uncaring of the effect.

  After ascertaining Viola did not want anything more, the maid bobbed a curtsey. “Refreshments will be served in the back parlor, if it please your ladyship. Or I can bring them up here. Lord Winterton has arrived, and he says if you feel up to it, could you come down.”

  Julius might be able to allay some of her fears. Not at all fatigued, Viola got to her feet and followed the maid down a broad staircase to a room on the ground floor. She found herself in a sunny, spacious room with windows that opened directly on to a terrace. For the first time today she registered it was a fine day. The sun beamed down on a lovely garden that stretched as far as the Thames.

  Forcing herself to smile and remember her society manners, Viola dropped a curtsey. Julius stood, and took her hand. That was when Viola realized another woman was standing near a broad sofa that faced the windows.

  Her looks reminded her of someone. The dark hair and long nose gave her a moment’s thought. Until she realized she saw something very similar in the mirror each morning.

  Her heart skipped a beat.

  “Imogen, Lady Hollinhead, may I introduce Viola, Lady Malton? Viola, this is Imogen. Your sister.”

  Viola swallowed and stared at the other woman. Since Imogen was likewise staring at her, this seemed admissible, but she would have done so had it been polite or not. Sister?

  Imogen recovered herself first, and smiled. “My husband is helping yours. He was a soldier and he’s your husband’s cousin, an Emperor.”

  Viola nodded. “Antoninus.” She knew the name, but little else.

  “We live in Cheshire, but we decided to come to London to attend to a little business. And to allow me to do some shopping, of course. But Tony raced off to Julius’s, and here we are, roped in to another of his schemes.” She did not seem perturbed, but rather, amused.

  If her husband had been a soldier, perhaps Imogen could cope with this terrible worry better. Viola nodded. “I—I’m pleased to meet you. Also a little shocked. Are there any others?”

  “I was shocked too. I had no idea I was anything other than Imogen Thane until recently. According to Julius, we have a brother and a half-sister, the result of the Old Pretender’s union with another woman.”

  “He got around,” Viola said dryly.

  Imogen sat down and glanced at the space beside her. “Won’t you sit?”

  Grateful for the chance to sit while she recovered from the news, Viola took the spot. She thanked Julius when he placed a dish of tea by her side. “I didn’t know about this house.”

  “No,” Julius said. “Few people do. It is my retreat. But if you wish, it can be yours for a while.”

  “Thank you. It’s lovely,” was all she could think to reply. “When will we know?”

  “Soon, I hope. If they are forced to continue the journey, they will send a message to us by fast rider. That will give us an idea of what is going on.” Julius sat in a chair opposite and crossed his legs. “Whatever happens, Viola, you are safe. We will not allow anyone to hurt you.”

  “Do you think I care for that?” Visions of Marcus hurt, shot, or speared through with a sword kept nagging at her, pushing themselves unbidden into her mind.

  Julius raised a brow.

  “I apologize,” she said quickly. “I should be mindful of all you’ve done.”

  Unexpectedly, support came from the lady on her left. “No, you should not.” Imogen covered her hand briefly in a gesture of comfort. “It’s perfectly natural for you to worry. But with Tony there, they are unlikely to come to much harm.”

  While she admired Imogen’s trust in her husband’s prowess, Viola was not so sure. But recalling Marcus’s skill with a sword made her feel better. “He’s no mean bladesman himself.”

  “He is not,” Julius agreed. “And they took every precaution. I am hoping they capture someone alive. I still have no idea who instigated this foolish attack, although I suspect the Pretender rather than the Dankworths. The Dankworths are more subtle in their attacks. This kind of brute force is not typical of the way they work these days.”

  So at least one of them could think properly. Yet while what Julius said made sense, Viola could not wish for anything except the safe return of her husband. “Do you know how soon we will know?”

  Julius shook his head. “Not precisely. The journey from the Heath to here will take an hour, more likely two, even in this weather. How long did the ride take you?”

  “Just under an hour.” They had set off well before they reached Hampstead Heath. “The inn was packed, and we managed to switch passengers. We waited for twenty minutes before we set off, to give the coach a head start.”

  The door opened to admit Val, who waved Julius back down into his seat and found one of his own. “That was a superb job,” he said, and bowed to her.

  “She’s eaten up with worry,” Julius remarked.

  Val laughed, the unfeeling idiot. “I honestly don’t think you have any reason. They have a coach full of w
eapons and abundant skill, as well as the element of surprise. While it was an honor to escort you here, I did wish I could remain and join in the fun.”

  “Fun?” she almost screeched. “How can it be fun?”

  “To defeat our enemies?” Val pursed his lips. “Oh, I daresay I could find something to smile about. They will not prevail, I assure you.” He was smartly dressed now, in contrast to his disheveled appearance earlier. “We should hear before dinner. I say, Viola, you will have to get used to such matters. Although, given your prosy husband, you might well go for the next fifty years without any further excitement.”

  Excitement? But Viola felt honor bound to protect Marcus. “When he fought me at Domenici’s, I saw no prosiness.”

  Val brightened. “And wasn’t that something? I have never known my brother provoked in such a way. Town could talk of nothing else for a week. I could almost believe we were cut from the same cloth.”

  “You will drive any woman demented in a week,” she said.

  “Val’s betrothed is in the unfortunate position of being expected to tame him,” Julius observed.

  Val made a sound of disgust. “As if Charlotte could do anything of the kind! She is immensely forbearing, but neither of us intend to make our betrothal permanent any time soon.”

  Had he found someone who would agree to a false proposal? His parents were exceedingly keen to see their wayward son settle to more suitable behavior. Perhaps Val had agreed to marry the unfortunate Charlotte merely to quiet his family for a time. Having not yet met the saint Charlotte sounded like, Viola was unable to judge. Nor, if she was to be honest, did she care at this moment. Only one person occupied her thoughts.

  “May I suggest you retire for an hour or two?” Julius said gently. “You appear considerably worn by the ordeal. If you can sleep, time will pass quicker. Failing that, I would enjoy showing you my villa and gardens.”

  She liked that the choice would be hers. But while such worry bowed her down, she feared she wouldn’t take pleasure from anything. “I would appreciate retiring. That is, if you don’t mind.”

  “Not at all,” Julius said. “Once I hear of the successful conclusion to this enterprise, I will take myself back to town. Feel free to treat this house as your own for as long as you wish.”

 

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