The suite at the Hotel de France resembled an art gallery. Art boards were stacked in front of the wardrobes. Watercolors dotted every raised surface – the tallboy, the console table, the dressing table – even across Sophia’s bed, lay canvases of finished paintings.
“Good grief! Did you buy every last blank board in Palermo?”
Sophia picked her way through the mess and collapsed on Laura’s bed, which – surprise, surprise – was free of clutter.
“Have you taken your shoes off?” asked a disembodied voice from behind a large canvas on an easel that blocked most of the afternoon sunlight. Sophia rose with a groan and unbuttoned her shoes before falling back onto the bed. Laura peered out.
“Selim Omar said he is already making arrangements for an exhibition in Turkey in six weeks, and I want to have at least thirty pieces ready.”
“In six weeks! When did all of this happen?”
“Well, I don’t just sit on the balcony and eat bonbons while you and Uncle Jonas look at old things all day. As it happened, I did a portrait of the Turkish men in the pavilion after you left, then the sheik arrived and was so impressed by it he offered me one hundred pounds for it then and there, and invited me to give him a private showing in his suite.”
“You refused him, of course.”
“I did no such thing. He bought my painting, and he’s wealthy enough to buy more – even to be my patron. And besides…” Laura emerged from behind her painting, wiping her hands on a cloth. “He’s handsome in a swarthy sort of way – Samuel might be marrying a lady, but I could marry a prince!”
“Now you’re just being ridiculous.”
Laura lifted the completed canvas from the easel. Sophia flung an arm across her face to shield her eyes from the afternoon sun streaming in.
“As ridiculous as you having a secret lover?”
The question came across as an accusation. Sophia moved her arm and opened her eyes to find Laura standing over her, holding an envelope. Sophia took it and saw the seal was broken.
“You read it?”
Sophia’s censure was parried by one of Laura shrugs.
“A beautiful bouquet of flowers arrives unexpectedly. Naturally, I thought they were for me at first, but then I saw the envelope was addressed to you. So, of course I opened it.”
Sophia snatched the envelope and extracted the card:
“Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind
and therefore is wing’d cupid painted blind.”
When pressed, I’ll even quote Shakespeare for you.
—CJH
Sophia smiled broadly and held the note to her chest.
“I racked my brains for a good hour trying to work out the initials before I remembered Kit is short for Christopher,” Laura continued. “How long have you been having an affair with the captain of the Calliope?”
Sophia got up and went over to the bouquet of seasonal flowers on the console table and sniffed them appreciatively.
“Actually,” she said, pride filling her voice. “Kit Hardacre is paying me court.”
There was silence. Sophia turned back. Her cousin sat on the bed with her mouth open. As much as she loved Laura, there was selfishness in the girl that made her want to throttle her at times.
“Is it so difficult to believe?”
“Well, Captain Hardacre is a very handsome man but he’s…”
“Too handsome for me?”
“I was about to say adventurous.”
“For the timid little mouse of a cousin?”
“He’s also not Samuel.”
The accusation was clear.
“Samuel was never for me. You took great pains to tell me so. I may not be a wealthy heiress, but is it so unreasonable that a man might find me attractive?”
Laura huffed, furrowed a brow, and fired her next salvo. “Then you have no right to lecture me about proprieties with Sheik Selim Omar.”
“That is an entirely different matter.”
“Well, I don’t see how. If the man wants to flirt with me, then let him. What possible harm could it do? And besides, why is my precious virginity worth more than yours?”
“Laura!” Sophia was appalled.
“Oh, don’t get so missish, you know perfectly well what I mean.”
Sophia sighed. This was an argument she wasn’t going to win. It was better she bury the hatchet before Laura dug her heels in further. She went over to her cousin and hugged her.
“It’s only because I love you, Laura. You’re right, I can’t tell you what to do. I can only urge you strongly to exercise caution and recommend you do not meet alone with a man you do not know well or of whose intention you are uncertain – it doesn’t matter whether he’s a duke or a dustman. Or a prince.”
Laura leaned into Sophia’s embrace. Apparently, all was forgiven.
“I’m not going to the sheik’s apartments alone. Samuel has been invited along with me. Will you come with me, too?”
“When?”
“The day after tomorrow – that’s why I’m in such a fluster about finishing these paintings. Do you think Uncle Jonas can spare you?”
“I’m sure he can for a few hours.”
Laura looked up at her slyly. “You can tell Samuel about your lover and then you can see whether my brother is the jealous sort or not.”
Samuel poked his head into the room. “Who’s got a lover?”
Then he looked around at the artworks filling every surface, his question forgotten.
“Good God, Laura, the sheik wants to look at a few paintings, not take home a barge full.”
“Well, I don’t know which ones to take, Sam. Do you think he’ll like the streetscapes or the portraits?”
“How about these?” Sophia waved her arm over the paintings of the harbor, which lay on her bed.
“Do you think those are the best ones?”
“No!” she said with mock exasperation. “It’s because that’s my bed and I might actually want to sleep in it tonight.”
*
“So what do you make of it?”
Kit had just returned from a two day reconnoiter along the coast of Tunisia and stopped by Pantelleria to see Ahmed Sharrouf who claimed to have some news. He maintained a nonchalant pose by the mantel while Bentinck prowled the floor of his office.
“There’s some sort of gathering of pirates planned. Some of these men would sooner slit one another’s throats as not, so whatever it is would have to be important enough to put aside their own differences. Perhaps I should say someone important. I’m told Al-Min is preparing a feast fit for a sultan.”
Bentinck stopped pacing. “Do we know who?”
“I can guess.”
The pacing resumed. “Guessing isn’t good enough. I know you have good reason to dislike these people, but you can’t simply make unfounded allegations, and certainly not about the cousin of the Ottoman emperor.”
“Selim Omar is the only name that makes sense, William – since Napoleon is otherwise engaged.”
“Don’t be flippant. We still need the Ottomans, fickle allies though they are.”
“They’re no friends of ours while they allow their client states to freely plunder us for slaves.”
“Then give me something more, damn it! Something I can tell London. Proof. Not conjecture; not one of your tragic little stories.”
That Kit emerged into the sunshine less than satisfied was an understatement. Didn’t Bentinck understand the real danger here, or was he simply trying to keep a lid on a simmering pot? He fished out a cigar and struck a match on a stone wall.
Did he expect more? Even if there was more of the general and less of the politician in Bentinck, it would take months to get the Admiralty to agree to launch a barrage on Tunisia. He wasn’t sure they had that much time.
*
“Don’t drop it. I haven’t started cataloguing it yet.”
Kit turned the decorated jar over once more and placed it back on its shelf while Soph
ia took a small paintbrush, dipped it in a jar of water and wiped it across a piece of terracotta. She straightened the glasses on her nose. The water soaked in and faint engravings emerged from the piece. She sketched them swiftly before the image faded.
“If you’re going to hang around a musty old storeroom, you can make yourself useful by unpacking that crate there for me,” she said, barely looking up from her task. He obliged, examining the objects himself before setting them on the bench beside her.
“Where can I find out more about this Greek fire you mentioned?”
“Ah,” she said knowingly. She removed her glasses and set them down. “I wondered about your sudden interest in antiquities.”
“Not true!” he protested gamely, “but I do have a confession to make.”
“Hmmmm?”
“I only started to truly discover my passion when I met a smart, raven-haired beauty.” Kit punctuated his compliment with kisses, starting with her hair and moving on to her cheek, and then a tentative kiss to the corner of her mouth. He knew he was distracting her, but he didn’t care, although he did stop when she dabbed the end of his nose with her paintbrush.
“So what is it you want to know about Greek fire?”
“Elias and I have been wracking our brains trying to work out what it’s made of.”
“From the reading I’ve done, the concoction was a closely guarded secret. Kallinikos shared his knowledge with Byzantines and held Syrian invaders at bay for years with it, but no one seems to exactly know what it is made of.” Sophia shook her head. “A fire that burns on water… I find it hard to imagine such a thing. Perhaps it never existed – a myth like the city of Troy.”
“One might have said the same thing of Pompeii, but the proof of Greek fire is right here.” He picked up the brass figurehead, letting the hinged jaw drop open to prove his point.
Sophia closed the catalogue she had been working on to look at him.
“To quote Sir Richard Colt Hoare, the founding father of our science, ‘we speak from facts, not theory’. So let us summon up the facts.”
Kit made himself comfortable on top of a packing case. He imagined this was what being a student would be like. He’d never had any formal schooling, although he could thank a white eunuch, a man named Wauhope, for what education he did have. Wauhope had been a slave for thirty years when he first met the man, and he recalled Wauhope’s words: “An Englishman is always a gentleman, and a gentleman is always educated.”
These ruminations he kept private. He would tell Sophia everything about his past one day. Just not all at once. Now, though, the present was far more compelling.
Sophia left her seat and paced.
“As we all know, fire is a disaster on a ship, so it would have to be contained,” she said. “So it would need a container big enough to hold a usable amount.”
“A cauldron?” said Kit.
“Something contained – a boiler,” she answered. “Samuel has been working on steam boilers for engines. They’re powerful enough to drive locomotives and even ships. You’ll have to ask him the exact workings of it, but it has something to do with building up pressure and releasing it in a controlled manner.”
“Good idea. Propel the Greek fire under pressure, away from your own ship.”
“So what do you think it was made of?”
He shrugged, then gave it more serious thought. “Saltpeter, pitch, quicklime, sulphur, resin – some of those or all. As for the exact formulation, who knows?”
“You’re not thinking of experimenting with such a dangerous thing? You’ll burn the Calliope to the waterline.”
“We’ll practice on land first, I promise.”
She watched him, clearly not knowing whether he was serious or not. That suited him for the moment. The thought of the Calliope answering any enemy with a red-hot blast of fire appealed to him greatly. Any advantage over the galiots was worth pursuing.
He took in the figure of the woman in front of him with delicious curves that tempted him more than they should.
“Enough work for today,” he announced. “Join me tonight. I’ll teach you to dance the flamenco with me.”
The smile she offered him was one of relief.
“My savior!” she said, clutching her heart in mock drama before starting to put away her catalogue and Jonas’ research papers. “Laura has become completely unbearable. Our suite is filled with paintings for an exhibition she has been invited to give to the Ottoman envoy. She’s in a perfect panic, afraid she won’t complete them on time. I keep telling her ten paintings, fifteen are more than enough, but no, she’s set her heart on thirty.”
Kit was glad Sophia’s attention was elsewhere, it hid the sour expression he could feel cross his face. Was it naked prejudice that made him distrust Selim Omar? Perhaps it was something more. He was more than half-convinced Selim Omar was Kaddouri’s patron, but there was absolutely no evidence. But Kit had kept himself alive this last decade by learning to trust his instincts, and something told him there was more to the envoy’s invitations than diplomatic relations.
“When is her exhibition?”
“The day after tomorrow.”
Kit nodded although she wasn’t watching; an idea beginning to form.
“She will need a porter.”
Sophia looked at him over her shoulder, her eyes narrowed. So, she was aware he was up to something.
“A porter?”
“You know, to take in her paintings and hang them for display.”
He had her full attention now and it was full of suspicion. Sophia folded her arms, expecting an answer. He hid a smile. She must have been a terror managing the Cappleman household.
“I know what a porter is. Why would you offer? You don’t even like Selim Omar,” she said.
He stood, put an arm around her, and fashioned his most innocent expression.
“But I do like you, and I know you’re fond of your cousin. Two of my men will deliver the paintings and pick them up the next day – unless, of course, the Sheik decides to buy them all.”
Sophia leaned back to look at him better, her brow furrowed. “How come I don’t think you’re telling me the whole truth?”
“Would it matter if I did?”
“You’re answering a question with a question again.”
Kit let out a short laugh.
“Let me put it this way, if Sheik Selim Omar is a true connoisseur of the arts then Laura will have nothing to worry about.”
Chapter Twenty-Five
It was the end of another fine day in the city; a light breeze took the edge off the heat from the cloudless day and, now, one by one, stars emerged in the royal purple sky. Laura insisted on walking from the hotel to the palazzo rented by the sheik.
Sophia listened as she and Samuel chatted amiably about his plans to rejoin his friends before they continued across to Greece. And he made final plans for their voyage home in two weeks.
Sophia would go back, too – for Samuel’s wedding and perhaps to say goodbye to England for the last time. Samuel – being Samuel – seemed blissfully unaware of her romance with Kit. Perhaps that was for the best.
Kit had awoken something in her – not just passion, although true to his word, he hadn’t advanced his lovemaking beyond kisses and caresses, but also a confidence. She felt lighter; stronger somehow, as if Kit’s love strengthened her. He had been right about her crush on Samuel. It was a misplaced emotion born of gratitude, a need to belong, because she never did fit in amongst porcelain-skinned beauties, manners poised, dripping in jewels, engaging in witty bon mots – she had always felt inadequate in their company. But, here in Palermo with Kit and the crew of the Calliope, she felt she truly belonged.
She still loved Samuel. But now it was as a brother.
“My hands are shaking,” said Laura.
Sophia took a hand in hers. Indeed, it was shaking – and cold. Her heart went out to her cousin. She hadn’t seen Laura look so vulnerable since the age of tw
elve.
“Oh darling, there’s nothing to be scared about,” Sophia assured her. “Your paintings are wonderful. You are a truly talented artist, and it’s not just your family saying so either. After all, Sheik Selim wouldn’t want a private exhibition if he didn’t think your work was of the finest quality.”
“Buck up, Sis, and listen to Sophia,” Samuel added. “I may not tell you often but you are a good painter. Hey, I have an idea – perhaps you could give one of your paintings of the view of Palermo to Bentinck, and I could ask him to write a letter of recommendation to the Royal Academy.”
Laura smiled gamely as they approached the large gates that enclosed the palazzo compound. A guard, dressed in vivid green silk pantaloons and matching brocade waistcoat, opened a small gate and beckoned them through.
The courtyard was bathed in the sounds of splashing fountains, surrounded by lush greenery in raised garden beds. They walked along terracotta tiles and up the wide, low steps to the main building. Another servant bowed and opened the door wide.
“Come with me, this way,” said another man, dressed even more sumptuously than the servant. Sophia supposed he was the equivalent of a butler or an equerry.
Samuel stepped forward and was stopped. “A thousand pardons, not you, Sir. I will direct you to the sheik’s suites presently. It is our custom that ladies do not mix with men, and it is our Lord Selim Omar’s desire that our ladies see the delightful works of your sister. I would ask your indulgence in allowing them to spend a few hours to profit from it.”
Samuel looked her and Laura uncertainly.
“Well, if you and Sophia don’t mind…”
“It will be a pleasure, won’t it, Sophia?” said Laura with forced bravery in her voice. “A chance to talk to ladies from another land without menfolk interrupting.”
The equerry smiled.
“Wisdom as well as beauty.”
The man clapped twice. Beside her, Laura jumped at the reports. Another servant emerged and gestured down a corridor. The equerry directed Samuel up a marble staircase.
Down the hall, they saw another servant, an imposing black man, tall as well as large and armed with a sinister looking scimitar. He smiled at them but the effect was more frightening than welcoming. He opened the door into a large, airy suite that opened out into another private courtyard.
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