Jane and the Prisoner of Wool House

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by Stephanie Barron


  “Are you, in fact, a surgeon?” I enquired curiously. “Is any part of your testimony the truth?”

  LaForge shrugged, “I told you, de vrai, what I had seen. As for my profession—a man may be anything his circumstance demands, mademoiselle. Certainly I have studied physiognomy in my day; I have worked among some of the finest men of science that Paris may offer; I am no stranger to the scalpel and saw. I have also killed a chicken and eaten him for my dinner from time to time—but if you would ask whether it is as a butcher that I earn my bread …” He smiled, and said nothing further.

  “I think,” Frank said sharply, “that you owe us a complete explanation, Monsieur LaForge.”

  “If you will give me another cup of that excellent tea,” the Frenchman returned, “I shall be happy to oblige.”

  The tea was fetched, and placed in his hands; his back propped against a pile of empty sacks that served as a Wool House pillow; and the four of us ranged around him expectantly, Frank with his face to the door and an expression of wariness on his features.

  “I was not always as you see me now,” LaForge began. “I shall not wear at your patience with tales of my youth in the Haute Savoie—of my father, Gaspar, Comte de la Forge; or of my mother Eugenie; I shall say nothing of how they spent their winters paying court at Versailles, and were counted among the blessed of France. You know enough of the fate of such people in our Revolution—you have heard, even in England, of the guillotine. I will begin only with myself as I was in 1792, an orphan of thirteen years, sent to live with my maternal uncle—Eugenie’s younger brother, a captain of Grenadiers. He had a fine revolutionary fervour, Hippolyte; he had a fine revolutionary bride, and a fine revolutionary daughter—a girl named Genevieve, my cousin.”

  “Aha!” I murmured.

  His brown eyes found my face. “Genevieve was a sort of perfection, to a boy of my turbulent history. She was younger than myself by seven years, a child of sweetness and laughter who grew, with time, into a beautiful young woman. My uncle, in turn, grew into one of the Emperor’s most respected officers. He died last year at Jena—but by that time, Genevieve’s hand had been sought in marriage by every notable in France. My cousin had refused them for years—I like to think because it was me she loved. But then the Emperor himself came to call.”

  “Buonaparte already possesses an empress,” I observed. “And thus we must assume his attentions were dishonourable.”

  “The Empress Josephine cannot bear children,” LaForge replied. “Napoleon is mad for an heir, you understand; he talks of nothing but divorce. There are some who claim he has debauched his own stepdaughter, the Princess Hortense, in order to get a child of Josephine’s blood—but I will spare you the sordid-ness of court intrigue.2 It is enough to know that he paid his court at my Genevieve’s feet, and that Napoleon was the death of her.”

  “Your cousin was not flattered by the Emperor’s esteem?”

  “She took him in such dislike, that her father considered a complete break with his sovereign in order to protect his child. But he was embroiled in Austria, you understand. He wrote to urge my protection for Genevieve—and when I learned of his fears, I threw up my studies at the Sorbonne and fixed myself at my cousin’s side.”

  LaForge paused, and sipped his tea.

  “I had loved her for years, of course; but I could not hope for her heart in return. I was nothing—my estates had been seized, my patrimony hidden. I was not the Comte de la Forge, as I should have been, but a man of science labouring in obscurity. All seemed well, once I returned to my aunt’s household; but then my uncle was killed at Jena not three months later.

  “Genevieve was determined to see in his death a vengeful murder. She could not believe that her father must fall like any soldier in batde; the cannonball that sundered his frame must have been sent with diabolic purpose. It was her fault, she believed, that her papa lay dead; he had been crushed by a ghoul who was determined to have her virtue.”

  “Another reader of horrid novels,” Frank murmured in my ear.

  “I did not comprehend the depths of my Genevieve’s despair. The Emperor paid a call of condolence upon his return to Paris; he kissed my cousin’s hand, and uttered phrases of comfort for her ears alone. Later I learned the import of his words: since my uncle had died without a son, his fortune was entirely forfeit to the state, and my aunt and cousin would be thrown into the street. Unless, of course, Genevieve could find some way of earning her bread …

  “She came to me that night and begged me to take her from Paris. She would go anywhere I liked, as long as we were far from the Emperor’s clutches. She had not reckoned, however, with my sense of honour: I could not abandon my uncle’s fortune to the rogue, without attempting to fight. I told her I would contest the forfeit of the estate, on behalf of my widowed aunt and Genevieve; we would try what the law might do. Later, while the household slept, Genevieve threw herself from her bedroom window.”

  “How horrible!” I exclaimed.

  LaForge stared at me, his eyes implacable now. “I had no love for the Empire. It had cost me all that was dear. But I could take my revenge. My uncle had long been intimate with the Emperor’s closest counsels. He knew all of Napoleon’s plans, his perfidious intentions with regard to Europe. It was within my grasp to hand these to the only power capable of crushing the Monster: the Crown of England.

  “I returned to the Sorbonne and requested the aid of a person I shall not name—a fellow man of science, who knew a good deal of British politics. He sent a message to your Admiralty, which has always been in command of certain funds disbursed for the purpose of buying information. I did not require recompense. I required the satisfaction of seeing the Monster’s ambitions thwarted wherever he turned. I waited a few weeks in apprehension and impatience, and at last I was instructed how to act I must take my uncle’s maps and papers, and embark upon an expedition of science—a survey of the flora native to the Pyrenees. While thus employed, I must cross over the mountains into Portugal and make my way by degrees to the coast. An English ship would await me there.”

  “Except that your message was intercepted,” suggested Frank, “and instead of a British ship, you were collected by the Manon”

  “Indeed. You know it all. I was seized by Porthiault himself and locked into a cabin, without so much as a word to the Manon’s crew. I feared the worst—my plot exposed, my uncle’s name besmirched, his fortune confiscated, and my aunt degraded. My trial and execution would prove a sensation; but of that I thought nothing. I believe my most bitter sensation was one of regret. I had intended to avenge the death of Genevieve—and I had failed.”

  “And then Seagrave attacked,” my brother said.

  “—Barely six hours after I was pulled off Corunna! One of the first British balls destroyed the wall of the cabin in which I was held; I freed myself from my bonds, dashed out onto the deck, and was handed a weapon as a matter of course by the frenzied crew. I used it to despatch Captain Porthiault; he was the only man on board ship who knew the truth of my crimes. Then I descended to the cockpit hold, and made myself useful in attending to the wounded who collected there, for the Manon had sailed without a surgeon.”

  LaForge set down his teacup with an air of finality.

  “I believe we understand the rest,” said Mr. Hill.

  Jeb Hawkins stood and extended his hand. “I should like the honour of shaking yours, mon-sewer, as a cool-headed cove and no mistake.”

  The Frenchman smiled faintly, and grasped the Bosun’s Mate’s paw.

  “But, Monsieur LaForge,” I attempted, “would you suggest that the Admiralty intended for Captain Seagrave to take you off Corunna? And that the interception of your communications by Captain Porthiault was merely a dreadful mistake—the engagement of the Manon an extraordinary piece of luck on your part—and the whole episode of Chessyre’s treachery a matter of happenstance, rather than design?”

  The Frenchman studied my face. “That is how it appears, mademoiselle,
does it not?”

  “Did the Admiralty possess any intelligence of your seizure?” I persisted. “Could they have known, at the event, that you were taken by the French?”

  “I must think it unlikely.”

  “You made no attempt, while a prisoner at Wool House, to reveal your identity to the authorities—beyond this vague plea for sanctuary on British shores.”

  “I feared a spy in the Admiralty,” LaForge said quiedy. “Few persons were aware of my existence or plans. It was possible, I thought, that my friend at the Sorbonne had been betrayed—that he had broken under the methods of Napoleon’s police—but it was equally possible that an English traitor had exposed me. Silence, and caution, appeared the only guarantors of safety. But when I heard of Miss Austen’s anxiety for Seagrave— of the court-martial and its terreurs—I saw an opportunity to bargain. That much I might do.”.

  A silence fell—a silence heavy with indecision and doubt

  “We must regard the sealed orders as entirely above-board,” Frank said abruptly. “Sir Francis Farnham should be unlikely to risk the life of an agent—particularly one bearing such vital information—merely to despatch a jealous rival. I cannot believe that even so arrogant a man would place his affairs before those of King and Country.”

  “Nor can I,” agreed Mr. Hill.

  “Unless,” countered LaForge delicately, “Sir Francis betrayed the Grown long ago. He is perfectly positioned, is he not, to play havoc with the Emperor’s enemies?”

  Frank’s eyes widened; the idea of such perfidy—such conscious working at deceit—was utterly new and repugnant to him; he must recoil, he must refuse the knowledge. I thought fleetingly of my cynical friend, Lord Harold Trowbridge; not for him the innocence of a post captain. He should have weighed and considered the Baronet’s guilt long before.

  “We cannot determine whether Sir Francis is capable of both murder and high treason on the evidence of this man alone,” said Mr. Hill, as though privy to my inmost thoughts. “What remains for us is to guard his life and the secrets he holds. Where, if I may ask, are your uncle’s documents now, Monsieur LaForge?”

  “Where they have been for the past six weeks,” he calmly replied. “In the hollow interior of my walking-stick. Do you have it still?”

  Without a word, Mr. Hill rose and went to a cupboard near the hearth at the rear of the room. He withdrew a slender parcel wrapped in white cloth, and unwrapped it reverently.

  “The catch is designed to open at my hand,” observed LaForge, turning the stick dexterously in his elegant fingers. “I do not believe the Marines of Wool House have even considered of it. There!”

  The silver knob fell off into his palm, and a tight roll of yellowed papers slid from the tube. “If you will guarantee me safe passage to London, I shall carry the papers there myself.”

  “London!” said Frank, with an eye for Mr. Hill. “That is bearing the viper straight to Sir Francis’s breast.”

  “Sir Francis is as yet in Southampton,” returned Mr. Hill pointedly. “But I cannot be easy in Monsieur LaForge’s safety. Sir Francis will know, even now, of the fire on the prison hulk; he shall enquire, and he is not a fool, as to the fate of LaForge.”

  “Perhaps it would be better for us all if LaForge had died,” I said slowly. “Then the eyes of enquiry should turn elsewhere, and leave us all in peace.”

  Mr. Hill stared at me in surprise and consternation. Then he seized my meaning, and his looks altered.

  “A fortunate death?”

  “With a certificate affirming the hour and cause, penned by a reputable surgeon.”

  —One who had seen the patient often in his care,” Frank said quickly, “and must be trusted to know the man and his condition. It is imperative the news of the Frenchman’s death be published at once.”

  Etienne LaForge thrust himself to his feet, his headless stick held before him like a sword. His face had drained of colour.

  With a sudden movement, Jeb Hawkins placed himself between the Frenchman and my brother; in his hand was the seaman’s knife he had used to cut my dreadful knot

  There’ll be no murder done tonight, gentlemen,” he said warningly, “unless it’s your blood I shed in defence of a brave man.”

  Frank gaped—Mr. Hill nearly choked—but I burst out in shaky laughter.

  “Not murder, Mr. Hawkins—only its parody,” I told him. “We mean to hide our friend in the surest way we know, by declaring him dead, and smuggling him out of the city.”

  The Bosun’s Mate went still. He considered my words an instant then let out a low, admiring whistle. “The lads at the dockyard allus said as the Cap’n was a rare fighting gentleman, miss—but you’re no dithering ninny, neither.”

  “Thank you for the compliment, Mr. Hawkins. Will you put up your knife, and fetch a hackney chaise? My brother, I am certain, will bear the charge.”

  1“… fall between Charybdis and Scylla.” This is similar to the English phrase “between a rock and a hard place,” or “out of the frying pan, into the fire.”—Editor’s note.

  2LaForge refers here to Hortense de Beauharnais (1783-1837), the daughter of Empress Josephine’s first husband, a nobleman guillotined in the Revolution; Hortense was forcibly married in 1802 to Louis Napoleon, brother of the Emperor, and her third son, Charles-Louis Napoleon—whom court rumor identified as Buonaparte’s—eventually became Napoleon III. He ruled France from 1852 to ‘71.—Editor’s note.

  Chapter 22

  In Gaoler’s Alley

  Sunday,

  1 March 1807,

  cont.

  ~

  THE BOSUN’S MATE HAD ONLY TO COMPREHEND WHAT was wanted, to devise a suitable plan.

  “Yon Frenchman is not fit to take the mail to London,” he decided. “He’s as weak as a newborn lamb, and that’s a fact. And though he speaks the King’s English to admiration, he’s not without the sound of foreign parts; there’d be those as were curious how a Frenchie came to travel our roads as free as a lord.”

  “A private hack might answer,” said Frank impatiently.

  “—but for the powers of Sir Francis,” persisted Jeb Hawkins. “That roguish gentleman has only to learn of the Captain’s hiring a conveyance at the Dolphin, to have the chaise followed and waylaid on the road.”

  “But he shall believe Monsieur LaForge is dead,” I pointed out.

  “He’ll hear as much,” said Hawkins grimly, “but don’t you be certain, ma’am, as he’ll believe the same, without the sight of the corpus in his own eyes. If you wish to safeguard the mon-sewer’s life, you could do worse than to trust Giles Sawyer.”

  “Giles Sawyer?” said my brother blankly.

  “He’s a coffin-builder in the town, Cap’n, and a rare mate o’ mine. He’d be sailing with the Hearts of Oak still, if it weren’t for Boney having taken off his leg. Giles’d be agreeable, I reckon, to shifting the Frenchie in his cart to London—and if the mon-sewer don’t mind a bit of confinement, and travel by the slow road, he might rest secure until Kingdom Come.”

  “Not quite so far, I beg of you,” said Etienne LaForge; but there was laughter behind his words. “First you would have me dead, then pack me off to London in a casket, hein? The English—they are plotters a la merveille. Ban. I shall go to my death with a will, as you say. Monsieur, I applaud you.”

  It required only the addition of Nell Rivers to the cart, as principal mourner for her dead husband; Frank’s note of explanation for the delivery of LaForge to the home of our brother, Henry, in Brompton; and a second note of introduction vouching for the Frenchman’s probity, to Henry’s acquaintance Lord Moira, who might be depended upon to convey LaForge to the First Lord.1

  “I shall be off to nab old Giles directly,” said the Bosun’s Mate, and fixed his cap upon his head.

  My brother paid him the courtesy of a bow. “I could wish there were more men of fibre like yourself, Mr. Hawkins, as yet in the Royal Navy. We are greatly in need of your wit and courage—and greatly in
your debt.”

  “Now, then,” said Mr. Hawkins sternly, as though Frank were an errant Young Gendeman, “none of that misty palaver. I’ll have Giles bring the cart round the back of Wool House, and carry the coffin inside; he has nobbut to do but poke a few holes in the sides, so that the mon-sewer don’t stifle, and we’ll all be right as rain.”

  I COULD NOT BEAR TO PART FROM MY CONSPIRATORS before the conclusion of such a business, and thus found myself at home as late as nine o’clock. My mother had retired with a hot posset, but poor Mary was as yet abroad and beside herself with apprehension on her husband’s part. When the door to Mrs. Davies’s establishment opened to reveal only myself, the poor girl nearly fainted from fretted nerves.

  “Where is Frank?” she implored, and clutched at Martha Lloyd’s arm for support.

  “He is making the rounds of the taverns,” I told her, “in the company of Mr. Hill, the naval surgeon, and is no doubt better fed than I. Has Jenny retired for the evening?”

  “Taverns!”

  “There has been a fire, Mary, on a hulk moored in Southampton Water, and Mr. Hill fears the loss of one of his patients.” We had determined among ourselves that if the ruse of LaForge’s death was to bear weight, it must be supported in the bosom of our family as well as in the town. “The Frenchman who gave testimony at Captain Seagrave’s trial is believed lost in the sea. Frank is conversing with all and sundry in an effort to learn of the unfortunate man’s fate.”

  “Good God!” ejaculated Frank’s wife. “Shall we never be free of that wretched affair? Tom Seagrave is gone to gaol, and still my husband will not accept his guilt. Hang Tom Seagrave, I say, and be done!”

  “Come and lie down, Mary,” interposed Martha gently. “You should have been abed long since. I believe, Jane, that Mrs. Davies left a little bread and soup on the kitchen hearth; you might enquire for your supper.” And with a speaking look for me, my friend led Mary firmly towards the stairs.

 

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