Seasons of War 2-Book Bundle

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Seasons of War 2-Book Bundle Page 49

by CHERYL COOPER


  Emily raised her head off her pillows. “What did I say?”

  “Were ya havin’ a nightmare?”

  “I … I don’t remember having one.”

  “Well, ya kept callin’ out to someone.”

  “Who?”

  “Someone named Leander,” she said, narrowing her eyes, “and I don’t suppose it was the mythical Leander ya were addressin’ — the one what swum the Hellespont to be with his Hero.”

  1:00 p.m.

  Hartwood Hall

  The music room was bright with afternoon sunlight, making a more favourable impression upon Emily, who had first viewed it while it had been cloaked in a dank gloom. Helena Lindsay, however, had chosen to drink her tea far from the brilliance that filtered through the far wall’s elegant window, preferring to be near the entrance to the room, in the cooler shadows beneath the portrait of her eighth son. Perhaps she hoped to make a fast exit, or be in a position to call for help if Emily became too unmanageable. She turned her thin face in Emily’s direction, but did not rise from her chair; instead, she extended one slim, amber-bejewelled hand, inviting her to sit opposite her at the small, round mahogany table.

  “Tea?”

  “Yes, thank you,” said Emily, lowering herself into the green-and-crimson-striped damask of the proffered chair, not daring to glance at the haunting portrait behind the duchess. She kept her eyes on the woman’s slender fingers as she decorously lifted the silver pot and poured steaming tea into an exquisite china cup before handing it off to Emily.

  “I trust you are feeling better, Emeline,” Helena said in that peculiar voice of hers.

  “I am, thank you,” said Emily. “I didn’t realize how exhausted I was, but then I’ve not slept in a real bed for months. Ship hammocks do not provide the same level of comfort.”

  “No, I should think not,” said Helena with disinterest. She kept her lips attached to her cup for a significant moment before speaking again. “And shall we have the pleasure of your presence at the ball on Saturday, or shall you be keeping to your room?”

  Feeling as if she were agreeing to a public beheading, Emily was slow to reply. “I would be honoured to join your family and friends.”

  “Good. My husband did mention a postponement of our soiree, but I wouldn’t hear of it. I’ve ordered a gown of cream silk and matching turban, and look much forward to shedding these ghastly mourning weeds. If I have my way, I’ll never again wear a gown of crepe or bombazine.” The harsh lines on either side of Helena’s mouth curved into a smug smile as she gazed out the large window.

  Following the woman’s eyes to the far end of the room, Emily caught a glimpse of red-haired Fleda running about in the back courtyard with a handsome, excitable dog. But there was no evidence of enjoyment on Helena’s face as she watched her daughter at play, and soon she turned again to Emily.

  “Glenna tells me you have no decent habiliments, and you most certainly cannot wear that to the ball,” she simpered, her eyes flickering over Emily’s blue-and-white-striped dress.

  “I would think you’d prefer to see me dressed thus than attired for the evening in a pair of seaman’s trousers and scarf,” said Emily, her blood beginning to simmer.

  Helena arched her dark eyebrows. “Its colours are not becoming; you look very yellow in it. I daresay the Prince Regent would be horrified to see you dressed in such an inferior rag; I know your Uncle Clarence was.”

  Emily took a deep breath. “As my uncle seemed in such a hurry to bring me here, he didn’t consider stopping by Windsor to collect any of my belongings. As for the clothes I brought with me for the journey across the Atlantic … they were all lost on the Amelia. I am certain you can understand … it’s not easy to acquire women’s clothing while at sea.”

  “These ships you were on … could you not have insisted one of them stop in New York or Boston so that you could disembark and purchase clothing worthy of your social standing?”

  “For the most part, I was travelling on Royal Navy ships.”

  Helena gave her a blank look. “Then what was the problem?”

  Emily wrestled down her mounting impatience. “We avoided American ports, as our country is at war with the United States.”

  “Yes, but it’s not a real war,” Helena said, studying the pattern on her teacup. “Is it?”

  The heart-stopping boom of cannons, musket fire, and men’s piteous cries resounded in Emily’s ears. The smells and horrors of Leander’s hospital rose before her like a knife-wielding murderer. The shock of Octavius Lindsay lifting the gun to his head and …

  “I’m afraid it is very real.”

  “How fascinating,” she said with the enthusiasm of a dozing dog. “And all this time at sea, did you never once get off whichever ship you happened to be on?”

  “While on Trevelyan’s ship, we did make one stop … in Charleston —”

  “Charleston! And you couldn’t find any shops in Charleston? And here I understood it to be quite the fashionable city.”

  “I was Trevelyan’s prisoner. I was not allowed out of his sight, and therefore had no opportunity to go shopping.”

  “I see,” said Helena through her teeth.

  “My Uncle Clarence informed me of a generous allowance the Prince Regent has made available to me. Perhaps it was given to you for safekeeping?”

  Helena responded with a graceful nod, but said nothing.

  “If I could trouble you for … a portion of it … and for a carriage ride into London, perhaps I could buy a few necessary habiliments before the ball.”

  Helena regarded her with cold indifference. “As you are still a child, Emeline, and therefore likely to spend it on frivolous amusements, I’ve been instructed by your family to manage your allowance.”

  A silence dropped between them like the ghastly thud of a guillotine. The force of those words felt like a slap to the face, leaving Emily stifling the urge to return the blow. Fortunately, before she dumped the contents of the teapot upon Helena’s lacquered curls, relief arrived in the form of a distraction as the world outside the music room enlivened with the noisy clatter of wheels on gravel. Both women eagerly sought the window, and watched as three large wagons entered the courtyard and came to a stop before Hartwood’s north doors, there to be greeted by Fleda, her prancing dog, and a number of the household staff.

  Helena set down her teacup in a manner that intimated the interview was at an end. “Ah, this will be the French chef I hired for the ball, and the first of the supplies. Now I must oversee to their unloading, and make certain they’ve brought us wax candles and the right cuts of meat for our guests.” She rose from her chair; Emily following suit.

  “Do not despair about your simple dress and lack of accessories at this time, Emeline. My maid has been busy these past days, making a most sumptuous gown for you.” Helena studied Emily’s head as if she were examining a poorly executed painting. “And on Saturday, once she’s set my hair, she’ll be exceedingly pleased to dress yours.”

  They exchanged bows, and Emily, her temples throbbing with pain, watched her drift from the music room and into the antechamber. Lost in a helpless stare long after Helena’s footsteps had echoed away, Emily tightened her fists. Though her mind was a vexatious jumble, a slight movement near one of the chamber’s columns caught her attention. At first she thought a member of the household staff had come to alert the duchess of the deliveries; however, the figure that emerged did so with a degree of surreptitiousness, leaving her wondering if perhaps she had spotted an eavesdropper. For a fleeting moment, as the figure dashed from the column and into the safety of Hartwood’s endless halls, Emily’s eyes met those of Lord Somerton.

  10

  Friday, August 13

  Near Midnight

  Aboard HMS Amethyst

  Magpie’s eye popped open. In the blackness of the sail room on the Amethyst’s orlop deck, he froze in his hammock, hardly daring to breathe, and listened to the night. What was it that had disturbed his sleep:
a figment of a frightening dream, the wind whipping the ship’s old timbers, or someone lurking beyond the door — a drunken sailor, perhaps — trying to feel their way to their bed in the blinding darkness?

  Three decks up the quartermaster tolled the ship’s bell eight times. Magpie had been late retiring on this night, thrilled to have been invited to play games with the young midshipmen in their lively berth, but he had no idea if the eight bells marked the end of the First Watch or the Middle Watch — if it was midnight or four in the morning. Then again, maybe it was dawn, later than Magpie had surmised, and one of the men simply had need of a new sail.

  But his good sense told him otherwise.

  There … there it was again! That sound! A rattling of the door latch! Someone was attempting to get in. Magpie yanked his blanket to his nose, but his alarm prevented him from calling out, or scrambling for a weapon of some kind, or blocking the door with rolls of heavy canvas. If someone had come to do him harm, he was in a hapless predicament.

  The door opened with a foreboding creak; a lantern’s glow eerily illumined the sail room, sending Magpie into a cold sweat. Peering over his thin blanket, he watched helplessly as a longhaired sailor — hunched over on account of the orlop’s low ceiling — ambled toward the corner where Magpie kept the sails stacked up against the wall. The man muttered to himself, queer, incoherent words, and — as if incited to a fit of rage — began vandalizing the canvas rolls, hurling them about, and tearing at the sturdy material with his teeth. Was he looking for something? Did he think he’d stumbled into the closet that housed Captain Prickett’s wine and spirits? Was he under the misconception that Magpie had stolen his purse of coins and hidden it here in this room?

  As suddenly as it had begun, the man’s fit ceased, and he turned on his heels and trudged toward Magpie’s hammock. For a brief second, the lantern cast light upon the sailor’s countenance, revealing swollen, ugly features and a conspicuous nose. Magpie stiffened like a cadaver and squeezed his eye shut. Best to pretend he was sound asleep, though no silent coaxing could slow the awful hammering of his heart.

  Hoisting the lantern high above the hammock, the man stood transfixed for an eternity, growling like a mad dog and releasing vapours of stinking breath that reeked of rotting meat. Magpie was so grateful for the blanket that enshrouded his nose. Holding his breath, bracing for the worst, he feared the man’s hands would soon close on his throat and crush the life from him; instead he set the lantern down upon the floor and snatched the Isabelle hat from his pillow. Then laughter — surely a sound only a savage could create — filled the dimensions of the sail room, and the man — much to Magpie’s relief, for he could again draw breath — shuffled away from his bed. With his eye still tightly shut, it was hard to discern his exact whereabouts as he delivered words that chilled Magpie to the bone.

  “Time’s comin’ when ya won’t be seein’ outta the other eye neither.”

  Then Magpie heard no more.

  Wild-eyed, he risked a peek over his blanket, fully expecting to find the man brandishing one of his sharp sail-making tools, or preparing to set the room afire, but he was gone; he’d vanished, as if he had slipped through the oak walls of the ship, taking the Isabelle hat with him.

  Liberating all of his anxiety in one giant whoop, Magpie propelled himself from his hammock, his bare feet barely touching the floor. He seized the deserted lantern and dashed for the exit, beyond caring if the man — the spectre — lay in wait behind the door, intent on tearing him apart with his teeth. He would not … he could not spend the remainder of the night in the sail room.

  Saturday, August 14

  7:30 a.m.

  (Morning Watch, Seven Bells)

  With a start, Leander straightened in his chair. While he yawned he looked with dismay at the ink-blotted, crumpled letter upon his hospital desk, which had spent the night under the weight of his crossed arms and sleeping head. What would Emily think if she were to receive such a letter? Surely she would believe an interloper had rescued it from the wastebasket, and it was, therefore, not meant for her consumption. He tucked it away in his writing box with myriad others neatly addressed to her, in care of the Duke of Clarence at Bushy House. What did it matter that not a single one had yet been dispatched to her? In all likelihood, he would be back in London before the Amethysts met with and entrusted their homeward-bound letters to the crew of a fast-sailing clipper, en route to England, and thus be able to hand deliver them himself. The prospect made him smile.

  Standing up, he stretched out the knots in his back, gazing as he did so into the forepeak’s narrowing, wishing — as he always did — that Emily’s cot was hanging there as it had on the Isabelle, and she still slumbered there … and that he could soon wake her to delight once again in her sleepy smile.

  “Is that a sigh I’m hearin’ from ya, Doctor?” asked Biscuit, lumbering into the hospital with the ponderous breakfast tray.

  Leander took the tray from the cook, whose own breakfast leftovers were still wedged between his grey teeth, and plunked it down upon his desk. “It is!”

  “Why, ya should be givin’ thanks! No sails on the horizon, fresh winds, the Lady Jane is still sailin’ within scope like a good lass.”

  “Yes,” Leander said, lost in thought, “another long, uneventful day —”

  “Is it eventful ya want? Now ya’re not hopin’ fer a battle, and yer hammocks to fill up with the dead and dyin’, are ya?”

  “I think you know me better than that.”

  Biscuit placed his roughened hands on his hips and winked his good eye. “I suppose yer recallin’ the time when a lovely princess were keepin’ ya company.”

  Leander poured milk into his morning tea and kept his face hidden from Biscuit, not caring to have the cook guess his feelings. “That seems a lifetime ago now,” he replied quickly, handing Biscuit two wooden bowls of oatmeal. “Now, if you please, help me pass round the breakfast.”

  Although Biscuit was happy to oblige, the moment he set off on his task he let loose a deprecating snarl. “Ach, Doctor, ya might’ve warned me ya had a fifth patient, so’s I knew how many oats to boil.”

  Leander swung around in time to see Magpie’s curly head appear above the side of a hammock that he had assumed was empty. There was a worrying redness in the boy’s one eye, and his face was swollen and blotchy. “Biscuit, would you see to a cup of chocolate for our newest patient?”

  “Right away, sir,” the cook chirped, departing at once for the galley.

  Leander dispensed the breakfast bowls to his four other patients before checking in with Magpie. “And why didn’t you wake me?” he asked, pretending to be cross.

  “’Cause I felt sorry fer ya, sir, sleepin’ at yer desk.”

  “Are you unwell?”

  “Nay, but I —” Magpie paused to study the faces of the others in the hospital, as if he were looking for someone in particular. “Ya don’t mind me comin’ here, and pilferin’ a hammock and all, do ya, sir?”

  “You know I don’t.” Leander dragged his chair over to Magpie’s bedside and sat down. “Now then, tell me what brings you here?”

  Magpie opened his mouth to speak, but stopped short, and glanced around him again. The four patients, who previously had been occupied with the mechanics of silently spooning oatmeal into their mouths, had all lifted their chins to listen.

  Recalling a time on the Isabelle when Octavius Lindsay had posed a threat to the boy, Leander leaned in closer. “Is there someone … someone bothering you?”

  Magpie fixed his eye on Leander’s face, and whispered, “I bin seein’ and hearin’ things.”

  “What kind of things?”

  “He’s bin comin’ at night.”

  “Who?”

  “The spectre.”

  “The spectre?”

  “Last night he were in the sail room.”

  Leander relaxed his furrowed brow. “Did he hurt you?”

  “Nay, but I almost fainted dead away with fear.�


  Biscuit hurried into the hospital with Magpie’s cup of chocolate and handed it off to him. “Are ya okay, wee lad?”

  Leander’s tone was crisp. “Magpie’s fine, thank you, Biscuit, but I should like time alone with him. Could you engage my google-eyed patients in conversation? Lead a sing-song if you must.”

  Biscuit grinned. “I’ll tell ’em a few jokes, sir, to keep their ears off o’ ya.”

  “Now then, Magpie,” Leander said, returning to boy, “start at the beginning.”

  “The first time, I saw him on deck — at night, in Halifax … all legs and arms he was, like a spider, and he said such things, strikin’ terror in me somethin’ fierce.”

  “And you’ve no idea who he was.”

  “I bin thinkin’ he ain’t real, sir.”

  Leander crossed his arms as he pondered that one. “First off, tell me about last night.”

  “He came into the sail room … through the door … holdin’ a lantern, and he messed around with the sails, and stole me Isabelle hat from under me nose. And when he left … well, I think he passed right through the side o’ the ship.”

  “Are you quite certain of that?”

  “I ain’t certain ’o nothin’, sir.”

  Being no closer to understanding Magpie’s plight, Leander’s lips curled in disgust upon hearing intrusive steps on the ladder and the simpering voice of Lord Bridlington.

  “Doctor, come away from the sailmaker. You must attend me at once.”

  Leander could not resist a sardonic reply. “Did Captain Prickett make good on his promise and perform a botched amputation on you?”

  The hospital inhabitants laughed, Biscuit the loudest of them all, for, having distracted the patients with his wit, he was already warmed up and in a jokey mood. Twisting his neck around, Leander was disheartened to find Meg Kettle straggling behind the first lieutenant. “What rabble is this? Oh, Mrs. Kettle! And to what do we owe the pleasure of your company? Do you need immediate attending as well?”

 

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