Authors: Alexander Kent
Bethune looked up suddenly. âIt seems the lords of the Admiralty are as much in the dark as we are!'
Adam said, âYou would know better than most, sir.' They both laughed, the tension all but gone.
He liked what he saw. Bethune had an open, intelligent face, a mouth which had not forgotten how to smile. He knew from Catherine's letters that she had trusted him. He could understand why.
Bethune said, âI almost forgot. When we reach Malta I should have more information to act upon.' He was making up his mind. âThere is a Lieutenant George Avery at my headquarters there. You will know him?'
âSir Richard's flag lieutenant, sir.' He felt his muscles tense,
but made another attempt. âThey were very close, I believe. I thought he had returned to England in
Frobisher
.'
âI did not force him to stay, but his knowledge is very valuable to me â to us. He was with Sir Richard when he dealt with the Algerines. And with a certain Spanish connection.' He smiled slightly. âI see that interests you?' He turned as muffled thuds came from the direction of the wardroom. Adam knew of the invitation, and that
Montrose
's captain would be there also. As a guest, as was the custom, although Adam had never known any captain refused entry to a wardroom in his own ship.
Bethune said, âIn any case, I did not have to press Lieutenant Avery. It seems he has nothing for which to return.'
I have a ship. George Avery has nothing
.
âI look forward to meeting him again. My uncle,' he hesitated, âand Lady Somervell spoke highly of him. As a friend.'
Bethune picked up his untouched glass of wine.
âI give you a sentiment, Adam. “To absent friends.”' He drank deeply and grimaced. âGod, what foul stuff!'
They both knew it was to hold at bay something far deeper, but when Captain Forbes and his first lieutenant arrived to escort them to the wardroom, they sensed nothing unusual.
Adam saw Forbes' eyes rest briefly on the old Bolitho sword, which lay beside Bethune's.
Why had he not seen it for himself? How could he have doubted it? It was still there, like a hand reaching out.
The lifeline.
SIR WILFRED LAFARGUE
waited while Spicer, his clerk, gathered up a bulky file of documents, and then folded his hands on the empty desk.
âI foresee several problems, perhaps serious ones, arising in the near future. But insurmountable? I think not.'
Normally, such a comment would leave a client hopeful, if not entirely satisfied. But Lafargue, as a lawyer and the senior partner of this prestigious firm which bore his name, was conscious only of its lack of substance.
He knew it was because of his visitor, standing now by the far window in this vast office. It was Lafargue's favourite view of the City of London, and the dome of St Paul's, a constant reminder of its power and influence.
Lafargue was always in command; from the moment the tall doors were opened to admit a client, potential or familiar, his routine never varied. There was a chair directly opposite this imposing desk, forcing the client to face the full light of the windows, more like a victim than one who would eventually be charged a fee which might make him blanch and reconsider before returning. Except that they always did return.
But this one was different. He had known Sillitoe for a good many years; Baron Sillitoe of Chiswick, as he now was. The Prince Regent's Inspector-General, and a man of formidable connections long before that. Feared, hated, but never ignored. Those who did regretted it dearly.
Sillitoe was a man of moods, and this again unsettled Lafargue; it broke the pattern of things and was disconcerting.
Restless, unable to remain still for more than a few minutes, he seemed disturbed by something which had not yet been revealed.
Lafargue, as usual, was expensively dressed, his coat and breeches cut by one of London's leading tailors, but the clothing could not completely disguise the signs of good living which made him appear older than his fifty-eight years. Sillitoe on the other hand had never changed; he was lean, hard, as if anything superfluous or wasteful had long since been honed away. A good horseman, he was said to exercise regularly, his secretary panting beside him while he outlined one or another of his schemes. He was also a swordsman of repute. For Lafargue it made the comparison even more difficult to accept. Sillitoe was the same age as himself.
Sillitoe was motionless, watching something below, perhaps the carriages wending their way towards Fleet Street, perhaps merely waiting for something. Lafargue saw that the doors were once more closed; Spicer had departed. As senior clerk he was invaluable, and although he appeared to be very dull he never missed the slightest nuance or inflection. Even here, at Lincoln's Inn, which Lafargue considered the very centre of English law, there were some things which should and must remain private. This conversation was one of them.
He said, âI have studied all the deeds available. Sir Richard's nephew Adam Bolitho, once known as Pascoe, is deemed the legal heir to the Bolitho estate and adjoining properties as listed . . .' He stopped, frowning, as Sillitoe said, âGet on with it, man.' He had not raised his voice.
Lafargue swallowed hard. âHowever, Sir Richard's widow and dependant, the daughter, will have some rights in the matter. They are supported by the trust instituted by Sir Richard. It may well be that Lady Bolitho will want to install herself at Falmouth where she did, in fact, enjoy a conjugal residency at one time.'
Sillitoe rubbed his forehead. What was the point? Why had he come? Lafargue was a celebrated lawyer.
Otherwise neither of us would be here.
He controlled his impatience. Lafargue would act when the time came. If it did . . .
He looked across at the other buildings, the small green expanses of parks and quiet squares, and saw St Paul's. Where
the nation, or a select few, would gather to pay homage to a hero. Some with genuine grief, others there only to be seen and admired. Sillitoe had never understood why any sane man would volunteer to spend his life at sea. To him, a ship was only a necessary form of transport. Like being caged, unable to move or act for himself. But he had accepted that others had different views, his nephew George Avery among them.
When they had last met he had offered him a position, one both important and, in time, lucrative. Sillitoe never threw money to the winds without proof of ability, and his nephew was a mere lieutenant, who had been passed over for promotion after being taken prisoner by the French; he had been freed only to face a court martial for losing his ship.
Any other man would have jumped at the opportunity, or at least shown some gratitude. Instead, Avery had returned to his appointment as Sir Richard Bolitho's flag lieutenant, and must have been with him when he had been killed.
He said flatly, âAnd what of Viscountess Somervell?' He did not turn from the window, although he heard the intake of breath. Another lawyer's ploy.
âIn the eyes of the law, she has no rights. Had they been at liberty to marry . . .'
âAnd the people? What will they say? The woman who inspired their hero, who displayed courage when most would fall back in despair? What of her part?'
He knew Lafargue would think he was referring to Catherine's bravery and strength in the open boat after the shipwreck; he was intended to. But Sillitoe was seeing something very different, something which had preyed on his mind and had never released him since he and his men had burst into the house by the river. Bruised and bleeding, stripped naked and with her wrists tied cruelly behind her back, she had fought her attacker. Sillitoe had held her against his body and covered her with a sheet or curtain, he could not remember what it had been or the exact order of things. His men beating her attacker, dragging him down the stairs, and then those moments alone with her, her head against his shoulder, her hair beautiful in disarray.
A nightmare. And he had wanted her. Then and there.
âThe people? Who listens to the
people
?' Lafargue was regaining his self-control. His old arrogance.
Sillitoe turned his back on the city, his face in shadow.
âIn France they listened. Eventually!'
Lafargue watched him, sensing the bitterness, the anger. And something else. He recalled Catherine Somervell coming here to consult him, at Sillitoe's suggestion, on a matter of purchasing the lease of a building where Bolitho's estranged wife lived, at her husband's expense. Belinda Bolitho had been horrified to discover that her home was owned by the woman she most hated. A woman scorned.
Lafargue's eyes sharpened professionally. No, there was far more to it than that. He watched Sillitoe, dressed all in grey as was his habit, move swiftly to the opposite side of the room. He had the ear of the Prince Regent, and when the King, drifting in madness, eventually died, who could say to what heights he might not rise?
Lady Somervell . . . he had thought of her as Catherine just now, which showed that he was unusually overwrought . . . was the key. Lafargue remembered her entering this room. She had walked straight towards him, her eyes never leaving his. To call her beautiful was an understatement. But a symbol could be soiled, and envy and spite were well known to Lafargue in the world of law.
They had praised Nelson to the skies, and those who had cried out the loudest had been the biggest hypocrites. A dead hero was safe, and could be remembered without anxiety or inconvenience.
Edward Berry, Nelson's favourite flag captain, had once quoted,
God and the navy we adore, when danger threatens but not before
.
Napoleon was said to be in retreat; it might soon be over. Not like the last time. Truly over . . .
How soon after that would those same people turn on the woman who had defied society and protocol for the man she loved?
He ventured, âIf Lady Somervell were to remarry . . . Her husband was killed in a duel, I understand.'
Sillitoe sat down abruptly. Everyone knew about Somervell, a gambler and a waster who had used much of Catherine's money to extricate himself from debt. A man who had plotted with Bolitho's wife to have his mistress imprisoned and
transported as a common thief. One of Bolitho's officers had called him out and had mortally wounded him. He had paid for it with his own life.
I would have killed him myself.
How much did Lafargue really know?
He would know, for instance, that the post of Inspector-General had once been Viscount Somervell's. Another bitter twist.
âI think it unlikely.' He tugged out his watch. âI must leave now.'
Lafargue asked, too casually, âAnd how goes the war?'
Sillitoe glanced around the room. âI shall see the Prince Regent this afternoon. He is more concerned with the army than the fleet at this moment. As well he might be.'
Lafargue stood. He felt unusually drained and could not explain it. He said, âI have received an invitation to the memorial service at St Paul's. The cathedral will be crowded to the full, I have no doubt.'
It was a question. Sillitoe said, âI shall be there.'
âAnd Lady Somervell?'
Sillitoe saw the double doors open silently. Perhaps there was a hidden bell, some sort of secret signal.
âShe has been invited.' Their eyes met. âPrivately.'
It told Lafargue nothing. He took his hat from the clerk, and sighed. It told him everything.
Unis Allday walked slowly around the small parlour, making certain that everything was as it should be. She knew she had already done it several times, but she could not help it. Beyond the open door she could hear voices, the only two customers at the Old Hyperion inn. Auctioneers from the sound of them, on their way to Falmouth for tomorrow's market.
Everything looked neat. There was a smell of freshly baked bread, and new casks of ale on their trestles, each with its own clean towel. She paused, and with her hands on her hips stared at her reflection in the looking-glass. She did not smile, but examined every feature as she would a new girl applying for work in the kitchen.
She shivered, staring at herself. As he would see her. His friend Bryan Ferguson had brought the news. The man-of-war
Frobisher
which had taken her man away from her last year was at Plymouth. John Allday was back, and coming home. She looked around the parlour again. Coming home. She allowed her mind to explore it. Never to leave her.
She could hear her brother, also named John, chopping wood for the kitchen. She had told him not to, with only one leg, but he was doing it for her. Allowing her this time to be alone.
She walked through the outer parlour. The auctioneers were still there but one was counting out money, and their horses were already at the door. She walked past them into the afternoon sunshine. Almost June, the summer of 1815. Where had it all gone, and so quickly?
She gazed down the empty road, the hedgerows rippling slightly under the breeze off Falmouth Bay, campion and foxglove splashing colour against the many shades of green. She turned and looked at the inn. She could not have done it without her brother. He had lost his leg in the line while serving with the Thirty-First regiment of foot, the Old Huntingtonshires. If it had been her, she thought, she would have given up. Now, freshly painted, the inn sign with the ship which had become so important in their lives was moving restlessly, as if the old
Hyperion
was remembering also.
Unis was well acquainted with the ways of the sea, its demands and its cruelties. Her first husband had been a master's mate in that same old ship and had died aboard her, like so many others. John Allday had burst into her life not far from here, when she had been attacked by two footpads while on her way to this very inn.
Big, shambling, but there was no man like him. As he had dealt with her attackers she had realised that he was in pain; he was suffering from an old wound, which she knew now had been a sword-thrust to the chest. She had seen the scar many times. She wiped her eyes.
He was coming home.
Bryan Ferguson had said it would be today or tomorrow. She knew it was today. How could she? But she knew.