Authors: Jane Feather
She stood up, thrust the chamber pot back beneath the bed with her foot, and took stock. The stagecoach for London stopped at the Rose and Crown in Winchester at four o’clock in the morning. She could walk the ten miles to Winchester across the fields and be there in plenty of time. By the time the household awoke, or George emerged from his stupor, she would be far away.
They would pursue her, but she could lose herself easily in London. She just had to ensure she wouldn’t draw attention to herself at the Rose and Crown.
Averting her eyes from the bed, Juliana went to the armoire, newly filled with her trousseau. But she’d secreted a pair of holland britches and a linen shirt. In this costume she’d escaped Forsett Towers on the frequent occasions when life had become more than usually unpleasant under the rule of her guardian’s wife. No one had ever discovered the disguise, or the various places where she’d roamed. Of course, she’d paid the price on her return, but Lady Forsett’s hazel switch had seemed but a small price to pay for those precious hours of freedom.
She dressed rapidly, pulling on stockings and boots, twisting her flame-red hair into a knot on top of her head, tucking telltale strands under a woolen cap pulled down low over her ears.
She needed money. Enough for her coach fare and a few nights’ lodging until she could find work. But she wouldn’t take anything that would be missed. Nothing that would brand her as a thief as well as a murderess.
Why she should concern herself about such a hair-splitting issue Juliana couldn’t imagine, but her mind seemed to be working on its own, making decisions, discarding possibilities with all the efficiency of an automaton.
She took four sovereigns from the cache in the dresser drawer. She had watched John empty his pockets … hours ago, it seemed—after the revelers had finally left the bedroom door and taken their jovial obscenities out of the house, leaving the newlyweds to themselves.
John had been almost too drunk to stand upright. She could see him now, swaying as he poured the contents of his pocket into the drawer—his bloodshot blue eyes gleaming with excitement, his habitually red face now a deep crimson.
Tears suddenly clogged her throat as she slipped the still-unfamiliar wedding ring from her finger. John had always been kind to her in an avuncular way. She’d been more than willing to accept marriage to him as a way of escaping her guardian’s house. More than willing until she realized she’d have to contend with George … malicious, jealous, lusting George. But it had been too late to back away then. She dropped the ring into the drawer with the remaining sovereigns. The gold circlet winked at her, its glow diffused through her tears.
Resolutely, Juliana closed the drawer and turned back to the cheval glass to check her reflection. Her disguise had never been intended to fool people close at hand, and as she examined herself, she realized that the linen shirt did nothing to disguise the rich swell of her bosom; and the curve of her hips was emphasized by the britches.
She took a heavy winter cloak from the armoire and swathed herself. It hid the bumps and the curves, but it was still far from satisfactory. However, the light would be bad at that hour of the morning, and with luck there’d be other passengers on the waybill, so she could make herself inconspicuous.
She tiptoed to the bedroom door, glancing at the closed bed curtains. She felt as if she should make some acknowledgment of the dead man. It seemed wrong to be running from his deathbed. And yet she could think of nothing else to do. For a minute she thought hard about the man whom she’d known for a bare three months. She remembered his kindnesses. And then she put him from her. John Ridge had been sixty-five years old. He’d had three wives. And he’d died quickly, painlessly … a death for which she had been responsible.
Juliana let herself out of the bedchamber and crept along the pitch-dark corridor, her fingers brushing the walls to guide her. At the head of the stairs she paused. The hall below was dark, but not as black as the corridor behind her. Faint moonlight filtered through the diamond panes of the mullioned windows.
Her eyes darted to the library door. It was firmly closed. She sped down the stairs, tiptoed to the door, and placed her ear against the oak. Her heart hammered in her chest, and she wondered why she was lingering, listening to the rumbling, drunken snores from within. But hearing them made her feel safer.
She turned to leave, and her foot caught in the fringe of the worn Elizabethan carpet. She went flying, grabbed at a table leg to save herself, and fell to her knees: a copper jug of hollyhocks overbalanced as the table rocked, and crashed to the stone-flagged floor.
She remained where she was on her knees, listening to the echo resound to the beamed ceiling and then slowly fade into the night. It had been a sound to wake the dead.
But nothing happened. No shouts, no running feet …
and most miraculously of all, no change in the stertorous breathing from the library.
Juliana picked herself up, swearing under her breath. It was her feet again. They were the bane of her life, too big and with a mind of their own.
She crept with exaggerated care toward the back regions of the house and let herself out of the kitchen door. Outside all was quiet. The house behind her slept. The house that should have been her home—her refuge from the erratic twists and turns of a life that had brought her little happiness thus far.
Juliana shrugged. Like a stray cat who had long ago learned to walk alone, she faced the haphazard future with uncomplaining resignation. As she crossed the kitchen yard, making for the orchard and the fields beyond, the church clock struck midnight.
Her seventeenth birthday was over. A day she’d begun as a bride and ended as a widow and a murderess.
“I give you good day, cousin,” a voice slurred from the depths of an armchair as the Duke of Redmayne entered the library of his house on Albermarle Street.
“To what do I owe this pleasure, Lucien?” the duke inquired in bland tones, although a flicker of disgust crossed his face. “Escaping your creditors? Or are you simply paying me a courtesy visit?”
“Lud, such sarcasm, cousin.” Lucien Courtney rose to his feet and surveyed with a mocking insouciance his cousin and the man who’d entered close behind him. “Well, well, and if it isn’t our dear Reverend Courtney as well. What an embarrassment of relatives. How d’ye do, dear boy.”
“Well enough,” the other man responded easily. He was soberly dressed in gray, with a plain white neck cloth, in startling contrast to the duke’s peacock-blue satin coat, with its gold flogged buttons and deep embroidered cuffs. But the physical resemblance to the duke was startling: the
same aquiline nose and deep-set gray eyes, the same thin, well-shaped mouth, the same cleft chin. However, there the resemblance ended. Whereas Quentin Courtney regarded the world and its vagaries with the gentle and genuine sympathy of a devout man of the cloth, his half brother Tarquin, the Duke of Redmayne, saw his fellow man through the sharp and disillusioned eyes of the cynic.
“So what brings you to the fleshpots?” Lucien inquired with a sneer. “I thought you’d become an important official in some country bishop’s diocese.”
“Canon of Melchester Cathedral,” Quentin said coolly. “I’m on my bishop’s business with the Archbishop of Canterbury at the moment.”
“Oh, aren’t we rising far, fast, and holy,” Lucien declared with a curled lip. Quentin ignored the statement.
“May I offer you some refreshment, Lucien?” Tarquin strolled to the decanters on the sideboard. “Oh, but I see you’ve already taken care of yourself” he added, noting the brandy goblet in the younger man’s hand. “You don’t think it’s a little early in the morning for cognac?”
“Dear boy, I haven’t been to bed as yet,” Lucien said with a yawn. “Far as I’m concerned, this is a nightcap.” He put down the glass and strolled to the door, somewhat unsteadily. “You don’t object to putting me up for a few nights?”
“How should I?” returned Tarquin with a sardonically raised eyebrow.
“Fact is, my own house is under siege,” Lucien declared, leaning against the door and fumbling in his pocket for his snuffbox. “Damned creditors and bailiffs bangin’ at the door at all hours of the day and night. Man can’t get a decent night’s rest.”
“And what are you going to sell to satisfy them this time?” the duke asked, pouring madeira for himself and his brother.
“Have to be Edgecombe,” Lucien said, taking a pinch of snuff. He sighed with exaggerated heaviness. “Terrible
thing. But I can’t see what else to do … unless, of course, you could see your way to helpin’ a relative out.”
His pale-brown eyes, burning in their deep sockets like the last embers of a dying fire, suddenly sharpened, and he regarded his cousin with sly knowledge. He smiled as he saw the telltale muscle twitch in Tarquin’s jaw as he fought to control his anger.
“Well,” he said carelessly. “We’ll discuss it later … when I’ve had some sleep. Dinner, perhaps?”
“Get out of here,” Tarquin said, turning his back.
Lucien’s chuckle hung in the air as the door closed behind him.
“There’s going to be little enough left of Edgecombe for poor Godfrey to inherit,” Quentin said, sipping his wine. “Since Lucien gained his majority a mere six months ago, he’s run through a fortune that would keep most men in luxury for a lifetime.”
“I’ll not stand by and see him sell Edgecombe,” Tarquin stated almost without expression. “And neither will I stand by and see what remnants are left pass into the hands of Lucien’s pitiful cousin.”
“I fail to see how you can stop it,” Quentin said in some surprise. “I know poor Godfrey has no more wits than an infant, but he’s still Lucien’s legitimate heir.”
“He would be if Lucien left no heir of his own,” the duke pointed out, casually riffling through the pages of the
Gazette.
“Well, we all know that’s an impossibility,” Quentin declared, stating what he had always believed to be an immutable fact. “And Lucien’s free of your rein now; there’s little you can do to control him.”
“Aye, and he never ceases to taunt me with it,” Tarquin responded. “But it’ll be a rainy day in hell, my friend, when Lucien Courtney gets the better of me.” He looked up and met his half brother’s gaze.
Quentin felt a little shiver prickle his spine at this soft-spoken declaration. He knew Tarquin as no one else did. He knew the softer side of an apparently unbending nature;
he knew his half brother’s vulnerabilities; he knew that the hard cynicism Tarquin presented to the world was a defense learned in his youth against those who would use the friendship of a future duke for their own ambitions.
Quentin also knew not to underestimate the Duke of Redmayne’s ruthlessness in getting what he wanted. He asked simply “What are you going to do?”
Tarquin drained his glass. He smiled, but it was not a humorous smile. “It’s time our little cousin took himself a wife and set up his nursery,” he said. “That should settle the matter of an heir to Edgecombe.”
Quentin stared at him as if he’d taken leave of his senses. “No one’s going to marry Lucien, even if he was prepared to marry. He’s riddled with the pox, and the only women who figure on his agenda of pleasure are whores from the stews prepared to play the lad.”
“True. But how long do you think he has to live?” Tarquin inquired almost casually. “You only have to look at him. He’s burned out with debauchery and the clap. I’d give him maybe six months … a year at the outside.”
Quentin said nothing, but his gaze remained unwaveringly on his brother’s countenance.
“He knows it, too,” Tarquin continued. “He’s living each day as if it’s his last. He doesn’t give a damn what happens to Edgecombe or the Courtney fortune. Why should he? But I intend to ensure that Edgecombe, at the very least, passes intact into competent hands.”
Quentin looked horrified. “In the name of pity, Tarquin! You couldn’t condemn a woman to share his bed, even if he’d take her into it. It would be a death sentence.”
“Listen well, dear brother. It’s perfectly simple.”
B
y the time the stagecoach lumbered into the yard of the Bell in Wood Street, Cheapside, Juliana had almost forgotten there was a world outside the cramped interior and the company of her six fellow passengers. At five miles an hour, with an enforced stop at sunset because neither coachman nor passengers would travel the highways after dark, it had taken over twenty-four hours to accomplish the seventy miles between Winchester and London. Juliana, like the rest of the passengers, had sat up in the taproom of the coaching inn during the night stop. Despite the discomfort of the hard wooden settles, it was a welcome change from the bone-racking jolting of the iron wheels over the unpaved roads.
They set off again, just before dawn, and it was soon after seven in the morning when she alighted from the coach for the last time. She stood in the yard of the Bell, arching the small of her back against her hands in an effort to get the cricks out. The York coach had also just arrived and was disgorging its blinking, exhausted passengers. The June air was already warm, heavy with city smells, and she wrinkled her nose at the pervading odor of rotting garbage in the kennels, manure piled in the narrow cobbled lanes.