Chapter 13

Asturias

The tide had long since turned, and the Wasp had manoeuvred away from the danger of the rocks.

She could ill afford to linger, for a fierce onshore wind threatened to blow the ship towards the cliffs.

There was a single shot from a cannon, and Colonel Fitzwilliam watched in the dying light as the brig moved away down the coast. Mayhap, if the wind changed, Captain Lanyon would return.

More than likely, he would head further west to meet up with Commodore Collier’s squadron—and write his report to be sent to the Admiralty in London.

The ripples would move outward: the First Sea Lord would convey the news to Lord Matlock; an urgent letter sent to Colonel Forster in Brighton; the Colonel would ride to Longbourn, informing the Bennets that two daughters, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Lydia, were lost on the north coast of Spain.

How long before the newspapers took up the story?

Gentlewomen snatched by the French from the beach at Brighton.

The niece of an Earl carried away under the very nose of the Prince Regent.

It was not to be borne! Lord Liverpool, the Minister of War, would be outraged. Likely the whole country.

The last gold traces of daylight bled away behind the cliffs. The sea stretched out, black and indifferent. Somewhere ahead, lost in the dark, were Miss Bennet, Lydia, and Georgiana.

Darcy stood a little apart, his silhouette sharp against the dull sheen of the surf. He had not spoken since landing on the shore. His gaze was fixed on the shadowed escarpment.

Behind them, the riflemen gathered in a loose group, their green jackets mottled with sand and spray. Will Goulding moved among them, his voice pitched low but urgent. He was the last to join the Colonel and Darcy at the base of the cliffs.

Fitzwilliam turned to Goulding, his tone clipped. “What do we know?”

Goulding shook his head. “They took the women up that gully, there—” he pointed to a jagged seam in the cliff face, “—before we made the beach.”

The Colonel drew a sharp breath through his teeth. “Too dark to follow them now. Too risky. We’d be lost or seen before we got halfway up.”

Darcy’s hands were clenched at his sides. “We cannot wait for dawn.”

Fitzwilliam glanced at him, then back at the assembled riflemen. “No. But we cannot blunder, either. Wickham is clever when cornered, and the French are—” He let the sentence hang, unfinished. The wind whipped up, rattling the brush clinging to the sparse soil above the high water line.

The Colonel raised his voice, projecting it just enough for the green-jacketed men to hear without echoing off the rocks. “Has any man here been a poacher?”

The question hung in the air, perfectly serious. The riflemen exchanged glances. Goulding’s brow furrowed, but he did not speak.

Fitzwilliam stepped forward, voice low. “I need men who can move quietly. Who know how to track in the dark, how to read the land by touch and sound. If you have hunted by moonlight, if you have slipped from the gamekeeper’s hounds, I want you.”

A moment’s hesitation; then a squat, broad-shouldered man stepped forward. His name was Donnelly—Darcy recognised him from the Marine Parade. His face was unremarkable, but his eyes were sharp, and there was a certain cockiness to the way he carried his Baker rifle.

“Sir, I’ve known the woods at night,” Donnelly said. “Rabbits and pheasant, mostly. Sometimes a bird for the pot, sometimes a bit of venison, when there was need.”

Behind Donnelly, another rifleman—tall, ginger-haired, with a broad grin that did not quite reach his eyes—nodded. “And I, sir. Grew up near Nottingham. You don’t eat if you don’t hunt quiet.”

Goulding looked to Fitzwilliam, who nodded. “Good. You and you—Donnelly, and—?”

“Call me Simms, sir.”

“Donnelly, Simms. Take one more, your choice. Mr. Goulding will guide you to the gully. You are to go ahead, as far as you dare, and see what you may learn. No heroics. No gunfire unless you must. If you find their camp, mark it and return.”

Donnelly and Simms exchanged a look, then beckoned a wiry young man whose eyes glittered with nerves and excitement. Together, the three slipped away, Goulding following silent as a shadow, their boots crunching softly on the wet stones.

Darcy watched them go, every muscle taut. Fitzwilliam laid a hand on his arm. “We will have them back, Darcy. We must be patient now.”

Darcy shook his head, voice rough. “I have never been patient. Not where Georgiana is concerned.”

Fitzwilliam managed a tight, humourless smile. “Then let us hope our poachers are quick.”

The remaining men settled in among the rocks, lighting no fires, speaking in whispers.

The cold crept in—first numbing fingers, then settling deep into bones.

The night pressed close, each sound magnified: the distant crash of surf, the clatter of a loose pebble, the occasional call of a seabird startled from its roost.

Darcy paced the line of the cliff, eyes fixed on the dark defile.

In his mind he saw Miss Bennet—her hair blown wild by the sea wind—something lurched within him, some nameless fear for her safety, someone who needed his protection.

He saw Miss Lydia, tearful and frightened; and Georgiana, pale and silent, clutching Miss Bennet’s hand.

He thought of Wickham’s smile, the cold, practised malice of it, and felt his jaw clench.

Fitzwilliam crouched by the base of the cliff, tracing the ground with his fingers.

The earth was scuffed and gouged, the marks unmistakable.

“They moved fast, but not fast enough to hide the trail. And see here—” He pointed to a broken sprig of heather, buried under a deep footprint.

“They’re carrying something heavy. The girls, perhaps, or supplies. ”

A faint sound—a pebble skittering down the slope—brought both men to their feet. Darcy’s hand went to his pistol, but Fitzwilliam caught his arm. “Wait.”

Out of the darkness, Goulding materialised, breathless. “Donnelly and Simms have reached the crest. There’s a path, narrow, but passable.”

“Did they see the women… the men?” Darcy demanded.

Goulding shook his head. “Not yet. They must have followed the trail further inland. ’Tis certain they’re carrying at least one, maybe two of the women.

” He handed the Colonel a piece of lace, torn from a muslin skirt, caught hanging on a thorny bush.

“Too high for a lady walking—she was being carried. Likely a big man.”

Darcy’s face tightened. Fitzwilliam nodded.

“They’ll tire, and seek a safe place to rest. Go back.

Tell Donnelly to follow as close as they dare and return.

We’ll not risk losing them in the dark. If it’s safe, tell them to stay nearby.

They can send the other man—Petersen?—back to us with their news.

Goulding, as I’ve said, no heroics. You’re to return once you’ve spoken to them. ”

Goulding nodded and vanished, swift and silent, up the gully.

The night dragged on. Every minute stretched, taut as wire. Darcy slumped to the ground, face in his hands. Fitzwilliam stood watch, eyes never leaving the cliff.

At last, just as the horizon began to pale with the promise of dawn, Petersen appeared, breathless and mud-streaked.

“We found them, sir. Off the trail, camped by a rocky outcrop. Two men stand watch, but they’re tired.

The rest sleep. There’s a path through the gorse. We can take them at first light.”

“Did they hear you?”

Petersen laughed. “Hear Simms? I’ve seen him crawl so close to a rabbit, he caught it with his bare hands.”

“You’re also a poacher?” asked the Colonel, wryly. “Get some rest, for we’ll move before dawn.”

* * *

The wind off the Bay of Biscay had teeth. It cut straight through Colonel Fitzwilliam’s coat; he squinted up at the escarpment—fifty feet of jagged stone rising sheer from the narrow shingle of beach, its flanks split with gullies and scree.

Fitzwilliam’s boots crunched on sea-wet pebbles as he paused, glancing back at the two men shadowing him: Darcy, tall and silent, jaw locked tight; and Goulding, the Rifle officer, whose green jacket and Baker rifle marked him for a hunter.

Goulding’s dark face was taut with hunger and something harder—he wanted blood, and Fitzwilliam, for once, did not blame him.

There were Frenchmen up there, and Wickham too, and three women who should not have been dragged into this filthy game.

He signed to Goulding. The lieutenant nodded, gesturing for his riflemen—hard-eyed lads, most of them swapping imprisonment or transportation for serving in His Majesty’s army.

Two had already gone ahead, climbing the steep defile that wound up the cliff face, going ahead to join Donnelly and Simms.

Fitzwilliam wiped sweat and salt from his brow, breathing hard. “Well, Darcy?” he muttered.

Darcy’s eyes never left the shadows above. “We go,” he said, low and cold. “No more waiting.”

Goulding grinned, teeth white in his stubble. “Aye, sir. We’ll have ‘em.”

The three men moved, pressed flat to the stone, boots finding purchase in the loose shale.

Fitzwilliam’s heart thudded in his chest, and he cursed himself for every glass of brandy and every soft bed since Portugal.

He’d fought Frenchmen before, but never with so much at stake.

Miss Bennet. Miss Lydia. Georgiana. He saw Darcy’s fists clenched tight, and knew the same names beat in his cousin’s heart.

They came to the crest, kept moving as quietly as possible along the narrow trail that led further inland.

A whistle—a thrush’s note, sharp and quick—came down the wind.

Goulding stopped, cocked his head, then nodded. “That’s them. Up ahead.” He grinned again, savage. “Ready, Colonel?”

Fitzwilliam nodded, and they pushed on. The path twisted, narrowed. Ahead, they saw the two men sent on ahead, speaking quietly with Donnelly and Simms. Seeing the main party, Donnelly beckoned them forward.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.