Chapter 14
Chapter Fourteen
“We cannot divert one of our packets for one man,” Lord Castlereagh sputtered.
“If we responded to every Englishman’s family inconvenience, the entire Foreign Office would turn into a fraternity of errand boys. No, you may not have the Gibraltar Packet.”
Castlereagh is right, of course. He usually is.
“Who did you dispatch to Thessaloniki?” The foreign secretary demanded.
“Archer. We’ve had no reports.”
Castlereagh grunted, cocked his head to the right, and tapped his thigh with one hand impatiently. “We need information, damn it!”
Richard didn’t bother defending what they both knew to be a simple fact of their life. Dispatches took time.
“Information. Our stock in trade,” Castlereagh growled. “Someday we’ll find ways to get more of it faster. For now, fast horses, fast men, fast ships.”
Richard didn’t interrupt the old man.
“What I need from you, Glenaire, is your analysis of the risks posed by revolt in Naples to our colony on Malta. I read Maitland’s report, but I need you to factor in dispatches from the ground throughout the area, particularly about potential piracy activity.
Have you gotten the reports I requested from returning naval captains? ”
“Some,” Richard replied. “I should have the rest in a few days.”
Castlereagh pointed a finger at him. “Any information Thornton could have given us from Russia will have gone cold. He can make his way home as best he can.”
Lily will have to endure the delay. Her precious Papa is safe enough in Copenhagen.
“Yes, my lord,” Richard said. “I’ll take my leave.”
It had been over three months since he promised her he could retrieve her father. Heaton said she had begun to openly complain about the delay. She would have to endure it.
I will not put my career on the line for Miss Lily Thornton, he thought grimly. England needed stability in Greece, quiet in Naples, troops in Canada, trade in India. Apparently, it did not need John Thornton home in a hurry.
He wrote a quick note to his business agent. The man had decent taste; he would know what sort of ring would impress the lady. Richard could absorb the cost, whatever it was.
Having managed that piece of business to his satisfaction, Richard wrote a brief analysis of troop morale in Canada.
He finally returned to his notes about the Mediterranean waters.
Castlereagh’s fears lay on vague, but likely true, concerns.
Richard reviewed his notes about the Barbary pirates.
Since the Americans’ efforts and Decatur’s victory at Cape Gata, the seas had been safer.
Safer but not secure. Chaos in Naples may encourage the damned pirates again.
Damage to shipping hurt the economy, and the threat of ransom weighed on the foreign secretary.
Richard’s jaw clenched at the thought of their last discussion about it.
“We can’t pay blood money,” Castlereagh had insisted.
“It only encourages the trade.” He planned to notify their embassies and outposts accordingly.
Richard’s retort that the poor souls sold into slavery might view it differently fell on deaf ears.
The old man must know slave auctions are as lucrative as ransom.
Letting English souls fall into Barbary slavery is unconscionable.
He wondered if he could find sufficient argument buried in this heap of notes.
He was still at his desk when word came from Heaton.
Sir
Miss Lilias Thornton has given us the slip. Thought you should know soonest.
R Heaton
Castlereagh’s report on Naples would have to wait.
It was ridiculously easy, Lily thought, to give those fools the slip. Desperation drove her errand; she didn’t need Glenaire’s spies to follow. A quick and overly blunt reference to one’s bodily needs, a convenient back door, and swift feet did the work. It may not be so easy next time.
The diaphanous scarf she had stuffed into her reticule covered her hair and face sufficiently. Adjusting her walk to that of an old woman helped also.
The servant at the door, very tall, very dark, and unsmiling had gestured her to a seat in the outer hall.
He wore English-style clothing. The white of his shirt contrasted with his dark skin.
He took her card and returned moments later with pursed lips and a disapproving frown to escort her to a man whose frown looked even less approving.
“So little one,” Sahin Pasha said, “You have come on an errand even more foolish than your last.”
“No one saw me come here.”
“Your Marquess of Glenaire implies he sees all.”
Lily smiled at that. “He likes to believe that. His minions should pay closer attention. I slipped away from them easily. No one saw me.”
“We shall hope that is true,” Sahin said. “What then brings you to take this risk?”
Lily looked around. Two men stood by the door. One was the man from the entrance.
“You may speak freely, little one. One man,” he gestured to a fierce little man to the left, “neither speaks nor hears. He merely guards. The other,” he shrugged, “is a eunuch. Protector of women, you understand?” He indicated her escort.
Lily understood. Her reputation could be protected, at least in Ottoman terms.
So proper. How will he react to what I have to say? She dug deep for courage. Sahin Pasha’s words at the Pembrook ball came back to her—I am in your debt, I fear. If you ever have need of my help, you know you can come to me.
Lily managed to speak by breathing deeply. “You will recall that you are in my debt, favored uncle. I need to collect.”
She had his attention. The old man nodded and waited for her to go on.
“My father has been delayed,” she said.
“We know this, little one.”
Just say it, Lily!
“What is it I can do for you?” Sahin persisted.
“I need employment,” she responded.
He didn’t try to hide his astonishment.
“It is not customary for young women to seek employment even in this barbaric country.”
“I need to leave London, favored uncle,” she said. “Soon.”
“Is it the Russian again?”
“Only in part.” Lily took a long shuddering breath, the kind that shook her whole body. She glanced back at the man who can’t hear and the man who—If his job is to protect women, what will he think of one who has allowed herself to get with child?
She slid back to face Sahin.
“Remember your debt, favored uncle, when I tell you this,” she said. Sahin made a gesture with his hand as if to brush it aside.
“I am with child,” she said, softly but distinctly.
Sahin sat back, grim faced. “This is a terrible thing, little one. Especially since your father is not here to protect your honor.”
Lily struggled to swallow her fear, to control her expression.
“Who is this dog who did this to you?” Sahin demanded.
Heavens! What would he do? A knife in the ribs?
“I will give him a choice, little one,” he said gently, as if he read her mind.
“Choice, honored uncle?” Lily asked, momentarily confused.
“He can agree to a respectable marriage with no harm to your name, in which case he will keep his head, or—” He shrugged. He didn’t need to spell out the alternative he had in mind.
“Please no. Oh God, no. I do not wish to marry him, uncle.”
“Foolish. Without marriage you have no protection.”
“Marriage to that man would condemn me to misery.”
“You are a defiant one, little one. You should do your duty to the man and this child.”
Lily raised her chin and shook her head. “No marriage,” she said.
Sahin Pasha looked thoughtful. “Is it possible I own some responsibility for this catastrophe?” he asked shrewdly.
Lily dropped her eyes. The old man is too perceptive. She focused on her toes where they peaked out from her gown and bit her lip. She would not help him puzzle out what happened.
Sahin waited a long time, but she didn’t budge. At long last he sighed. “How is it you think I can help with this ‘employment’?”
I have no idea. Despair washed over her. Idiot. Women have even less freedom in his country than here. What were you thinking, Lily?
She tried frantically to recreate the notions that drove her here.
“I thought,” she began, spelling out the only strategy that had presented itself in long days of searching for alternatives, “you might suggest a place where I can teach. I will call myself a widow, have my child, and earn my keep.”
“And then?”
“In a few years, with my father’s help, I can return to England, a widow with a young child. It would work if—”
“—if you had ‘employment,’ a refuge, among people easily fooled.”
“No! I don’t mean to fool anyone, I just—I have told you the truth, favored uncle.”
The old man nodded. “Yes. Truth is good.”
Neither swish of fabric nor footstep warned Lily.
The tall, dark man behind her moved to Sahin’s side.
He made obeisance and spoke in rapid Turkish.
Sahin appeared to object. Lily strained to hear.
She understood the language. Sahin’s visits to her father helped pass long winter nights in Saint Petersburg, and it entertained him to teach her.
The men’s soft whispers, however, made it difficult to sort the words.
The tall man’s responses sounded respectful but emphatic.
He glanced at Lily, spoke a few more words, and returned to his place.
“My debt weighs in your favor,” Sahin said. “Ahmet reminds me that I must help you find a solution. He has suggested a way.”
Lily’s hopes soared. She felt her heart beat in her throat. She glanced up at the one called Ahmet and quickly back to Sahin.
“My aunt is Valide Sultan. Do you know what that is?”
“The Sultan’s mother, I believe.”
“Usually, although not currently. She is a woman of great influence and power, the head of the sultan’s household. She administers the entire household, the Seraglio, hundreds of people. You understand?”
“What has this to do with my problem?”
“My aunt devotes herself to good works, most particularly education. The Sultan, or in reality the Valide Sultan, requires that every man and woman in the household be literate.”
Lily sat up, attentive. “Hundreds of people? The household? You called it the Seraglio?”
“The Seraglio, yes, a complex that requires considerable administrative skill. It is vital, you understand, that no scandal upset the smooth running of the household.”
Lily nodded.
“I will take you to my aunt. You will tell her everything. What happens after that is up to the Valide Sultan.”
“Time, favored uncle. I don’t have time to wait.”
A slow smile spread across Sahin Pasha’s face, reached his eyes, and warmed. “God is with you, little one. We have packed up our delegation. We leave in two days.”
“Two days?” she gasped.
“If you wish our help, you must take it now. If you choose not to, I will consider our debt filled.”
“Very well, favored uncle. I will come with you in two days.”
“Your father?”
“I’ll leave word for him and pray he reaches London to get it.”
“He may follow you, as is his right. I won’t hide you.”
“I wouldn’t want you to.”
“And your marquess? Will he pursue you?” The shrewd old man held her eyes.
“He is unlikely to expend effort for a troublesome woman.” And he isn’t my marquess. “Besides, I believe he is about to become betrothed.”
“I see,” Sahin said sadly. “I regret—but no matter. It is good he will not pursue.”
Stepping out the back of Sahin’s London townhouse, swathed in her scarf, Lily hoped he was correct. A dark-skinned servant slipped silently out behind her. She wanted to protest but knew it to be futile. Sahin, in his way, could be as stubborn about her need for protection as the marquess.
As to his lordship, a niggling doubt about his willingness to pursue her would not stop teasing at her mind. Glenaire might not care about her personally, but he did hate to have his will thwarted. She pitied Roger Heaton.