Chapter 9

Chastity woke to the gray light of an early morning, and the distant clatter of the inn. For a moment she wondered where she was and why she was sleeping in her clothes. Then it all came back.

Verity, Winchester, Cyn . . .

She opened her eyes a crack and looked up at the bed, but from the low pallet she could not see the occupant. She gingerly slid from under her blankets, anxious to be done with her toilet before he awoke. She eased to her stockinged feet . . .

. . . To see Cyn sitting by the window, feet up on the sill, watching her. “I was about to wake you, lad,” he said easily. “I’ve ordered breakfast. We must be on our way.”

“Right,” said Chastity, and scuttled behind the screen. Did a woman pissing sound different? She hoped not.

She put on her second layer of clothes, her wig, and her hat, and emerged fortified. He looked her over as if he would make a comment, but before he could speak, the innkeeper and a maid bustled in with a hearty breakfast. He shrugged and gestured her to the table.

Adventure must sharpen the appetite. Chastity found she could do a hungry youth’s justice to the ham, eggs, kidneys, and fried bread.

“We should reach Maidenhead today, shouldn’t we?” she asked as they both mopped up the last of the food on their plates.

“If all goes well and the weather holds. Let’s be on our way.”

Within the half hour they were trotting out of Winchester. The hired horses were hardly prime bits of blood, but they were sound enough, and seemed built for endurance. This was as well, for they would have to carry their riders more than thirty miles this day.

The air was sodden and Chastity gave thanks for her double layers of clothing and heavy riding cloak.

The sun lurked behind sullen clouds, making no attempt to brighten leafless trees and skeleton hedges that stood stark against dark plowed earth.

She hoped the gloomy day was no predictor of their luck.

Cyn, however, was bright-eyed. Did nothing ever cast the man into the blue-devils? “Cheer up,” he said. “The day’ll be better yet. We’ll find Frazer and put an end to Verity’s problems. Then we can look to yours.”

Chastity jerked on the reins so that the horse jibbed. “What?”

“Have a care. His mouth’s doubtless like iron, but that’s no reason to rasp it. I can hardly send you back to your cottage-prison without making a push to help. I’m a devoted knight-errant, don’t you remember?”

“I’m hardly a damsel in distress.”

He looked at her almost seriously. “Still, I’d like to help. What crime caused you to be sent into exile?”

“Disobedience,” said Chastity bleakly.

“You have a deuced strict father.”

“True enough.”

“And how long is your punishment to last?”

Chastity could not bear this. The temptation to pour out her woes to him was too great. She looked at him coolly. “My petty problems are none of your concern, my lord. Let us but settle Verity and I will return to Nana’s, and you’ll be free of us both.”

He accepted it, but she didn’t much like the intent look he flashed her before speeding the pace.

A good canter drove the chill from her bones, but did little for the chill in her heart. They were racing toward the end of their association.

She resolutely put past and future out of mind, and set to enjoying these brief hours of Cyn. Laughter bubbled at the sound of that, and she let it out. He grinned at her and she grinned back. The day rapidly improved.

Again he showed his gift for geography. They frequently left the busy road for country bridle paths, heading always northeast toward London, but cutting across the main routes, for Maidenhead lay to the west of the city.

He didn’t push the pace, but Chastity gave thanks for the many hours of riding astride she’d put in during her exile, for otherwise she’d never have been able to keep up. As it was, when they halted at midday to feed themselves and the horses, she could swagger into the inn with just the right air.

They ate in the common room, sharing a table with a carter, an elderly medical man, and a pasty-faced clerk.

Chastity wondered why Cyn risked eating in public when they could have hired a private room, but she enjoyed the experience.

She’d never eaten in such company before.

She soon discovered why Cyn had chosen a public room. Gossip.

“Lot of military men about,” said the rotund carter, eyeing Cyn’s uniform. “French trouble, is it?”

“Not as far as I know,” said Cyn. “There’s some concern that the current war might encourage the French and Jacobites to try again, but hardly here on the south coast. Ireland more like.”

“Troublemakers,” said the carter, and spat, though whether he referred to Jacobites or Irish wasn’t clear. “Still and all, I’ve been looked over by patrols all along the London road. Sommat’s up.”

“I can tell you what,” said the pinch-faced doctor, dabbing at his lips with his napkin. “A poor lady is wandering witless. Widow of a gentleman, and that man’s heir along with her.”

The carter frowned as he masticated a huge mouthful of beef. “A hell of a lot of red-coats for one mort. I’ve never seen so many, not even during the ’45.”

“You exaggerate,” said the doctor. “We could scarce move without being questioned at that black time. Not that I objected. If I had my way, every Stuart sympathizer in the land would be done to death. It offends me deeply to know that there are still those going free who would have flocked to the banner of Charles Edward Stuart. But now we even have a Scot as the king’s right-hand man! ”

The clerk interjected at this point to state that his mother was Scots, and that not all Scots were traitors. Soon heated politics became spice for the meal, with the doctor continuing his tirade against Jacobites and Lord Bute.

When the doctor left, the carter spat again. “That man’s the sort who’d hand his granny to the hangman and call himself a good man. Especially if there was a farthing in it.”

“But it is our duty to oppose treason,” remarked Cyn.

The carter eyed his uniform uneasily, but said his piece. “Aye, but opposing treason always brings out those with an ax to grind, and those who like to see others brought low. Many a fortune changes hands in hard times.”

“That’s true enough,” said the clerk sourly.

“And some of the gainers no doubt as treasonous as the losers if the truth were told. Take the Campbells, for example.” He too rose to his feet and dusted himself off.

“You should keep your eye out for the missing lady, though, Captain. I intend to. There’s a handsome reward offered, and that wouldn’t be blood money, for she’ll be the better for being found. ”

“Aye, that’s true enough,” said the carter.

“But with the hunt so thick up near London, she’d need to be a fairy-woman to be north of here.

’Tis a pity to say, but she’ll likely be fished out of a river one day soon, baby and all.

” He rolled out to assemble his eight-horse rig and continue his long, slow journey into Somerset.

Cyn and Chastity too went to order their mounts. As they waited for their horses, Cyn said, “Did I detect some sympathy in you for the Jacobites? Is your heart touched by Bonnie Prince Charlie and his gallant highlanders? If so, we are on opposite sides.”

“No, I’m no Jacobite. But from what I hear the highlanders were brave and true to what they believed.

The reprisals were too harsh. So many families ruined, and whenever I drive under Temple Bar and see the heads still rotting there .

. .” She shuddered. “As our friend the carter said, there are doubtless many traitors who’ve avoided detection—the sneaky ones who waited to see which way the wind would blow, while the brave men paid the price. ”

Cyn mounted. “You’re too rosy-eyed, lad. A good many Jacobites just hoped to be on the winning side. The sorry truth is that most men are out to gain from what they do.”

As she checked the girth and swung into her saddle, Chastity said, “Even knights-errant?”

Cyn gave her a hooded look. “Even them.”

As they cut north over the Exeter road the sky clouded over again in a way that threatened a downpour. Dusk came early in November, but it looked as if it would be earlier still today.

“Doesn’t look good,” said Cyn with a glance at the sky. He urged his mount faster and Chastity followed suit.

Not long after, his horse cast a shoe.

Cyn let loose a string of vivid, multilingual oaths. “I’ll have to lead him to the next village,” he said, “and hope there’s a smithy. There’s a spire over there that looks promising. Come on.”

A drizzly rain began to fall, and they both pulled up the hoods of their cloaks.

“I doubt we’ll make Maidenhead tonight,” he said with irritation.

“With a storm threatening, we’d be better not to try.

” Then he shrugged. “In fact, it’s no great loss.

If we stop for the night in some out-of-the-way village, we’ll be less noticeable than if we turn up late and bedraggled in Maidenhead, where doubtless the net is tightest.”

He looked up, as if wondering at her silence.

“Yes, you’re right,” said Chastity. Another night on the road. Oh, Lord.

By the time they came into the village of East Green, Chastity’s head was throbbing with tension.

They stopped at the Angel, a plain square building on the main street, with a small coaching yard beside it.

The door opened to spill warm light and pleasant chatter into the yard.

The hearty innkeeper assured them there were rooms to be had, and a smithy just down the road.

His ostler would take the horse down and have it seen to.

There was no obvious watcher here, but the first thing Chastity saw inside the Angel was a notice nailed to a post.

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