Chapter 19 #3
“God, but I missed you,” he groaned against her cheek.
“I missed you too. I was so worried . . .”
He moved away a little. “We mustn’t do this. Your reputation . . .”
“I don’t care . . .”
“I do.” He sucked in a deep breath and separated them completely. “Stop tempting me, wench.”
“Ha!” she protested. “So I’m cast as Eve, am I?” But she smiled with the joy of his return. “Come and see the ballroom.”
He allowed her to pull him back into the room and gazed at the walls. “I saw. Even Rothgar wouldn’t . . .”
“It is remarkably convincing, isn’t it?”
He went over and studied a panel, and blew out his breath in relief. “But it’s remarkable from a distance, and in candlelight . . . The Malloren reputation for doing the incredible is about to be bolstered.”
“Quite apart from whatever takes place at the ball.” Then the purpose of the ball hit her like a shower of cold rain. “Did you get the documents?”
“Yes,” he said, and rolled his eyes. “But only by luck. Mary gave the clothes to her maid, who passed them on to her mother. When I arrived at that lady’s house, she had just plunged them all into a vat of hot, soapy water.”
As if unable to resist, he took her hand.
“Oh, Lord. Did the ink survive?” That tenuous contact was shattering her mind.
He grinned. “She’d taken the document out of the pocket, thinking to return it to Mary, but put it on the table near a joint of meat. It became somewhat bloodstained.”
“Appropriate in a way,” Chastity commented, twining her fingers with his.
“Very true. Unfortunately it then seemed a tasty treat to the lady’s pet cur.”
Chastity closed her eyes. “I don’t want to know.”
“Only slightly chewed.”
She opened her eyes and smiled at him, as much in delight at his presence as at his news. “You gave the letter to Rothgar?”
“I gave it to Verity, since it is hers. I think she is taking it to Rothgar now.” He raised her hand and kissed it.
She gazed at him longingly, but said, “Come on, then. I’m quite desperate to know what is in it. And if it turns out to be some carefully-thought-out last words of advice, I shall have the vapors!”
Cyn allowed himself to be dragged along. “I live to see the day!”
She flashed him a scowl that turned into laughter, and towed him along. At the door to Rothgar’s study, however, he put up real resistance and captured her against the wall. “You seem happy,” he said almost wistfully.
Chastity realized with surprise that she was. That she had been for days. Happy to be a woman again, in a normal house, with a family of sorts. She’d wiped away the terrible months and was refusing to contemplate the bleak future. “Do you mind?”
He shook his head. “Why should I mind, love? This is what I want for you. What I insist on giving you. If the document turns out to be useless, we’ll find some other way.”
“Oh, Cyn,” said Chastity. “I pray you’re right.”
“Of course I’m right. You have the Mallorens on your side.”
Chastity shook her head at him, but said, “I want to thank you for bringing me here, Cyn. And for recruiting Rothgar. I know it wasn’t easy for you.”
He hooted with laughter. “Recruited! Was that what I did? How bloody marvelous!”
And it was Cyn who pulled a bemused Chastity into the study.
They found Rothgar, Verity, and Nathaniel—a very sober Verity and Nathaniel. Rothgar passed the stained and slightly-chewed document over to Cyn and Chastity.
“Lud,” said Chastity as they read.
It was a very incriminating document, for all that it was signed only ‘Mr. Ware.’ The recipient, whoever that was, had clearly demanded proof of who he was dealing with.
In response, a number of details had been given which pointed clearly, for those with any knowledge of the man, to Lord Walgrave.
In one sentence, the words offspring, Fortitude, Chastity, Victor, and Verity had been combined.
Mr. Ware promised to use his influence with certain highly placed people—read the Prince and Princess of Wales—to induce the royal family to flee once the Jacobite army arrived within thirty miles of London.
He professed unswerving allegiance to James III, citing a meeting with the ‘king’ during his Grand Tour in 1717.
“Could that meeting have really taken place?” Chastity asked. “I can perhaps imagine that Father allowed his ambition to control him, and took this step, thinking that the Stuarts were about to triumph. But back in his youth, and so soon after the rebellion in 1715?”
Rothgar answered. “In fact, it is the least incriminating item. A young man can be misguided, or ill-advised. Back in those days, I understand, there was a certain fashionable bravado in making contact with the Stuarts during a Grand Tour. The rest, however, is enough to make your father’s position very dangerous indeed.
It will certainly shatter forever his image as the Incorruptible. ”
Verity looked at Rothgar. “Fort must be told. He must have a say in this.”
“Of course.” Rothgar sent for Lord Thornhill.
Fort entered the room suspiciously, withdrawn physically and mentally from these unwelcome allies. He sent a burning glare at Cyn. Rothgar handed him the letter.
Fort read it and collapsed into a chair. “I never would have believed . . . He must have been mad!”
“Those were strange days,” said Rothgar.
“You were in the nursery, and doubtless remember little. I was a young man, too young to be truly torn by it, but I remember that there were a few days when it seemed as if the impossible might become true. All was rumor and disorder. The Hanoverian royalty were packed and ready to run back to their little German electorate. Many believed that hidden Jacobite sympathizers were about to crawl out of the wainscoting . . . Your father lost his nerve.”
“But a Jacobite! I’d have sworn oaths he has never had Jacobite sympathies. Plague take it! In spiritual matters he’s more of a Puritan than a Papist. That’s why we ended up with these names.”
“But more ambitious than anything else. In 1745 he was in the prime of life, remember. He was the same age, I believe, as his friend Frederick, Prince of Wales, and so would have been thirty-eight. Two ambitious men waiting in the wings, impatient for power. The great Walpole had fallen a few years before, leaving no firm hand to steer England. Everything was ready, if only the king would die.” Rothgar smiled derisively.
“Neither of them could have dreamed old King George II would live until 1760, and outlive his greedy son . . . The ironies of fate.
“But before that turn of the wheel came this other foul blow of destiny. With Walgrave poised to take control of England as soon as Frederick became king, was he going to let the Jacobites wrest it from him? He struggled against them, but when it seemed they might in truth prevail, he faltered, unable to see his dream turn to dross. Perhaps they approached him, tempted him . . . Frederick, you know, was not an inspiring figure upon which to build a great new order. He was a drunkard and a libertine . . .”
He suddenly shrugged. “Forgive my speculations. Perhaps the noble earl will enlighten us when he comes.”
“When he comes?” asked Fort numbly.
“Didn’t Chastity tell you? I have invited him to the ball.”
Fort stood, the letter still in his hands. “I could throw this in the fire.”
“Perhaps,” said Rothgar.
“You have the whip hand at last, don’t you, Rothgar?” sneered Fort. “How you must be loving this. What are you going to do?”
“I?” said Rothgar mildly. “I am going to ensure that my brother can comfortably marry your sister. It is my sole interest in this matter. That letter plays a very small part, and only to twist your father’s arm a little.
For anything more, I leave it up to you, but I would not let him know you have it without safeguards. ”
The room was silent as Fort considered the fact that his father would kill him to gain the document. He thrust the letter back into Rothgar’s hands. “Keep it. I’ll let you know when I decide what to do.” He stalked out of the room.
Verity said something softly to Nathaniel and rose to her feet. She looked at Chastity. Chastity went with her sister in pursuit of their brother.
They tracked him down in his room where he was attacking a bottle of brandy. Moving in unison, they relieved him of it. “Not now, Fort,” said Verity.
“This is all your fault!” he snarled.
“Well, really!” declared Chastity. “If ever I’ve heard a piece of injustice, it is that! Verity and I have suffered terribly, and have brought none of it on ourselves.”
He turned on her. “If you hadn’t debauched yourself with a damned Malloren, bloody Rothgar wouldn’t have our family over a barrel!”
Chastity planted her fists on her hips and leaned forward. “If Father hadn’t committed treason, none of this would have happened! Or have you forgotten that?”
He groaned and sank his head into his hands. “If this comes out, we’ll all be destroyed.”
Chastity and Verity sat, one on either side of him. “Fort, you heard Rothgar. It won’t come out.”
He looked up. “You trust Rothgar?”
“Yes,” said Chastity. “Don’t you?”
“He hates the Wares.”
“Why is that, Fort?”
“It mainly hinges on a man named Russell, an adherent of the Pitts, whom Father detests. I see now—I think I see—that Father detests anyone and everyone who gets between him and power. Russell was Commissary General of the Army. He was tried and ruined for corruption, but Rothgar stood by his friend throughout. There was talk that he had shared in the spoils, of course. Father has boasted of having a part in bringing Russell to justice, of putting an end to the scandals that had our brave soldiers fighting in tawdry uniforms and using unreliable weapons . . .” He sank his head in his hands once more. “Now, I don’t know what to think.”
Verity said, “Now you think Rothgar might want revenge?”
“He’s not a man to let sleeping wrongs lie.”
Chastity said quietly but firmly, “I don’t believe it.
” When Fort looked at her, she added, “I know you think I’m besotted with love, or lust, but Rothgar’s devotion to his family outweighs any other impulses he might have.
To expose Father would only make my situation worse, and he won’t do that to Cyn. ”
Fort’s frown lightened a little. “I pray you are right. But when this is over, he’ll still have that document, or at least the knowledge . . . I don’t trust him.”
Chastity laid a hand over her brother’s. “I’ll have Rothgar’s promise to return the document, and to keep silent. He’ll be true to his word.”
Fort shrugged her hand off. “I’ll not have you groveling to a Malloren for favors. I wonder,” he sneered, “what price he’ll ask.”
Verity’s shocked “Fort!” clashed with Chastity’s “Fool!”
Chastity stood and faced him. “For your information, the marquess is like a brother to me, and has been a better brother these past days than my real one has ever been!” She turned on her heels and slammed the door behind her.
Fort cursed. “That girl is out of hand. I’d like to beat her.”
“No, you wouldn’t,” Verity said firmly.
He sighed. “I feel as if I’m in the maelstrom.
Chastity’s letting these Mallorens twist her inside out.
She believes everything they tell her.” He looked at Verity.
“I’m glad you’re married to Frazer, but it’s another scandal in the making, especially when Vernham takes you both to court. And now there’s Father.”
“And you, I suppose, are pure as snow.”
“No,” he admitted ruefully, “but I’m beginning to look like it, the company I’m keeping.”
Verity smiled at him. “I trust Rothgar too. And so does Nathaniel.”
“You’re all mad,” said Fort.