Chapter 14

The Marquess of Rothgar made no attempt to ornament himself before setting off for Windsor in the carriage. This was not an occasion for glitter. With God’s grace, Cyn would have alerted the king to danger. Now he must prevent damage to the family’s reputation.

Even with six of his best horses in the shafts, it took more than an hour to arrive at the king’s country palace, its ancient walls rising majestically over a mass of buildings added to and adapted by centuries of monarchs.

Almost anyone had to progress through a number of chambers to reach the king.

Rothgar, however, progressed with remarkable speed.

He was bowed through the paneled guard chamber, where the guards did not seem to be on special alert.

Then a footman escorted him through the presence chamber and audience chamber, past a number of hopefuls lounging about admiring Verrio’s magnificent ceiling, and the empty carved throne.

A couple of men tried to speak to him, but he indicated that his business could not wait. He recognized the envy in their eyes but had little sympathy for such petitioners. Most of them merely wanted a sinecure from the king to finance their expensive pleasures.

At the great gilded doors of the King’s Drawing Room, the guards stood back to let him pass.

George, fresh-faced and bulbous-eyed, was pacing the room when Rothgar was announced. He turned to him fretfully. “Lord Rothgar!” he exclaimed. “Such goings-on!”

Rothgar, noting an absence of both mechanical device and brother, made a profound bow to the King and to the heavily pregnant queen who sat nearby, clutching a puppy. Then he bestowed lesser ones on Lord Bute and Charles Grenville, who were also present.

“You are well come indeed,” said Grenville with assumed warmth. “We thought you out of the country, my lord, and feared for your reputation.”

“God sent contrary winds, and thus I am here to set all right. The mechanical device?”

“Was delivered. But Lord Cynric arrived in time.”

“He manhandled me!” George spluttered.

“I apologize on his behalf, Your Majesty, but I’m sure it was necessary.”

“Well, I’m not! And if the device is so dangerous, how can that be when it is a gift from you, my lord?

Eh? Can you make sense of this story, eh?

Can you? Grenville says a relative of Lord Bute was involved, but Lord Bute denies any knowledge of it.

The device came from your house, my lord, but you are ignorant of it.

Lord Walgrave is involved, but acting on my First Secretary’s orders, and innocent.

And no one saw fit to tell me anything. I am displeased. Most displeased!”

The king dabbed at his sweaty forehead with a gilded, monogrammed silk handkerchief.

“Very understandable, Your Majesty,” said Rothgar, forcefully projecting calm. “I assure you, had I known anything of this matter, I would have informed you in full immediately. Lord Walgrave, however, perhaps you can excuse. He is young and took the advice of older men.”

“I am somewhat surprised to hear you defend him, Rothgar,” said Grenville, no longer smiling. “You are no friend to that family.”

“I try not to let my bias sway me, Grenville, and of course, our families are now joined. Walgrave’s purpose, I am told, was merely to assist in rooting out the base of this plot to harm His Majesty.”

“And as soon as we find Michael Murray,” said Bute, “we will have him! I am distressed, distressed beyond imagining, that I have harbored such a viper in my bosom.”

“As close as that, were you?” queried Rothgar mildly.

The earl flushed. “ ’Tis an expression, my lord.”

“Ah, I see.” Rothgar turned back to the king.

“I have sent some men to a location where we might find Murray, Your Majesty. At the same time, I sent a message to Mr. Grenville’s office suggesting that he dispatch soldiers there, and also search ships sailing down the Thames.

I had no idea he thought it more important to be here. ”

Grenville flushed. “I left capable men in charge, Your Majesty. In fact, I left Lord Walgrave to assist them, since he was, most understandably, anxious to set all aright. I came here, feeling His Majesty had to be informed as soon as possible.”

“Which it seems he is not.” Rothgar turned to the king. “With your permission, Your Majesty, perhaps we may all sit and I will tell the tale as best I can. I’m sure Lord Bute and Mr. Grenville will add their mite.”

“I know nothing,” declared Bute fretfully. “Nothing.” But when the king waved permission, he sat with the others, clearly trying to decide just where the threat to his position lay in all this.

The old tavern appeared deserted, but when Elf saw the trapdoor leading to the ramp, she knew someone had been there.

It stood open, the lock forced in some way.

Despite Bryght’s cautioning hand on her arm, she leaned forward to peep in.

Even in daylight, the windowless room was gloomy, but she could see well enough to know that it was now completely empty apart from the old casks.

The coffin had been removed.

No special stone sat on the uneven floor.

“It’s gone,” she whispered.

“Indeed it is,” said a familiar voice, and Elf straightened to face Fort. He stood in the ruined doorway dressed in deepest black, and even with a battered face, he had regained all his aristocratic hauteur.

Suppressing a host of distracting emotions, she asked, “Where is it?”

Now she noticed the soldiers behind him, and altered by something in the atmosphere, she turned to see more appear from behind nearby objects, all eyeing the Malloren servants with suspicion.

Some of the hovering mothers grabbed their curious children.

“I have no idea,” said Fort, “having only just arrived myself.”

“Well, nor have we, since we have only just arrived, too.”

Elf saw that Fort’s attention was entirely on Bryght, and that if he’d been a dog, his hackles would be rising. She was sure her brother was reacting in exactly the same way. They were old enemies because of Portia. Goodness knows what folly they would get up to now if allowed.

Turning her back on them, she marched over to one of the nearby scavengers, a toothless crone, dressed in ragged clothes.

“If you please, ma’am, has anyone been here this morning to take anything out of that building?”

The woman’s rheumy eyes shifted and she scuttled a few steps away, clutching her folded-up apron to her chest. “I ain’t taken anything I shouldn’t. ’Onest!”

“Of course not,” said Elf with as reassuring a smile as she could manage. “No one wants to make trouble for you. It’s just that we expected to find something in that cellar. Just a large stone, actually. And it’s not there. Probably our friends were here ahead of us.”

The woman’s eyes turned sharp. “Friends, eh? And redcoats ’unting ’em? I don’t want no trouble.”

Elf heard footsteps behind her and knew they wouldn’t be Fort’s. “Bryght. Do you have a small coin?”

He put a sixpence in her hand and she held it out to the woman. “Here. Take it. You don’t have to do anything for it. But if you do know anything, it would be a kindness to tell us.”

The crone grabbed the coin, her eyes darting around.

“Right, well, you seem an ’onest, sweet-natured lady, so I’ll tell ’ee.

Some men came by with a cart a while ago.

Broke open that door, they did. Funny it was really, ’cos ’esterday the door wasn’t locked at all, and the blinkin’ cellar was empty of all but a few old casks.

Then they ’auled out a bloody great boulder!

I couldn’t figure it at all,” she said, getting into the spirit of her story.

“Gawd knows there’s enough rocks in the world if a body wants ’em.

But this bob-wigged minister was leaping around, telling ’em not to scratch it.

Never seen anything like it in all me born days. ”

Bob-wigged minister? But then Elf remembered Roberts saying the street monkeys had been hired by a Scots clergyman. Murray in disguise? “It does sound extraordinary,” she said as if only mildly curious. “What did they do with this stone?”

“Put it in a box they brung up before.” She cackled.

“A coffin, it was, and a right funny scene. The clergyman was as fretful as if they was handling a corpse. Kept saying as they should ’ave put the stone in the box before bringing it up.

Which was true enough if he didn’t want it scratched.

Stone, he kept calling it. Weren’t no stone. Were a bloody great boulder.”

“So, this clergyman. He wasn’t here when the others started moving things?”

“Nah, he turned up later.”

“And I suppose they put the box on a cart and drove it away.”

“That’s right!” said the woman, as if this were a work of deductive genius. “That’s just what they did, mistress.”

Elf looked in the direction of the river. “As you have guessed, ma’am, the poor clergyman is not quite sane. He thinks this boulder is of great value and intends to ship it to France as a gift to the king there . . .”

The woman cackled again. “Lord ’a mercy, I wish I could see that!”

“It would be less embarrassing if we could stop him before he sets sail. I wonder what wharf he would be most likely to use.”

The eyes were sharp again. “Soldiers and all,” muttered the old woman. “I doubt you’re telling me the ’ole tale, mistress, but you look like a good ’un. I ’eard ’em say Harrison’s Wharf. It’s close by on the river.”

“How long ago?”

“Not long. They won’t have got orf yet, I don’t think.”

Elf took the woman’s callused, dirty hand. “What’s your name?”

The woman shied a bit, but then said, “Dibby Cutlow, mistress.”

“Thank you for your help, Mrs. Cutlow. And if you are ever in need, come to Malloren House in Marlborough Square.” Then she turned to Bryght. “The clergyman is probably Murray in disguise. En avant!”

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