Authors: Alexandra Benedict
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
It was a shameful realization.
“I want nothing from you but Sabrina,” said Anthony.
“What about your family honor?”
He paused to consider the man for a moment. “And what does my family’s honor have to do with this?”
“Well, the Kennington name will be tarnished once you are condemned for high treason.”
“Treason! Are you mad?”
Fidgeting with the emerald ring on his finger, Gillingham returned confidently, “If you refuse to surrender the locket, you will be committing treason.”
“Ridiculous.”
“I warn you, Lord Hastings, I have the authority to do as I will. If you want your family free from persecution, you will give me the locket.”
“Horse shit. Now give me the gypsy.”
The cold façade crumbled. Gillingham slammed his fists against his desk top, knocking away a number of his papers, all fluttering to the floor in disarray. “I refuse to believe you give a tinker’s damn for that vagrant!”
“I don’t give a rat’s bloody arse what you believe,” was the curt reply. “I want the girl.”
“The girl must die.”
“Why?” challenged Anthony, as a sickening vision invaded his thoughts; an image of Sabrina’s lifeless body floating down some watery channel, and him fishing her from the channel, cradling her limp limbs in his arms, howling at his loss. He quickly dismissed the disturbing thought.
The scoundrel stood in frustration, paced before his desk, then paused to demanded: “Do you think I would risk this nation’s security for a gypsy’s meager life?”
“Don’t be absurd.” Anthony rejected the suggestion at once. “Sabrina cannot jeopardize Britain’s security.”
Cupping the edge of the desk, Gillingham leaned forward. “She knows what is inside the locket, doesn’t she?”
Anthony didn’t answer.
“Doesn’t she?” Gillingham pressed him again.
“
I
know what is inside the locket. If you want a prisoner, take me.”
“What if I take your family prisoner instead?” A sadistic twinkle of delight flashed through his shadowed eyes. “What if I detain your father in the tower, humiliate your mother, ravish your sisters? Condemn you all as traitors?”
The viscount bounded for the desk. But two robust arms shoved him back into his seat.
“You see, Lord Hastings?” The fiend offered a satisfying smirk. “I have a hold over you. Your family honor is far more precious to you than a mere gypsy. You’re not going to reveal what’s inside the locket. I would destroy you. And your blue-blooded instincts are far too sharp to let such a fate befall you. You will do whatever I tell you. But I have no such hold over the gypsy.”
Anthony all but growled, “Sabrina doesn’t understand what’s inside the locket. She can’t even read!”
“I’m not willing to take that chance.” Gillingham resumed pacing. “Now that locket is rightfully mine. It was stolen from me five years ago with very sensitive information.”
Sensitive information? Anthony made an internal snort. Sensitive indeed. The scoundrel wanted money. Money owed to him, no doubt, by the unfortunate resident of the address in the locket.
Well, if mere wealth was the issue, Anthony would offer it in abundance. Whatever it took to get Sabrina back.
“How much?”
Gillingham paused and quirked a brow. “Pardon?”
“How much for the girl? That is what all this nonsense over British security is all about, isn’t it? A ploy for money?”
“Oh, Lord Hastings.” He shook his head like a disappointed father scolding a son. “Your paltry wealth could never entice me to betray my country.”
His words triggered a memory. Anthony could clearly see in his mind the arena of the Lion’s Gate, the tables scattered across the main floor, the patrons clustered together at each of the tables. He quickly skimmed over the faces of the gentlemen, recalling those he knew, remembering how he had once thought the group a rather eclectic bunch. But on closer reflection, he realized there was one similarity that all the men shared. Jeremy Fielding, the third marquess of Winbourne, for instance, wasn’t always the present marquess. In fact, he was never destined to become the marquess. As second born, the man was devoid of a fortune and was impelled to make the military his career. It was only after his elder brother had died in a riding accident, that Jeremy sold his commission and assumed his place as the next marquess of Winbourne.
General-Major Archibald Adington had served under Wellington himself, so it was no secret the man was associated with the army. And then there was the politician, Lord Bradford Derwent, who, though he had never served in the army, had caused quite a stir when he’d made some rather ambiguous comments in Parliament concerning the war with the French. Comments that could be construed as treasonous. And then, of course, there was Vincent, another man involved in the war.
The implication was suddenly clear—though Anthony loathed to acknowledge it. “You’re a spy.”
“Very good, Lord Hastings. That’s one matter resolved.”
Anthony didn’t want to believe what he was hearing. He just wanted to pay the scoundrel a hefty sum and be done with the whole ghastly business of bargaining for another’s life.
But there was one piece of evidence he could not deny, something he had seen with his own two eyes—Gillingham at court.
Anthony had tried then to dismiss what he had witnessed, convinced it was only his imagination gone wild, but he could no longer refute the obvious. No ordinary scoundrel would have that kind of access to the royal palace, and Anthony was forced to accept the man’s claim, however much he deplored it.
“And the locket?” asked Anthony next.
“The locket was stolen by a French spy. A royalist supporter who wanted to see the
ancien régime
restored in France. She joined my coterie some years ago, posing as an English patriot. Her loyalty was vigorously tested, of course, but in the end it was all just a ruse. She needed the information only my spies could acquire.”
“And where is she now?”
“Dead. But we never did find the locket.”
Anthony settled back against his chair in a daze, all sorts of baffling thoughts swimming through his head. “Then I assume your club serves as a front for your true intentions, and yet it is filled with British officers and politicians. Why spy on
them?
”
“To ensure there are no traitors. Should I happen upon a potential radical, the individual is encouraged to conform.”
“Blackmail, you mean?”
“Precisely.”
“And if you find you have trapped an innocent man?”
“He is released without much fuss—though perhaps stripped of a few coins.”
Anthony grumbled, “Vincent, for instance?”
“Yes, Mr. Longhurst proved to be a threat only to himself. Not much of a card player, I’m afraid.” Gillingham returned to his seat. “I see all this astonishes you, Lord Hastings. With so many balls to attend and whores to bed, I’m not surprised you haven’t noticed our country is in peril. Daily I hear of conspiracies to overthrow the government. There is always a riot needing to be suppressed somewhere in England. Economic and social discontent is breeding violence. The people are clamoring for a revolution of their own. And surely you, Lord Hastings, as a member of the realm, do not want to lose your head on an English version of Madame Guillotine?”
Anthony made no reply.
“I didn’t think so. Now let me paint you an even grimmer picture.
Habeas corpus
has been suspended. I have the authority to throw any suspected conspirator into the jail without trial or witness. I have executed a number of would-be conspirators, and yet, despite all of my best efforts to crush any sort of revolution, the threats to the crown and government persist. Now what do you suppose would happen here in England, if the frail political stability in France were to snap and the people there were to launch another revolution?”
Anthony let out a deep breath. “England would be inspired to launch a revolution of her own.”
“Precisely. Now do you see my predicament? To keep England safe, I must keep France safe, too. An arduous task. And you, Lord Hastings, are making my duty all the more difficult by withholding the locket.”
Brow wrinkled, Anthony remarked, “I don’t understand.”
“You don’t need to understand.”
“You had best make me understand, because I’m not about to let you murder an innocent woman over a scrap of paper inside of a locket.”
“That scrap of paper has the power to hurl France into another revolution if it falls into the wrong hands.” Gillingham adjusted his neck cloth, which had twitched out of place in his earlier outburst. “The current King Louis has two warring parties inside his moderate government: the ultraroyalists, who want the
ancien régime
restored, and the ex-revolutionists. Now the ultraroyalists realize they have very little chance of restoring the old regime, unless, of course, another French king was to come along and challenge the current King Louis for power.”
“But there is no other French king.”
“My spy in Austria believed otherwise.” Propping his elbows on the desk, Gillingham leaned forward to whisper: “Shortly before she was killed, my agent managed to smuggle an address into England. I was away from London when the message arrived. Upon my return, I learned it had been stolen, and inside the locket was gone forever the location of a small Austrian village, where a young man, believed to be King Louis XVII, resides.”
Anthony quirked a brow. “But the boy-king died in prison more than twenty years ago.”
“Yes, that is the official report. A victim of tuberculosis, the young Louis-Charles was buried with the rest of the royal family. But my sources tell me the boy was smuggled out of the temple by royalist sympathizers and into Austria, another youth’s body left in the boy-king’s place. Once safely removed from the carnage of France, Louis-Charles was to remain in seclusion until such time as he could be restored to the throne. But something went wrong. The young king’s sympathizers lost all trace of their monarch. Some sympathizers were beheaded, others fled France for their lives, and little by little, knowledge of the boy-king’s whereabouts disappeared.
“When the time came for the government to establish a constitutional monarchy, an heir was needed, so the boy’s uncle was proclaimed King Louis XVIII. And now he is responsible for France’s recovery. And I am not about to permit another king to enter France and instigate a revolution.”
Anthony remained thoughtful for a moment. Such plots and conspiracies seemed too flamboyant to be true, and yet, why else would Gillingham scour the countryside for the elusive locket these last five years? And there
was
an address scribbled on the scrap of paper. That much Anthony could acknowledge.
“What will you do with the alleged king in Austria once you find him?” wondered Anthony.
“First, establish his true identity. If he is Louis-Charles, I will ensure he never makes a bid for the throne.”
“You will kill him?”
“Nothing so dramatic. It is unwise to murder a monarch. Should rumor ever escape of his second death, it, too, might trigger a revolution. Better to keep Louis-Charles alive—but out of sight.”
“But Sabrina need not die.”
“Yes, she must!” The dark and wintry glow in his eyes was back. “I have the lives of you and your kin in the palm of my hand. I would crush you all were you ever to betray me, but I have no such hold over the gypsy.”
“I will guarantee she never reveals what is inside the locket.”
“Preposterous!” Down went a fist. “She is a wandering beggar. You will have no more power over her than I.”
“Then I will take her as my wife.”
The offer had a peculiar impact on Anthony. Here he was, demanding the right to a wife. A more unlikely situation he could not have envisioned. And yet, pure instinct had propelled him to present the solution: one Gillingham would have to accept, since Anthony would
never
accept the forfeit of Sabrina’s life.
“The law will give me authority over my wife,” Anthony went on to explain the credence of his plan. “You would have a hold over both of us.”
But Gillingham only snorted. “You would never take a gypsy for your wife. It would be social suicide.”
Anthony heard none of his skepticism. The crushing impulse to whisk Sabrina away from brutality—away from an empty death—was the sole instinct he heeded. “I will surrender the locket if you will give me the gypsy. That is the final bargain.”
Gillingham leaned back in his chair with a thoughtful gaze. “So you want to marry the wench?” He paused, then, “Very well. I’ll bind you to her myself. You will be married at dawn. If the secret of the locket is ever revealed, her disgrace will be yours—and your whole family’s. I will have you both executed for treason. Future Kennington generations will have no hope of ever showing their faces in England again. Do you understand?”
“I understand. Now where is Sabrina?”
He paused. “In Bedlam.”
B
edlam. A hospital—if it could be called such a place—for the insane. Anthony had only heard tales of the appalling conditions of imprisonment. It had been a popular excursion some years back for members of the gentry to tour Bedlam and its host of “abominable creatures.” But Anthony had never actually seen the grotesque surroundings for himself. With no interest in the exploitation of England’s mad citizens, he’d never participated in such a tour.