Authors: Beryl Kingston
âThey have their value,' his neighbour agreed. âHowsomever 'tis my opinion they are best when they are used with discretion. As agents provocateurs I sometimes wonder if they ain't a good deal worse than the mob we pay 'em to control. They provoke riots a-plenty, I'll grant you that, but it don't lead to a hanging, and a hanging is what we need to deter the sort of mob we see in this country today.'
âQuite right,' Sir Joshua said. âAin't had a good hanging for years. Used to enjoy 'em, so I did.'
âHow of our own two special government spies?' Lady Harrowby said urbanely, smiling at Frederick in the hope that he would help her to ease the conversation. âI believe you found our roving Princess when you were on your travels last autumn, did you not?'
âWe did, ma'am,' Frederick said.
âAnd did you discover her intentions too?'
âI fear we may have done.'
âShe means to return,' Lady Harrowby said, understanding him. âDear me. That won't please the new King. Can he do ought to prevent her, think 'ee?'
âI doubt it, ma'am.'
âThey say he will divorce her rather than allow her to be Queen.'
â'Twould seem likely.'
âShe is hardly a fit person to be Queen of England,' Lady Barnesworth said. âFlaunting her lovers and dancing in the streets and wearing indecent clothing. 'Tain't seemly.'
âThe King takes lovers,' Nan pointed out, grinning at her, âand we forgive him for it. One law for the goose and another for the gander, I'm thinking.'
Another message had arrived and Lord Harrowby was looking uncommon serious.
âAnd what of her lover, Count Bergami?' another lady asked. âDid you meet with him? They say in the
Gazette
that he is a commoner and a fortune hunter.'
âAs to that, dear lady,' Frederick said, â'tis an impossibility to believe all that one reads in the press since no two newsheets ever agree.'
âThe government should put paid to the damn press, once and for all,' Sir Joshua said, filling his mouth with buttered parsnips. âThat's what they should do. All this pussy-footing around with stamp acts and agreements and such. 'Tain't a bit of use. Oh I know what you'll say to that, Mrs Easter, but upon me soul I never read such unmitigated balderdash as you see in
The Times
nowadays. I used to think it fair-minded, but upon me soul â¦' And he slopped more wine in his glass to show his ill-humour.
The butler was standing at the window shaking his head at his master, which seemed to be the correct signal for the noble Earl was smiling in answer. Now what was going on?
âHang the lot of 'em,' Sir Joshua said, drinking his wine noisily. âThat's what I say.'
Frederick gave him a disparaging look. âA very charitable sentiment,' he said.
A few hundred yards away, on the north side of Oxford Street, a group of excited men were waiting for a signal. There were about twenty of them, crowded together in a darkened attic above a stable at one end of a narrow alley called Cato Street, guns primed, swords sharpened, last instructions given. And among them were Jack and Henry Abbott, both in a state of frantic excitement, Jack prowling, Henry cracking his fingers like a fusillade, crick, crick, crick, over and over again.
Voices in the stable below them. The signal at last. Standing, gathering their weapons together, breathing fast with excitement. The trap door flung aside with a thud, a head protruding through the opening. But not the head they expected. Dear God! This one wore the stovepipe hat of a constable.
âHellfire boys! We are done for!' somebody shouted. Then the candles were kicked out and the room was full of struggling bodies. Somebody fired a pistol with a flash of red flame, acrid smoke, deafening reverberations. Somebody was duelling, blades hissing. Impossible to tell
friend from foe in the noise and darkness. Then Henry saw one of the windows opening and a man squeezing through head first, kicking as he fell, and he seized his cousin by the hand and followed, landing jarred but feet first in a street full of excited people.
Two men fighting for a cutlass, rolling over and over in the midden beside the door, constables rushing madly into the stable, conspirators struggling even more madly to get out, and scores of spectators herding into the road through the archway, alerted by gunfire and all agog for blood, running and shouting.
âCome you on,' Henry said, and he picked himself up, turned and backed into the oncoming crowd. âThrough the arch, bor!' And then they were in John Street and running like madmen, with no idea where they were going, wild with fear to get away, and with half a dozen men roaring after them, shrieking, âStop thief!' and âTreason!' They ran and ran, until their lungs felt as though they were bursting, continuing long after their pursuers had tired and given up the chase, and when they finally stopped it was because they had no breath or strength left at all.
They were in a quiet garden in the middle of one of the new fashionable squares, having thrown themselves bodily over the railings and crawled on their hands and knees to the cover of a thick holly.
âWhat â shall â do now?' Henry panted.
Although he could barely speak, Jack knew the answer. âGo â Fitzroy Square,' he gulped. âMrs Easter.'
Harriet Easter was spending a quiet evening at home, exactly as Matilda had predicted. John was out dining with Mr Walters of
The Times,
as he did every two months with his customary regularity, and she had been writing letters in the study downstairs, sitting peaceably beside the fire with her feet on the little velvet stool and the ticking of the grandfather clock for company. Two letters were written and ready for the early morning post, one very long and voluble to her dear Annie and the other short and restrained to her mother and father, and now she was
earnestly composing a third in answer to a request for a speaker. She had hardly begun it when there was an urgent rapping at the front door. Whoever can that be at this hour of the night? she wondered, putting down her pen, and she listened while Paulson brisk-footed into the hall.
Muffled voices. ââ Mrs Easter â could 'ee? â d'ye see, sir?'
And Paulson's solemn answer: âIf you will wait I will make enquiries.'
She had recognized one voice before Paulson came in to announce its owner. âTwo
persons
of the name of Abbott, so they say, ma'am.'
âShow them in, Paulson. They come from Rattlesden. Mrs Hopkins told me they were working in London and might be calling.'
But not at this hour of the night, Paulson's expression said. However, he did as he was told.
âWelcome to my house,' she said as the two men shuffled into the study. âPray, do sit down.' But then she saw that they were both bolt-eyed and red in the face with effort. âWhy, what is the matter?'
âWe've a pack of constables at our heels,' Jack Abbott said. âTha's the truth of it, mum. We'm on the run an' we don't know which way for to turn. Could you hide us an hour or two, mum? If it en't too much to ask.'
âWhat have you done?' Harriet asked, thrilled to think that they had turned to her for help. It was almost as though she were the great Nan Easter. Or even Mr Rawson. âWas there a meeting?'
âNot in the general sense of a meeting,' Jack admitted sheepishly.
âWell what, then?'
âWell now, mum, 'tis like this here,' Henry said, perching on the edge of the chair. His tone was decidedly artful, but she was too excited to notice. âWe been a-keepin' stables over the other side of town, since we come to London. Your friend Mr Richards sent us to it, for which we'm good an' grateful, en't we Jack?'
âYes,' she said. âMrs Hopkins told me of it. 'Twas at Cato Street, was it not?'
They seemed loathe to admit it, and she did notice that,
but thought it no more than odd.
âWell yes, mum,' Henry said after a long pause. âSo 'twas.'
âWhat we wasn't to know, mum,' Jack went on, âwas that them he sent us to is a parlous bad lot, mum, wanted by the constabulary so they are. And now we'm a-wanted along of 'em. Bein' they'm on the run, mum, we've had to run too, d'ye see. And bein' they'm a-wanted, we'm a-wanted along of 'em.'
âDo you mean that the constables are chasing you?' she asked. âActually on foot and chasing you? Now? Tonight?' How dreadful and how exciting!
âYes, mum,' Henry Abbott said. âGot away by the skin of our teeth, mum, so to speak.'
âBut you have done nothing wrong? You assure me of that?'
âOh no, mum. Nothing at all.'
But this was terrible. Something would have to be done to protect them, and done at once. âWait there,' she said, happily taking command of them. âI will return to 'ee presently.' And she went off to order the pony-cart, planning as she went. She would send them out of London on the first available coach, well out of harm's way, somewhere where the constables would never think of looking for them. The price of the tickets could be added to the Easter account, so that would present no problem. John would be sure to agree to it, as it would be an act of simple Christian charity, no more, no less. Now where could she send them? And the answer to that was in her mind almost as soon as she'd asked herself the question. Why to Caleb Rawson, of course! He would know exactly what ought to be done with men on the run from the constables. Had he not dealt with hundreds such after the massacre of Peterloo? She could write him a little note explaining the matter and throwing them all on his mercy. What a thrilling business, it was!
The pony-cart was ready in half an hour with Tom Thistlethwaite to drive it and Peg Mullins to accompany her for propriety's sake, for it wouldn't have done at all to be
seen driving about London at night in the sole company of two rough-looking men and a boy. And it was just as well she had such foresight, for it took over an hour and a half to find a coach to Manchester with two vacant seats aboard. But at last it was done, and the two Abbotts were dispatched with their letter of introduction. It was striking the first quarter past midnight when she and Peg and Tom finally arrived back in Fitzroy Square.
John had been home for half an hour. âWherever have you been, my love?' he asked mildly. âPaulson tells me you took two
persons
to the midnight coach. Was that truly so? He does not approve of such goings-on at all.'
âA most extraordinary thing,' she said. âDo you remember Mr Abbott from Rattlesden? Well â¦'
âYou have a tender heart, my dear,' he said when the tale was told.
âIt was right to help them, was it not?'
âLet us hope so,' he said, even though he wasn't at all sure, for it sounded very suspicous. But he was too tired to worry about it now.
However, the next morning his suspicions were confirmed as soon as he arrived at Easter House and saw the morning papers. He went home early for breakfast, taking a copy of each one.
âYou had best read this,' he said to Harriet, handing over a copy of the
Chronicle,
as she met him in the hall. âFrom what you told me last night, I am afraid you may have harboured two desperate criminals.'
No, she thought, as she walked through into the dining room paper in hand. The Abbots are not criminals, surely not. It is a mistake. He can't mean criminals. But the words in the paper were unequivocal.
âThursday Feb 24th 1820,' they said. âDREADFUL RIOT AND MURDER.'
âYesterday evening the West-end of the town was thrown into the utmost confusion, the streets lined with soldiers and spectators, and the greatest alarm prevailed in consequence of the following circumstances. Information having been received at Bow Street, that a
meeting of persons armed was to be held at a house in Cato Street Marylebone, the magistrates, fearing something serious would be the result, forwarded a formidable body of their officers to the place.
âA desperate affray took place. An officer by the name of Westcot received three shots through his hat, and Smythers, an active officer, received a stab in his right side, and he was carried away, quite dead. The officers endeavoured to enter the place, and secure nine of the offenders, who had received much injury; one of them, a butcher, had a desperate black eye, and his hands were much cut. Several others escaped and are being sought by the officers. Captain Fitzclarence arrived on the spot with a party of the Guards, and the prisoners were escorted to Bow Street by a strong body of soldiers, who surrounded the coaches.
âThe person, whose stab proved fatal to Smythers, has escaped. This person was stated at Bow Street to be Arthur Thistlewood.
âGovernment is understood to have had previous information of this extraordinary meeting.'
Harriet was so shocked she felt quite sick. Carried away quite dead! But that was murder! What were they doing with guns? They must have been planning an insurrection. Were the Abbotts conspirators?
âOh, John!' she said. âCato Street was where they worked. They told me so last night. These must be the very people they worked for. How
awful!
How
absolutely awful!
' The implications were terrifying. Had she helped two conspirators to escape from justice? Or two murderers? That was even worse. Oh surely not! Dear God, please don't let this be true, she prayed. I meant no harm by it. You must know that, Lord, for you know the secrets of all hearts. I thought I was helping the afflicted, not two men who were privy to murder. Please don't let it be true. âThey swore they had done nothing wrong,' she said.
âOh Harriet, my dear,' he reproved, âand you believed them?'
âI saw no reason not,' she pleaded.
He
had been quite
sanguine about them too, last night. âI thought they were telling the truth.'
âYou'd best read the
Advertiser
too,' he said, handing it across to her. âThere is more and worse.'