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Authors: Georgette Heyer

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General, #Classics

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BOOK: Masqueraders
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Robin caught her hand, and kissed it. ‘Ma’am, we treat you cavalierly, and you have been in truth our good angel. You know what I would say to you in thanks: what Prue would say.’

‘Ah, what is this?’ She snatched her hand away. ‘Do not talk to me like that! Thank me for nothing, Robin. I will be the silly dupe. Eh, but how I will lament!’

‘You will do it very well, my dear Thérèse,’ my lord assured her. ‘John, saddle the horses. Waste no more time, my son: it is time you were gone. I shall see you again very shortly. Thérèse, I shall drive back to town in your curricle, and if you send a man for it to-morrow you will find it in your own stables near Arlington Street. Naturally I shall have had nothing to do with this. I have not visited you to-night. Do not forget that! Robin, farewell! When you return, remember that you bear the name of Tremaine. John, have a care to my son!’ My lord arose as he spoke, received his hat and cloak from John, and with a gesture that savoured strongly of a Pope’s blessing, swept out of the room, and away.

CHAPTER XXIX

The Ride through the Night

Shoulder to shoulder, galloping over silent fields in the light of the moon, Prudence and Sir Anthony passed through the country unseen and unheard. There was little said; the pace was too fast, and Prudence too content to talk. This then was the end, in spite of all. The large gentleman swept all before him, and faith, one could not be sorry. Several times she stole a look at that strong profile, pondering it; once he turned his head and met her eyes, and a smile passed between them, but no words.

It seemed she was very much the captive of his sword; there could be nothing more to say now, and, truth to tell, she had no mind to argue.

She supposed they were off to his sister, but the way was unfamiliar to her. The gentleman seemed to know the country like the back of his hand, as the saying was; he eschewed main roads and towns; kept to the solitary lanes, and ever and anon led her ’cross country, or turned off through some copse or meadow to avoid a village, or some lone cottage on the road. There would be no one to tell of this mad flight through the dark hours; no man would have seen them pass, nor any hear the beat of the horses’ hoofs racing by.

Sure, they seemed to be the only people awake in all England. The failing daylight had gone hours since; there had been a spell of darkness when they rested their horses in a walk along a deserted lane; and then the moon had risen, and there was a ghostly pale light to show them the way, and the trees threw weird shadows along the ground. There might be heard now and then the melancholy hoot of an owl, and the chirp and twitter of a nightjar, but all else was hushed: there was not so much as a breath of wind to rustle the leaves on the trees.

They saw squat villages lying darkly ahead, swung off to skirt them round, seeing occasionally the warm glow of a lamp-lit window, and reached the road again beyond. Once a dog barked in the distance and once a small animal ran across the road in front of them, and the mare shied and stumbled.

There was a quick hand ready to snatch at the bridle. Prudence laughed, and shook her head, bringing the mare up again. ‘Don’t fear for me, kind sir.’

‘I need not, I know. Yet I can’t help myself.’

The moon was high above them when they reined in to a walk again. Prudence was helped into her greatcoat; the horses drew close, and the riders’ knees touched now and again.

‘Tired, child?’ Sir Anthony’s free hand came to rest a moment on hers.

Faith, it was a fine thing to be so precious in a man’s eyes. ‘Not I, sir. Do you take me into Hampshire?’

‘Be sure of it. I’ll have you under my sister’s wing at last.’

Prudence made a wry face. ‘Egad, I wonder what she will say to me?’

There was a little laugh. ‘Nothing, child. She’s too indolent.’

‘Oh, like Sir Anthony Fanshawe—upon occasion.’

‘Worse. Beatrice is of too ample a girth to indulge even in surprise. Or so she says. I believe you will like her.’

‘I am more concerned, sir, that she may be pleased to like me.’

‘She will, don’t fear it. She has a fondness for me.’

‘I thank you for the pretty compliment, kind sir. You would say you may order her liking at your will.’

‘You’re a rogue. I would say she will be prepared to like you from the outset. Sir Thomas follows her lead in all things. It’s a quaint couple.’

‘Ay, and what are we? Egad, I believe I’ve fallen into a romantic venture, and I always thought I was not made for it. I lack the temperament of your true heroine.’

There was a smile hovering about Sir Anthony’s mouth. ‘Do you?’ he said. ‘Then who, pray tell me, might stand for a true heroine?’

‘Oh, Letty Grayson, sir. She has a burning passion for romance and adventure.’

‘Which Madam Prudence lacks. Dear me!’

‘Entirely, sir. I was made for sobriety.’

‘It looked excessively like it—back yonder in the coach,’ said Sir Anthony, thinking of that shortened sword held to poor Matthew’s throat.

‘Needs must when the old gentleman drives,’ said Prudence, smiling. ‘I should like to breed pigs, Sir Anthony, I believe.’

‘You shall,’ he promised. ‘I have several pigs down at Wych End.’

The chuckle came, but a grave look followed. ‘Lud, sir, it’s very well, but you lose your head over this.’

‘An enlivening sensation, child.’

‘Maybe. But I am not fit to be my Lady Fanshawe.’

The hand closed over her wrist; there was some sternness in the pressure. ‘It is when you talk in that vein that I can find it in me to be angry with you, Prudence.’

‘Behold me in a terror. But I speak only the truth, sir. I wish you would think on it. One day I will tell you the tale of my life.’

‘I’ve no doubt I shall be vastly entertained,’ said Sir Anthony.

‘Oh, it’s very edifying, sir, but it’s not what the life of my Lady Fanshawe should be.’

‘Who made you judge of that, child?’

She laughed. ‘You’re infatuated, sir. But I’m not respectable, give you my word. In boy’s clothes I’ve kept a gaming-house with my father; I’ve escaped out of windows and up chimneys; I’ve travelled in the tail of an army not English; I’ve played a dozen parts, and—well, it has been necessary for me often to carry a pistol in my pocket.’

Sir Anthony’s head was turned towards her. ‘My dear, will you never realise that I adore you?’

She looked down at her bridle hand; she was shaken and blushing like any silly chit, forsooth! ‘It was not my ambition to make you admire me by telling you those things, sir.’

‘No, egad, you hoped to make me draw back. I believe you don’t appreciate yourself in the least.’

It was very true; she had none of her father’s conceit; she had never troubled to think about herself at all. She raised puzzled eyes. ‘I don’t know how it is, Tony, but you seem to think me something wonderful, and indeed I am not.’

‘I won’t weary you with my reasons for holding to that opinion,’ said Sir Anthony, amused. ‘Two will suffice. I have never seen you betray fear; I have never seen you lose your head. I don’t believe you’ve done so.’

Prudence accepted this; it seemed just. ‘No, ’tis as Robin says: I’ve a maddening lack of imagination. The old gentleman tells me it is my mother in me, that I can never be in a flutter.’

Sir Anthony leaned forward, and took the mare’s bridle above the bit; the horses stopped, and stood still, very close together. An arm was round Prudence’s shoulder; the roan’s reins lay loose on his neck. Prudence turned a little towards Sir Anthony, and was gripped to rest against a broad shoulder. He bent his head over hers; she had a wild heart-beat, and put out a hand with a little murmur of agitation. It was taken in a firm clasp: for the first time Sir Anthony kissed her, and if that first kiss fell awry, as a first kiss must, the second was pressed ruthlessly on her quivering lips. She was held in a hard embrace; she flung up an arm round Sir Anthony’s neck, and gave a little sob, half of protest, half of gladness.

The horses moved slowly on; the riders were hand-locked. ‘Never?’ Sir Anthony said softly.

She remembered she had said she could never be in a flutter. It seemed one was wrong. ‘I thought not indeed.’ Her fingers trembled in his. ‘I had not before experienced—
that
,
you see.’

He smiled, and raised her hand to his mouth. ‘Do I not know it?’ he said.

The grey eyes were honest, and looked gravely. ‘You could not know it.’

The smile deepened. ‘Of course I could know it, my dear. Oh, foolish Prue!’

It was all very mysterious; the gentleman appeared to be omniscient. And what in the world was there to amuse him so? She gave a sigh of content. ‘You give me the happy ending I never thought to have,’ she said.

‘I suppose you thought I was like to expose you in righteous wrath when I discovered the truth?’

‘Something of the sort, sir,’ she admitted.

‘You’re an amazing woman, my dear,’ was all he said.

They rode on in silence, and quickened presently to a canter. ‘I want to rest you awhile,’ Sir Anthony said. ‘Keep an eye for a likely barn.’

‘The horses would be glad of it.’ Prudence bent to pat the mare’s neck.

They were in farm-land now; it was not long before they found such a barn. It lay by some tumbledown sheds across a paddock, where a little rippling stream separated field from field. The farm buildings were hidden from sight by a rise in the ground; they rode forward, past what was left of a haystack, and dismounted outside the barn.

It was not locked; the door hung on rusty hinges, and inside there was the sweet smell of hay.

Sir Anthony propped the door wide to let in the moonlight. ‘Empty,’ he said. ‘Can you brave a possible rat?’

Prudence was unbuckling her saddle-girths. ‘I’ve done so before now, but I confess I dislike ’em.’ She lifted off the saddle and had it taken quickly from her.

‘Learn, child, that I am here to wait on you.’

She shook her head, and went on to unbridle the mare. ‘Attend to Rufus, my lord. What, am I one of your frail, helpless creatures then?’

‘You’ve a distressing independence, on the contrary.’ Sir Anthony removed the saddle from the roan’s back, and led him into the barn. For the next few minutes he was busy with a wisp of straw, rubbing the big horse down.

Prudence went expertly to work on her mare, and stood back at last. ‘It’s warm enough here,’ she remarked. ‘They’ll take no hurt. When they’ve cooled we’d best take them down to the stream. Lord, but I’m thirsty myself!’

Sir Anthony threw away the wisp of straw. ‘Come then. There’s naught but my hands to make a cup for you, alack.’

But they served well enough. They came back at length to the barn, and found the horses lipping at a pile of hay in the corner. A bed was made for Prudence. ‘Now sleep, my dear,’ Sir Anthony said. ‘You need it, God knows.’

She sank down on to the sweet-smelling couch. ‘What of yourself, sir?’

‘I’m going to take the horses down to the stream. Be at ease concerning me. What, must you be worrying still?’

She lay back with her head pillowed on her folded greatcoat, and smiled up at him. ‘A pair of vagabonds,’ she said. ‘Faith, what have I done to the elegant Sir Anthony Fanshawe? It’s scandalous, I protest, to set you at odds with the law.’

Sir Anthony led the horses to the door. ‘Oh, you must always be thinking you had the ordering of this!’ he said teasingly, and went out.

When he brought the horses back her eyes were closed, and she had a hand slipped under her cheek. Sir Anthony took off his greatcoat, and went down on his knee to lay it gently over her. She did not stir. For a moment he stayed, looking down at her, then he rose, and went soft-footed to the door, and paced slowly up and down in the moonlight. Inside the barn the horses munched steadily at the armful of hay he had given them. There was silence over the fields; the world slept, but Sir Anthony Fanshawe stayed wakeful, guarding his lady’s rest.

CHAPTER XXX

Triumph of Lord Barham

Speculation concerning the result of my Lord Barham’s coming meeting in Grosvenor Square was in abeyance. The strange flight of the Merriots formed the topic of every conversation in Polite Circles. It was a seven-days’ wonder, and society was greatly put out to think it had received this couple with open arms. It was felt that my Lady Lowestoft had been very much to blame, and quite a number of people who heard my lady’s lamentation felt a glow of superiority. They had a comfortable conviction that they would never have been so foolish as to invite such a chance-met pair to stay. One or two persons had an odd idea that they had heard my lady say she was acquainted with the Merriots’ father, but when they mentioned this my lady was positively indignant.
Voyons
,
how could she have said anything of the sort when she had never set eyes on the elder Mr Merriot? She had been most grossly deceived; no one could imagine how great was the kindness she had shown the couple; she had had no suspicion of foul play. When she heard that Mr Merriot was taken by the law for the killing of Gregory Markham she was so shocked, so astonished, she could scarcely speak. And then, next morning, to find Kate flown, and a horse gone from her own stables—oh, she was prostrated. The affair was terrible—she believed she would never recover.

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