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Authors: Barbara Barnett

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BOOK: The Apothecary's Curse
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Gaelan spied Kinston House looming near: battlements and towers high above the surrounding landscape. After dismounting, and tying his horse at the tall iron gates of the graveyard, he gazed through the locked bars and past hundreds of aged and mossed-over stone markers toward a small hillock, wondering whether the gleaming white monument at its foot marked the resting place of his small family, of Lord Kinston's only child and her son. A gentle tap on his shoulder startled him in the quiet of the churchyard. “Might I help you, sir?”

Gaelan wheeled, coming face-to-face with an old man, well dressed in cleric's garb. “Good morning, vicar.” How much did the vicar know? “I was just coming to your door. I shall be taking my leave of England for a while and should like to lay a flower at a particular gravestone before I do. If you would be so kind as to open the gate, then direct me towards—”

The old man smiled. “You are here to see the Lady Caitrin, of course. She was your wife, was she not?”

The vicar scrutinized him like prey, and Gaelan forced himself to remain emotionless and calm, wondering whether there would be trouble.
Be you a man of God or Lord Kinston's lackey?

“You look as if you might do with an ale, sir. Do come in.”

Gaelan had little desire to drink with the vicar. “Forgive me, but I've ridden two hours after a near-sleepless night, and I've no mind to delay—”

“All the more reason, sir, for you to sit a moment. If not drink, food perhaps. If you don't mind my saying, I am dreadful sorry about Lady Caitrin. I knew her since she was a babe in arms—” The vicar hesitated a moment, worrying a thread on his sleeve. “And your son, of course. All the more so for the way . . . Indeed, it was wrong of Lord Kinston to refuse you last year when you wished to attend her—” He blinked. “
Their
 . . . burial. I . . . I assure you . . . I advised him otherwise.”

There was little regret in the vicar's countenance. Beads of sweat welled on his doughy face. He was afraid, but of whom?

“Forgive me, sir. I have not come here to harangue you. Have I your leave, or shall you have me thrown off these lands as Kinston did a year back?” He would brook no small talk, no sympathetic platitudes from this sniveling toady. Gaelan gauged the height of the fence, contemplating how he might vault it, if need be.

The vicar nodded, blowing out a breath. “Very well.” He unlocked the high gate and pointed in the direction Gaelan had been looking before he'd been interrupted. “You'll find her grave at the base of yonder hill, beneath the acacia tree.”

Gaelan approached the hillock, listening for footsteps in pursuit, hoping the vicar had not lost his nerve. The alabaster stone was polished and new, set amid the fragrance of new-mown lawn and the moist decay of autumn.

“Lady Caitrin Arianna Kinston, Beloved Daughter and Mother.” Gaelan bit his lower lip, rage flooding his grief. The bond between them—ten years of marriage and a son, the earl's own grandson—severed by a stonemason's awl. Not even the anticipation of such coldheartedness mitigated the blow.

He ran his hands across the deep carving of the headstone, engraving it upon his soul. But where was Iain's grave? He ran from one marker to the next, frantic, crawling through the damp grass and debris, but it was nowhere to be found.
Why would they not . . . ?
Then, from behind, hoofbeats! There was no time! He whirled to find Kinston's men surrounding him, rifles at the ready.

“You shall leave, sir, and never return,” said one. “The next time we discover you on these lands, we shall call the magistrate. Be gone.”

With little use in confronting the heavily armed men, Gaelan was forced to abandon all hope of finding his son's gravestone. The family had gathered before the great house to witness from a distance his humiliation. They were all there—Kinston, his wife, even a serving girl, holding in her arms a young child—all staring at him derisively as he was marched off the estate.

The midafternoon sun filtered dull orange-red through the dissipating smoke of Smithfield as Gaelan arrived at the White Owl Inn. The boisterous crowd was still buzzing about the blaze, uttering, “Thanks to heaven,” that no one had been killed and the injuries mild. “Ah, but you, Mr. Erceldoune! What of your shop? And what's to become of you?”

The publican Sally Mills stood in the midst of the crowd, three mugs in each meaty hand. Gaelan approached her, taking three of the brimming vessels from her. “Have you a room to let, Sally? And have you seen Tim around yet today?”

“Thank you, Mr. Erceldoune. Yes, he's yonder,” she said, gesturing with her elbow to a corner table as she shifted one of the mugs to her other hand. “Too bad about your shop; I've seen the ruin, but of course you'll rebuild.” He followed her to a large table, distributing the mugs among the customers. “Meantime, consider the White Owl to be your home.” She placed a gentle hand on his arm.

“The room's not for me, Sally, but for Tim. I mean to leave London, quickly as I may.”

“Leave? But why? Whatever shall we do without you? Lyle Tremayne will bring in one of his own—some charlatan to fleece us all and line his pockets! You
can't
leave us. I'm more than happy to put you up on the house till you're ready to rebuild.”

Gaelan nodded. He well understood what would likely befall the good people of Smithfield if Tremayne had opportunity to put in an apothecary of his own choosing. “That I know well, my dear friend, but I'm afraid I cannot stay. I shall put in a word at the Apothecary's Hall and find Smithfield a proper practitioner—perhaps better than me!”

Timothy had spotted him and was now excitedly waving his arms. Gaelan smiled and began to make his way to his table. “Now, my darling Sal, bring us round bowls of that wonderful stew of yours, which even now intoxicates my senses. And pints of your finest.”

“Shop's a ruin, Mr. Erceldoune,” Timothy said, shaking his head slowly. “I don't know how we're to rebuild—”

“We cannot.”

The food arrived, and Timothy devoured the stew quickly. Gaelan had no appetite, no matter how enticing the savory aroma. He pushed his bowl toward his apprentice, and finished off his ale in three gulps. After withdrawing two envelopes from his leather satchel, Gaelan set them on the table.

“I'll be gone in three days' time, lad. And you shall return home to your father's house. I've here a letter of introduction; you shall have no difficulty in finding another apothecary with whom to apprentice. You're clever, and you're an able assistant; you would do well to study the surgeon's art as well, as I did long ago. The other letter is for your father and a return of monies not used, for he paid me ahead three months.”

“But, Mr. Erceldoune, where shall you go? I can certainly follow wherever you set up a new shop. You shall need an assistant, of course, wherever you resettle—”

Gaelan looked away. “No, Tim. I mean to leave England forever. Perhaps away to America.” Indeed, he had been in Smithfield too long by far. Soon enough, neighbors would take notice; no doubt Sally already had. They had all aged, Sal, Timothy, Tremayne—all but him. No wonder Tremayne suspected something peculiar. “No, my lad. Fortune be with you, but we shall never again cross paths.”

Pulling Timothy into an embrace, Gaelan regretted severing himself once again from all he held dear. But there really was no other way. He gestured toward Sally, now arguing with a customer from behind the long bar. “Now mind her, and she'll take care of you until it is time for your coach on the morrow. I've arranged your fare already.” Simon closed his bag, adjusting it over his shoulder and across his chest. He patted it, feeling within it the ouroboros book, determined never again to let it venture too distant from his grasp.

“But—”

Already out the door, squinting into the sun, Gaelan sighed, one task complete and his thoughts drifting to the next item on his list.

“Gaelan Erceldoune?”

He looked up; five men formed a semicircle before him, pistols raised. He took a step backward, tensing.
What's this about, then?
It couldn't be Kinston's men chasing him all the way to Smithfield, and yet . . . Not Kinston's, he realized: Tremayne's men, sent to finish the task forgotten in their haste to flee the blaze.

Perhaps this was a stroke of luck. They would shoot, and he would fall. Fifty witnesses would swear to his death, and he'd be carried off. Morning would come, and he would vanish, the body undoubtedly snatched by resurrectionists.

Over his shoulder, the White Owl quickly emptied, the patrons watching with curiosity as the armed men approached. “I am Gaelan Erceldoune. What do you want of me?”

“Gaelan Erceldoune, you are under arrest for murder, by order of the magistrate. You are to accompany us to the Old Bailey.” One advanced, shackles unlocked and at the ready.

Arrest?
Coiled and wary, Gaelan stepped backward toward the White Owl, his hands flat in front of him—a gesture of surrender. “I've
murdered
no one.”

“That is not what it says here!” Another of the men approached with a rolled paper. “You will answer, sir, for the death of Lillian Mason, found poisoned late last night.”

Incomprehensible.
Lil dead?
Poison?
It could not be true. Gaelan's knees buckled; he fought to remain upright, facing his accusers eye to eye. He refused to believe it. Tremayne. Had to be. Who else would do it—murder an innocent girl and then come after him to hang for it? Gaelan shouted the scoundrel's name, as if he would have the courage to confront him directly.

“Mr. Erceldoune!”

Tim.
Gaelan startled, yet remaining mindful of the armed men, now nearly upon him. “Timothy! Please. Come no closer, lad. All will be right.” He held up an arm, waving Timothy away and addressing his captors, begging reason to prevail. “Surely, the young man is no threat to you.”

Gaelan held up his satchel, still slung across his chest. “This bag contains nothing but items of sentimental value. I would give it into this young man's safekeeping. You may look inside if you wish, but I would ask—”

One of the men took it, ripping the long strap from Gaelan's shoulder. He opened it. “Fine.” He threw it into the dirt.

Gaelan picked it up, beckoning Timothy closer. “Tim, my boy, there's naught to give you a fright. I shall be fine. Only just take my satchel; I'll have no need of it for a while.” His voice dropped to a whisper, forcing Timothy closer still, but the men continued to draw nearer. “Be sure to take care with it, and keep it safe for me. Do not let it out of your possession, wherever you go. Someday you shall return it to me.”

“But, sir! Your books—”

Gaelan nodded. “Yes, them as well. I—”

The men had lost patience, forcing the shackles around his wrists and ankles. “No more small talk!”

He neither fought nor helped as his captors dragged him off to the mortifying cries of “Murderer!” in his wake.

CHAPTER 16

Two weeks later and still Simon could not believe that Sophie was dead. Life passed as if he were a spectator standing alongside a moving stage. The funeral at his in-laws' estate, recalled only in flashes of distorted faces, lips mouthing unintelligible platitudes. He'd been home three days, refusing all visitors and swathed in a blanket of laudanum, which did little to stem his tearless sobs.

And now his mother awaited him, the most unwelcome caller of all. He sighed, opening the drawing room doors, knowing he could not avoid her forever. Her hard gaze ambushed him immediately.

“I must have a word with your housekeeper. You are a fright, Simon. James told me you were in a bad way, but I refused to believe him.”

“Mother, I have just lost my wife.” So it began. There was little she could say that had not already been said several times over by James—and even Mrs. McRory.

“Yes, and from what James has told me, it is more blessing than curse that she is gone; she was in terrible pain, he told me, and on death's door. And what is this business of an apothecary? My
God
, Simon.” She shook her head slowly side to side. “My dear son, I thought you were more reasonable than this! Look at you! Is this any way to greet a visitor, in mourning or not. Really!”

“You must allow me to grieve in my own way—”

“What? By starving yourself, refusing to bathe or shave?”

“Mother, you know nothing. I—”

“To speak true, Simon, I came because dear Mrs. McRory was fearful for you. She sent word that you had deteriorated both in health and in deportment. I did not believe her, owing it to exaggeration and her own sorrow. Now go, dress properly for luncheon. I have no intention of returning home to Cheshire until I am satisfied you have recovered your good senses!”

Simon was grateful to leave his mother's presence, anxious to reprimand Mrs. McRory for going to Lady Elizabeth, although she'd warned him. But there was nothing Mrs. McRory, James . . . or Lady Elizabeth Bell might say to him.

BOOK: The Apothecary's Curse
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