Read The Emperor's Conspiracy Online
Authors: Michelle Diener
Tags: #Romance, #General, #Historical, #Fiction
Tavenam stood still, and she realized he was shaking. “How do you know about the wager?”
“One of Lady Howe’s old friends is a member of the same club. He informed us, deeply worried about it, and its impact on my reputation.” It was an all-too-possible scenario. One that Tavenam would accept. “And you only need to watch some of the men here tonight to see that it is already having an effect.”
Tavenam clenched his jaw. “I will deal with this. Make no move toward Durnham for a day, maybe two, and I will make sure this is passed off as a prank in poor taste. Pretend you know nothing about it.”
She said nothing, raising her brows.
“It’s a mistake. Someone thinking to profit …”
“Profit from my being forced into intimacy with Lord Durnham, no matter my thoughts on the matter, or my own sensibilities.” She kept her voice even.
Tavenam went red. It started below his collar and crept up his neck, to stain his cheeks. He looked away from her. “This was not on my orders. It is someone not thinking clearly.”
“And you will make him see the light?”
Tavenam looked at her at last, and the expression in his pale, almost opaque eyes forced her to suppress a shiver. “He’ll understand his error before I’m done with him. I can assure you of that.”
30
T
he note arrived for him at his club just after ten in the evening. Edward took the envelope off the silver salver presented to him by the club’s butler and slit it open with the letter opener provided.
It was from Charlotte, giving the location to meet her, Kit, and Gary this evening. He studied her handwriting, the loops and flourishes of it, which spoke of a joy in putting pen to paper. A celebration of the skill of writing.
She must only have learned how when she came to Catherine.
He folded the paper and slipped it into his top pocket.
“Good news?” Lord Aldridge asked, and with a start Edward noticed he was sitting very close by, in the same dark corner of the room. He leaned forward and increased the light on the small lamp beside him, beating back the gloom a little.
“Why do you say that?”
“You looked …” Aldridge looked suddenly uncomfortable. “… well, happy.”
Edward damped down his surprise. “Yes. In a way, I am.”
“Well, good luck to you.” Aldridge stood. He was a few years younger than Edward, and almost too good-looking. Edward had known his older brother quite well, but Gerald had died six months before of appendicitis, and he knew Aldridge had come off the Peninsula Campaign to take up the title and the running of his family estate. He looked too thin, and careworn.
“Aldridge, if you need help or anything—” Edward stopped. He had no time or inclination for diplomacy, but even he could see that asking outright if the Aldridge finances were in a mess would be rude.
But Aldridge was smiling ruefully. “Nothing like that. Gerald was a paragon of virtue and economy, as was my father before him. No, we’re sickeningly well-off. It’s just very final, taking the title. I was always grateful to have dodged being the heir, but there’s no running from it now. And if only I could get some decent food—” He stopped and laughed.
“Food?” Edward knew his mouth was open in astonishment.
“I find France and Spain have ruined me for life. I can’t eat boiled beef or overdone fish anymore.” He sighed. “At least, not a lot of it.”
Edward gave a sympathetic twist of his lips. “Get a French cook then.”
“Hmm. Hard to come by. I’ve already tried.” He tugged
down his sleeves and pulled his jacket straight. “Well, I best be off.”
“Wait.” Edward looked up at him. “Were you in Portugal?”
Aldridge gave a nod. His eyes had narrowed slightly.
“Ever have someone under you by the name of Harkness?”
Aldridge’s eyes flew wide. “I did. Excellent chap. Outstanding bravery. If there was a medal I could have recommended him for, I would have. Terrible waste, his death.”
Edward hesitated. He suddenly realized Aldridge could be one of the men he was looking for. The watchers outside his and Charlotte’s houses were ex-soldiers from the Peninsula Campaign. Men Aldridge would have known. By his own admission, Aldridge had been in France and Spain enough to have lost his taste for English food. Certainly long enough to work out some smuggling routes.
And yet, he seemed genuinely respectful of Harkness, and genuinely thought him dead.
“May I ask, how do you know Ted Harkness?”
“His family lives near my country estate.” Edward felt the lie stumble and trip off his tongue, unwilling and surly.
“That would explain it.” Aldridge gave a nod and walked out, and if Edward hadn’t been watching him, he would have missed Tavenam entering the room.
He was looking for someone, and Edward wondered if it was him. Tavenam’s fingers twitched as he stood in the doorway, eyes moving from group to group.
Then he walked over to the betting book and began to look through it, and Edward went very still.
Charlotte.
Charlotte had cornered Tavenam this evening. Either that or someone else had mentioned the wager to him. And he was coming to see if he could work out who had entered it.
Edward leaned back in his chair, grateful for the lack of light in this corner of the room. The only lamp was the one Aldridge had turned up, forming a small pool of light over his chair and a side table with a book on it. Edward leaned forward and turned it down again until it winked out with a tiny pop.
Tavenam turned to the card room, and then stood, head to one side in a strange, birdlike motion for his ample frame, as a group of four men walked out of it.
One of them, Blackley, stiffened slightly at the sight of him. “Uncle.” He tried to find a smile. “Didn’t know you were a member here.”
“Just came to have a word, dear boy.” Tavenam smiled genially. “Take a walk with me, will you?”
Blackley nodded, the movement uncertain and almost fearful.
Edward felt a rage rise up in him just looking at Blackley, strong as a deep winter storm at sea. He hadn’t felt like this since the days he’d had to deal with his stepfather as a young man, and every smirk, every small, needling insult had taken real control to ignore.
He rose and watched Tavenam and Blackley as they left, and had the sense of a sharp movement just behind him. He turned and saw Blackley’s friends watching him, their eyes wary.
He stared at them a moment, and then dismissed them, heading for the door and stairway.
He took the stairs two at a time and reached the doorway just as Tavenam and Blackley were walking down the street. Tavenam’s carriage stood at the corner, and Tavenam was making use of every moment between the club and his rig to impress something upon his nephew.
He came to a halt, as if to make a particularly important point, at the opening of a narrow alleyway thirty feet from his carriage.
Hands came out of the darkness and pulled Blackley into the narrow gap. Edward watched, saw Tavenam tug a little at his cravat in discomfort, and then step into the alley after his nephew.
Well, well. Perhaps Tavenam hadn’t realized it was his own family member who had made things so difficult, Edward thought, but that would not stop him administering a reprimand. Perhaps the reprimand would be stronger, so that Tavenam was clearly shown not to be favoring the idiot.
He wanted to hear what was said. Very badly.
He walked forward, so intent on keeping quiet, and trying so hard to hear any sounds from the alley that he was taken completely by surprise by the hand on his shoulder.
He only just prevented himself from crying out, spinning to look straight into Aldridge’s eyes.
“I was walking home,” Aldridge said quietly, his eyes flickering over Edward’s shoulder to Tavenam’s waiting coach, and then back, “and then I recalled your estates are in Devon.
Gerald stayed with you there once. I remember receiving a letter from him. But Ted Harkness was from Portsmouth—”
“Shh.” Edward turned back to face the alley, his hand lifted to silence Aldridge. He could hear babbling and a calm, measured response from the darkness. A muffled cry of pain. He moved closer, aware of Aldridge behind him.
“What in hell is going on, Durnham?” He spoke at such a low whisper, Edward could barely hear him, and his respect for the man rose.
“There was a wager in the betting book—”
“Ah. Saw that.” Aldridge said nothing more. He did not leave, though, and Edward cast a quick look over his shoulder.
Aldridge did not drop his gaze, his look even and curious, and with a shrug, Edward turned back. Pressed himself up against the wall at the opening to the alley.
“… make an apology.” Tavenam’s voice was shaking with some deep emotion. Then Edward heard him walking out and stepped back deeper into the shadows. He could not see where Aldridge had gone.
Tavenam passed just by him, his steps jerky, followed by two men. One swung up into the driver’s seat of Tavenam’s coach; the other opened the door for Tavenam, saw him settled inside, and climbed to sit next to the driver. The coach rolled off.
Edward stepped into the alley, wishing for better light, but there was a little, spilling from a high window at the back of the house on the corner.
Blackley stood slumped against a wall. His face was unmarked, but he stood half hunched over. Ribs, maybe. Or kidneys. Perhaps just a quick blow to the stomach.
Certainly no more than he deserved. In fact, if Edward were the judge, substantially less than he deserved.
As he watched, Blackley straightened, pulled his cravat and coat to rights, and stared toward the street with an expression of growing defiance.
Someone still hadn’t learned their lesson.
He moved. Fast and hard.
He had a hand just below Blackley’s throat, and the other resting just by Blackley’s ear before the insolent bastard could so much as react.
Blackley gasped, and then his eyes moved over Edward’s shoulder.
Aldridge.
“You can ask me about Harkness later,” Edward said, and even he could hear the anticipation in his voice.
Blackley began to shake. “I would like to accompany Lord Aldridge to the club,” he said, his words tripping over each other.
“Oh, I don’t think so.” Edward did not loosen his grip. “You and I have matters of honor to discuss. The value of a woman’s reputation, and other related subjects.”
Aldridge sauntered over, coming up to Blackley’s other side and leaning against the wall with one shoulder.
“Those are important subjects, Blackley. Ones a man should never, ever forget. Perhaps they don’t seem important
to you now. But give it time. One day, you’ll have a wife. A daughter. In fact, you have a younger sister, don’t you?”
Blackley went very still. “Don’t you …
don’t
.”
“What?” Edward looked him directly in the eye. “Don’t what, Blackley?”
“I was mistaken. Very, very mistaken in that bet. I thought it a joke, but I see now there was nothing funny about it. Nothing at all. And I plan to retract it, and pay out the wager, and you can take this as my apology, Durnham.”
Edward gave him a long, slow smile. “I didn’t hear an ‘I’m sorry.’”
“You don’t need me here, I assume?” Aldridge straightened up.
Edward shook his head. “I don’t really want to share, but thank you for the offer.”
As he turned his full attention back to Blackley, he heard Aldridge chuckle as he walked away.
E
dward had made the effort to blend in.
Charlotte studied the rough trousers and coarse cotton shirt, over which he wore an ill-fitting jacket too heavy for the current weather, and admitted to herself he knew how to don a disguise.
He even sported a bruise on his cheek, and a tiny cut on his lip that had bled a little and then dried. The perfect Billingsgate thug. He wouldn’t be drawn on how he’d come by his small injuries.
His private coach had dropped them near enough to Billingsgate that they would not have far to walk, but far enough away that no one would see them arrive. They’d driven a fast and twisted route to their destination, and she decided Edward was taking no chance they would be followed.
She’d sat next to him, with Gary and Kit on the opposite bench, feeling the heat and the press of his body against her.