The Masque of the Black Tulip

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The Masque of the Black Tulip Page 9

by Lauren Willig


  So it had come to this, had it?

  In the file, looking as innocent as only a piece of paper can look, sat a draft of Delaroche’s latest instructions to the Black Tulip. And there, in the middle of the page, blazed the name ‘Lady Henrietta Selweecke.’

  The misspelling, the Pink Carnation knew, provided no hope of misdirection; it was merely an indication of Delaroche’s contempt for the English, expressed through a wilful misuse of the alphabet. The Black Tulip was, directed Delaroche, to allocate particular attention to Lady Henrietta Selweecke and M. Miles Doreengton, associates both of the perfidious Purple Gentian. Either would be in a position to make use of the former Purple Gentian’s resources, his League and his contacts, to bedevil the French Republic. Any methods were acceptable. ‘Any methods’ was heavily underscored.

  The Pink Carnation scanned the page, mind working rapidly as her eyes moved across the rat’s nest of Delaroche’s handwriting, as familiar to her by now as her own.

  If she had been of a different temperament, the Pink Carnation might have slammed the file shut or cursed or clasped her hands together to stop them from shaking. Because she was Jane Wooliston, her pale complexion turned a shade paler, her spine became a tad straighter, and her lips thinned.

  This wouldn’t do at all.

  She had – if her messengers had survived the journey – already apprised both Henrietta and the War Office of the presence of the Black Tulip in London. They would have to be warned immediately of this new development. She would send off a letter in code tonight. There was no need to break off contact with Henrietta; Delaroche suspected Henrietta only through her relationship to Richard, not her unusual volume of correspondence with France.

  Wasn’t that, thought Jane primly, returning the file to its hiding place, just like Delaroche to suspect the right person for all the wrong reasons?

  It would have to be stopped. She would not have Henrietta falling into danger. Jane chose not to dwell on that ominous phrase ‘any methods,’ or the even darker stories she had gleaned of the Black Tulip’s former activities. That wouldn’t be of the slightest use to Henrietta or Mr Dorrington. Jane moved her mind, instead, into more useful channels.

  Jane could, of course, create some sort of diversion in France, moving suspicion away from Henrietta and Mr Dorrington, and necessitating the recall of the Black Tulip to the Continent. But Jane had larger plans brewing, of which immediate action was not a part. It did not in the least serve her purposes for the fanatical former assistant to the Minister of Police to learn that the Pink Carnation remained in France.

  Her attention had recently been drawn to the possibility of an Irish rising being organised out of Paris; Delaroche’s files confirmed that a meeting was planned between Bonaparte’s Minister of War, General Berthier, and Addis Emmet, a representative of the United Irish. The meeting needed to be infiltrated, and French use of Ireland prevented. Then there was the matter of the generals. Disaffected generals, currently in Bonaparte’s pocket, but beginning to find Bonaparte overbearing and subservience suffocating. All they needed was a gentle hand urging them in the right direction. Jane had only just begun the series of gentle nudges that might topple them into treason. Having Delaroche’s attention directed across the Channel had been an unexpected boon, and one she was not yet prepared to relinquish.

  False intelligence could be planted, and brought to Delaroche’s attention, intelligence directing the Black Tulip’s attention to… whom? A suitably vague description, Jane decided. Something that could apply to half a dozen pinks of the ton, but would most decidedly not apply to either Henrietta or Mr Dorrington. Ever since Sir Percy Blakeney’s successful masquerade as a fashion-mad fop, the French had been decidedly twitchy about those who professed to immerse themselves in fashion. A few mentions about the cut of waistcoats this season, slipped into ‘reports’ designed to be intercepted, should sufficiently agitate the French intelligence community. Jane had two double agents on her payroll for just this sort of assignment. They came dear, but they were worth every penny.

  As a precautionary measure, it was worth pursuing, but it wasn’t enough. No agent of the Black Tulip’s calibre would allow himself to be put off by such a tepid report. He might set about garnering extra information, but, at best, his attention would be diluted, not diverted.

  Jane frowned as she perfectly realigned Delaroche’s desk chair.

  Removal to the country would be equally futile, in fact, perhaps more dangerous than not. So many accidents could happen in the country. A horse could shy; a shot could go awry; the wrong sort of mushroom could be added to a sauce. No. Henrietta would be safer in town, where the rules of society dictated the presence of a chaperone.

  Having neatly assessed and dismissed most of the viable options in her head, Jane Wooliston settled on the only acceptable plan. They would simply have to find the Black Tulip.

  It would take Delaroche some time to replace an agent of that skill. Until he managed to do so, Henrietta and Mr Dorrington would be free from molestation, and Jane could proceed with her master plan. It would all serve very well.

  There was nothing for it but to remove the Black Tulip.

  Word would be sent to Henrietta and the War Office, labelled for the highest of alerts. Her own men in Paris would be sent to ferret out any scrap of information they could find relating to the identity of the Black Tulip. Fouché’s files would have to be looked into.

  There was no reason, resolved Jane, that they shouldn’t have the Black Tulip enjoying His Majesty’s hospitality within the next fortnight. It was all a matter of applying oneself logically to the problem.

  A furrow appeared between Jane’s pale brows. It could all be quite simple – if only the Black Tulip didn’t make his move first.

  Jane squelched worry as neatly as she had rifled through Delaroche’s files. Her courier could be in London by the day after next. Within the next thirty-six hours, Henrietta would be warned, and, Jane hoped, modify her behaviour accordingly. There were only the next thirty-six hours to be got through, and, surely, a spy so newly arrived in London would wish to survey the field before resorting to darker methods.

  Having arranged the matter to her satisfaction, the Pink Carnation shuttered her lantern. She retrieved her cloak from the window and her scrap of cloth from the door. She oozed out into the night as silently as she had come, leaving Delaroche’s office once again swathed in slumber, exactly as he had left it.

  Chapter Nine

  Jealousy: emotional warfare waged by an agent particularly cunning in the ways of human nature; an attempt to prey on the sentiments and derail one from one’s mission

  – from the Personal Codebook of the Pink Carnation

  ‘Hen!’ exclaimed Penelope in annoyance. ‘You aren’t paying attention!’

  ‘What?’ asked Henrietta vaguely, looking up from the amber swirls in her teacup.

  Penelope scowled. ‘I just asked you if you wanted arsenic in your tea, and you said, “Yes, two, please.”’

  ‘Oh. Sorry.’ Henrietta put her teacup down on the inlaid wood of her favourite table in the morning room, and smiled apologetically at her oldest friend. ‘I was thinking of something else.’

  Penelope rolled her eyes. ‘That much was obvious.’

  Henrietta succumbed to the urge to direct yet another glance at the dainty china clock on the mantelpiece. It was nearly noon. And Miles hadn’t stopped by yet. Miles always stopped by on Thursday mornings. Every Thursday, Cook made ginger biscuits, for which Miles held a regard tantamount to that of Petrarch for his Laura. For Miles not to appear on a Thursday morning was tantamount to the bells of St Paul’s refusing to chime. It just didn’t happen.

  Unless Miles was otherwise occupied. In the arms of a dark-haired beauty, for example.

  It wasn’t like Miles to disappear from Almack’s without stopping by to say goodbye. And yet he had done just that. Usually, he left with the Uppingtons, riding with them as far as his lodgings on Jermyn Street, an
d taking his leave with a joke and a tug of one of her curls. Henrietta found the latter habit decidedly less than endearing and had remonstrated with Miles about it on several occasions. But without him there…the evening felt oddly incomplete.

  That Woman had disappeared around the same time.

  Coincidence? Henrietta deeply doubted it.

  Not that it mattered one way or another. Miles was a grown man, and it wasn’t as though he hadn’t had mistresses before; Henrietta wasn’t that naïve. It was simply, Henrietta rationalised, that it would be very tedious if Miles took up with someone nasty. After all, with Richard away in Sussex, and Geoff hideously preoccupied with that vile Mary Alsworthy, Miles was her primary source of lemonade and banter at the nightly social events deemed de rigueur by the ton. If he started dancing attendance on some cold-eyed temptress, it would just be inconvenient – that was all. There was certainly nothing more to it than that.

  ‘Oh, Pen!’ Charlotte’s cry broke into Henrietta’s reverie. Charlotte’s large grey eyes grew three sizes larger. ‘You weren’t out on the balcony with Reggie Fitzhugh?’

  ‘Oh, Charlotte!’ mocked Penelope, adding with a wicked twinkle in her eye, ‘He does have ten thousand pounds a year. Surely you can’t disapprove of that.’

  ‘And the mental capacity of a turnip,’ put in Henrietta dryly, allowing herself to be diverted from her decidedly less-than-pleasing speculations.

  Charlotte giggled. ‘I suppose all that gold does rather gild the turnip.’

  Penelope eyed her askance. ‘Gild the turnip?’

  ‘You know, like gilding the lily. Only he’s a turnip.’

  Henrietta shook her head to clear it of unfortunate images, and looked pointedly at Penelope. ‘Back to the matter at hand…’

  ‘Don’t fuss, Hen. What’s the worst that could have happened?’

  ‘Disgrace?’ suggested Charlotte.

  ‘Marriage to Mr Fitzhugh,’ warned Henrietta.

  ‘Ugh,’ said Penelope.

  ‘Exactly,’ said Henrietta crisply.

  Henrietta was about to drive the point home, when she was distracted by the sound of booted footsteps in the doorway. Jerking her chair around, she saw the object of her earlier speculations leaning winningly against the door jamb. He had clearly made the kitchen his first stop; he held one of Cook’s ginger biscuits in either hand and was alternating taking bites from both.

  ‘Good morning, ladies,’ he pronounced with a winning smile, only slightly marred by bulging cheeks.

  ‘You do know Richard doesn’t live here anymore?’ snapped Penelope.

  Henrietta waved a languid hand. ‘Oh, that doesn’t make the slightest difference to Miles. He just comes here…’

  ‘…for the meals,’ Miles obligingly finished for her, swallowing a final mouthful of ginger biscuit.

  Henrietta cocked her head. ‘You’re in good spirits this morning.’

  ‘How could I not be, with three such pulchritudinous ladies arrayed before me?’ Miles swept an elaborate bow.

  Charlotte blushed.

  Penelope snorted.

  Henrietta narrowed her hazel eyes suspiciously. ‘Last night it was “Run along, children; I’m flirting.”’

  Miles clasped his hands behind his back and gazed up at the elaborate plasterwork of the ceiling. ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.’

  ‘You have a new mistress?’ Henrietta fished.

  ‘Hen!’ Charlotte exclaimed.

  Miles wagged a finger, and pronounced, ‘You aren’t supposed to know of such things.’

  Henrietta noticed that he didn’t deny the allegation. ‘Don’t you mean “such women”?’

  ‘Such states of affairs,’ Miles corrected loftily.

  ‘Affairs are precisely what I was referring to,’ Henrietta said, rather more sharply than she had intended.

  ‘Richard,’ Miles said ominously, ‘tells you altogether too much.’

  ‘If you knew half of what was whispered in the ladies’ retiring room, your ears would fall off in shock.’

  ‘Might be an improvement,’ muttered Penelope.

  ‘I don’t think ears fall off just like that,’ put in Charlotte thoughtfully.

  ‘Whose ears are falling off?’ enquired Lady Uppington, sweeping into the morning room in a rustle of emerald silk.

  ‘Miles’s,’ said Penelope pointedly.

  ‘Not before this evening, I hope. You will be coming with us to the Middlethorpes’ ball tonight?’

  ‘Uh…’

  ‘Good. We’ll call for you at those dreadful bachelor lodgings of yours at ten o’clock. That’s ten o’clock, mind you. Not five to eleven.’

  ‘I had a problem with my cravat,’ protested Miles defensively.

  Lady Uppington emitted one of her infamous harrumphs. ‘Don’t think I don’t know your tricks by now, young man.’

  Henrietta smothered a chuckle.

  She failed to smother it well enough. Lady Uppington’s shrewd green eyes lighted on her daughter. ‘Henrietta, darling, the lime green silk, I think, for tonight. I’ve just heard that Percy Ponsonby will be there—’

  ‘I don’t like Percy Ponsonby.’

  ‘—with Martin Frobisher.’

  ‘And Martin Frobisher doesn’t like me.’

  ‘Don’t be silly, darling. Everyone likes you.’

  ‘No, he really doesn’t like me.’

  ‘She spilt ratafia all over his new coat last week,’ explained Pen, exchanging an amused glance with Henrietta. ‘It was completely ruined,’ she added with relish.

  ‘Pure sacrilege, ruining a coat by Weston,’ muttered Miles.

  ‘He said things no gentleman should say.’ Charlotte rose to her friend’s defence.

  ‘What did he say?’ Miles asked darkly.

  ‘Nothing like that!’ snapped Henrietta. ‘He just made a suggestion regarding the balcony and placed his hand somewhere where his hand was not supposed to be.’

  ‘If he tries it again—’ began Miles, just as Lady Uppington said frowningly, ‘When I see his mother at the Middlethorpes’ tonight…’

  ‘Oh, no,’ Henrietta groaned. ‘This is just why I didn’t tell you. Mama, please don’t speak to his mother about it. It would be too humiliating. And you’ – she pointed at Miles – ‘whatever you were thinking about doing, just don’t. I’m fine.’

  ‘Unlike Martin Frobisher’s coat,’ giggled Penelope.

  ‘Shhhh!’ Charlotte tried to kick Penelope but hit the claw foot of Penelope’s chair instead, subsiding back into her own chair with a little cry of pain.

  ‘Didn’t you have shopping to do before tonight?’ asked Henrietta pointedly of her former best friends, casting them an ‘I am never telling you anything ever again’ look.

  ‘Oh, goodness!’ Lady Uppington clapped her hands together. ‘Charlotte, I promised your grandmother I would deliver you both to the modiste by noon. Come along now – chop-chop. No dawdling, Penelope.’

  ‘I’ll stay home,’ interjected Henrietta. ‘I have some letters to write.’ Or at least, she could find some letters to write. To someone. She just didn’t feel like picking over ribbons and squealing over flounces this morning. A nice gloomy, horrid novel would be just the thing.

  Lady Uppington cast Henrietta a sharp look, but her maternal eye failed to note any flush of fever, so she hustled Penelope and Charlotte out of the room in a flurry of flounces and rustle of petticoats, issuing orders all the while.

  ‘Don’t forget, Miles! Ten o’clock!’

  Miles wandered out into the hallway. ‘How does she do that?’

  ‘Black magic,’ replied Henrietta frankly, rising from the settee to join him just outside the morning room. ‘Eye of newt and toe of frog, with just a dash of essence of hedgehog.’

  ‘I heard that!’ came Lady Uppington’s voice from the other end of the hall.

  ‘That also explains,’ added Henrietta confidentially, ‘her exceptionally good hearing.’ The front door clicked shut, cutting off the
cacophony of female voices. Henrietta cocked her head to look up at Miles. ‘I need a favour of you.’

  Miles casually rested a hand against the wall above Henrietta’s head. ‘I’m listening.’

  They had stood that way a hundred times before – Miles liked leaning on things and against things and over things – but for the first time, Henrietta felt uncomfortable. Crowded. She was acutely aware of the stretch of Miles’s arm next to her head, the muscles outlined against the well-tailored sleeve of his jacket. The warm, distinctly Miles scents of sandalwood and leather filled the space between them. He was so near that she could see the minuscule blond hairs on the underside of his chin, so near that to sway even slightly forward would bring her into his embrace.

  ‘Embrace’ and ‘Miles’ were not concepts that went together; Henrietta found the thought distinctly unsettling.

  So she did what any mature, poised young lady would do in such a situation. She poked him in the chest. ‘Do stop looming.’

  ‘Ouch!’ Miles jumped back. ‘Don’t I loom well?’

  Henrietta moved quickly away from the wall. ‘Yes, splendidly, but it’s very frustrating trying to carry on a conversation with the bottom of your chin. Valet nicked you shaving, did he?’

  Miles’s hand went protectively to the bottom of his chin.

  She felt much better standing three feet away, with the black-and-white checks of tiled floor separating them. Much more like herself.

  ‘About that favour…’ she began.

  Miles’s eyes narrowed. ‘What sort of favour do you have in mind?’

  Henrietta shook her head in exasperation. ‘Nothing as onerous as all that.’

  ‘“Onerous,”’ Miles said darkly, rubbing his abused waistcoat, ‘is a highly relative term.’

  ‘Will you dance with Charlotte tonight?’

  ‘Why?’ asked Miles suspiciously.

  ‘What sort of nefarious ulterior motive could I possibly have?’

  Miles cocked an eyebrow.

  ‘You don’t think… I’m not trying to matchmake!’ Henrietta was surprised by the vehemence of her own reaction. ‘You’re not Charlotte’s type at all.’

 

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