Grace Gibson

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by The Lost Heir of Devonshire


  She searched his face. “But I do believe in you! It…it is just that I also believe that Oscar Neville is an evil person, and I fear what will come of this.”

  He clucked at her and led her downstairs. “I will need a pen and paper, and I will need my devil horse saddled up if it can be managed, and I need Jim.” Just as Mary was about to jump into action at his commands, he stayed her and shouted for the young man.

  That worthy came with alacrity to hear what His Lordship wanted. He was told to pack a light portmanteau for an overnight stay, to find the groom and tell him to saddle Lucifer, and to tell the cook that he would need a light travelling luncheon and a flask of ale.

  “You may fetch pen and paper,” he said to Mary, and she did, following him into the salon and sitting quietly in the window seat while he worked.

  The Marquis wrote out a long letter. It took him the better part of an hour to compose it, and once he had scratched and scribbled, he took a new sheet and transcribed it in his energetic and occasionally haphazard hand. He sanded and sealed it, took the draft to the fire and saw it burned to ash, and then he turned to Mary and bade her to have it sent forthwith to Lord Eversham at the Westfork posting house.

  “Very well, but what about Will? How will you manage to rescue him, Robert?” This sudden demand once uttered surprised and embarrassed her. “I mean, my Lord! And I would simply like to know your plan — I don’t want to appear to be pressing you…”

  He laughed at her. “Oh, call me Robert! After all you, have sat in my lap for several hours, and I suppose you have every right to demand answers from me.”

  She would have fled in confusion, had he not then said, “Never tell me you are getting missish now. I cannot become a gentleman overnight you know. Now then, as to my plan for Will, I haven’t got one. Yes, you can stand there and flash those great brown eyes at me in dismay, but there are some things, Mary, that are best left to work themselves out. I will find Will, extricate him from horse betting, discourage him from suicide, and bring him home. Describe him a little if you will?”

  “Oh, he is of medium height, with brown hair like mine, but perhaps a little lighter, and a slight cleft in his chin…”

  “A very unusual looking person,” his Lordship remarked dryly. “What was he wearing?”

  “Oh, I believe he had on his riding boots and a green satin waistcoat.”

  “Better,” he said sarcastically. “I suppose I will know him by his empty pockets. Never mind, I will find him. Once here, we will sit down, the three of us, and concoct our plan.”

  “You will…you will not humiliate him, will you?”

  He shot her a thunderous look. “You are doing it again.”

  Amusement sparkled in her eyes. “You mean I am dictating to you just how to go on?”

  “Well, you would if I would allow it,” he grumbled. “I believe I know how to get on with the Will Fanleys of the world.”

  “Then I will strive to believe in you, Robert.” With sudden shyness, she offered her hand.

  He bowed over it and pressed her fingers firmly. “I forbid you to worry, Rabbit,” he said, and then he was gone.

  When Mr. Fanley arrived that evening, he was greatly discomposed to find Lord Robert gone again, but Mary cheerfully went about assuring him in the most commonplace of accents that he had got it into his head to join Will in Newmarket.

  “But I thought he had some letter-writing to do, If he’d a mind to go out, he should have come with me.”

  “He did write a letter, and then he cast around for something to do. You know how these titled people are, Papa. They can be counted on to change their minds at the wink of an eye.”

  “That is so devilishly unreliable!” Mr. Fanley cried. “I will certainly discourage him from these impulses in the future. He will never do well at Treehill if he cannot sit still on a rainy afternoon.”

  “Well, certainly he will accustom himself to our pace,” she said pacifically, “but I think it was quite an honourable compulsion; his thinking to join Will and make his acquaintance early.”

  This did pacify Mr. Fanley, and he went up to his bed that night entirely unconcerned with Lord Robert’s erratic behaviour.

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Denley let Lucifer have his head for a few miles, and flew down the road toward Newcastle. But he eventually brought him down to a saner pace and took full measure of what he was about. Thrusting himself into a crowd, many of whom were of his own set and might recognize him, was a risk he was forced to take. But he was done hovering around like a common criminal. He resolved never to disguise himself again.

  As he approached the town, the Marquis set his back up very straight and assumed an expression of noble hauteur. Fortunately the market was in full spate and the mood was too high for anyone to really notice yet another member of the quality arrive amongst them. He rode carefully around, containing his wilful horse with some effort and searching out green waistcoats.

  Eventually, his quarry appeared — a young man with riding boots, a green satin waistcoat, of medium build and medium colouring, but with a face so disfigured by anxiety as to be recognizably that of a boy in the grip of a fatal losing streak. The Marquis angled Lucifer over that way and allowed his beast to thrust the boy aside.

  “I say there!” Will said very crossly.

  “Oh,” Lord Robert looked vaguely down his nose, “I beg your pardon, sir. Is the next race due to start?”

  “Momentarily,” Will replied in agitation. “And I cannot see over your horse.”

  “Quite right.” The Marquis dismounted and pushed Lucifer back a pace. “Which one have you backed?”

  “The dun mare to the right,” Will pointed, having nailed his horse with his eyes.

  “I have gotten here too late,” Lord Robert explained, “and they won’t take my paper. But she looks like a slow-goer to me.”

  This provoked Will, predictably. “I say you will soon see that she is a winner, sir.”

  “One hundred pounds says you are wrong, my young friend,” he said in a bored voice.

  Will hesitated. Lord Robert realized he had come almost too late, and that perhaps young Mr. Fanley had just dropped his last note on this very race. “That is to say, if you believe she is so very fast. But how you can say so I will never know. I have seen dogs with more spirit.”

  “I will show you spirit,” Will said hotly. “You can take your hundred pounds to the devil!”

  “Oh, in that case, if you are so sure, I will wager that same hundred pounds that she wins,” Lord Robert said amiably. “But quickly, they are set to start.”

  “The devil she will!” Will exclaimed, pumping Lord Robert’s hand in vague triumph. They shook hands and a pistol fired, starting the race. Lord Robert watched with detachment as the dun mare gave a valiant run for third place, and instantly put one hundred pounds, lodged ever so nonchalantly between his second and third finger, into the hands of his dazed companion. Then he melted away into the crowd.

  In about twenty minutes, just as expected, Will Fanley found him. “Sir,” he said with bruised dignity, “I do not completely understand that wager. I believe I have taken your money unfairly.”

  The Marquis of Denley, rarely in the habit of using his quizzing glass, removed it, and scrutinized Will to the point of discomfort. “I never haggle over money,” he said in a dampening tone. “You convinced me your horse would win and she did not.”

  “But that is my own bad luck,” Will said despairingly. “I have only passed it on to you.”

  “I believe if I am going to argue with you, you should at least be someone known to me.” With this Lord Robert took the reins of his horse and walked disdainfully away.

  Like honey to a bee, this treatment caused Will Fanley to run after him and shout angrily, “Well, allow me to introduce myself, your highness! I am Will Fanley of Greenly and I don’t like your manner!”

  A small crowd gathered around them in expectation of an exchange of fists. But Lord
Robert only started and turned around in amazement. “Fanley did you say? William Fanley of Greenly Manor?”

  “The same,” Will claimed, but with slightly less vehemence.

  The Marquis of Denley made him as beautiful a bow as one could make outside the palace of Versailles. “Then I heartily beg your pardon sir. I am Denley, and I’ve just come from Greenly, where I breakfasted with your father and sister this morning.”

  The crowd instantly dissolved for lack of interest, leaving Will and Lord Robert to fumble through their astonishment in the privacy of a bustling market.

  “Never tell me you are the Marquis?” gasped Will.

  “And never tell me you are Miss Mary’s brother,” chuckled Lord Robert. “Now, tell me how I have wronged you, my buck, but refrain from making our affairs public. Let us go down to the inn by the road and have a bowl of punch, shall we?”

  Once at the Rose Tree Inn, the Marquis bespoke some refreshments in the coffee room and they took possession of table in the corner.

  “I suppose everyone of consequence is at the horse market,” explained Will to his companion.

  “Oh, indeed,” Lord Robert dutifully looked around in bewilderment. “I believe you are right.”

  “What was that strange trick you played?” Will asked. Then, progressing to the more pressing question, “And how come you to Newmarket from Greenly, sir, if it isn’t out of place to ask? You were not there as of yesterday morning, and can have only arrived…”

  “I arrived yesterday afternoon.”

  This news bewildered the young man. “Then what are you doing here?”

  “Searching for you,” his Lordship said enigmatically, sipping his spiced wine.

  “Good God, for me? What has happened? Tell me instantly! It is my father, isn’t it?”

  Lord Robert allowed himself to look insulted. “Really, Will. Were I the bearer of bad news, I would hardly have stopped to place an idle wager on a dun mare.”

  “No, but I would know instantly why you have come in search of me…” The light in his eye turned martial. “It was Mary wasn’t it? By God, she has broken my confidence and sent you out to nursemaid me!”

  “You mistake me if you think I ever nursemaid anyone. Nor am I in the habit of being sent on errands of parental supervision by every country miss who demands it.”

  Will’s expression turned sulky. “Oh. Then I cannot fathom why you are here.”

  “I am here because I learned yesterday, quite casually I might add, that you have fallen into an acquaintance with Oscar Neville.”

  “And if I have?”

  “No doubt you feel free to take that tone with your papa, Will, but I will box your ears for it. If you will stop your tantrum, I will tell you what you most likely already know — Oscar Neville is a snake.”

  The fight left Will’s body instantly, and he sagged back into the settle. “You are too late, sir. I am already lost beyond all salvation.”

  Lord Robert laughed out loud. “That is rich! And now I suppose you are going to take that hundred pounds and buy yourself a place in the militia? Or is it the bridge with a stone necklace for you?”

  The reaction was immediate and predictably violent.

  “Sit down, Will,” Lord Robert said, still laughing. “Now, let us reason together. Do you think you should put your head in a bucket first or can we speak as grown men, in less passionate tones?”

  “Very well,” Will said angrily. “You have come to tell me what I know already. Now, what do you suggest?”

  “I have a very great resentment against Mr. Neville for imposing himself on your family, Will. If you would know the truth, I am very fond of Greenly, and I intend to be a very faithful neighbour of yours for years to come. I have come here to enlist you, for I have a mind to give Mr. Neville a dose of his own medicine.”

  This was all Will needed to hear. “How do you propose to do it? I have duelling pistols you know, and I’ve a mind to slap my glove on him.”

  “You are by no means the first, but that will hardly do. You are to be a man of responsibility: you cannot go around duelling like some reckless profligate.”

  “Why not? I have a right to assert my manhood and defend my honour!”

  “Certainly, but I’m compelled to point out that unless the honour you defend is that of a lady, it is hardly seemly. Besides, if you have a lady in mind, which I suppose a man like you does, then she will never forgive you for it.”

  “How would she come to know?”

  “Oh, things that are most secret are the first and most talked of, you know. She would hear of it instantly. And then, of course, if you were dead, I doubt you could keep her from knowing it.”

  Will cast him an accusing glance. “You are very schooled in duelling.”

  “Oh, I am indeed very schooled, I assure you. But that we will hash out at a later date. Now, let us go back to the races and bet like rational men, shall we?”

  Will Fanley looked reluctant to engage his luck again. “I have wagered like a rational man and look where it’s got me,” he complained.

  The Marquis of Denley only smiled. “Yes, but I have never done so before; I would like to try it out.” They began with fifty pounds apiece and proceeded with extreme care. Races in which the favourites were very well matched they avoided; they made small bets in races with a clear favourite, scrutinizing the horses, the riders, and watching for all the winks and nods that signalled unfair play. In the end, having bet pound for pound alike, they had realized two hundred pounds between them.

  Riding out of Newmarket the following morning, Denley remarked casually, “So, that is how it is done, is it?”

  “It was prodigiously boring!”

  Lord Robert fell into a peal of laughter. “Bravo, my buck,” he said wiping his eyes, “and that is why we, of all people, should avoid it.”

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Will Fanley’s homecoming was met with nonchalance from his father and astonishment from his sister.

  “Will!” she cried, bursting from her chair and flying to the parlour door to hug him.

  “Good gracious, Mary. I was only gone two days together.”

  “Yes, certainly there is no cause for such a display my dear,” Mr. Fanley said peevishly, for he was not a man who could like what he did not understand.

  The Marquis however, understood that Mary’s great anxiety had been relieved by the restoration of her younger brother. He leaned on the doorframe and crossed his arms, watching her in amusement and satisfaction as she stammered and blushed her excuses.

  “I’ve grown used to company, Papa, that is all. Come, Will, I will call for tea. And you, sir — ” She turned shyly to Lord Robert and gave him a beautiful curtsey. “ — you are very welcome here, indeed.”

  “Welcome! And so he is,” Mr. Fanley cried, rising and extending his hand.

  The afternoon and evening progressed interminably for Mary, while her brother and his evil accomplice delighted in drawing out fabricated details of their sojourn to the horse market. Sensing that she was bursting to know what had truly transpired, they lorded over the time and kept Mr. Fanley’s interest well past the usual early hour which took him to his bed.

  When at last Mary was able to call a weary “Good night, Papa,” her patience had worn thin.

  “So, I expect you are dying to hear about Newcastle, Mary?” Will taunted her.

  “Dying?” she replied with an arched brow. “Indeed, I am nearly dead with tales of it, already. I am in a fair way,” she yawned affectedly, “to be sound asleep if I hear of so much as a single horse hair.” With this she rose very languidly and made her way to the tapers, lighting one to take upstairs.

  “Oh, sit down. We were only funning you!. Where has your sense of humour run off to?”

  “It ran off its very legs with worry, you sorry, craven boy!, she returned brutally. “So what has happened?”

  “Well, I lost a great deal of money,” Will said disheartened, “but,” brightening, “D
enley and I have had a rightful coze, and we mean to make meat of Oscar Neville.”

  “Make meat?” She cast an angry glance at Lord Robert. “You mean to tell me your plan is fighting?”

  The Marquis threw up his arms in defence. “Oh, my fighting days are nearing an end, I assure you, Rabbit. Your brother only means we will see Mr. Neville ride out of this county quite penniless, and for good.”

  “Rabbit?” Will said, much struck at the oddness of the exchange, while oblivious to its intimacy. “Why ever would you call her Rabbit?”

  “If you have to ask,” Lord Robert replied, with amusement dancing in his eyes, “then you don’t deserve to know.”

  “What? I mean to know,” he turned from the Marquis to his sister, whose face had gone red to her roots. “Why does he call you Rabbit?”

  Mary cleared her throat in complete confusion, and after an interminable moment of silence, Lord Robert came to her aid. “Does she never remind you of a rabbit?” he asked lightly. “She bounces from room to room, her ears always plucked upright listening for some incident that will induce her to throw down her sewing and dash out of the room.”

  Will’s consternation vanished. “Oh, quite right. Her nose almost trembles, don’t you know?”

  “You,” Mary said darkly, “will never be allowed to call me what the Marquis of Denley chooses out of some inborn need to show his spleen.”

  “Oh, indeed, Will,” the Marquis said, holding Mary’s eyes with his own. “I would not attempt it if I were you.”

  Dimly sensing exclusion, Will became impatient. “Oh, keep your rabbits then. I may as well tell you, Mary, I’ve lost your blunt.”

  She looked at him with motherly compassion. “Oh, well, you know I don’t care a pin for money. I am just so pleased to see you in spirits again.”

  “Well, I’m in spirits, as you call it, because Denley and I have made an alliance against the dastard, and we mean to shake him by his heels till his pockets are empty.”

 

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