The Forbidden Rose

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The Forbidden Rose Page 26

by Bourne, Joanna


  “You are carrying a knife.” Séverine came closer, fascinated.

  This wasn’t the sort of thing a child should be seeing. It was too late to do anything about it. She wrapped linen around everything and tied it in place.

  With perfect gravity, Adrian said, “I have several knives, but Maggie only needs one at a time. So that’s all I gave her. Does Justine carry a knife?”

  Séverine regarded him with a closed expression and said nothing.

  “You’ve already learned the first rule. Say nothing.” Adrian tilted his head, watching. “You don’t answer any questions about Justine.”

  Marguerite tied the last knot. “Justine?”

  “She’s Justine’s sister. See the eyes. And her mouth. Can’t be a daughter. Has to be her sister.”

  She could see it, now that he pointed it out. Séverine had more gold in her hair than Justine. Her eyes were green, not brown. But they were sisters.

  There were two of them she must take away from this house. Both Justine and this beautiful child. When she had freed Guillaume, she would set about it.

  The clatter and squeak was Jean-Paul, climbing the ladder. He boosted himself out, sat on the floor, and swung his legs around. “You’re right. You left no trail.”

  Adrian showed his teeth and didn’t answer.

  “We get these bloody rags out of here.” Jean-Paul was already gathering them up. “And make sure there’s nothing splattered on the floor. Why were you fighting?”

  “Me? I’m innocent as an egg. I was trying not to fight. Not my fault somebody wants to poke holes in me.”

  “Who?”

  “He’s named Paxton.” There was a cold bleakness in the way the boy said that.

  Another Englishman. The Englishmen in France seemed a bloodthirsty crew. “In a city of so many Frenchmen I would think it was one of them trying to kill you. Why is Citoyen Paxton poking holes in you?”

  “Now that is something I didn’t get around to asking him, being busy jumping around and staying alive at the time.” He took his knife back from her, since she was no longer using it, and handed it, hilt first, to Séverine. “Here. You can play with this if you don’t cut yourself. It’s sharp. Make marks on the floor.”

  Séverine proceeded to do exactly that, kneeling, using both hands to hold the knife. She cut slanting lines on the boards.

  I should probably put a stop to that.

  “Look. You want me to deliver this message from Doyle or not?” Adrian said it exactly as if she had been shushing him to silence for the last ten minutes.

  “Speak, by all means.”

  “He says, ‘Maggie. It’s done. I’ve played Cadmus with the boy’s papers. Stay off the streets.’ ”

  Guillaume could send her such a message, knowing she would understand.

  Adrian pulled the damp red sleeve down to cover the bandage she’d put on him. He didn’t look up from doing that while he said to Jean-Paul, “If you don’t keep your hand off Doyle’s woman, I’ll take that knife back and gut you with it.” He sounded perfectly friendly.

  Jean-Paul, who should have known not to take this threat seriously, nonetheless removed his hand from her back. “What did you do with the body? Can it be traced here?”

  Adrian did up the button on his sleeve, left-handed. “I didn’t kill anybody. I ran like a rabbit, is what I did. I have papers to deliver.” He lifted his coat from the floorboards, showing the slashed and bloody sleeve. “I can’t do it wearing this.”

  “What papers?” Jean-Paul returned from pouring the basin of bloody water very carefully out the window, along the ivy and bricks. “What does Cadmus have to do with this? Marguerite?”

  It took several minutes to explain.

  “. . . drafts of the speech that Robespierre will deliver to the Convention, tomorrow or the next day. All of Paris is waiting for this speech, wondering who Robespierre will condemn next. Most especially, his enemies want to know this. Guillaume . . .” Even in prison, he is dangerous. “Guillaume has made copies of these papers and added a name or two that perhaps Robespierre did not exactly mention. He sends these to . . . How many?”

  Adrian said, “Twenty copies. I’ve got six more to deliver. Who’s Cadmus?”

  “He is in a story. The hero, Cadmus—I will tell you frankly this seems an unwise thing to do—Cadmus sowed the earth with the teeth of a dragon. From this seed, warriors sprang up.”

  Adrian was patient, waiting for her to get to the point.

  “Always before, Robespierre attacked his enemies one or two at a time, without warning. That is his plan again. But this time, there will be twenty men in fear of their lives. Those are the dragon teeth you carry. That is the battle Guillaume arranges.”

  Jean-Paul let out a slow whistle. “I can imagine the names. They’ll see a draft in Robespierre’s hand. They’ll be desperate. If they work together . . .”

  “Robespierre will fall. The Terror will end.”

  But it will be too late to save Guillaume. He knows this. However many he saves, he will not save himself.

  “It just might work.” Jean-Paul was a man of swift action, when it was needed. He pulled his coat off. Tossed it to Adrian. “Wear this. It’ll cover that shirt so the blood doesn’t show. I’ll send Justine to help you find the last six men.”

  “I don’t need her.” The coat was too large, but a young messenger boy might buy such a garment in the market for used clothing. “This’ll do till I can get something that fits.”

  “You are welcome.” Jean-Paul spoke ironically, but his eyes glowed. “Go. Deliver the papers. Change the course of history while I sit in my shirtsleeves and scrub your blood from the floor.” He knelt to be level with Séverine. “I will return this one inside, to her house. And I will collect this toy from her.” He took the knife and passed it to Adrian. “If your history is anything to go by, you’ll need it again.”

  Adrian made the knife disappear. “I could have stayed in London if I’d wanted a pack of people trying to kill me. Didn’t have to come to Paris for that.” He grinned, and he was gone in an instant. A mere creak on the stairs. Utterly silent in the shed below.

  Her Guillaume sowed dragons’ teeth today. They would see what came of it.

  She stood in the middle of the broken and discarded furniture of the loft, feeling helpless. Useless. Guillaume was trapped behind guards and walls and she could not get him out. She couldn’t even visit the prison again. Victor would have set watch by now.

  She would have gone into Hades, itself, like Orpheus seeking his Eurydice. There was nowhere she would not have gone to find Guillaume. No journey to the underworld she would not undertake.

  Jean-Paul picked Séverine up, promising her that the boy with the cut arm would be perfectly safe. And yes, he would come back soon.

  No journey to . . .

  The large map of Paris was still spread across her pillow. She took it up, knowing it would not tell her what she needed to know. There was a map that did. “Wait.”

  Jean-Paul turned back.

  “There is a way.”

  Jean-Paul looked from the map to her. “What? What are you thinking?”

  “I’m thinking about building stones and magnetism. About history and washing clothes.” She let the map go. “I never expected to say these words, but I need my father.”

  Forty

  DOYLE MUTTERED, “I CAN’T TELL YOU WHAT I DON’T know, you bleating goat.”

  The guard grinned behind Victor’s back. But a nod from Victor, and the same guard slammed Doyle against the wall, making sure it hurt.

  “Where is she?” Victor demanded.

  “Don’t know. Don’t give a damn.” He’d cut his lip, kissing the wall. He couldn’t pick that one pain out of the pack, but he tasted blood.

  That was the wrong answer. Victor motioned. The guard hit him against the wall again. They’d been doing this a while. There just aren’t any good ways to chat with a man who plans to kill you.

  Victor said
, “Where is she?”

  “If your cousin run off, she didn’t run with me.”

  “You have chosen a bad moment to be amusing, citoyen. Guard, bring him in here.”

  It looked like they were going to skip right past bribes and threats and persuasion and go directly to breaking bones.

  The guardroom had one door into the prison. Locked. One door, closed but not locked, leading out to the street. One door leading from the guardroom to a front courtyard the size of a handkerchief. There was a little window that let you see into that courtyard.

  The guards made themselves comfortable here. Empty wine bottles lined up in ranks on the shelf over the chimney. Dirty cups scattered the hearth. Uniform jackets hung on the backs of chairs. The table was cluttered with cudgels and manacles and old newspapers. They’d leaned their guns up in the corner. Four standard infantry muskets, in only moderately good condition, loaded, muzzles crossed.

  Victor wore a black coat and breeches with white knee stockings. Likely he’d come straight from the Convention. In this company he was a pale, smooth-curried spittle of a man. A well-bred lapdog. Next to the sans-culottes guards, he looked flimsy as thin paper.

  “Secure him.” Victor pointed.

  They’d tied his wrists behind him when they hauled him out of the cells. That was one more disadvantage to walking around, the size he was—all this mistrust on the part of the authorities. The guards cleared off the biggest chair and manhandled him down. They left his hands trussed up at his back, coiled rope around his chest, and pulled it tight, being rough but impersonal. They didn’t waste malice on somebody who’d be dead in a handful of days.

  There was slack in the ropes. The chair wasn’t solid as rock. Give him half an hour to himself and he’d get loose. Unfortunately, Victor had plans for his next half hour.

  “It is done.” A bushy mustache walked into his line of sight, hauling a grizzled guard along with it.

  “Leave him with me,” Victor said.

  “We have no orders to give a prisoner into your charge.” That one was a soldier. A veteran of the colonial wars, he’d guess. Wasted on prison duty.

  “I said go.”

  “It is a bad precedent. Without orders—”

  “I am from the Committee of Public Safety, a friend of Robespierre. That is the only order you need.”

  It got quiet. One man whispered to the next. Laid a warning hand on the sleeve. The senior guard hesitated, then nodded, and the men jostled out, silent. The door didn’t click behind the last man.

  They’d left the door open a crack. Done that on purpose. There’d be a man left picking his teeth in the hall, innocent-like, keeping an ear on events. They all reported to somebody. The Secret Police. The royalists. The military. There were no secrets in Paris.

  Victor strolled over to appreciate the selection of clubs and bludgeons laid out on the table. He picked out a sturdy length of wood that had started life as a table leg.

  This is where I get hurt. It said everything he needed to know about Victor that the man only came close when he had a weapon in his hands and his opponent was tied up.

  The club swooped back and forth. Victor faced him. “My cousin has not left Paris. You are going to tell me exactly where she is.”

  “Citoyenne de Fleurignac? I left her at your house. That’s the last I—”

  Victor swung the club.

  Pain. God, the pain. Couldn’t get his breath. It took three tries before he could talk. “Listen, you cod-sucking pig, I don’t know where she is. It’s not my fault you can’t keep hold of—”

  That got him a fist across his face. “Where is my cousin?”

  Ask question. Get no answer. Apply beating. Ask the question again.

  He spat out a mouthful of blood, getting some on Victor’s fine white shirt. “Your cousin is nothing to me. Never touched her. Never wanted to. Don’t know where she is now.”

  He saw the club coming, twisted, and took the hit on the flesh of his arm. He yelled so they’d hear it on the street.

  “If you do not tell me where she is, you will die. Before you die, I will break every bone in your body.”

  “I don’t know where she is.” He slumped, groaning. Being stoic just encouraged folks to beat the hell out of you. “I don’t know . . . where . . . she is.” The minute I lift my head he’s going to hit me again. “Damnation, man. How many times do I got to say it? I don’t know where she’s run off to.”

  Victor drew back and swung in a wide arc.

  “I don’t know—” Pain tore the words apart. The idiot was going to kill him by accident. “Hell in a bucket.”

  He’s going to break my damned ribs. Send bones into my lungs. I’ll drown in my own blood and he’ll be surprised.

  God, I hate amateurs.

  He coughed. Agony shot into his side. Pain like white ice. “Wait. Just a minute. Wait.” Say something he wants to hear. While he’s listening, he’s not hitting. “Listen. I brought her home at dawn, but it’s not what you think. I found her in the Tuileries, out where she shouldn’t be. I took her home. That’s all. I left her on your doorstep. I never touched her. That’s twice I’ve collected yer wandering girl for you. You should be thanking me for—”

  He caught this one on his arm. He yelled, making it loud. “When she left the prison, where did she go? Where did Marguerite go?”

  Give it a count of three. One. Two. Three. Look up. He put the right amount of startled on his face. “The prison? Your cousin? She weren’t here. That was my Odette.” He let bloody saliva dribble out of his mouth.

  Victor’s pale green eyes flicked over him, flicked away fastidiously. “What do you mean?”

  You don’t like looking at that, do you? You got a weak stomach for torture.

  His half brothers used to hurt him this bad every time they came home from Eton. They’d race in, howling, and pull out the cricket bats, and track him down. Teach the bog-trotter not to be uppity. They didn’t mind admiring their handiwork.

  “It was . . .” He let his voice drop weakly. Panted. “Was Odette Corrigou. My woman. Works for a seamstress on Rue de Roule. Nothing to do with you.” He bit his lip to coax some more blood out. Nothing like leaking blood to make a man look sincere. He kept his breath shallow, skimming under the pain. “She’s a good woman, my Odette. Good Bretonne woman. Comes from—”

  “Lies.”

  Pain. White hot. Blood red. “My cousin visited you here. She told you where she’s hiding. Where her father’s hiding. Tell me.”

  “It was my woman.” That was truth. His woman. His Maggie. Always and for all time, his. “Just my woman.”

  You’ll never touch Maggie. You’ll never get close to her.

  Hawker would be delivering those dragons’ teeth across Paris. Twenty powerful men had just got themselves terrified. They’d bring down the whole bloody French government. Including you, Cousin Victor. Including you.

  And Maggie would be safe.

  His breath cut like a knife going in and coming out, bright and sharp. He let his head loll back, mumbling as if he were losing consciousness.

  Victor lowered the club. His eyes slunk away.

  Look at me. Damn you for a bloody incompetent coward. Look at the man you’re torturing. You think the answers are written on that wall? If you were paying attention to the man you’re beating up, you’d know I’m not broken. God save us from idiots.

  Victor crossed to the plank table and dropped the club clattering among the wine bottles. “You’re really quite good. I could almost believe you.”

  Victor had taken his gloves off for the dirty work of beating a prisoner. He picked them up from the table and shook them out. “I discovered Marguerite’s involvement with La Flèche some weeks ago. Émigrés in London talk of nothing but their escape from France. I recognized Marguerite’s rabble of lowborn friends in the reports of our spies. She is fortunate no one realizes what she has done. You are one of her flock of traitors, I think. Heron, perhaps. I could never decide
who Heron was.”

  Doyle kept his head down, concentrating on being stupid. Staying alive.

  “You and the others who betray France will be swept away like the garbage you are. But I will keep my cousin’s name out of this. You make a mistake when you keep her from me. I am the only chance Marguerite has.”

  A chance to get killed. But he didn’t say that. He didn’t say anything.

  “I have men searching for her. I’ve discovered Marguerite’s secrets before. I will do so again. Someone saw her leave this place. Someone knows where she went.” The gloves were kid leather, bone white. Pristine. Victor tapped his fingers in. First one hand, then the other. “It cannot be too difficult to find one woman.”

  You have not one crumb off the loaf of an idea of what she is, do you? He lifted his head. “Nothing to do with me. Told you that.”

  “I’m not an idiot, Citoyen LeBreton.” A thin smile appeared. “Did you think I wouldn’t know my cousin had been with a man? You should not have touched a de Fleurignac. It was the worst mistake you ever made.”

  It was the best thing that ever happened to me.

  Victor finished with his gloves. “I will return in a day or two to tell you I have found her.” He paused and pretended to reconsider. “But no. Of course not. There will be no reason to return. You will be dead.”

  Forty-one

  “AND THEN?” MADAME STOOD ON THE STAIRS above her. She was dressed severely in black. Her hair was caught up with silver butterflies, on pins. She wore silver rings upon her hands.

  Justine made her report concisely, as she had been taught. “He delivered the last of the papers to Tallien and to Vadier.”

  “Who are great enemies of Robespierre.”

  “C’est sûr.” Madame would find this amusing. “The so-clever Adrian took me with him for the last deliveries. He said if he did not, I would only follow him, and this would save us both a great deal of trouble.”

  Madame smiled at her. “And did you discover what is in these papers?”

  “Alas, no.” Really, these English were not trivial opponents. “I did not see them. I wheedled and cajoled and the boy was not moved in the least. I think these are matters of great gravity.”

 

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