by Shana Galen
To Tempt a Rebel
The Scarlet Chronicles: Book IV
Shana Galen
TO TEMPT A REBEL
Copyright © 2019 by Shana Galen
Cover Design by The Killion Group, Inc.
All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the author.
All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Acknowledgments
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-One
Twenty-Two
Author’s Note
If you enjoyed this book, pre-order The Claiming of the Shrew, available April 2019.
Also by Shana Galen
Acknowledgments
SPECIAL THANKS TO
Kim Killion for the cover design,
Martha Trachtenberg for copyediting,
and Abby Saul for editing, formatting, and uploading.
Dear Reader,
Undoubtedly, you have heard tales of the Scarlet Pimpernel and his League. You know of his daring, his cunning, his outright bravery in the face of death. You may have been privy to accounts from those he rescued—French aristocrats and commoners alike condemned to death in France’s Reign of Terror, saved from the blade of the National Razor by the Pimpernel and his men. These stories are no myth.
The legend is true.
But what you know is not the whole story. . .
One
Paris, The Reign of Terror
The king was dead. The queen was dead. The country was at war and thousands faced starvation as winter approached, promising to be just as harsh and unforgiving as in years past. Tumbrels stacked with corpses fouled the streets, the bodies polluting the Seine when they were dumped unceremoniously into its waters. The cemeteries were filled to bursting. Death and the stench of death was a pall over the city of Paris. And this man—this so-called patriot—thought to lecture her on the theater’s choice of play.
Alexandra Martin—Alex to her friends and lovers—tapped her foot impatiently. Her foot was hidden by her skirts. Her face was not, and that she schooled into an expression of rapt attention.
“Voltaire’s Irène and The Marriage of Figaro,” the patriot droned. “Those are the only acceptable plays to be performed in the Republic.”
The patriot’s name was Citoyen Chevalier—Tristan Chevalier—and Alex knew where he lived, what he ate for breakfast, whom he slept with, and where he’d received the scar on his jaw. He had been a printer before he’d joined the revolution. His father had been one of the delegates sent to the National Assembly, and the son had stayed in Paris and run the family business. His parents and his sister were dead now. His brother fought with the army on the front, and Tristan Chevalier no longer printed inflammatory pamphlets and libelles. Now he worked for Robespierre, doing the bloodthirsty leader’s dirty work.
Today that included warning the actors and owners of the People’s Theater, where Alex had been part of the company for the past eight years, that the doors to the theater would be closed and the actors imprisoned if they did not abandon their current offering—Julius Caesar.
“Shakespeare’s plays,” Chevalier said, reading from a small notebook with a worn blue leather cover, “most especially the histories, such as Julius Caesar, are not permitted.”
“Why not?” one of the actors asked.
Chevalier raised eyes the color of café au lait. He looked at each of the actors in turn, trying to discern who had spoken. His eyes rested on Alex only briefly. It had been a man’s voice, so she did not interest him. Nevertheless, in that brief instant, she felt her neck grow warm and the heat rise to her face.
“Because,” Chevalier answered, “Robespierre has deemed it so.”
And Robespierre had probably read Shakespeare and realized that a play about a tyrant might provoke unwanted comparisons in the citizens who viewed it. Much better to keep the public’s enmity focused on the ancien régime, now being systematically eradicated on the guillotine’s scaffold each day.
“I am happy to answer any further questions,” Chevalier said, closing his notebook and securing it in his waistcoat, “at the Salle des Machines.”
And from thence the offending actor could easily be sent to the Conciergerie to await trial—or what passed for a trial in this city forsaken by justice.
When no one else spoke, Chevalier turned neatly on the heel of his polished boots and started for the steps. The actors had been called together on the stage of the theater, as it was the only location in the building large enough to fit all of them, and now he walked off the stage and into the rows of seats. The theater was dark, the stage lit only by a scattering of candles and lamps, and his dark blue coat—much in the style of that worn by the National Guard—quickly blended in with the darkness.
She couldn’t let him go. In a sense, she’d orchestrated his presence here. She was the one who’d suggested the theater perform Julius Caesar and then coaxed and cajoled Deville until he had persuaded the other theater managers. She’d known the play would not be permitted and Tristan Chevalier would be sent to shut it down. Bringing Robespierre’s lapdog here seemed the easiest and least suspicious way to carry out her mission. She’d been ordered to make contact with Chevalier by none other than the Scarlet Pimpernel. The Scarlet Pimpernel—the British hero who had saved so many from the guillotine and who many still argued was only a fiction.
As part of the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel, Alex knew he was no fiction.
Alex went after Chevalier, lifting the hem of her tunic so she would not trip over it. She had been dressing for a rehearsal of the play when Chevalier had arrived and demanded their presence on the stage. Alex might have wished she wore something other than the white tunic with the gaudy gold piping and the black wig of tight curls encircled by a gold band, but she rather thought the flimsy white material might attract Chevalier’s attention.
“Citoyen!” she called, running lightly on her sandaled feet. Even in the semi-darkness, she saw his back stiffen. Then he paused and turned sharply to watch her approach.
He was a tall man, though every man was tall to her as she was petite, but he must have been close to six feet. His straight brown hair, streaked with a few lighter strands here and there, had been pulled back into a simple queue and hung down his back to an inch or so below his collar. His eyebrows were dark slashes and his lips a soft peach amid a day’s growth of stubble. She imagined he let it grow to hide the angry red scar on his jaw. In time it would fade and turn white, but her information was that the scar was only a few years old and had been deep enough that it would take considerable time to disappear.
He nodded at her, clasping his hands behind his back. He was
curt and perfunctory, and not at all the sort of man she was used to dealing with. “Citoyenne Martin.” His tongue stumbled slightly over her English name, as though he was not used to the harsher consonants of her native language. “How may I be of assistance?”
She paused as she stood before him and smiled up and into his eyes. “You know my name.”
“All of Paris knows your name, citoyenne. You are the famous English actress.” His tone was one of disdain, but Alex kept her smile in place.
“Then you know my work?”
He shook his head. “I do not have time to attend the theater. In fact, I am pressed for time now.”
Alex had not loved the ancien régime, but she had certainly appreciated the noblemen’s manners. These patriots had none. “Allow me to accompany you to your carriage.” She hooked her arm through his and waited for him to lead her. He gave her a weary look, one that said he did not have time to pretend he strolled in the gardens, but he placed his hand over hers and led her toward the exit anyway.
“I am afraid you have dealt the company quite a blow today,” she said, her voice pleasant and loud enough to be overhead by any who wished to listen. “Costumes and sets do not come cheaply, citoyen.”
“Then your company would do well not to waste funds on a play that has not been approved by the Committee of Public Safety.”
They stepped into the foyer, where two National Guardsmen jumped to attention and opened the door. Immediately, Alex clamped her teeth to keep them from chattering. It was mid-November, and the weather outside was wet and cold. A gentleman would not have taken her out in it, dressed as she was in a thin costume, her arms bare. But Chevalier was no gentleman.
He stepped outside, and the wind caught her skirts and slapped them against her calves. Her nipples puckered from the cold, but she did not cross her arms over them to warm herself. Instead, she watched Chevalier’s eyes, hoping his gaze might dip to the hardened points of her breasts, thereby proving he was human after all. But his eyes never left her face—or rather, a point just to the right of her face.
“Shakespeare is beloved by everyone, the world over. His plays are considered masterpieces.”
Chevalier’s eyes slid to hers, then back to that undefined point again. “The Committee considers them unpatriotic. You do not wish to participate in anything unpatriotic, do you, Citoyenne Martin?”
And there was the veiled threat. She’d been learning everything she could about Chevalier for weeks. He was known for his ability to offer veiled threats, and even more importantly, make good on them.
“No, of course not. The Committee will not find a more ardent patriot than I, citoyen.”
“I am pleased to hear it.” But his face was a mask of skepticism. She had not fooled him, nor had she expected to. “Good day, citoyenne.”
“Good day. And remember—
Great princes' favorites their fair leaves spread
But as the marigold at the sun's eye,
And in themselves their pride lies buried,
For at a frown they in their glory die.”
He paused, hand on the door to his carriage. “Sonnet twenty-five,” he said, his gaze meeting hers directly now.
She raised her brows in both acknowledgment and admiration.
“Is it a warning?”
“Take it as you will.”
He climbed into the carriage, but looked out the window again before signaling to the coachman to drive on. “You play a dangerous game, citoyenne.”
She smiled. “There is no other kind worth playing. I do hope to see you again, citoyen.”
He looked at her long and hard, as though he might say something more, then he leaned back in the carriage and rapped on the roof.
Alex watched the carriage go, her smile fixed in place. She had not been certain he would know Shakespeare. Even after all she had gathered about him, she still did not know whether he was merely a sheep following the herd or an intelligent man with his own thoughts.
She was not pleased to have discovered the truth. An intelligent man was even more dangerous. It meant he was a true patriot. Such a man was much harder to sway with bribes or blackmail. This Chevalier did not seek fortune and fame but the ideals the revolution had been founded on.
Such a man could not be easily corrupted, and yet, that was what she must do if she were to save the little king.
Alex’s smile faded as the carriage rolled out of sight. It was time she had a serious discussion with the Scarlet Pimpernel.
TRISTAN DID NOT RETURN to the Salle des Machines at the Tuileries Palace, where Robespierre and the National Convention were quartered. He had no desire to be sent on another tedious errand by a man whom he had once loved and respected but who, over the course of the last year, had become increasingly fanatic.
Men, women, and children were starving in the streets. France was at war in the Vendée and with Austria. Riots broke out daily in Paris. Robespierre’s solution seemed to be universal: cut off more heads.
Tristan instructed the coachman to drive him to his residence near the Tuileries. He had taken the small apartment to be nearer to the National Convention, but now he wished his family’s lodgings in the Rue Sainte-Avoye hadn’t burned. The shop beneath the residence, with its once loud and busy printing press, had felt as much like home as the tiny upper floor, where he and his family had passed many pleasant evenings in crowded quarters. His current quarters offered him plenty of space but were bare and impersonal.
At one time he’d wanted to forget those memories and cling only to the anger they stirred in him. Now his anger was sated, his lust for vengeance snuffed out. Robespierre seemed to sense this, and Tristan suspected his supervisor kept him busy with trivialities to prevent him from attending sessions of the National Convention.
After all, what did it matter what play the People’s Theater performed when half of the country would freeze to death in a few short weeks or months? What difference did it make which portrait a café owner hung in his establishment? These were but diversions and details that distracted from the very real problems facing the country—problems Robespierre and the Convention seemed unable to solve.
Upon arriving at his residence, Tristan sent the coach back to the Tuileries and watched it depart. When the coachman was out of sight, he entered the building housing his apartment and walked straight out the back door, without stopping in his rooms. From there he walked the short distance to the Palais-Royal.
The day was cold and overcast, and the weather matched his mood perfectly. This morning he’d barely stepped foot in the Tuileries before Robespierre had sent him to the Boulevard du Temple and the People’s Theater. It had further annoyed him to be challenged by an actress, no less, and an English one at that. The woman must have a death wish to express her disapproval of the dictates of the National Convention so openly. Tristan could have reported her, and she would be in the Conciergerie before the end of the day.
He would have reported her too, if he was not about to do something far worse than merely disapprove of the new government’s policies. Tristan might be many things, but he was not a hypocrite.
He entered the café and took a seat at a small round table toward the back. One glance around him and he knew the man he sought had not yet arrived. The café was brightly lit with crystal chandeliers whose lights reflected off the many mirrors lining one wall. Gilded moldings separated the mirrors and ran along the edge of the ceiling as well. Paintings of scenes from mythology lined the walls where mirrors did not.
Tristan indulged himself, ordering coffee with chocolate and sat back, closing his eyes. He was tired. He had not slept well since this business had begun, and he was anxious to complete it. He was weary of deception and intrigue. He was only a man, and lately he felt as though he carried the weight of the entire nation on his back.
Eyes closed, he tried to clear his mind of political intrigue—of Dantonists, Girondists, Jacobins, and Montagnards. Instead, the vision that came to him wa
s that of Citoyenne Martin’s lovely green eyes. They were her best feature, and he would not have been a man if he had not noticed them. Nor would he have been a man had he not noticed the way her thin Roman garb clung to her legs and revealed the shape of her small but firm breasts. She was not a beautiful woman. Her jaw was too sharp, her body too angular. She had none of the roundness embodied in the nymphs and goddesses painted in the scenes from mythology surrounding him.
She was rather like a sprite or a fairy, her green eyes sparkling and bent on mischief.
“Have you been waiting long?” a man’s voice asked.
Tristan opened his eyes and looked into the face of the man he knew only as Citoyen Allié. Tristan did not believe this was the man’s real name. Allié meant ally and that was too convenient to be a coincidence. Tristan also suspected the man took some pains to disguise his true appearance. He wore his hat pulled low, his collar high, and his nose and cheeks did not look quite right. Theatrical makeup, perhaps? Or perhaps the shadows from his hat, which he had not removed upon entering the café, only gave the appearance of irregular features.
“Not long, citoyen.” Tristan gestured to the chair opposite. The waiter appeared with Tristan’s coffee, and inquired as to what Allié would drink. The man ordered coffee, plain. He always ordered the same, and never had Tristan seen him drink it.
When the server was gone, Allié leaned forward. “Do you have the pamphlets you mentioned to me when last we spoke? I am eager to read more of these republican tracts.”
The words were meant for anyone listening to them. Pamphlets was but code for letters Tristan had copied wherein Robespierre advocated for the arrest and execution of political enemies and formally condoned several massacres of loyalists in the provinces.
“The pamphlets are close at hand,” Tristan said. Part of the reason he had not slept the night before was that he was still undecided as to whether or not to give the letters to this Allié and officially pull the trigger, as it were, and begin Robespierre’s downfall.