"The Slightest Provocation" - читать интересную книгу автора (Rosenthal Pam)Chapter Eleven
Just as well, Kit thought, that she hadn’t been at church. The scriptural passage was very fine and he’d done a reasonable job of reading it aloud. But he might not have been able to carry it off if he’d had to avoid catching her gaze. Yes, he could just imagine it. In truth, he’d rather enjoyed booming out the biblical sonorities. Even pausing to glare for an instant at a little boy who’d been whispering to his mate. How pretty she’d looked, passing through the village square with a basket over her arm. White gown with black dots. But they weren’t dots, they were very tiny flowers-he’d only realized it during the instant when she’d swept past him so haughtily. Lovely flowing stuff the gown was made of, especially lovely to think of her wearing that particularly disreputable shift under it. A length of scarlet cord around her wrist-no, that had been merely a trick of his imagination, set aflame by, of all things, her ladylike village propriety. After church, he’d enjoyed the well wishes and congratulations from people in the neighborhood. Good to meet Colonel Halsey, who led the militia; they’d be speaking next week. And everyone had chuckled when he’d shaken the hand of the child he’d terrorized from behind the lectern. Of course, Mrs. Grandin and that pretty daughter had come up to greet him. Too bad: he’d wanted a few more words with Halsey. But Susanna had been anxious about Wat. He’d hastened to take her back to Rowen. “He’ll be very happy when I tell him how beautifully you read it.” Kit handed her into the carriage a bit charily. Still, she wasn’t such a bad sort. Fearful of unconventionality, in the past she’d stayed as far as she could from him-odd now to be thrown together, to have to make halting conversation. Growing up in the glow cast by a brilliant, beautiful mother, Kit had always assumed Wat had married Susanna because he’d been told to. Certainly he couldn’t have But today he found himself admiring the patient slowness with which she spooned beef jelly between his brother’s tremulous lips, heedless, as she wiped it from his shirtfront, of the bit that stained the lace cuff of her gray gown. “It must be awkward for you,” she told him after Wat had been put to bed for a rest, “with Lady Christopher in the neighborhood. Still, now that you’re here, perhaps she’ll return to London.” He suppressed a smile. Whatever her newly revealed strengths, Susanna clearly didn’t know Lady Christopher. “I hadn’t realized you received her family nowadays,” he said. “Times change,” she said. “The estate boundaries are settled, which was the main thing. Mrs. Grandin is more liberal in her opinions than I like, but she does her best. And Mr. Grandin was quite what he should be.” How strange to be having this conversation, as though “And then, of course, I quite dote upon “Not at all.” He wouldn’t have expected anything else. Though what “But you’ll want to get back to the magistrate’s papers,” she was saying now, leading him out of the dining room and down a corridor. Rather a dreary little office. They’d moved the papers down from the tower room, Susanna had told him, so that Wat might be able to work with Kit on them when he recovered a bit more. She’d made a very small pause before articulating the word Still, he was glad not to be working in the tower. The old marquess would summon you up there to pronounce judgment on you. He’d sit at his writing desk and you’d stand in front of it like a supplicant. He wouldn’t exactly get angry. You’d have to be worth a lot more than you were, his manner implied, to make him angry. Mostly he’d be bored, mildly amused, and visibly hankering to be out riding or fishing. As when Kit had been sent down from school. Or when he and Mary had returned from Gretna. He’d gotten a scowl out of him anyway, with that comment about her name being beautiful. A small victory in those days. Surprising how vividly he could remember it. Physical proximity, he expected, a sense of place. Smell of the air, rustle of weeds and hedges, weight of looming skies. Walking the footpath from Grefford, it had been as though she’d been by his side. As though he could still make out their younger shapes, pressed into the grass, molded into the heavy air that meant a storm was on the way. Time to get on with business. The downstairs office contained a safe, which held instructions on how to communicate with Traynor, the informant. Messages in a hollow tree. He’d walk out later, leave a note telling the man that he’d be receiving the reports from now on. Paying for them, too. Interesting stuff. He’d read some of it last night; finishing it up now, he felt something of the excitement one felt decoding a military communication-disparate elements suddenly cohering into a story. In truth, rather a frightening story. It vindicated everything Wat had been writing to him and matched exactly what the Committee of Secrecy had been saying. Traynor was clearly no professional. His wordy reports on the doings of the local Parliamentary Reform Club were written in neat if wobbly writing, but one had rather to hack through an overgrowth of irrelevancies to get to the point. Though, in fact, the local malcontents were meeting less frequently at taverns these days and more often in barns, as new laws against seditious meetings were handed down from London. But on an occasion when they still came together at a place that served food and drink, Mr. Traynor seemed to feel it incumbent to begin with a description of the various members’ suppers-who’d had chops and who’d had ale, and whether they had to borrow the money to pay for it. The first pages of certain reports would thus be bathed in a glow of fellowship, the warmth of a public hearth. Reading them, Kit felt sometimes as though he were back in uniform, drinking and joking with his men. Until one got to the real stuff: In one of Wat’s last communications to Kit in Paris, he’d written that Sir Charles Benedict, over near Nottingham, had been receiving extremely similar reports from He gazed out the window across the velvety lawn at Susanna wheeling his brother’s invalid chair in front of a stand of rhododendron. All calm and domestic peace, or so one might think. Even as late as last February, Kit had doubted the existence of a conspiracy. The letters Wat sent him last year had been singularly unimpressive. There’d been just as many meetings for Traynor to report on-more of them, perhaps, after the harvest had turned out so miserable. Snow on the ground as late as June; hunger and anger-though at least they’d been spared the food riots some districts had endured. Invective had flowed from the spy’s reports like small beer at a village festival: the sort of extravagant, furious, gaseous oratory Kit imagined a poor man might glory in when he’d had some drink in him. Which was exactly why he Whereas in these more recent reports… suddenly one could discern a different order of reality, of confidence, of resolution, of detailed planning and disciplined organization. And although it seemed entirely ridiculous for the several dozen members of Grefford’s little local Parliamentary Reform Society to think they could take London, the disturbing part was that they weren’t planning on doing it themselves. Sheffield would be sending ten thousand men; Birmingham a great many more than that. The speaker had it from a Mr. Oliver, whom he’d met at Derby. “He’ll be here with us next week, and “For the lads from Another London delegate, named Hollis, had spoken at Manchester, according to a man who had a brother-in-law there. Told the Manchester crowd that the Leicester-Derby-Nottingham area would be sending thirty thousand. How had the Committee of Secrecy put it? And all taking their orders from London-the level of coordination and discipline most impressive indeed. He wrote his note to Traynor to tell him he’d be acting in behalf of the marquess for the next while. Yes, continue sending your correspondence; you’ll be receiving your pay and orders from me now. It would be more important than first he’d thought to talk to Benedict in Nottingham, share information with a fellow magistrate. Which meant another letter explaining his newly assumed position and asking if he might hope to find him at home on Tuesday. Folding the letters, sealing them-the one to Traynor to be deposited in its hiding place; too bad he’d have to pay to post the one to Benedict. But it would be worse to risk finding out if Wat could sign his name well enough to frank the letter. But absent a next communication from Traynor, or additional information from Benedict, there was nothing to do but wait. Or take a walk in the forest. See the old places. Why not? |
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