Authors: Elizabeth Mansfield
A Regency Charade
Elizabeth Mansfield
Prologue
Although the jubilation after Waterloo had long since subsided, and the sight of a returning soldier on the streets of London no longer caused a commotion among the passers-by, the appearance of the tall, imposing uniformed officer standing at the top of the stone steps before number 17, Chancery Lane, drew the eyes of the people on the street. Their attention was captured not by the splendor of the officer’s dress uniform, with its scarlet, frogged coat and gilt epaulettes, nor by the strong features of the man himself under the impressive regimental shako, but by something in his stance which seemed out of keeping with the dignity of his appearance. He seemed bemused, perturbed, even muddled. His eyes peered down at the street in a blank, unseeing stare, and when he started down the stairs, his step was decidedly unsteady. “’E’s lushy,” sneered one of the oglers to his companion. The other shook his head in disgusted agreement as they walked off.
The officer reached the bottom step, but, having taken no notice of the fact that he’d reached street level, stumbled and lost his balance, falling awkwardly against a passing gentleman who had been watching his unsteady descent. The gentleman, somewhat past middle age, was quite robust and sturdy, and he was able, by the quick extending of a supporting arm, to keep the soldier from falling on his face. Helping him to steady himself, the gentleman remarked with a wide grin, “Easy, old chap. Ye don’t want the world to know ye’ve drunk London dry in one day!”
The officer blinked at him in embarrassed confusion. “I do beg your pardon, sir. I wasn’t looking—”
“Still celebratin’ the vict’ry, are ye?” the elderly gentleman inquired with an indulgent laugh.
“What? Oh … I see.” A small smile lit the officer’s face. “No, I’m not drunk,” he assured the older man. “Just … absent-minded.” His smile faded and his mouth set in a straight line. “Although I could use a dram of spirits quite well at this moment.”
The older man eyed him shrewdly. There was nothing in the fellow’s manner or speech which suggested an overindulgence in liquor. In fact, now that the officer had been shaken into attention, even his stance was sober and soldierly. The pallor that still remained in his cheeks and the confused look that still lingered at the back of his eyes now indicated to the perspicacious observer that the poor fellow had more likely been served a shocking blow than a large brandy. “Do ye truly crave a drink?” the older man asked sympathetically. “Well, Captain—you
are
a Captain, ain’t ye?—it just happens that I’m on my way to wet my whistle. I’d be honored to have yer company.”
The officer, who had been adjusting his shako to the proper angle, looked at his companion with another of his quick smiles. “It would be my pleasure, sir. Lead the way.”
By the time the two arrived at the Grape and Barrel, they were arm-in-arm and addressing each other by name. Captain Alexander Tyrrell had revealed to Mr. Isaiah Hornbeck that he’d just returned from the continent and had indeed been a participant in the battle of Waterloo. Mr. Hornbeck, on his part, had told the Captain that he was the owner of a successful cotton mill located near Birmingham (“It wouldn’t surprise me at all,” he’d chortled proudly, “if ye wasn’t wearin’ some of my cotton on yer person at this very moment.”) and had come to London on mill business.
But as he chattered on, Mr. Hornbeck was aware that Captain Tyrrell’s inner tension had not eased. The older man, despite his blunt manners, was gifted with an innate sensitivity and a keen intelligence, and he took note of the fact that the Captain’s eyes had not lost their look of almost blind confusion. Keeping up a stream of inconsequential banter, he led the officer to an empty table and ordered a bottle of the best brandy the house could offer. Then, uttering a hearty “Cheers!” he handed a large glass to the troubled soldier, lapsed into silence and let the Captain think his own thoughts.
Captain Tyrrell’s thoughts were in such an agonized muddle that one could hardly call the turmoil in his brain “thinking” at all. He took a quick, generous swig of the brandy, leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes. Perhaps the liquor, as it released its warmth into his blood, would ease the shock his solicitor had just dealt him, and he could begin to think sensibly.
His solicitor’s words still rang in his ears: “We’re sorry to have to tell you, my lord, that you are still married.” The Captain shuddered.
Still married
? How could it
be
? For six years, all the while he’d been abroad, he had assumed that he was free, that the ties between him and his wife had been severed … that he would never again have to lay eyes on Priss. No, he mustn’t think of her as Priss. He’d assumed that she had become Lady Edmonds; he’d trained himself to think of her that way. But his solicitor had referred to her repeatedly as Lady
Braeburn
. Good God, Lady Braeburn—she still used
his name
! She was still his wife! A little moan escaped from his throat.
“Are ye feelin’ a bit out o’ frame, Captain?” Mr. Hornbeck asked in concern.
Captain Tyrrell opened his eyes and tried to smile reassuringly. “No, not at all. I’m quite all right. I’m just … mulling over some news I learned from my solicitor.”
“Oh, is that it?” Mr. Hornbeck nodded knowingly. “Solicitors do have a way o’ dimmin’ down the sunshine.” He reached for the bottle. “Here, have another. Ye look as though ye need it.”
The Captain tossed down a second drink and stared absently into the empty glass. Mr. Hornbeck was quite right, he thought morosely. His solicitor certainly
had
taken the sunshine out of his day. “We’re sorry to have to tell you, my lord,” Mr. Newkirk had said quite distinctly, “that you are still married.” At least Newkirk had had the sense not to look him in the eye as he’d said it. He’d fussed over his papers as nervously as a hungry chicken pecking through the weeds for a crumb, muttering something about having “tried our best.” (The damned fellow worked in his office without a single assistant, yet he always referred to himself as “we.”) Tyrrell had felt his blood freeze in his veins at the words.
“What do you
mean
?” he’d demanded. “I left you with
strict instructions
—!”
“We know, my lord,” the solicitor had muttered miserably. “But as we told you before you left, a divorce would be quite difficult and expensive to obtain—”
“And I told
you
, Newkirk, that I didn’t give a
hang
about the expense!” he’d said furiously.
“Yes, we quite understood that. But as we explained to you at the time, the aftereffects would be most painful. A blot on your name … social ostracism for her ladyship … your future blighted …”
“Yes, yes, I remember. But didn’t you say you’d apply for a decree of nullity or some such legal bibble-babble?”
Mr. Newkirk had nodded guiltily and lowered his eyes again. “Just so, my lord … a decree
a vinculo matrimonii
, which voids the marriage and permits both parties to remarry freely. But you see, it is very difficult to find acceptable grounds—”
The Captain had jumped to his feet impatiently. “But … you assured me that you’d manage it!” he cried.
Mr. Newkirk had bit his underlip unhappily. “Yes, my lord, but her ladyship …”
“What about her ladyship?”
“She begged us to … to postpone the action until she could speak to you.”
Tyrrell had put his hand to his throbbing forehead in bewilderment. “See here, Newkirk, this makes no sense. You
knew
she’d have no opportunity to speak to me … that I’d left immediately for Spain. It was you, yourself, who’d procured my commission.”
“Her ladyship knew you’d departed. She meant … after the war …” the lawyer had mumbled.
“
After the war
? Didn’t you warn her it might take years? I thought … didn’t she express to you her desire to wed Blake Edmonds?”
“No, my lord, she did not.”
Tyrrell had stared at the solicitor in utter bafflement. Feeling distinctly like someone who’s had the ground pulled from under him, he’d sunk into the nearest chair. “Then … she
didn’t
marry him. But …
why
?”
“I’m sure we couldn’t say, my lord.”
Captain Tyrrell had brooded darkly for a long moment over the strange ways of women. Then he’d looked up at his solicitor angrily. “Then, hang it, Newkirk, why didn’t you
tell
me?”
The color in Mr. Newkirk’s cheeks heightened in a guilty flush. “Lady Braeburn urged us … quite persuasively … not to do so. She said she didn’t want you to be disturbed while you were facing enemy bullets.”
The Captain had jumped to his feet in renewed fury. “Well, damn it, Newkirk, I’m not facing enemy bullets now! So you can take yourself out from behind that desk and procure that decree! Do you hear me, man?”
“Yes, my lord,” the solicitor had said with a troubled but steady gaze, “but it will be necessary to have a document stating that Lady Braeburn had entered into a valid pre-contract with Sir Blake Edmonds prior to your nuptials. Those are the only grounds on which we can base our case for nullity.”
The Captain had glared at him and marched to the door. “Then go ahead and get it.”
“You don’t quite understand, my lord,” the poor solicitor had called after him. “She will not sign such a document at
our
request.”
Tyrrell had turned back to him in surprise. “What—?”
“I’m very much afraid, my lord, that
you’ll
have to get it from the lady
yourself
.”
Yes, that was the very nub of the problem, the Captain thought with a deep sigh as he reached for another drink. Six long years had passed since he’d last laid eyes on her. Fortunately, time and the war had matured and hardened him. He was certain he had recovered from the wound she’d dealt him. But he had not counted on the necessity of facing her again, of talking with her about the very matters which had once caused him such bitter pain. He was not at all sure that the thin veneer with which he’d covered over the injury would be able to withstand such an encounter. He groaned again and reached for the bottle.
“Are ye certain, Captain, that ye’re quite well?” Hornbeck asked solicitously.
Captain Tyrrell was beginning to feel the effects of the brandy and had difficulty in focusing on the kind gentleman who’d befriended him. “I’m ’s fine ’s a married man c’n be,” he said thickly.
Hornbeck laughed. “Nothin’ wrong with that. I was a married man myself ’til my Sarah died, and I never had no regrets.”
“Ah, but you haven’t been thinking of yourself ’s a
bachelor
for six years,” Captain Tyrrell said, wagging an unsteady finger in front of Hornbeck’s nose.
“I don’t see how ye can think o’ yerself as a bachelor if ye’re a married man,” Hornbeck pointed out sensibly. “I think the brandy’s beginnin’ to muddle you.”
“Not so muddled tha’ I don’t know I’m in a fix,” Tyrrell insisted gloomily, reaching for the nearly empty bottle.
“Perhaps ye’ve had enough,” Mr. Hornbeck suggested gently, a slightly worried frown appearing at the corners of his mouth.
“More ’n enough,” Captain Tyrrell agreed with a nod, “but I don’ feel much better. May as well get foxed. No place t’ go now.
She’s
still livin’ in m’ house!”
“Well, of course she is. So why don’t you go home to her? Kiss and make up. Ye’ll feel much better fer it, I promise ye. I was married more ’n thirty years, so there’s not much about marriage that I don’t know.”
The Captain gave a mirthless laugh. “Y’ speak like a babe. An innocent babe. Do y’ know John Donne?”
Mr. Hornbeck blinked. “No. Can’t say I’ve met the gentleman. In the service with ye, was he?”
“A poet, Mr. Hornbeck. A true poet. An’ do y’ know what he said? Lis’n:
If thou beest born to strange sights
,
Things invisible to see
,
Ride ten thousand days and nights
,
Til age snow white hairs on thee.
Thou, when thou return’st, wilt tell me
All strange wonders that befell thee
,
And swear