whose plots had vexed England since long before even Wessex's father had been born.
The interior of the coach reeked strongly of hashish, and Wessex spotted the tall slender form of a
narghile set in an ebony stand attached to the floor of the coach. He set his lantern beside it, scenting the
bitterness of absinthe beneath the cloying sweetness of hashish.
He had no time to refine upon Warltawk's vices, however. Working as quickly as he could, Wessex
began to dismantle the interior of the coach..
There were secret drawers beneath both seats. One contained a pistol—mercifully unloaded—and a
stack of gold coins. Wessex picked one up and examined it by the lantern's light. A gold napoleon, of this
year's minting. He tipped the booty into his pockets, conscious of the role he must play, but beneath the
acting, his mind raced. How had Warltawk come by these coins? Had he been paid in them, or was he
to pay in his turn?
The other drawer contained a small packet tied with a violet ribbon. Wessex sniffed at it, and untied the
packet. A cursory inspection identified these as the letters of a lady. This, too, was bestowed upon one
of the pockets of the grey coat for further inspection.
"I said bestir yourself, me lord!"
Merlin's voice. Wessex came quickly out of the coach.
The tableau upon the turf remained unchanged. Warltawk stood unmoving, glaring malevolently at the
highwayman. With his coachman by his side, it would be a great risk to approach him, and one that Mad
Merlin obviously preferred not to take.
"You may shoot my servants, if it amuses you. But if you shoot me, I guarantee that worse will come to
you than hanging." Warltawk's voice was dispassionate.
"And if you are an invalid? Thrown upon the charity of your son?"
Wessex, coming closer, spoke softly into Warltawk's ear in a voice quite unlike his natural one. He laid
the barrel of his pistol against Warltawk's leg meaningfully.
"You were a noted duelist in your day, my lord. You have seen how a wound can fester, condemning a
man to see out his days hemmed in by servants and the grossest indignities. You are thought to be the last
of your line, my lord, but I know otherwise. You have a living son. I am certain that he would not
condemn you to the care of strangers." The identity of Lord Warltawk's secret by-blow had been a
closely-guarded secret for nearly half a century, but the White Tower knew many secrets. It would be a
quietly amusing sort of revenge to throw Warltawk into Malhythe's household.
As the meaning of his words penetrated, Wessex felt the old man's body struck by a whiplash of rage,
until for a moment he feared that a paroxysm would carry Warltawk off.
"You
will
pay for this insolence!" the old man hissed in an adder's voice.
"On another day." Wessex stepped back and gave the servant a shove. "You—move off."
The footman's nerve broke at last. He turned and ran in the direction from which the coach had come.
"Allow me to assist you," Wessex offered, reaching for Warltawk's cape.
There was nothing in the cape; Wessex tossed it to the ground. He was reaching for Warltawk's coat,
when he discerned a glint amidst the foam of lace that cascaded from his lordship's throat. Wessex seized
it, and flicked the long golden chain over Warltawk's head.
He stepped back, gazing at what he held in growing dismay.
It was a quizzing-glass, such as any member of Warltawk's generation might sport… but a highly unique
one which, as Wessex knew for a fact, did not belong to Warltawk.
An antiquary who'd once seen it had suggested that the stone itself was possibly Roman—a disk of ruby
roughly two inches in diameter, with a silvery flaw in its center whose shape had given the gem its name.
The ruby called the Mirror Rose had been reset several times, though always as a quizzing glass. There
were five bands along the handle engraved with letters in the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin alphabets. Once
the rings were set in combination, the quizzing-glass became the engine to cypher—or uncypher—any
document. Unbreakably.
The Mirror Rose was the property of Sir Geoffrey Hanaper, personal private secretary to Endymion
Childwall, Marquess of Rutledge.
And Rutledge served the White Tower.
"How did you come by this?" Wessex demanded roughly.
It would be too much to say that there was a look of fear upon Warltawk's face, after the threats Wessex
had made, but there was certainly a look of… caution.
"I am an antiquary. I recently purchased this item. And you, sir, are a most peculiar highwayman."
Wessex was fast ceasing to care whether Warltawk recognized him or not. Hanaper would not have
given up the jewel while he lived, for whoever possessed it could translate England's most secret
correspondence.
Wessex cocked his pistol and pressed it against Warltawk's thigh, prepared to deliver the wound he had
promised. "Tell me how you stole this from Geoffrey Hanaper," he said.
"One cannot steal from a dead man," Warltawk answered coolly.
"Why should I believe you?" Wessex said.
"An impasse," Warltawk agreed. "Very well, sirrah, let me offer you this to match it: the late Mr.
Hanaper's employer, one Endymion Childwall, is making a hasty trip to the Continent under cover of the
nuptial celebrations. Perhaps it was occasioned by the discovery that his secretary had uncovered that
which he ought not to've. Perhaps it is the desire to ally himself with the winning cause. His blood was
never what it ought to be, you know."
Wessex took a silent step backward, raising his pistol and releasing the hammer. Warltawk's words
made a terrible kind of sense. If Hanaper had been murdered and the death disguised—If Rutledge were
the Judas-agent whose activities had so vexed the White Tower, and Hanaper had discovered that
fact—
There was nothing more that could be done here, short of shooting Warltawk. And Wessex would leave
that work to another. Wessex turned away, gesturing for Merlin to precede him.
"I bid you good evening, Your Grace of Wessex," Warltawk said, his voice pitched for the Duke's ears
alone.
Wessex did not look back.
Wessex and Morgan rode until the lights of Town were visible. Whatever Warltawk knew—or thought
he knew—was a problem for another dawn. For now Wessex put it behind him. At the edge of Town,
Wessex drew rein and turned to his companion. Both men had rearranged their dress as they rode, giving
themselves a more respectable appearance. If luck was with them, it would be hours before Warltawk
could report his encounter with a pair of highwaymen. And it would be best for all concerned if the
Prince de Minuit
could prove he'd been entirely elsewhere, for Warltawk's reach was long.
"If I were you, my lad, I'd get Malhythe to send you somewhere safe—such as Paris," Wessex said with
a faint smile.
"I was thinking more of Coronado," Merlin said fervently. "I'd rather live under the Dons than be torn to
gobbets by that wizened old hellgrammite."
"Coronado might be far enough," Wessex allowed. He passed Merlin a heavy wallet that bulged with
stolen gold. An experienced gentleman of the high toby such as Merlin would find ways to spend the gold
napoleons without attracting undue attention. "This should see you there and more. If I were you, I'd
leave now."
Merlin smiled a crooked smile and touched two fingers to his hat-brim. "And so I shall. And I thank you
for an evening I'd not care to repeat, Master Blaise."
He wheeled his horse and trotted away. Wessex wasted no time in spurring Hirondel on his own path.
At this hour, it was not possible to use the regular entrance to the White Tower Group, which was a
haberdashery on Bond Street. Instead, Wessex spent precious minutes locating a certain coaching inn
that lay along High Holborn. He did not stop in the Globe and Triangle's innyard, but rode Hirondel
directly into the stable.
A surly ostler looked up, reaching for the lead-weighted club with which he kept order in his domain.
"The Scarecrow has business with England," Wessex said, and the ruffian subsided. He jerked a thumb
over his shoulder.
Wessex dismounted—to have dismounted before giving the code-phrase would have been to ensure his
immediate execution—and led Hirondel through the stable. The Globe and Triangle was a busy inn, and
for the most part its traffic was entirely ordinary.
A second groom watched carefully as Wessex led Hirondel into the last stall on the end, taking with him
the lighted lantern that hung on the peg there. It was a loose-box, scrubbed clean and with thick straw
strewn upon the floor. Wessex went quickly to the manger in the back and pushed it toward the left.
There was a loud click as the mechanism engaged, and then the entire back wall of the stall swung inward
as if it were a door, to disclose a long downward-sloping narrow passageway, just high enough for a
mounted man, if he were a careful one.
Wessex led Hirondel through the opening, then shoved the wall back until he heard the click that meant
the mechanism had engaged once more. The stallion nosed at him inquisitively, and Wessex took a
moment to reassure the beast before he swung into the saddle again.
The passage was damp and close and smelled pervasively of horse. Hirondel's hooves made only the
faintest of sounds, for the passage was floored in thick rubber tiles. It led from the stables at the Globe
and Triangle to the cellars of the Bond Street house, a passage of no little distance. Wessex had used it
only once before, but tonight he had no choice: there could be no possible reason for the Duke of
Wessex to call upon his tailor at this hour of the morning—and he could not approach Baron Misbourne
at a public function even if he knew where the White Tower's master might be.
A quarter of an hour brought him to the end of the passage. The passageway seemingly ended in a solid
wall, but Wessex knew its secret. He dismounted, tied Hirondel to a ring set into the wall, and cast about
until he found the pulley-ropes that worked the dumbwaiter. As Wessex strained at the counterweighted
ropes, an open-sided box that only moments before had appeared to be a part of the tunnel walls began
to rise skyward, bearing Wessex with it.
It was just as well that my lord of Wessex had dressed the part of a low fellow when he had gone
seeking the highwayman, for no Pink of the
Ton
7
would have been able to work the mechanism without
imperiling the work of the impeccable Weston. But Wessex's coat was slovenly loose, and a few minutes
of exertion saw the open elevator rise into the lowest of the cellars of the Bond Street establishment.
Charteris was there to greet him as always, the impeccably-liveried White Tower butler giving no
indication that there was anything amiss regarding the hour or fashion of Wessex's arrival.
"Good evening, Your Grace," Charteris said imperturbably, reaching for Wessex's cloak and hat.
His Grace surrendered the items reluctantly. The Mirror Rose was in the inner pocket of his coat. "I need
to see Lord Misbourne. It is a matter of the utmost urgency."
"Of course, Your Grace. If you will come with me to the Yellow Parlor, I shall enquire if His Lordship is
at home. I shall send a servant to see to your horse."
A few moments later, Wessex stood in one of the four small rooms on the ground floor of the premises.
Except for the colors for which they were named—Red, Yellow, Violet, Blue—and which were carried
out in their decoration and appointments, the four rooms were virtually identical. Even at this hour there
were fresh candles burning on the mantel, and from behind the velvet curtains, the faint sounds of late
revelry could still be heard on the streets without.
He supposed that Charteris was waking Misborne as he waited. He doubted Misbourne would be any
happier to receive this news than Wessex had been to gain it… assuming it were in fact true.
He drew the Mirror Rose from his pocket and studied it. In the light of the clustered candles, the flaw
that so resembled a silver rose in the heart of the ruby could be clearly seen. With this and its
counterparts, Britain had an inviolable code to use in communicating with its politicals on station in Lisbon
and elsewhere. Without it, they did not. It was bad enough that the secret should be known at all. Worse,
that it should be compromised.
The door to the Yellow Parlor opened.
"My lord will see you now," Charteris said impassively.
Wessex dropped the quizzing-glass into a pocket and followed Charteris up the curving staircase to the
first floor of the town house concealed behind the haber-dasher's facade. No doors gave onto the
corridor save the one at its end. That door was covered in padded red leather, and as always, Charteris
pushed it open and allowed Wessex to pass through without announcement.
Also as always, the room was frightfully dim, for Jonathan Milo Arioch de la Forthe, third Baron
Misbourne, had been born an albino: strong light hurt his eyes, and sunlight blinded him. But these
disabilities were insignificant in the face of Misborne's formidable intellect, a mind which had placed him
as the spider in the center of the web that held the Grande Alliance together: the white knight who had
taken the field against the Black Pope and the prospect of a globe-spanning French empire.
Wessex forced himself to stand still, waiting for his eyes to adjust. The room was lit by several cobbler's