Read Marry the Man Today Online
Authors: Linda Needham
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
A man wound tightly, ready to spring should anything go amiss. And if anything was going to go amiss, it would be right now.
"Here, Helen, dear," she said, holding up the length of gingham to cover Skye, who was on her knees, slipping through the curtain at the back of the shop.
Seconds stretched out to minutes as she pictured Skye approaching the princess. Hopefully blindfolded, hopefully alone and unharmed. Dressing the hostage in a jacket and a pair of britches, cramming her hair into a cap.
"Yellow is just perfect for my hair, Mama!" Jessica stood in front of the mirror, nearly dancing with the long length of fabric.
While Elizabeth listened closely to the sounds from above, the soft brush of a footfall, a small voice, a creak. She was ready to rescue Skye or any of them, if it came to that. Armed as she was with a short cudgel and the will to use it.
Just as she knew that Ross was prepared to do the same; she could see it in the broad set of his shoulders, in the powerful flex of his arms.
But the amazing man kept the clerk busy with the rosewater and a box of cigars and a promise that he would purchase the entire length of yellow gingham.
She held her breath and tried to steady her heart. Still, it was a full five grueling minutes before she finally heard two quiet sets of footsteps on the stairs.
Quiet because it was Skye and the princess and not a brawling end to the mission.
"Oh, good heavens, look at the time, girls!" she said, giving the signal that the princess was in hand and to prepare to leave the shop. "Your grandmother will start to fret if we're a minute late."
"Can I have the gingham, please, Mama?" Jessica held out the bolt as Skye and the other figure slipped through the curtain and into the middle of their cluster.
"Yes, child, your father's already bought it for you, haven't you, dear?"
"Yes, dear."
They started forward from the rear of the shop as a group, then Elizabeth let out a loud snort. "Why, there you are, boy!"
"Did you see the trains, Patrick?"
"No trains for
him,
Josey; he missed his chance! Where have you been, boy?" Flooded with relief, Elizabeth clamped her arm around the small rounded shoulders of the princess and yanked the cap farther down over the blindfold. "Out gallivanting in the street, I'll wager. Come along now, or you'll not be getting your allowance this week."
While the three girls blocked the clerk's view from the counter, Elizabeth led the stumbling, confused hostage through the aisle toward the door.
They were just steps from freedom when a wiry man in a cap and a shop apron came striding through the door.
He stopped abruptly in his tracks, blocking the whole of their exit.
Elizabeth's heart dropped into her stomach. She'd know that walk anywhere, even in the dark. She'd followed him here to the shop and then to the Austrian Embassy only a few hours before.
She maneuvered herself and her skirts in front of the princess and gave the man an enormous smile.
"Well, good afternoon to you, sir," she said as brightly as she could manage.
Still the man studied her for a moment, then the rest of her brood. Then cast a look above and behind them, doubtless at Ross towering above them all.
The man then smiled and nodded. "Thank you for your patronage." He stepped aside with a bow.
"You're most welcome, sir." Her knees quaking, Elizabeth led her delegation through the doorway and out onto the sidewalk, with the princess disguised as her son and overwhelmed by the sea of crinolines and bonnets.
The Carter P. Norris family, larger by one, paraded back down the street and around the corner to the waiting carriage, with Ross silently bringing up the rear.
The rest happened quickly, silently.
Henry opened the door and Elizabeth climbed in behind her husband. The girls surrounded the blindfolded princess and helped her up into the carriage, then down into a ball in the well between the seats.
Then they hooked arms and kept walking down the street, chattering. Three young women on a market outing.
What would she do without them?
And what would she have done without Ross?
Elizabeth wanted to bubble and blather to him about the terrifying parts of the operation and the nimble ones, the things they might do better next time, and how perfect he'd been at the spur of the moment.
But her husband was pensive, unmoving; his gaze fixed out the window, his face unreadable, his mouth still masked by that ridiculous moustache.
And with the princess at their feet, they couldn't speak anyway. Not without risking her recognizing their voices at some time in the future. Or Ross's immediately.
But the princess was safe now, the world as well.
And it was barely ten in the morning.
And so Elizabeth watched out the window, startled when, instead of stopping in front of the Russian Embassy, they pulled through a pair of gates that opened into an unfamiliar courtyard that she couldn't ask Ross about.
Even as he silently handed her out the carriage door.
A small group of equally silent men, doubtless more of her husband's operatives, swooped out of a doorway then set to work gently moving the princess out of the carriage into the back of a van painted with the words finest household goods in deep arcs on each side.
The poor woman was just as silent. Must still be terrif
i
ed, though she must also have guessed at their good intentions because she had never struggled against her bonds or her blindfold, never cried out.
Thinking that she ought to ride in the back with the princess and lend her a bit of comfort, Elizabeth looked around the busy courtyard for Ross. But he was nowhere to be seen.
She was about to scour the place for him when she saw a bearded man with a slouching cap climbing into the driver's seat of the van.
Ross! She'd know those unforgettably dark eyes anywhere, that finely sculpted mouth. She went toward him, but he put up his hand to stop her and gave her a nodding salute, when surely she deserved a walloping kiss.
More than a kiss!
After all, they were still in the midst of their honeymoon!
"Blast it all, Ross!" she whispered under her breath as her arrogant husband pulled the van through the gates and out into the street, taking the princess and all the risks with him.
The blackguard! After all she'd done for him!
"My lady Blakestone, if you please ..."
"Pe
m
bridge!"
"His lordship said he might be away for a few hours, maybe more." The man's face flushed crimson. "So he wanted me to see you to your rooms at the Huntsman."
"A few hours?" Just to deliver the princess? Or maybe he had to report back to one of his many agencies.
"He also said to tell you that you'd best be there when he returned, if you know what's good for you."
"He actually had the nerve to say that?" No wonder Pembridge's cheeks were red and growing redder.
"Well, my lady, I'd certainly not be making up threats like that to another man's wife."
Nor should the husband himself.
"Then come along, Pembridge. Whether his lordship likes it or not, I have an excellent idea of what's good for me."
And it wasn't being locked in her husband's sitting room for the rest of the day.
Chapter 21
It is the nature of a woman to cling to the man for support and direction, to comply with his humours and feel pleasure in doing so, simply because they are his; to conquer him not by force but by her weakness, to command him by obeying him. . . .
Thomas Carlyle, to his fiancée,
18
26
“What's good for me, husband, dear, may not a
l
ways be what's good for you.
Elizabeth was still steaming mad a few minutes later when she went bolting into Ross's empty suite at the Huntsman, prepared to do battle with the man the moment he returned. She was going to have to set him straight before their marriage grew another day older.
She had just begun scrubbing the greasepaint off her face in the washroom when she thought she heard a knock at the door.
It couldn't be Ross, he hadn't been gone long enough. Thinking it was Pembridge with a heaping tray of tea and biscuits, she opened the door to a stoop-shouldered old man peering at her from the private corridor.
He was dressed well, his white hair neat and trimmed, his gray eyes drooping but surprised.
"Oh, dear, miss. I must have knocked on the wrong door." He glanced both directions down the hallway.
"You're looking for Lord Blakestone?"
"Yes, is he here?" The old man looked past her shoulder.
"I'm afraid he's not right now. But I'm his wife. Elizabeth . . . uhm, I'm Lady Blakestone. I'd be happy to give him a message from you."
"His wife?" The man quirked his brow and studied her face. "I didn't know the boy had married."
"It's only been a day or two." Worried about his balance, she caught his thin wrist. "Would you like to come in and leave a note?"
"No, no, my lady." But he came forward into the room with the gentlest tug. "The name is Tuckerton, Lord Tuckerton. I just came by to ask his lordship if he'd found my lass yet."
His lass? A lost, dreamy look had come into the man's sad gray eyes. A long-dead wife, or a grandchild? "Have you lost someone, then?"
"Oh, no, my dear. I wouldn't be so careless with someone I love. My lass was taken."
Elizabeth drew back. "Taken where?"
"I don't know where, Lady Blakestone. Don't know who took her either." Tears began to soak into his leathery cheeks. "But she's been missing a couple of weeks now. That's what young Blakestone is looking into fo
r m
e."
"Missing." A chill slid over her skin. "What was your lass's name?"
"Eugenia." The man wobbled as he sank onto the
o
ttoman. "She's my grandniece. She's married to that bastard Wallace. You might have heard of him."
Dear Lord, no! Her heart plunged into her stomach. Her throat closed up, filled with tears.
"My Genie's the only family I have now, and someone took her from me."
Eugenia Wallace! He was waiting for Ross to find a phantom! She knelt in front of the old man and wrapped her arms around his thin shoulders. Hot tears brimmed in her eyes and spilled down her cheeks. "I'm so sorry, Lord Tuckerton."
"I came by to find out if the lad's heard anything at all about my Eugenia. Do you know if he has?"
"No, my lord, I don't think so. But I'm sure he's working very hard on it." What a terrible lie to tell a heartbroken old man.
An innocent soul that she hadn't anticipated in all her conspiracies. But she couldn't very well confess to him that his Eugenia was fine and on her way to a happier life in America. A slip of his doddering tongue and the old man wouldn't stand a chance against Lord Wallace's interrogation.
But there must be some way she could make things right for the dear fellow.
"Good, then, my Lady Blakestone, Eugenia ought to be coming back to me any day now." Tuckerton patted Elizabeth's hand as he stood and started toward the door. "I'm glad I've got his lordship working on the case."
"I'm sure he'll do his best, my lord."
And I will too,
she promised as he hobbled off down the corridor. One way or another.
Weighed down by more than a bit of guilt, Elizabeth finished cleaning up, then stuffed her costume into her satchel and was back at the Abigail Adams a few minutes later, the memory of old Tuckerton trailing after her like a ghost.
The true, untold cost of Lady Wallace's liberty.
She made her daily rounds at
the Adams, the tea room, the bookstore, the library, then into the workroom with her three assistants, to celebrate their first and probably final international success.
"We were wonderful, my lady!" Jessica said, popping a humbug into her mouth.
"Skye, you were the bravest of all." Elizabeth gave the young woman a hug, her nerves still on edge for the danger they had all evaded.
"I was lucky, my lady. The princess was blindfolded when I found her and very cooperative after I whispered that we'd come to rescue her."
"His lordship was magnificent as well." Cassie dropped back into a chair. "Especially his moustache."
"I'll tell him that, Cassie." If she ever saw the man again.
Elizabeth would have stayed at the impromptu party, but she was called into the clubroom.
Lady Maxton was standing beside the besieged young woman from the charity ball.
A sight that filled her with relief for the girl, and a sudden trepidation for the future of her own married life. Because she couldn't give up on the lost and the aching, no matter her husband's objections.