innocence. He was brooding over that matter as he rode up Mooncoign’s long drive
an hour later.
In the light of early afternoon, Mooncoign’s northern facade, faced all in white
stone, shone with a brilliant light Mooncoign’s roof was edged in crouching stone
figures that – to Wessex’s jaundiced eye – looked ready to take wing and fly. Three
generations of Roxburys had so enlarged the house that its consequence rivaled that
of Blenheim Palace.
He was not, upon his admission to the house, much in a mood to be told that
Lady Roxbury was not receiving visitors.
* * *
Sarah tossed fretfully in her half-sleep, a bitter taste lingering on her tongue.
Bizarre images capered through her dreaming mind: fantastic horses dressed in
plumes; a black-lacquered coach with its dead-lights burning. She was… She was…
She was Sarah.
But disparate images accompanied the naming: a quiet young woman, dressed in
beaded buckskins – a painted lady, dressed in satins and jewels.
Which was she? Which was Sarah?
Sarah groaned and opened her eyes. Above her head stretched an unfamiliar
canopy of embroidered silk with bullion fringe. Memories of the recent past crashed
and collided in her brain, making her whimper aloud with vertigo.
She remembered the crash – yes, the aftermath of it was clear enough now – the
screams of mangled horses and the wails of injured passengers – the sickening pain
in her head. Everything before that was grotesquely clouded, but the aftermath was
relatively clear: Mrs. Bulford, in whose house she’d awakened; a man named
Falconer – whose words had been utterly baffling but whose tone had conveyed
both anger and disappointment; the ride in the coach back to her – her? – home.
This isn’t my home, Sarah thought with chill fear. I don’t belong here. But of
course she did. Of course it was. Everyone had told her so… at least she thought
they had.
Sarah sat up, stretching muscles that protested days of disuse. She rubbed at her
eyes; the voluminous sleeves of sheer muslin that trailed from her arms made her
look down at her gown; the nightdress, of a muslin so fine it was called nun’s
veiling, was elaborately tucked and embroidered, dozens of yards of material going
to make up the costly and etherial gown she wore. Numbly, Sarah stared at the
sleeve as one transfixed. It seemed wrong, somehow: not evil, but out of place, like a
frog in a butterchurn –
Galvanized by her own disquiet, Sarah swung her legs over the side of the bed
and stood, a renewed bout of dizziness making her clutch at the heavy bed curtains
to steady herself. Breathing deeply and carefully, Sarah looked around the deserted
room.
Her gaze was drawn inexorably to the portrait above the mantlepiece, where a
woman in a most indecent gown and a face painted until it was only a white mask
looked down at Sarah with a challenging gaze that Sarah could see in the looking
glass any time she chose. Were they related? The painted woman’s jewel-covered
fingers held a key, a dagger, and a rose, items that held no familiarity for Sarah.
As if of their own volition, her hands flew to her bosom, but the comforting lump
of her father’s ring was not there.
The ring!
Casting aside all other worries, Sarah tore the room apart until she found the ring,
set aside in a drawer by her bedside. Quickly she worked the catch, rotating the
black stone until the enamelled unicorn and the King’s Oak were revealed on its
silvery obverse, and gazed on the image with relief. No matter what else was hidden
from her, this memory was real and true.
The blue ribbon she had worn the ring on was gone; hesitantly Sarah tried the ring
on all her fingers, until she settled it upon the forefinger of her left hand. At least this
treasure was still with her.
But why should she think that? All she owned was with her: this was Mooncoign,
her home.
Sarah raised her hands to rub her throbbing temples. Alien luxury beguiled her
upon every side, but her gaze was drawn longingly to the window, beyond which
Mooncoign’s lavish mock-wilderness was visible, bright emerald in the midday
English sun.
It is not the real woodland, it is false, just as everything else about this…
mummery, Sarah thought sulkily.
Yes, that was it! All this was false, unreal, a playlet all enacted for her benefit in
which none of its actors believed. All these people treating her with outlandish
deference, granting her impossible titles… it was a game.
But who played this game, and why? Sarah stared through the enormous windows
and saw no answer waiting beyond the lavish expanse of glass. Her certainty began
to fade back into troubled confusion, and she became slowly aware that for the last
several minutes she had been hearing a gradually increasing commotion through the
great oak door that led to the world outside.
„To the devil with her headache – I will see the woman!“ a strange male voice
shouted, just as the door flew open.
Sarah stared.
The stranger had the night-black eyes of a fallen angel, and his moon-cream hair
was brushed straight back and held at the nape of his neck with a black ribbon. He
was dressed in a neat coat of blue superfine, white buckskin inexpressibles, and
gleaming tasselled Hessians – riding clothes. He still wore a pair of Cork tan gloves
and carried a silver-headed crop, and as he moved, light flashed from the gemmed
pin in his cravat. Sarah stared at him, enchanted in the oldest sense of the word.
Incredibly, the stranger blushed, staring at her billowing and all-concealing muslin
nightgown and averting his eyes hastily.
„I – Your pardon, Lady Roxbury. I did not – I shall await you – Pray excuse
me.“
While Sarah was still belatedly registering the fact of his arrival, the Duke of
Wessex removed himself to her sitting-room, closing the door swiftly behind him.
Wessex stood in Lady Roxbury’s withdrawing chamber, striving to master the
flush of sheer mortification that stained his cheeks. The manner of the aristocracy
was quite free-and-easy, but there were still well-defined limits. Wessex was aware
he had passed one of those limits by bursting in upon an unmarried female who was
en deshabille, and he did not care for the sense of humiliation it gave him.
And Lady Roxbury’s astonishment had only added to his sense of culpability.
When he had stormed into her chamber, the Marchioness of Roxbury had been
standing clinging to one of the velvet bed curtains, her muslin nightgown sliding
down her narrow shoulders. Her light brown hair spilled about her arms, and her pale
skin was bare of paint. She looked much smaller than he had remembered her as
being, and far more vulnerable.
As he waited impatiently for the Marchioness to emerge - for what else could he
do, after all, having burst in to her private chambers like a man demented? – Wessex
heard the outer door to the withdrawing room open. A fragile old woman – who
nevertheless conveyed the indefinable imperious air of a very superior servant indeed
– appeared.
„What is your business here, sir?“ the woman asked with the fierceness of a
mother hen protecting her only chick. Through the open door behind her, Wessex
could see a brace of stout footmen hovering, obviously hoping their assistance
would be required.
„I have come to pay my respects to your mistress,“ Wessex said. „Pray enquire if
she will receive me,“ he added, as blandly as if he had not just rudely accosted Lady
Roxbury minutes before. „Tell her that her bridegroom has come to pay her a call.“
Wessex disliked trading upon that future affiliation, particularly as he was not
entirely certain he intended to honor the betrothal, but it was imperative that he speak
to the Marchioness. He only hoped that after a singularly inauspicious beginning, the
notoriously touchy Lady Roxbury would condescend to grant him an interview at all.
„I… shall enquire, Your Grace,“ the old woman said reluctantly, and disappeared
into the Marchioness’s bedroom. The door closed behind her with an audible
thump; her appearance of fragile old age was obviously illusion only.
Wessex turned and closed the outer door in the footmen’s faces, then
shamelessly approached the inner door, seeking to eavesdrop on the conversation
within the Marchioness’s bedroom. But it was a fruitless attempt; the door was too
thick for even murmurs to reach him.
Gardner seemed nearly as surprised as Sarah to see her on her feet, though Sarah
clung to one of me bedposts to steady herself.
„My lady,“ Gardner said, and sank automatically into a stiff curtsey. „I shall bring
Dame Alecto.“
The automatic flash of alarm sparked Sarah to feign a vitality she did not feel.
„Why?“ she asked coolly. „I am perfectly recovered. Pray tell me, Nurse, who
was that man?“
„I shall send him away at once,“ Gardner promised. „My lady, you are far from
well. The stress of the accident – “
„That was several days ago,“ Sarah said. The confusion in her mind was as
strong as ever, but so was the need to – not escape, precisely, but to be mistress of
her fate. „And my…“ She hesitated, but the ideas were there when she groped for
them. „My guests will wish to see me, after all. Bring me my clothes.“
„But my lady,“ Gardner protested again. Sarah said nothing, and after a few
moments she saw the old nurse’s indignation soften into defeat.
„Very well, Lady Roxbury. I shall send Knoyle to you so that you may dress.“
A victory, but Sarah did not have the leisure to luxuriate in it. „And tell that man I
will see him, once I have dressed,“ she instructed the nurse. Whoever he was, he
might hold the key to the mystery that surrounded her.
Chapter 6
A Masquerade in Shadows
The Marchioness would receive him the moment she was dressed, Wessex
allowed himself to be conveyed by the house’s butler to a bedchamber in the
bachelor’s wing of the house, where a servant took away his coat and boots to be
brushed and polished, and Wessex made what repairs to his toilette he could with
the time and materials available to him. Fortunately, when he was finished, the figure
gazing back at him from the mirror far more resembled the Duke of Wessex than the
madcap Chevalier de Reynard or any of his spiritual cousins. Thank God he had
worn his signet ring, as befit a man of his station – his betrothed was rumored to be
notoriously high in the instep, insisting on all observances due her exalted rank.
Wessex gazed upon his reflection, drawing upon himself as surely as any role the
trappings of his own life. As some might say, his real life.
Reflexively, his fingers caressed the stone of the massive ring he wore on his left
hand, and he smiled, for Lady Roxbury would never appreciate the true meaning of
this signet.
At his practiced touch, the carnelian cut with the crowned salamander of the
Wessex dukedom lifted up and out on an armature that had seemed, moments
before, to be the rim of the bezel. Under Wessex’s control, the engraved gemstone
spun to reveal a device that only twelve men and one woman in the realm were
privileged to carry.
In precise, exquisite enamelwork, an oak tree in summer foliage glowed against a
silvery field. At its foot, a unicorn slept, its head upon the ground. In the branches, a
crown in glory burned.
Boscobel – the King’s Oak. And a symbol of loyalties that might at any moment
be divided.
The League’s founder had seen his father, Charles the First of England, executed
by those for whom he ruled; had himself spent long years of penurious exile in all the
courts of Europe while his birthright suffered beneath Cromwell’s iron heel. When
Charles Stuart had come into his own again he had been balked at every turn by
Lords and Commons determined that the Crown of England would dance to their
piping, and not they to that of any King.
And so Charles Stuart – King Charles II of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales
– had danced, smiling and bowing and keeping his tongue behind his teeth as he
painstakingly forged the sword to defend England against herself at need. The
Boscobel League: twelve men and one woman, never more and never less – each
new member chosen by his predecessor and approved by the King. Drawn from the
highest and lowest in the land, loyal to King – or Queen – before Country.
It was by the decree of their Royal founder that the League’s numbers should not