Somewhat Scandalous (Brambridge Novel 1) (15 page)

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Authors: Pearl Darling

Tags: #Historical, #Romance, #Fiction, #Regency, #Romantic Suspense, #Victorian, #London Society, #England, #Britain, #19th Century, #Adult, #Forever Love, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Hearts Desire, #Series, #Brambridge, #Scandalous Activities, #Military, #Spymaster, #British Government, #Foreign Agent, #Experiments

BOOK: Somewhat Scandalous (Brambridge Novel 1)
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Agatha did not feel like talking. She wanted to sob for her brother and his wife. Despite their differences, they had been
family
. She rebuffed the round lady’s advances and hung grimly onto the window as the coach rattled at high speed along the west road out of London. The lady sat back with a huff and spoke to the other passengers, who were more receptive.  She spitefully dug her elbow into Agatha’s side, making the small space that she was wedged into even more crammed, but soon gave up in surprise as her elbow clashed against the jar of jam Agatha had pushed under her coat. Mrs. B. had not mentioned jam and mold in her conversations with Caroline and Emily in
Conversations on Science
. She had wanted to write to the author, Jane Marcet, to consider covering it in her next volume; after all, Mrs. B. was forever prattling about covering highly interesting topics in their next conversations, and yet those conversations did not materialize in the book.

Against all odds, Agatha fell asleep, cradling her last memories of the house in Mount Street to her. She awoke as they passed through Newbury. Night had drawn in, and the coach was halting at an inn for dinner.

“Ten minutes stop,” shouted the coach driver. “Anyone not back on the coach will be left behind.”

As Agatha fell from the coach, she looked immediately for the privies. An outhouse at the back of the inn provided some room and overflowing chamber pots. She sighed, beggars couldn’t be choosers.

As she returned to the coach, she became aware that she hadn’t thought to pack anything to eat. Young boys hawked trays of pies in the courtyard of the inn where the carriage stood. As her stomach rumbled, Agatha realized that she did not have any money readily available to buy one of the delicious smelling pies, as it was all tied up against her bodice. She dithered for a minute, wondering whether to go back to the privy and take out a coin. Her grief made her actions fuddled and slow.

“One minute warning!”

She scrambled back on the coach. She had been hungry before, and she had eaten a large breakfast. She would hold out till the next stop. She would.

It took a day and a half to reach Honiton. The large lady left early the next day. No one took her place. With relief, Agatha was able to stretch out. She managed to extract some money at the next stop the coach made. The boy selling food at this inn looked at her suspiciously as she handed over the golden coin. He did not ask too many questions. However, Agatha noticed that she did not get as much back in change as she should have done. As she fumbled with the coins, she nearly cried. She had so little and now she and her niece, oh god, her niece, had even less.

As the coach arrived in Honiton, Agatha looked out wearily at the picturesque little town. It was crowded with lace shops and overflowing with market day visitors from the surrounding villages. After leaving the coach and asking directions, she arrived stumbling at the orphanage on the edge of the town.

Apprehensively, Agatha looked for a bell to ring at the front door. Seeing none, she banged her fist against its peeling wooden panels. The door opened a crack; a large, broad figure stood immobile behind it. When the figure did not move, she pushed on the door herself, pressing it open with her bag.

Agatha fell into the dark hallway of the house. The large man who had opened the door continued to look at her silently.

“Where is the house owner?” Agatha asked.

The man shrugged, his gaze flicking up and down her stained dress. “In the back.”

“William! William! Where are you?” A rotund lady with a merry face bustled into the hallway, immediately filling it with warmth. “There you are!” she said. “It’s lovely of you to come back and visit.”

Agatha coughed to gain the woman’s attention. The lady stared at her with large eyes. Unsure what to say, Agatha withdrew the scrap of fabric the magistrate had given her and showed it to her.

“My name is Agatha Beauregard. Thomas Patrick gave me this scrap of material,” she said simply.

The woman’s face creased in a smile, “Thank the Lord, one of our orphans has family! We thought that you wouldn’t be found. Poor mite. Let me just fetch the record book to match the material.”

Agatha shifted from foot to foot. “I was in London. Patrick found me only two days ago. I came at once…”

“Such a tragedy.” The woman shook her head.

Agatha gulped. Tears threatened in her eyes.  Realizing what she had said, the woman looked at Agatha directly.

“I’m so sorry, where is my head? That must have been your brother.”  She paused and took a breath for a second. “Come through for some tea. William, get Mary would you love? And I will get the record book.”

Agatha opened her mouth. She was pronouncing her niece’s name wrongly. But the stout woman incongruously pushed the large man laughingly down the corridor and then opened a door on the left which led into a sunshine-filled room.

“I am Mrs. Cooper,” she said over her shoulder as she left a dazed Agatha in the room before bustling out. Whilst the room was lovely, it was noticeable that it needed attention. The furniture was threadbare. There was a large damp patch on the wall. Regret filled Agatha that her niece had been left here for ten days. She would have been there for longer if the magistrate hadn’t found her.

Mrs. Cooper returned with a large portfolio under arm and a tray which held an enormous pot and two cups. Setting down the portfolio, she poured a generous portion of water into each cup, the hot water running almost clear. Mrs. Cooper looked rueful as she saw Agatha watching the pot.

“We haven’t much money, least of all for tea. It’s a luxury. I’m sure you’ve noticed.”

Agatha nodded vigorously. She did not want to appear rude. As Mrs. Cooper set the cups down on a low table, the door to the room creaked open again and a small figure crept in. Agatha said nothing, taking in the curly red mop of hair and sad, hazel eyes. Mrs. Cooper placed her finger to her lips and turned to Agatha.

“She’s afraid of strangers,” she whispered. “I’m not sure when you last saw her, better give her some space. She’s a very shy girl still.”

Agatha sat back and tried to concentrate on the cup of tea in her hand. All her senses cried out to enfold the girl in her arms. She was dressed in a pinafore dress, her hair scraped back, a bruise on her temple. She looked much younger than her thirteen years.  As Mrs. Cooper started to talk loudly about the weather, her niece moved slowly closer, from chair to chair, evincing a great deal of interest in the floor.

Then it seemed as though she had made a decision. She crossed to where Agatha sat and hauled herself onto the low sofa. She placed one hand lightly on Agatha’s dress and with the other thrust her thumb into her mouth.

Mrs. Cooper and Agatha continued their desultory conversation. Mrs. Cooper took Agatha’s piece of material and matched it successfully with the other scrap that was held in the portfolio.

The small girl leaned in to Agatha and murmured softly, “
Auntie.

Agatha’s heart clenched. She gathered the girl to her and kissed her brow. She was only a few years younger than herself. Whatever happened from now on, her niece would always have her.

“Who is the man that greeted me at the door?” she said softly, changing the subject now that the small girl sat quietly beside her.  Mrs. Cooper dropped her cheerfulness.

“William Standish? His mother was killed in a mill accident. Never knew who his father was. William’s was here for three years. Barely speaks. Probably because I do most of the talking for him. Somehow I seem to tell him everything. He’s back for a visit—he was apprenticed out to the blacksmith in Brambridge. Now he’s the master smith there.” She looked at her hands for a while. “Although I run this place, I see what it does to the children. I can’t give them love like a parent, and many come here with horrific stories, but I do what I can. Enough of that. Where are you going to go now?”

Agatha trusted Mrs. Cooper.  She was kind, but if the people who had killed her brother and sister-in-law knew where she was, then life would become worse for Agatha and her niece.

“I’m not sure,” she said guardedly. “We need to find somewhere to live.”

“You had best pick up your brother’s belongings first, then. We have them all in the outhouse. Thomas Patrick told me that within two days of your brother’s death, the landlord that held Peter’s mortgage had packed up his belongings and set them on the roadside for people to take away. Thomas Patrick felt bad he hadn’t taken in Mary, see, so brought everything here. We haven’t touched anything.”

Agatha hadn’t thought of her brother’s belongings. She had assumed that the house would be available for them both to go to whilst they looked to move elsewhere. The callousness of the owner was cruel but not unusual.

“Thomas Patrick will sort you out. I’m sorry though, love, you can’t stay here. We have no money to feed you.”

“I don’t want any food, but please could I stay in the outhouse overnight? I need time to sort out accommodation. I will pay you…” Agatha looked hopefully at Mrs. Cooper. Although she had slept on the first leg of the journey in the coach, her muscles ached from being cramped all the time.

Seeing Mrs. Cooper’s doubtful face, she reached into her bodice and felt around. She extracted two gold coins and held them outstretched, nodding at her niece. “For
Mary’s
keep, and for a night in the outhouse.” Agatha knew that she had paid more that this was worth, but the sad condition of the orphanage and the kindness of Mrs. Cooper to her niece were obvious.

Mrs. Cooper was stunned. Grasping the gold coins, she danced around the room. “We can repair the roof with this, and fix the damp patch. Thank you, thank you!”

As Agatha lay down beneath the leaky thatch in the outhouse, she stared at the midnight blue sky. Even the stars had hidden themselves. For the first time the weight of responsibility clutched heavily at her chest. Responsibility for another person. Rolling over, she arranged the sacking she lay on more closely to her body. She’d only ever thought of herself, her freedom, her wishes. And yet the thought of another’s needs crushed all of her paltry wants. Was this how Henry felt, day in day out, as he had yet again told her how to behave, of her influence on Victoria?

Ma… no she would no longer call her niece that. She would change her name to Harriet. If someone was setting out to find them, then hopefully they would dismiss the small young family. And there would be no more of her scientific nonsense. She would do her best by Harriet.

God willing
.

 

CHAPTER 18

 

He’d finally found her. Staring in through the window, Henry watched as Agatha moved the quill across the paper, balled it up and started again. The vicar in Honiton had recognized his description of a small woman towing a child and sent him in the direction of Brambridge, a small village not ten miles away by the sea. Henry pushed down a cough.
Brambridge,
a place he never thought he would come back to, never wanted to come back to even.

He’d spent the day watching Agatha’s movements as she cleaned the Brambridge Vicarage and heard the barbed comments about the parentage of Agatha’s niece dropped by Mrs. Madely the vicar’s wife. Holding his breath, he had waited as Agatha’s skin turned pale but she turned not a hair from the odious woman.

When had her spirit been broken? His heart had ached as he followed Agatha and her niece from the vicarage to a small damp cottage. It was obvious that Agatha had tried to make the musty place a home, hanging paintings on the wall, dishes over the sink and an ornate knife behind the door for unwanted intruders.

Agatha’s candle guttered as a particularly strong gust of wind banged the window casements and rustled the thatch. A large banging sound from the window above him erupted after the gust of wind. Cursing, Henry slid along the side of the cottage and knocked lightly at the front door.

She didn’t answer. Moving back to the window, he looked in. Agatha had disappeared. The hunting knife he had seen on the back of the door had also gone. Stifling a groan, he flattened himself against the wall and moved back to the front door. He knocked on it again.

Still no answer. A window banged at the back of the cottage. The rustle of the bushes was audible even above the sound of the howling wind. With a small laugh, Henry detached himself from the wall and sauntered back to his original hiding place.

“Bloody hell.”

His smile widened. Agatha bent away from him, the large hunting knife clutched in her hands, sawing away at the bushes beneath the window. Her skirts were caught in the prickly thorns.

She was so intent on what she was doing that she did not notice him until he was upon her.

“First rule of espionage, Agatha,” he growled in her ear, stealing his hands around her waist. “Don’t wear light-colored clothing on a moonlit night when spying on someone. You are so very easy to see.”

Agatha tensed. He could feel her heart beating through her chest, although her body seemed to sink into his strong hands.

“Henry… Lord Anglethorpe?” Her voice came out hoarse and breathy. She tried to turn. “I… I’m trapped.”

Slowly Henry let go of her waist, the heat from her body leaching quickly away from his hands. He knelt and deftly freed the skirt from the plant, plucking the torn cotton away from the thorns. As he stood again, his great coat fluttered in the wind. She stared at him, wide eyed.

He couldn’t stop himself. Bending his head towards her, he raised his hand to the delicate arch of her neck. Slowly he drew her towards him, tipping her head back into the moonlight, and dropping his chin down towards hers. Her mouth, seemingly of its own volition, parted.

Slowly he drew his fingers underneath her eyes.

“You look tired, Agatha.” He stepped away. Control, he needed control. “Let’s go inside. I want to know where you have been.”

Agatha stared at him and narrowed her eyes. He dropped his gaze and followed her as she silently led him inside. A candle still guttered in a small pewter dish, although it was getting low.

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