A Masquerade in the Moonlight (21 page)

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Authors: Kasey Michaels

Tags: #England, #Historical romance, #19th century

BOOK: A Masquerade in the Moonlight
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Clearly the American was in rare form tonight, and out to make everyone around him as uncomfortable as possible. Sir Ralph heard but did not even try to understand Dooley’s angry mutterings as he took hold of both horses’ bridles and guided them toward the ostler who had belatedly appeared from the stable. “Another meeting, Donovan?” he prompted, signifying with a wave of his hand that Donovan should precede him through the doorway, the tall, well-built American bowing his head to make it safely under the low lintel. “You are a busy man, aren’t you?”

“Busier than the devil in a high wind.” Donovan stopped on the flagstone just inside the door and turned, grinning, so that his mustache lifted at the corners and all his top front teeth glinted in the dim light. “You wouldn’t be prying now, Sir Ralph, would you? No, of course not. But I’ll tell you anyway. You English play all day, every day, so one night is much the same as the other. However, you see, in America, where most of us must work for our daily bread, Saturday night is a time for fun and frolicking. I’ll be frolicking later, Sir Ralph. It’s to be my reward to myself for working so diligently on my president’s unofficial business all week long.”

The American was deliberating baiting him, but he refused to respond. “I see,” Sir Ralph said, indicating Donovan should follow him up the stairs and into the private dining room William had rented for the evening. “We shall endeavor not to detain you then, as it would be impolite for you to keep the young lady waiting. Is she anyone I know?”

“You might have met her, Sir Ralph, but I’d wager my lovely new horse outside you don’t know her.” Donovan walked past Sir Ralph and into the private dining room. “Ah, I’m not the first to arrive, I see,” he said, tossing his hat onto a small side table, the curly brimmed beaver almost immediately buried by his carelessly flung greatcoat.

The men sitting around the long, rectangular table nodded as one.

“Lord Chorley,” Donovan said, “good to see you. You’re looking in plump currant tonight. The world, and the cards, must be treating you kindly.”

“Mr. Donovan,” Lord Chorley responded, his smile well pleased.

Donovan turned to his left. “Sir Peregrine—delighted to see you again as well. You know, my sainted mother always told me not to frown so. The devil might just sneak up behind you, she always warned, deal you a great whack on your head, and
presto
!—your face will stay like that forever.”

“That’s nothing but an ignorant superstition, Mr. Donovan,” Sir Peregrine asserted, looking down his nose at Donovan. “Just the sort of foolishness the simple Irish peasantry is prone to uttering. Don’t be offended, Mr. Donovan, for I am merely stating facts.”

Donovan inclined his head respectfully—or at least it would have seemed so, if Sir Ralph hadn’t noticed the devilish twinkle in the man’s eyes. “If you say so, Sir Peregrine,” Donovan agreed. “Heaven knows I wouldn’t wish to tug caps with you, for I’m quite convinced you’ve never lost an argument in your life. Lord Mappleton, hullo! That’s the smile of a man in love if ever I saw one! I take it the fair Miss Rollins proved an enjoyable companion last evening at the theater? Well, we’re all here—all except one, that is.”

Sir Ralph shot a quick, involuntary look toward the curtain in the shadows, then recovered his composure. Donovan couldn’t know William was behind the curtain. Just because he was leery of this man, leery of this scheme, he should not invest the American with powers he couldn’t possibly possess. “Missing, Donovan?” he asked, turning a quelling glare toward Lord Mappleton, who was on the point of saying something—something he shouldn’t say, or else Sir Ralph really didn’t know the man. “I fear I don’t understand.”

“Paddy, man. Patrick Dooley, my comrade in intrigue,” Donovan replied, helping himself to a glass of wine and then seating himself at the head of the table—in Sir Ralph’s seat. “I thought that would be obvious. He’ll be here in a moment, I’m sure, unless he was waylaid by the smell of strong ale coming from the barroom. Ah—here he is. Paddy, take a seat. We’re about to talk treason. It should be jolly good fun.”

“Would you kindly lower your voice?” Sir Peregrine Totton whispered through clenched teeth from his chair at Donovan’s left hand. “This is serious business, young man, with serious consequences for failure.”

Donovan winked at Totton. “Not for me, Sir Peregrine. Haven’t you figured that out yet?”

Lord Chorley, who had been admiring the new gold watch and fob he had bought and not yet paid for, looked across the table to Sir Peregrine. “He’s got you there, Perry. We’re not officially at war. All they’ll do to him if we’re discovered is toss him out of the country. We’re the ones who’ll hang.”

“What? What? Hang, you say?” Lord Mappleton sat forward with a lurch, his chair creaking as his weight shifted. “Stinky—we’d
hang
? Oh, no. Can’t do that. Not when I’m finally within Ames Ace of getting myself bracketed to a most healthy fortune. Miss Georgianna Rollins. Lovely diamonds. You remember, Donovan. You met them —er, I mean
her
. No, I can’t hang. Not now.”

“Married?” Donovan stood, holding his glass high. “Gentlemen, a toast to our good and most
industrious
friend, Lord Mappleton. You move quickly, your lordship. Sir Peregrine, you’re not drinking. Is something wrong?”

“Nothing a lowborn creature such as yourself would comprehend, Donovan,” Totton shot back, looking to Sir Ralph even as Lord Chorley drank deep to his friend Arthur’s good fortune, showing he saw nothing wrong with marrying for money. “Can we get on with this? I don’t have all night to sit here listening to foolishness. I have just today experienced a major breakthrough with an ancient coded manuscript I was fortunate enough to stumble over the other day while perusing the bookstalls. It’s a rare find, possibly detailing the location of some early Roman works that could prove invaluable for their artistic and educational contributions to society.”

Lord Chorley rolled his eyes. “Still looking to be named head of the Royal Society of Insufferably Pretentious Twits, are you, Perry? What’s it this time—statues? Rare coins? An ages-dead, stuffed Roman? They’ll never take you in, for all your knocking at the door. I have about as much chance of breaking the faro bank at Boodle’s. But I suppose you won’t give it up any more than I will, heh, Perry? Old dogs, you know, and all that sort of rot.”

Sir Ralph turned to stare down Patrick Dooley, who was sitting in a corner, chuckling at what he must have seen to be a huge joke. “That will be enough, gentlemen,” Sir Ralph cut in when it appeared that Sir Peregrine was about to reply to Lord Chorley’s remarks. “I could ring for supper, but I don’t believe any of us is prepared to break bread like bosom chums. Especially Mr. Donovan here, who has told me he’s in a great rush to return to London, to frolic with a willing female.”

“Now, Sir Ralph, don’t go putting words in my mouth,” Donovan cut in, reaching into his frock coat pocket. “I never said she was willing. After all, I’m not there yet, am I, to convince her? But I agree—let’s get on with it. Lord Mappleton, I understand you are to direct payments for services and goods rendered—goods and services that, as you know, will never be rendered to anyone—to an office and warehouse I am to set up for business. I have dutifully rented just such a building near the wharfs—the company named Phillips and Delphia Stores and Armaments—and even now a clerk is waiting there to receive checks and forward cash by ship to another Phillips, etc., etc., office in the West Indies, which shall then forward that same money to Washington. Both the new company’s name and location are listed on this paper.”

Sir Peregrine snatched the paper before it could be passed to Lord Mappleton. “Phillips and Delphia Stores and Armaments?” He looked to Sir Ralph. “What sort of name is that?”

Sir Ralph kept his silence, hating Thomas Donovan more with every passing moment.

“As good as any other, I should imagine, Sir Peregrine, if a trifle sentimental. There is no rule that says we can’t enjoy ourselves, as far as Mr. Dooley and I see the thing,” Donovan answered, taking another drink of his wine. “Now, Sir Peregrine—you’re next. As I understand it, you will be diverting shipments of the
real
armaments from the royal warehouses to this same Phillips and Delphia Stores and Armaments, so that they can follow much the identical route by private carriers you shall engage, also ending their journey in Washington rather than in the hands of His Majesty’s loyal troops. It’s an ingenious plan, actually, and I compliment you, Sir Ralph. England will be paying for arms it doesn’t get and America will be receiving both. I commend you.”

“I am neither interested in nor needful of your compliments, Donovan,” Sir Ralph shot back, refusing to take up the empty chair beside Stinky’s, the lopsided one that had been set aside for the American. “I should be able to arrange the full fitting out of three top-of-the-line supply ships by the end of the month. They will carry foodstuffs, blankets, medicines, and other supplies necessary to our troops. The captains, three of our best, will be told they are under orders to sail for the West Indies on a highly secret mission of the gravest importance, where they will then report to an official of the company whose name you have just given us. It will be up to your agents to commandeer the ships and crews for your own use once they’ve arrived. As far as my government will be concerned, the ships will have been lost in storms as they made for the Peninsula.”

“I don’t care if your government thinks the ships were chewed up by hulking great sea monsters on their way to China, Sir Ralph,” Donovan said cheerily, rising and motioning for Dooley to gather up his hat and greatcoat. “I think you’re wasting my time. Three fully loaded ships is less than a quarter of the number you originally promised.”

“True, Mr. Donovan,” Sir Ralph answered, slipping into the chair the American had just vacated. He felt better now, more in control. “However, it’s also three ships more than you will receive, unless I have something more concrete than your assurances your president will not simply take what we are offering and declare war anyway. It’s imperative your government merely show its teeth, and not bite. We want you to have enough well-equipped ships to harass ours and make us look foolish, while at the same time our soldiers lose battles on the Peninsula because they are badly supplied. When England is forced to sue for peace with France, we need to know we will not be threatened by you colonials as we go about the business of removing the imbecilic Farmer George from the throne and his parasitical, spendthrift sons from the succession. It is imperative England be rescued from its warlike folly before she destroys herself. We want, need, nothing more than we do peace with the rest of the world. If we are all equally strong, no one will seek war, and England and your so-called United States will be free to trade with each other once more.”

“Fancy that, Tommie!” Dooley exclaimed, helping Donovan into his greatcoat. “It’s just like you said it would be. Well, almost, except for that last bit. Shame on me, for doubting you. Oh—sorry about interrupting you, your lordship. Go on. I’m listening.”

“I think not. You’ve said too much already, Ralph,” Sir Peregrine said forcefully. “As I already warned you, this man has ambitions of his own, and I think he acts more from personal greed than patriotism. He’s Irish first, remember, and we all know they’re not the sort to be trusted.”

Lord Chorley, who had been busying himself throwing a pair of dice, one hand against the other, tugged on Sir Peregrine’s sleeve. “Don’t go casting aspersions on the fellow’s ancestors, Perry. It’s not nice. What do we care what the American wants? I just want my debts gone.”

“I think my sweet Georgie would like some of Prinny’s jewels,” Lord Mappleton said consideringly, stuffing a handful of grapes into his mouth. “And maybe that monstrosity he’s building in Brighton. We could use it as our summer home.”

“You’re paper-witted, shortsighted buffoons, the pair of you,” Sir Peregrine stated firmly. “Debts! Jewels! You have absolutely no understanding of the benefits to be accrued from the power we shall wield, the monies we could direct toward studies of the sciences and literature and art.”

Sir Ralph looked to each man in turn. The meeting was getting out of hand. His cohorts were wallowing in their own blockheadedness and greed and the American was preparing to leave, just as if he had been the one to call for the gathering in the first place and had now motioned for adjournment. He slapped his palms against the bare wood of the table, to bring everyone back to attention. “I will not act—not on three ships, not on the agreed-upon fifteen—nor will I allow Arthur or Perry to act, until I have written assurance from President Madison that he will not declare war on us, now or once the king is removed and we reestablish open trade between our two countries. Without that letter to protect us, we cannot and will not proceed with any part of the agreement. If we are to go down, Mr. Donovan, we go down together, we and your president.”

Donovan’s smile was maddening, infuriating, unsettling. “And now, Sir Ralph, I believe we have a problem. I have the paper you requested in my possession—but I have orders not to turn it over to you until the full shipments of arms and money are on their way to the West Indies.” He spread his hands wide, palms up. “What to do, Sir Ralph, what to do? Paddy—the time, if you please.”

“Almost nine, Tommie,” Dooley responded, slapping his own hat on his head. “Time we were heading back. I have to get up and seek out a Mass tomorrow morning, don’t you know. We aren’t all heathens like you, sleeping till noon on the Lord’s day.”

“You heard my friend, gentlemen,” Donovan said, holding on to the door latch as he turned to face the room. “I can’t keep a man from his religion, now can I? Sir Ralph? I do hope you can work things out among you. As you said, we are all peace-loving people. You don’t want war. We don’t want war—having beaten you so soundly already. We both, I believe, also admire money and power very much. So much alike, we patriots. Do let me know what you decide.”

A moment later, Donovan and Dooley were gone and the room was deathly quiet.

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