Authors: Stephen R. Lawhead
“That’s not what you used to say,” she replied sulkily. “In fact, it was always: ‘You’re fantastic, Moira. You’re a beauty, a goddess. I have to see you, Moira. Come rescue me.’” She laughed, her smile beguiling.
“Well, it might have been useful if you’d have come sooner. As it is, we have very little to discuss.” Waring could feel himself growing peevish and defensive. He didn’t want to argue with her; all he wanted was for her to leave him in peace. “You may have noticed Parliament’s been dissolved and I’ve got a general election to fight.”
“And you’ll win, too, darling. I predict the largest majority of your career.”
“I’m glad you think so. No one else rates my chances so high just now.”
“Public opinion can change in an instant,” she said with a snap of her long fingers. “Why, I shouldn’t be at all surprised if tomorrow’s bravado proves to be the worst mistake of the King’s short career.”
Cold dread spread through Waring’s stomach. “What have you done?”
She smiled wickedly. “You never wanted to know before.”
“Before? What are you talking about, Moira? There was never any ‘before.’ I never asked you to do anything for me.”
“You didn’t have to ask, darling.” She moved across to the bed, sat down, and leaned back provocatively. “It was understood. I told you I would help any way I could.”
“Teddy blew his brains out. It was suicide. There was no one with him.”
“Believe what you will,” Moira replied. “But do you really think a bumbling ne’er-do-well like Teddy could have managed that on his own?”
Waring stared at her. “I didn’t hear that.”
“Did you not, my darling?” she asked, affecting a thick Portuguese accent. “It’s a little late in the day to become squeamish, don’t you think?”
Waring felt his flesh crawl. “My God, Moira, if there is ever so much as the slightest whisper of a doubt that Teddy’s death was anything but a simple suicide —”
“Now, Thomas,” she chided prettily, “you worry too much.”
“Maybe you should worry a little more,” he told her. “This is not a game. I can’t be remotely implicated in that man’s death.”
“Afraid of a little blood, my pet?” She laughed, letting her head fall back, exposing her long, lovely throat.
Her casual wantonness astonished and frightened him. She had as much as admitted causing Teddy’s death — what else was she capable of? had she killed Donald, too? No, it was too absurd.
“Anyway,” she was saying, “after tomorrow your worries are over. No one will have any use for that tin-pot King and his pissant advisor.”
“What happens tomorrow?” demanded Waring. “What have you done, Moira?”
She sat up straight. “Oh, look at you.” She laughed, teasing. “suddenly interested in your Moira again.”
He stepped towards her. “I’m not in the mood, Moira. What have you done?”
“Are you
sure
you want to know?” She smirked. “A second ago you weren’t so keen.”
“I mean it. Either tell me or get the hell out.”
“You’re no fun,” she complained sulkily, winding a lock of her auburn hair around her finger.
“Tell me, goddammit!”
“Live by the press, die by the press — isn’t that what they say?” She laughed again, and lay back on the bed, letting her short red skirt ride up her shapely thighs.
“The press —” He stared at her dumbly. “You know about that?”
“Of course. What did you think?” She gazed up at him playfully. “But don’t worry, your secret is safe with me. I won’t tell a living soul.” Her slight emphasis on the word “living” made his scalp tingle.
“Well, if you’re not going to take me to bed,” she said, sitting up again, “at least you could get me a drink.”
“Look, maybe we should just break this off. It’s late, and I’m tired, and for the next six weeks I’m going to be up to my neck in an election campaign. We wouldn’t be able to spend any time together. Maybe we should just call it quits.”
“Just like that,” she said, watching him begin to pace back and forth in front of the bed.
“A clean break. That would be best.”
“Oh, no you don’t, my sweet,” she said, rising onto her knees. She knelt on the bed, staring at him. “We’re in this together.
You
were the one who called
me
, remember?” Her voice had grown as brittle as glass. “You can’t get me to do all your dirty work and then toss me aside when you feel like it.”
“I’m not tossing you aside. I just don’t think it’s working out, that’s all. It’s time to go our separate ways.”
“You worm!” she shouted, suddenly furious. “I am not one of your whores. We made a bargain, my sweet. We are partners. You need me far more than I need you. Don’t ever forget that.”
The force of her anger halted Waring mid-step. He glanced at her and saw how the rage twisted her face into a rigid mask of hate. The expression passed at once, and her mood altered. “You’re worried about the election, Thomas,” she said softly, suddenly reassuring. “You’re under a lot of strain. I understand.”
“I’m worried about the election — simple as that, is it?” He shook his head slowly. “You don’t have a clue. The election isn’t half of my problems. That idiot Rothes started a brand-new royalist party and then went and got himself killed. Ordinarily, I wouldn’t mind so much; unfortunately, he will now be seen as a martyr to the cause, and that can only increase public sympathy for the bloody fool and his bastard King.”
“If you ask me, Rothes got precisely what he deserved,” Moira replied. “Consider it a warning to anyone tempted to interfere in affairs that do not concern them.”
Waring felt himself growing cold, as if the temperature in the room had suddenly plummeted. What
did
she know about Donald Rothes’ murder? He thrust the question firmly aside; after all, if she was even half as deeply involved as he suspected, did he really want to know the details?
“Relax, Mr. President,” she cooed. Sliding off the bed, she came to stand before him again, gathering him into her forceful embrace, pressing herself against him. He felt the heat of her body stirring him. He wanted her, and was too tired to fight it anymore. “You don’t have a worry in the world. Trust me, darling. Trust your Moira.”
“I appreciate your coming along,” said James as the black Jaguar inched through nearly gridlocked traffic. “But you didn’t have to — especially if you’re not feeling up to it.”
“True,” agreed Cal. “We could have handled it ourselves.”
Embries, brooding and silent since his early-morning return from Glastonbury, sat like the shadow of death in the front seat. At James’ suggestion, he half turned to look at those behind. “From now on, we underestimate the enemy at our peril.”
“What enemy?” asked Cal. “Man, what did you do last night?”
Embries turned his face towards the front window without answering.
“It’s to do with Donald’s accident, isn’t it?” suggested Jenny. Following Donald’s death, she and Cal had flown down to London to help lend whatever aid and comfort they could.
“It was no accident,” muttered Embries; he kept his gaze fixed on the slowly moving traffic outside the window. “That, at least, is beyond doubt.”
“Then it was murder — is that what you’re saying?” When no more was forthcoming, James said, “Look, if you’re not going to tell us anything —”
“There are forces arrayed against us,” Embries said sharply, “powers, principalities, rulers of this dark world, which would see the sovereignty of Britain destroyed forever.” He turned in his seat, agitated and upset. “Last night I tried to bind the chief exponent of power….” He paused, his expression turning desolate once more. “God alone knows whether I succeeded.”
“This is a person we’re talking about, right?” said Cal. “Not a ghost or banshee or anything?”
“You scoff because you do not know,” Embries grumbled. “You haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about.”
“So tell me,” said Cal stubbornly. “I want to know.”
Embries stared out the window, shaking his head slowly. “Like me, she is a relic of a forgotten time,” he muttered at last.
Before anything else could be said, Rhys announced, “We’re almost there, sir. And it looks like it’s going to be a scrum.”
“Maybe this wasn’t such a brilliant idea after all,” said James, looking at the swarming mass of people awaiting his arrival.
“You’ll be wonderful,” Jenny assured him. “After today, the whole world will know what kind of man you are.”
“Pray that is so,” murmured Embries darkly.
Thus, the typical Saturday-morning turnout for the nation’s traditional observance of democracy in action — also known as Speaker’s Corner, where mostly harmless eccentrics unburdened themselves to a chorus of robust heckling — had ballooned from the normal few dozen diehards to several thousand. From the look of it, the King would have a sizable audience for the launch of his charm offensive.
The closer they got to Hyde Park, the greater seemed to be the crowd converging on Marble Arch.
Why not
? wondered James. It was a brilliant winter day: mild and sunny, and with a strong whiff of royal disgrace in the air. People by the hundreds were streaming towards the site. Come what may, he’d have a full house to witness his performance. At least, he concluded gloomily, the masses might be entertained by the sight of their King ahoist on his own petard.
The Jaguar crept to a halt before a police cordon, and Rhys leaped out to open the King’s door. “Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” said James, taking a deep breath. “Here goes.” Jenny gave him a kiss for good luck, and he stepped from the car to face a sharply ambivalent public.
The Metropolitan Police, anticipating a larger-than-usual turnout, had set up barriers along the pavement; and, although James could see a few dark-blue uniforms scattered in among the crowd, the police presence was minimal and seemed to be concentrating mostly on keeping traffic moving. Several TV crews and a host of journalists and photographers were ready and waiting at the end of a small walkway formed by two double-length sections of barriers. James was quickly met by two bobbies, who greeted him and conducted him to the official Speaker’s Corner soapbox, a sturdy wooden red-painted box about a meter square.
At James’ appearance, people began to clap and shout. Many people lining the police cordon had brought signs and placards; a quick visual tally revealed roughly as many for the monarchy as against. James was heartened to see that the Save Our Monarchy activists — presumably, the ones who had decided a scandal-ridden house of Moray was better than no house at all — had turned out in force. Although, amid the applause there were shouts of “Down with the King” as well.
Here and there, clusters of balloons swayed in colorful profusion above the heads of the crowd, and James could smell roasting chestnuts on the air. Whatever else happened, a few enterprising souls would make a bob or two out of the event.
Escorted by two police officers, walking in slow procession through the tightly packed, gawking throng, James felt like a condemned man being led to the gallows. The feeling increased as he reached the soapbox to a crescendo of catcalls. The hostility and anger on their faces as they ranted and screamed seemed to James all out of proportion to any actual crime he might have committed. It was more on the order of the sort of outrage usually reserved for child molesters or dangerous perverts. Looking at all those hate-twisted faces, he could only conclude that there was something else at work in people’s hearts and minds — something far deeper and much more significant than anything he might have done. Who, after all, gets so worked up over events that may or may not have happened years ago to people no one ever knew or saw or cared about in the first place?
The police had established a clear zone extending in an arc from the foot of the soapbox to a barricade line ten meters away. Pressed up against the barriers were television cameramen and other media types; he could see no sign of Jenny, Cal, or any of the others.
James mounted the small wooden platform and looked out across that narrow divide, and saw the people gazing back at him, their faces pinched with sharp expectation. So like children, he thought, angry and frustrated because they wanted something but did not know what it was or how to ask for it. This nameless yearning had soured inside them and made them bitter.
“You will have heard it said,” he began, speaking with slow and deliberate emphasis so his words would not be lost or misunderstood, “that I dishonored myself and my country while serving as an officer in the army.”
He paused, to allow this to sink in. Someone in the crowd yelled, “Abdicate!”
“You will have heard it said,” James continued, unperturbed, “that I participated in criminal and immoral activities, and enriched myself with the proceeds. You will have heard these and other allegations about me, my friends —”
The heckler shouted, “We’re no friends of yours! Bastard!”
“These accusations are lies,” James declared sternly, then repeated it for emphasis. This assertion was met with a fidgety silence, which he took as a good sign, so he continued, saying, “I come before you this morning to put an end to these rumors and to stop the lies. More important, I come before you this morning to tell you something of the vision I have for Britain.”
“Who cares?” shouted another heckler.
“I’ll tell you who cares,” replied James evenly. “Every single person here today cares; you wouldn’t be here otherwise. You care, or you wouldn’t have bothered to come down here to make your feelings known. Every single person here today cares very deeply; I know because I, too, care very deeply about this country of ours and what is happening to it.”
Out of the corner of his eye, James saw Cal and Jenny slide into the front row behind a nearby barrier. Cal gave him a thumbs-up sign, and Jenny gave him a wink.
“Most of you believe that the monarchy is dead and ought to be buried, that it’s an institution well past its sell-by date, that it is nothing more than a holdover from a once-grand past which has long outlived its usefulness. But I’m here to tell you that you’re wrong.