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Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Traditional British, #Historical

Castle Rouge (27 page)

BOOK: Castle Rouge
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I shook myself free of the dreadful memory, whose shadow had followed me to this remote castle on the edge of Europe, and to Godfrey.

“I was captured shortly after, and brought here. I wonder what they want of me. Women do not seem to fare well in their hands.”

“She was very young, this girl they found in Prague,” Godfrey hastened to reassure me. “Perhaps sixteen, no more.”

“If you mention my great age to relieve my mind, I would point out that most of Jack the Ripper’s London victims were above forty and I am just past thirty.”

My best tone of umbrage accomplished what I had intended: distracting Godfrey from the bad news he had borne and his own dismay that I had seen too much in the past three weeks to pretend shock at the news of it.

“I did not mean to imply that you were too old to be a victim, Nell,” he said.

“I should hope not. Nor am I too old to contemplate escape from a most unpleasant circumstance. I propose that you attempt your route across the castle walls, only I will braid our bed linens into a rope so that you have some safety line.”

He glanced doubtfully at the hulking darkness of my gigantic, drapery-hung bed. During our talk I had realized that neither of us dare linger at the castle, no matter how apparently deserted, to see what our captors meant to do with us when they arrived. And they would arrive soon, the entire coven, no doubt.

“I assume you have a similar resting place?” I prodded. Dear Godfrey, he had glimpsed a bit of the horror, but not its full outline.

He nodded, still puzzled.

“The sheets for these behemoths of beds are the size of sails, Godfrey. I need an instrument sharp enough to start a tear along the weave of the linen, and of course they bring us no knives to eat with. Luckily they did not notice nor think to take away my chatelaine, which was in my pocket. My embroidery shears are just the thing. I shall shred your sheets and mine. Once I have strips to braid I can produce a rope long and strong enough to take you halfway to Warsaw. Our current captors will never notice that the linens are missing beneath these heavy brocaded coverlets, and, from what you tell me, they are far too slovenly to want to change our bed linens.”

“This will take much time, Nell.”

“Leave me the candelabra, and I will begin tonight. You will see that it will go faster than you think.”

Any practitioner of the needle arts knows that one stitch, in time, will amount to thousands.

Godfrey had left me for the night—whistling, I noticed, after the door leading to his rooms had closed. Men, I had concluded, were simply large boys: deny them exercise and derring-do and they become quite ungovernable. Allow them their boyish enthusiasms, with suitable strictures, and everyone will be happy.

Of course it takes a clever woman to allow them enough rope, so to speak, without them breaking their necks.

So now I allowed myself to consider the enormity of my self-appointed task. The linens were large, but exceedingly tough. The worst part of the process was creating the strips; braiding them was simple.

I felt a bit like a trio of fairy tale heroines: the poor girl left overnight to spin straw into gold; the loyal sister who wove nettles into shirts to turn her seven brothers from swans into men again; and Rapunzel whose infamously long locks sufficed to make a ladder to and from a prison tower.

I pulled the first sheet from my bed. Every fabric has a way it will resist tearing and a way it will more easily rip. Finding the weaker weave in this fabric was a puzzle. My tiny embroidery scissors nibbled at the hemmed edges until they had parted enough for me to grab the fabric with both hands and pull with all my might. The sides of my small fingers were abraded raw, and the candle wicks were swimming in the last pools of liquid wax before I gritted my teeth and gave a mighty, Samsonlike pull…at last the tightly woven cloth came rending apart with a shriek like a cat having its tail stepped on.

I stared, panting, at the single yard of separated fabric.

Rolling my fists into the fabric where the rent ended, I gave another mighty tug. And another yard of fabric finally gave up the ghost. Again. And Again.

By dawn my arms and back and sorely tried ribs were aching, but I had a mound of two-inch-wide strips high enough to hide a yearling sheep. These I bundled back into the bed and spread out to resemble disarranged linens. The entire outer sides of my hands were raw and oozing, and I had no ointment. I used part of one sheet strip to bind both of my hands around the palms, so Godfrey should not see the damage, then admonished myself for being the silliest goose from Shropshire! Of course I should have used “mittens” during my previous tearing work. Certainly I would from now on, and spare my skin.

I surveyed my room and my deception, weary but proud.

I had little doubt that the few servants I had glimpsed in this vast, deserted castle would be the last souls to go probing around in my bed linens.

And the rats and cats would not care what nests I made, if only I would share them!

I quieted a shudder. Better rats and cats for company than devil worshipers.

21.

The Queen and I

When a charming young lady comes into your office and smilingly announces she wants to ask you a few questions regarding the possibility of improving New York’s moral tone, don’t stop to parley. Just say ‘Excuse me, Nellie Bly,’ and shin down the fire escape
.


PUCK
MAGAZINE
, 1888

FROM A JOURNAL

“How is it you are called ‘Pink?’” the Queen asked.

We sat in another lavishly painted and gilded withdrawing room, the Queen and I. She presided over a porcelain tea set as intricate as a miniature city. In fact, I began to see that the significant pieces were covered in bas-relief landscapes of local Prague scenes.

“First,” I returned, “how is it that you speak English?” Here, she blushed, instantly endearing herself to me. “Madame Irene encouraged me to learn Bohemian and English and French to aid my husband the King in his enterprises. Forgive me, but your bluntness in asking reminds me of my dear Miss Huxleigh.”

My warming sense of endearment chilled. Irene had not mentioned her friend’s dire circumstances, and I could see why. The King barely registered the Admirable Nell’s existence, but the Queen was seriously attached. How had such a situation come about? Ah. The Queen had not always been the Queen. Perhaps Irene and Nell knew the King previously to Clotilde’s entrance on the scene. But then the King should know Nell very well. What a mystery!

“I believe my bluntness, as you call it, is American energy, not British bluster.”

“Ah. You do not like the British.”

“Not very much.”

“And have you met Godfrey?”

“I’m afraid not.”

“He does not bluster.”

“Then he is an exception.”

“Oh, yes,” said the Queen, with a small sigh that made me raise my eyebrows figuratively. “My husband is not British, but he can bluster. However, I am learning to…direct it.”

“Did you direct it just recently into the
grande promenade
our…associates are taking together at this moment?”

She blushed again. “I am obligated to Madame Norton for a great personal service she did me. Part of it was learning to be diplomatic, which most distresses me because it seems that dissembling is a key part of diplomacy.”

“It is indeed,” I said with a smile as I sipped tea from a Meissen cup as fragile as a newborn’s fingernail. “I am not very diplomatic I fear, though I can dissemble in a good cause.”

“And what do you consider a good cause, Miss…Pink?”

“Why on behalf of the poor and the weak, the meek and mild, the women, the children, the workers, the lost.”

“Gracious! You sound like an anarchist.”

“No, like an American reformer. We are all over the place over there, and quite harmless, as no one ever much listens to us.”

“I suspect they listen to
you
,” Clotilde answered with a shrewd sky-blue glance over the eggshell lip of her cup.

Strange thing about delicate porcelain: it can hold boiling water and not shatter. I figured Clotilde might be one of those types. And I guessed that I was not the first American woman she had consulted.

“They called me Pink as a child,” I admitted suddenly, “because I blushed so much. It stuck, the nickname.”

“‘Nickname.’ What a word. It means an endearment?”

“I suppose so.”

“Then may I call you ‘Pink,’ since my dear Miss Huxleigh is not here? I would never dare to call Miss Huxleigh by her given name, I cannot say why.”

I found myself speechless for a spell. It was not my intention to usurp Nell in anyone’s regard, and I found it rather sad that the people who most genuinely liked Nell called her Miss Huxleigh.

“You may call me Pink,” I said finally, “but I will call you Your Highness, as I am an American and not used to titles and will forget if I don’t use them, and besides, we Americans are secretly knocked sideways by them, so my calling you Your Highness is akin to your calling me Pink.”

Clotilde sat still for a moment as she translated this speech both literally and emotionally.

“How refreshing you Americans are! No wonder Willie…well, that is the past. But you must promise to give me a ‘nickname’ someday. I would dearly like one.”

“No one has ever used a diminutive for you?”

“I was a Princess Royal born. No one dared.”

“Well, I will dub thee one. Let’s see. It will be American, I warn you.”

Clotilde laughed and clapped her hands. “You cannot guess how much I would like a touch of the American about me. I am already half-French, thanks to the gowns of Monsieur Worth.”

“But he is English, I hear.”

“Not anymore.”

“All right. Clotilde. Tilde. That’s an accent mark, but it’s not right for you. I know! Matilda. Very American and with a French twist:
ma Tilde
, you see?”

“Ma-til-dah?”

“Great American frontier name. You could wear gingham and buckskin with that name.”

“Ging-ham?”

“A cotton checked material. Very practical.”

“No one has ever called me practical. I like it! Er, checked?”

“Like my coatdress. Checked and practical.”

“And American?”

I hated to admit that I had adopted the style from Nell. “And a bit British.”

“Then I shall be a little like all my friends.”

It made me sad to think she thought I was her friend. A reporter can be friendly, but she daren’t start thinking of her subjects as her friends because she has to tell the truth about them. Odd; I had subjects, just as Queen Clotilde did, come to think of it.

“Well, Matilda, now that we are on nickname terms, you must tell me about how you got to be Queen of Bohemia and met Irene and Nell and all that.”

“How I got to be Queen of Bohemia was destiny. Willie and I were betrothed when we were eleven.”

I nearly swallowed the Meissen cup with my last gulp of tea.

“But how I met Irene and Nell and what we three did afterward is quite a tale.”

“I am like an ewer, all ears,” I said.

So she told me, more than she should have of course, but it was all very useful.

Et tu
, Pink.

22.

Lone Wolf

But there are a great many James Kellys who no doubt are committed for similar offences and there may possibly be a mistake
.


JOHN MOLLER, COUSIN OF JAMES KELLY

FROM A YELLOW BOOK

It was well to forsake the train, as we had the caravan, and let my other minions see the baggage to its final resting place.

My beast and I travel on together, on horseback with a rogue band of Gypsy men who are half-Magyar, half-Cossack, and all animal. We have joined a different and far less visible train.

So much for our enemies in pursuit.

Oh, the traveling is far rougher: the nights raw and the food barely edible, and then barely cooked. No silk and no sherbet, no star, that is for certain.

But Gypsies travel in packs, like wolves and dogs, and he craves the society of others. I cannot say that he craves the society of “his fellows,” for there are none like him.

This he seems to have known from a very early age. I sometimes wonder if he seeks crowds so that he may assert his natural place above them.

Yet he is a man of the people still. He wolfs down the abominable food along with the strange, strong liquor the Gypsies find for him somewhere.

I am tolerated in their midst, a freak with moneybags. I pay for their missions to the caravans and other camps, from which they return with haunches of raw meat (whose source it is best not to ask) and the heavy pottery bottles that look as old as the Crusades.

They offer my beast first taste.

BOOK: Castle Rouge
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