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Authors: Clarissa Ross

Tags: #romance, #classic

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BOOK: Vintage Love
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She said, “It was good of you to come.”

“Your letter interested me,” he told her as he took a sip of the wine.

“I appreciate your paying so much attention to it. You could well have considered it the ravings of some female lunatic.”

“Not at all,” he demurred. “It was well written, and I could tell it was from a lady of some position even before I read the signature and realized who you were.”

“Really?” She could see that he was extremely sharp along with being discreet.

He told her, “Your late father, Sir Ian Chapman, had a long and outstanding career in our diplomatic service. Until his death, so regrettable, he was a member of that service.”

“It was his pride,” Betsy said. “He wanted nothing more than to serve his country. The same could be said of my brother, Richard.”

“And of you, young lady, I’m sure of that,” he said in that same rasping voice.

“Unfortunately, because of my sex, I have not had the same opportunity to stand forward for my country. But I promise you I feel as strongly.”

The thin man’s narrow face showed interest. “I’m glad to hear that.”

She said, “That is why I wish to learn the truth about my brother’s death. And if his commanding officer was at fault, I would want to see him punished.”

“A rational enough wish,” the thin man in black said quietly.

“So I was not only grief stricken but frustrated by this word that Richard’s death mightn’t have been necessary.” And she again recited all that she had written in the letter to him. He sat there listening and showed what appeared to be interest.

When she had finished, he put aside his empty wine glass carefully. Then glancing at her, he said, “Yes. I’m very well acquainted with the manner of your brother’s death, miss.”

“And what, pray, are you to do about it?”

“The battle of Waterloo is history now, young lady. No act of mine can change what happened on that eventful day.”

She protested. “I fully realize that, sir. But if my brother was needlessly sacrificed, I wish the one responsible to be punished.”

The man nodded his almost bald head and suggested, “You bear an undue hatred for this man, a man who may have done his best. His worst offense might be that he temporarily lost his head in the midst of that awful battle!”

Her eyes opened wide and her cheeks warmed as she asked of him, “Are you reproving me for my stand?”

“It has perhaps become an obsession, has it not?”

“No more so than is natural,” she flung back. “I loved my brother, Richard, as I have rarely loved anyone!”

“I know,” her black-clad visitor said quietly. “You were both on Saint Helena together.”

Betsy gasped. “How do you know that?”

The thin man offered her a bony smile which gave his face a more skeletal look than ever. He rasped, “I know all about you, young lady. Your entire history! The history of your family!”

She stared at him in dismay, wondering what sort of person he was and why he had taken this trouble to visit her if he were not sympathetic to her complaint. She said, “Are you telling me my complaint to the War Office was unreasonable?”

“Not at all,” he said. “I only am trying to point out that there may well be no villain in this drama of the battlefield, that the man who gave the order resulting in your brother’s death was confused and not evil intentioned. That he perhaps regrets what happened to this very hour.”

She sat up very straight. “You are making a plea for the man I consider my brother’s murderer. Why did you bother to come see me at all?”

He coughed, a dry, racking cough, and produced a white handkerchief and pressed it to his mouth for a moment. Then he drew it away and stuffed it in his pocket as he told her, “I have come to visit you for quite another reason.”

“Another reason?” she echoed in bafflement.

“Yes.” He was studying her with an odd look of satisfaction.

“Pray tell me what it may be,” she begged him. “You are from the War Office, are you not?”

“I am,” he said. “How else could I come by your letter?”

“Please continue!”

He stood up. “I will move about,” he told her. “It is easier for me to think on my feet.”

“Whatever you like,” she said.

He gave a deep sigh. “Until recently I have been head of a division of the War Office. Now I have been told to retire, that my usefulness is at an end. I’m spending my last few weeks in the office I have occupied so long, being forced to retire to my dark and unhealthy London house, ignored by those I have served so well, including His Majesty.”

“That is too bad, sir,” she said. “But what has it to do with me?”

He moved away a little and made a gesture of his thin hand. “If you will be but patient, you will hear.”

“I’m sorry,” she said, beginning to think she was entertaining a madman.

He swung around to face her and said, “I’ll venture that until you received my letter, you never had heard the name of Felix Black.”

She stared at the odd, shabby figure. “That is true.”

“And yet for years I have been one of the most powerful forces in the War Office. I have been chief of espionage.”

“Espionage!”

“And before that I was the foremost spy of the service,” the thin man ranted on. “Yet today I am discredited and soon to be discarded.”

“Why? And what has it to do with me?”

He came close to her and pointed a thin forefinger close to her lovely face. “Your father was stationed on Saint Helena just after Napoleon was exiled there.”

“Yes.”

“Soon after your family had word of your brother’s death in the battle of Waterloo, you along with your father and mother and an ancient Anglican priest all arrived on the bleak island. Your father was sent there as assistant to Admiral Cockburn.”

“Yes,” she said almost in a whisper. “I was beside myself with sorrow and anger at first. Dear old Father Warren tried to remove the rancor from my heart.”

The cold, sharp eyes fixed on her. “You were often a guest at Longwood, the estate of the Balcombe family on Saint Helena.”

“I was.”

“And it was while you were there that you met the former Emperor Napoleon who was temporarily living in their garden house. You were only sixteen but lovely, as you are now. You, along with Betsy and Jane Balcombe, became good friends of the man who had changed the face of Europe.”

She said, “Are you making some sort of charge against me? That was long ago. Napoleon is dead!”

Felix Black regarded her with one of his cold, superior smiles. “You hated the emperor at first! And when he asked you why you were so bitter, you told him. And when you said your brother had died at Waterloo because of him, he was full of sympathy for you. And he told you that to all intents he had died there as well.”

She stared at him in amazement. “Almost his very words! How could you know that?”

“Napoleon had great charm,” the man in black went on relentlessly. “He won you over. You soon became as friendly with him as the Balcombe girls. The gossips on the island whispered about the scandal of this middle-aged conqueror at last being conquered by a beautiful English girl.”

“I will not have you tarnish the friendship,” she told him. “My father and mother approved. For a time I felt less bitter about Richard’s loss. It was not until later I heard the story about garbled orders and realized he had been the victim of one of our own British officers — not the enemy.”

The thin, nearly bald man showed a wry smile. “You wished to believe that. For since that sunset eve on Saint Helena, when you and Napoleon wandered off to stand on the cliff’s edge hand in hand, you have always revered the memory of that fat Corsican!”

“Do not speak of him like that!” she cried, springing up. “He was a noble figure, and I cared for him deeply. Call it treasonable if you will. Charge me as you like!”

The stooped man came close to her and said, “I blame you not at all. I did not come here to charge you or condemn you.”

“Then why?”

“I wanted to find out if you remembered.”

“How could I forget?” she asked brokenly as she turned away from him. “It was my first true love affair. I was a child and he a man of much experience. Yet it was beautiful and he, the ogre of my childhood memories, was tender and loving to me. When I learned that because of my father’s illness we were to leave the island, I thought my heart would break. My only consolation was his promise that he would never forget me.”

“If it is of any small value to you, he never did.”

She wheeled around to stare defiantly at the weird figure in black. “How can you know all this? You unhealthy man!”

He smiled. “Do you remember Dr. Barry Edward O’Meara?”

“Of course. He was the British medical officer appointed to look after the former emperor.”

“He was my man. A member of the British Intelligence. Unhappily I also had to later recall him. He came under the spell of Napoleon to the extent that he now spends his time writing books in his defense. Needless to say he is no longer one of His Majesty’s spies.”

“Barry O’Meara!” she exclaimed, a look of days past recalled in her blue eyes. “I always liked him. I never guessed. So he was the one who told you about me.”

“He and others,” the master spy said. “I have always conducted an efficient department.”

She sighed. “With all the guards and small freedom left to him, I knew there had to be spies. But I did not guess that Dr. O’Meara was one of them. He was Napoleon’s friend.”

“He still is,” Felix Black complained. “If he keeps on writing his infernal books, he’s going to wind up in prison.”

She said, “So you have not come here to help me about my brother’s being sacrificed. Why have you made this visit?”

He faced her in silence for a moment. “Can I trust you implicitly? Have I your sworn word that what I’m about to say to you will never be repeated?”

Betsy was upset. “What are you talking about?”

“Do you swear to remain silent?”

“Yes,” she said. “As long as it means no harm to anyone.” She was beginning to suspect that he was about to enlist her in some plot against her former friend Dr. Barry O’Meara. It was evident they wished to silence the former spy.

Felix Black frowned. “Because of what I’m going to tell you, I’m being driven from my office. Reviled! Scoffed at as an old fool living in the past! No one wants to believe me!”

“Explain,” she said.

He seized her by the arm and fixed his fanatic’s bright eyes on her. “Napoleon lives!”

“What?”

“He lives! He was successfully rescued from the island of Saint Helena, and he is somewhere in Europe in hiding at this very moment.”

“Preposterous!” she gasped.

“That is what they are all saying,” Felix Black said, still clenching her arm so that it pained. “They ignore all my years of being mastermind of the world’s greatest spy network.”

She said, “It is common knowledge that Napoleon died of a liver afflicton that came from his being held on that dread island. My father contracted the same liver ailment, and it killed him.”

“A man died of a liver affliction in Napoleon’s bed, but it was not Napoleon,” the thin man in black said with passion. “And now the former emperor is virtually a prisoner of one of the great criminal minds of our day, a political upstart named Valmy. This Valmy is the head of a group of ex-military men and others who wish to seize power from the new king of France. Later it is Valmy’s plan to see that Napoleon, once in power again as a puppet leader, is murdered. Then Valmy will become the new ruler of France and be on his way to conquer Europe. His particular hatred is for England and all things English!”

She listened to the trembling old man in awe, not sure whether all that she heard were the ramblings of a mind which had broken under long years of strain or the stunning information gathered by one who was still a mastermind of espionage. Somehow she felt what he was saying might at least have some truth in it.

In a hushed voice she asked, “Why have you told me all this?”

He had released her arm, and now he twisted his hands in nervous fashion and said, “Because I need your help.”

“My help?”

“Yes,” he said. “I have been discredited at the War Office. I shall be leaving shortly. But I’m going to conduct this campaign on my own. My house shall be my headquarters, and I shall enlist my own agents to try and rescue Napoleon from this Valmy, warn him of the fate in store for him, and have him take an armed vessel to the United States.”

“The English betrayed him before when he could have made his escape to America easily,” she reminded the man in black. “Why should he trust us again?”

“Not the nation, but me,” the thin man said excitedly. “He knows of me. There is a house built for him in Louisiana, funds aplenty for a life of ease, and safe passage on a United States armed vessel.”

“Why should you care what happens to him?”

“I don’t! But I want to save Europe from the madman Valmy. The nations cannot stand another senseless war, and there will be one if Valmy succeeds with his scheme. The ace card is in his hand — the former emperor.”

“I find it all impossible to believe,” she said.

“So do the others,” he told her. “But if I bring this off, the fat oaf we call His Majesty will invite me to the palace for honors. I shall have my revenge. Those that call me mad now will bow to me in gratitude.”

“What do you want of me?” she asked.

Felix Black gazed at her grimly. “I need you to be my chief agent. You know Napoleon, and he trusts you. If you tell him what Valmy is up to, he will believe you.”

“I know nothing of such things,” she said.

“You are an excellent shot, you fence as well as any man, and you ride horseback like a trained cavalry officer,” he said.

“You have been well informed.”

“Always,” he agreed. “It is my strong point. There are only a few tricks to be learned and I can soon teach them to you. A matter of codes, techniques for getting information, a knowledge of picking locks, and a familiarity with needed poisons.”

She said in disbelief, “You wish to enlist me to go to France in search of a returned Napoleon and save him from this Valmy?”

BOOK: Vintage Love
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