Smuggler's Lair

Read Smuggler's Lair Online

Authors: Virginia Henley

S
MUGGLER'S
L
AIR
V
IRGINIA
H
ENLEY
LYRICAL PRESS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Also by Virginia Henley
 
 
“Christmas Eve” in
A Gift of Joy
 
 
“Beauty and the Brute” in
Lords of Passion
The Smuggler's Song
Rudyard Kipling
 
If you wake at midnight, and hear a horse's feet,
Don't go drawing back the blind, or looking in the street,
Them that asks no questions isn't told a lie.
Watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
Five-and-twenty ponies, trotting through the dark,
Brandy for the Parson, 'Baccy for the Clerk;
Laces for a lady; letters for a spy,
And watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
Running round the woodlump if you chance to find
Little barrels, roped and tarred, all full of brandy-wine;
Don't you shout to come and look, nor take 'em for your play;
Put the brushwood back again, and they'll be gone next day.
 
If you see the stable-door setting open wide;
If you see a tired horse lying down inside;
If your mother mends a coat cut about and tore;
If the lining's wet and warm, don't you ask no more!
 
If you meet King George's men, dressed in blue and red,
You be careful what you say, and mindful what is said.
If they call you “pretty maid,” and chuck you 'neath the chin,
Don't you tell where no one is, nor yet where no one's been!
 
Knocks and footsteps round the house, whiles after dark,
You've no call for running out till the housedogs bark.
Trusty's here, and Pincher's here, and see how dumb they lie,
They don't fret to follow when the Gentlemen go by!
 
If you do as you've been told, likely there's a chance
You'll be given a dainty doll, all the way from France,
With a cap of Valenciennes, and a velvet hood,
A present from the Gentlemen, along o' being good!
Five-and-twenty ponies trotting through the dark,
Brandy for the Parson, 'Baccy for the Clerk.
Them that asks no questions isn't told a lie,
Watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
P
ROLOGUE
As dawn began to lighten the sky, the naked female immersed breast-high in the River Rother relished the feel of the cool water on her skin. The forbidden indulgence filled her with a sense of freedom she seldom experienced in the restricted, narrow life she led. Victoria knew she must end her swim and return home to the priory before she was discovered.
She took one last, lingering look at the medieval castle of Bodiam and went very still. From atop one of its high towers, a dark figure watched her. Silhouetted against the gray sky, the black-clad male remained motionless and Victoria shivered as gooseflesh crept up her arms. The ancient castle, neglected for decades, had been unoccupied for the past few years.
How long has he been watching me?
Her thought was followed by another, even more chilling:
How many times has he spied on me from the high tower?
Victoria swam in the Rother twice a week at dawn when she professed to be at church. Her pulse raced madly.
He knows my secret!
She closed her eyes in panic.
How long before Mother learns of my deception?
When she opened her eyes, the figure was gone.
“It was a trick of the light. I only imagined him,” she murmured with bone-softening relief.
With pounding heart, Victoria slipped from the water and retrieved her clothes from their hiding place. She pulled on her drawers, dress, and shoes, wrapped her dark cloak about her, and quickly walked the mile that brought her to the priory gardens. She hurried into the shed and donned the stockings that she had earlier stuffed into her pocket, then pulled back her wet hair, plaited it tightly, and pinned it into a bun at the nape of her neck. She tied on her bonnet, picked up her prayer book—a present from her late father, the Right Reverend Thomas Carswell—and proceeded with dignified, measured steps into the house. When she reached the haven of her bedchamber, Victoria let out a long, shuddering sigh of relief.
“I imagined him!” she whispered. But vision or no, she sensed deep in her bones that she would encounter him again.
C
HAPTER
1
“A dinner invitation from
Mad Jack's
nephew?” Victoria asked with prim disdain.
“The gentleman's name was Captain John Fuller,” Lady Carswell said repressively. “Wherever did you hear such a vulgar sobriquet? Surely not from one of the history books in which you constantly thrust your nose? John Fuller was a Captain in the Sussex Light Infantry and a respected Member of Parliament for four years.”
“Yes, Mama.” Victoria reluctantly closed her book.
Anyone who fritters away a fortune building follies and is buried sitting up wearing a top hat has earned the nickname Mad Jack!
“His wealth came from manufacturing cannon for the Royal Navy.”
Undoubtedly a big noise!
Victoria hid her amusement.
“His nephew, Sir Peregrine Palmer Fuller, inherited everything.”
“Peregrine?
The name alone invites ridicule,” Victoria declared.
“That is quite enough. Young ladies should be seen and not heard. Your manners are appalling. A far higher standard of gentility is expected from a clergyman's daughter. Since our year's formal mourning period has been over for months, I shall accept the invitation. Obviously the gentleman wishes to form a connection with us because of our reputation for respectability.”
Why else would he invite us to dinner?
It was obvious he wanted to distance himself from Mad Jack's eccentricity by cultivating the rigidly moral, straitlaced Lady Edwina, widow of the Right Reverend Thomas Carswell, and her spinster daughter.
“I'd rather decline, Mama,” Victoria said with daring.
“The dinner is to be held at Bodiam Castle.”
“Bodiam?”
Victoria gave her mother her full attention. The medieval castle was one of her passions. Constructed in the fourteenth century in the reign of Edward III, one of England's great Plantagenet kings, the magnificent castle on the river had been built to protect the Rother Valley from French raids.
Victoria's interest in Bodiam had been sparked when the main gates were suddenly replaced. That was a decade ago, when she was seven, and though it had lain neglected ever since, she had fallen in love with the romantic, moated castle with its high towers and battlemented ramparts.
“Did Mad Jack . . . I beg your pardon, Mama . . . did Captain John Fuller own Bodiam Castle?”
“Yes, and now it is owned by his nephew, Sir Peregrine Palmer Fuller. What possible objection could you have?”
“None. None whatsoever.”
I've longed to go inside Bodiam Castle since I was a child—this is the opportunity of a lifetime!
* * *
Victoria appraised her reflection in her cheval glass. Her dark hair was pulled back into a neat bun at her nape and only a tiny white frill around its high neck relieved the plainness of her long-sleeved mauve cambric dress. As she pinned on her jet mourning brooch, she was satisfied that her mother could find no fault with her appearance tonight. She noticed with pleasure that her eyes matched the shade of her gown exactly. Victoria smiled at her reflection and murmured, “Vanity, thy name is woman!”
Downstairs, her brother Edmund stood in the front hall waiting patiently for his mother and sister. He wore his clerical collar and a black suit. He had become the Reverend of the Hawkhurst parish church after his father died, which enabled the Carswells to keep possession of the priory. Victoria suspected her mother had planned it that way by insisting Edmund follow in his father's footsteps, despite the fact that he felt no calling. Edmund's nature was too gentle to go against his mother's wishes, but he was complicit in guarding Victoria's shortcomings and remained silent about his sister's absence from church services in the early morning.
Edwina, garbed in her best bombazine, finally appeared and gave her daughter a thorough inspection. “Tonight, Victoria, do not speak until you are spoken to. You must use a deferential tone and manner, as becomes a young unmarried lady. Remember to be prim and proper at all times and, above all, keep your lashes lowered. It is improper to look directly into a gentleman's face, and it will help conceal the strange color of your eyes.”
Edmund held his sister's cloak and squeezed her shoulders to take the sting from their mother's words and comfort her.
Victoria raised her dark lashes to reveal the full impact of her pale violet eyes, then lowered one eyelid in a solemn wink.
Since the Carswells could no longer afford a driver, Edmund drove their carriage the short distance to Bodiam. As they went over the narrow bridge that led across the moat, Victoria saw that the gate moved up and down like a portcullis and she silently thanked Mad Jack for duplicating the original medieval apparatus. She glanced down into the moat and saw water lilies, closed now that it was eventide, and she thrilled at the reflection of the moon upon the water. Mist was floating in from the river, adding to the otherworldly atmosphere that felt timeless.
Tonight, the shadows make it look as it did centuries ago.
Lit torches flared in the courtyard, leading the way to the stables and revealing a large grassy quadrangle.
This is the castle bailey.
A stableman came forward to take care of their horse and carriage and Victoria wished he'd been wearing livery.
A servant met them at the door and led the way through what must have been the Great Hall, then he ushered them into a smaller adjacent chamber furnished as a dining room.
Victoria stared wide-eyed at the high stone walls, the arched timbered ceiling, and the ancient chandelier that held myriad blazing candles. She thought she heard the faint echo of voices and imagined they were sounds floating from the past of people who had inhabited Bodiam over the centuries.
I wish it were mine!
The servant took the ladies' cloaks and told them that their host would be with them directly. A uniformed female servant stood unobtrusively against the wall and Victoria noted the fatuous look of approval on her mother's face because the maid had been stationed there in deference to the ladies.
Sir Peregrine must revere propriety as much as Mother does.
When their host arrived, Edwina rushed forward to meet him, while her daughter hung back. Victoria had formed a picture of what a man called Peregrine would look like, but all her preconceived notions now shattered into a thousand shards. His presence was compelling; the back of her neck began to prickle. The man was dark, his build powerful, his face strong, and his manner hinted of dominance.
He's at least thirty. He makes Edmund seem like a boy.
“Lady Edwina, I am delighted to make your acquaintance.” He took her hand. The quick bow of his head, though polite, was not obsequious.
“Sir Peregrine, this is my son, Reverend Edmund Carswell.”
“I'm pleased you could come, Reverend.”
“And my daughter, the Honorable Victoria Carswell.”
Victoria cringed. Her mother had no right to be addressed as
Lady Edwina,
nor claim her daughter to be
Honorable.
Nonetheless, since it added to her consequence, she did so without a blush.
“Mistress Carswell, I welcome you to Bodiam.”
Victoria did not offer her hand. With downcast eyes, she sketched a ghost of a curtsy.
“I named my daughter after a royal princess, never dreaming that one day Victoria would become our beloved queen.”
“Sherry or port, Lady Edwina?”
“Good heavens, neither. Carswell ladies do not drink wine, but I have no objection to you gentlemen indulging.”
Their host poured two glasses of port from a decanter on the sideboard and handed one to Edmund. He raised his own glass and said politely, “To the ladies.”
Victoria stood quietly with clasped hands and downcast eyes, while Edwina proceeded to monopolize the conversation. “I see we are your sole guests tonight, Sir Peregrine. It is wise to be selective. Moral rectitude and respectability are desirable qualities not shared by everyone, I fear. You may be assured that I have taught my children the virtues of decency and decorum.”
“It is clear you extol convention,” he said smoothly.
Edwina took it as a compliment.
He is mocking her!
Every instinct told her that Sir Peregrine was the dark figure she had glimpsed atop the high tower. Though Victoria longed to give him a set-down, she remained passive with downcast eyes. She was secure in the knowledge that the plain girl in the prim dress, with her hair in a severe bun, bore no resemblance to the naked nymph in the River Rother.
When they sat down to dinner, their host gallantly held Edwina's chair and Victoria was glad that he apparently found her invisible. She hid her amusement when she tasted the soup and found it was liberally laced with cream and sherry.
“May I inquire what you do for pleasure, Reverend?”
“Tory's passion is history and mine is painting, Sir.”
Edwina almost choked on her soup. She pressed her lips together and reprimanded, “
Passion
is an unsuitable word in mixed company, Edmund, and I prefer you call your sister Victoria. Life is not for pleasure; it is for duty and obedience.”
* * *
You do not believe that, do you, Tory? Meekness does not sit well with you. I warrant that Tory and passion go hand in hand. When I first walked into the room, I thought there had been a mistake. I was convinced you were not the same female I followed to the priory.
Peregrine smiled.
Your disguise is clever, quite cunning enough to deceive the venerable Edwina, and artful enough to give you a false sense of security.
“I have always discouraged my son from painting,” Edwina confided. “People with artistic natures are invariably unstable. Fortunately, Edmund shows no aptitude.”
Victoria's dark lashes flew up. “His paintings of Bodiam Castle are magnificent!” An awkward silence descended and she quickly lowered her lashes.
As the soup plates were removed and the game course placed before his guests, Peregrine sat bemused behind his mask of indifference.
Her eyes are the color of pale violets in the snow. All shades of purple denote passion. I know your secrets, Tory!
“If you love history, Bodiam must fascinate you. I invite you to come one day and explore the castle.”
“Thank you,” Victoria murmured.
He's using Bodiam as bait. He's fully aware how tempting it is. He wants me to return for a tour so he can control me, but I prefer to see it now!
Tory ate most of her food, then placed her linen napkin on the table. “Please excuse me.” She moved her chair back and arose.
Peregrine stood politely and signaled the maid. The uniformed woman curtsied to Victoria and led her from the room. The host resumed his seat and after a moment spoke to Edwina in a confidential manner. “I am most impressed with your daughter, madam. She has a modest, self-effacing demeanor that appeals.”
Edwina simpered with pride. “Victoria is a most biddable girl. My insistence upon impeccable behavior has resulted in virtue and chastity, which, though exceedingly rare, are only right and proper in a maiden.”
“I would like your permission to pay my addresses to her.”
“Sir Peregrine, I would be delighted. You do us great honor.”
* * *
When Victoria and the maid came to a stone staircase, Tory spoke up firmly. “I prefer to manage on my own, thank you.”
“Very good, Miss. I'll just wait here.”
Tory ran lightly up the steps, turned, and went down a long passageway that looked neglected. She passed occasional brackets holding rush lights that seemed to illuminate wisps of fog that had crept inside. There were a couple of narrow openings in the stone walls, but the pitch-black rooms beyond held no temptation. Victoria shuddered and then she heard music. Drawn by the sounds of instruments and laughter, she found herself walking along what could only be described as a minstrels' gallery.
She looked down in amazement at a group of people who had obviously gathered for a party. “It's a fancy-dress ball!” The men wore powdered wigs, satin breeches, and brilliantly hued brocaded vests and coats. It was the women, however, who drew Victoria's eye. Their wigs were adorned with jeweled ostrich feathers; their gowns were not only beautiful but also extremely risqué, designed to deliberately display the women's upthrust breasts.
Tory was shocked, yet for one moment she pictured herself in such a glorious gown. The scene below was exactly as it would have been a century ago in Georgian times. As she watched, she realized their behavior was beyond vulgar as they openly flirted and touched each other in inappropriate places.
Her shock slowly turned to anger. “That brute Fuller is throwing a party. His dinner invitation to the Reverend's family is a clever subterfuge to cover up the licentious goings-on at Bodiam. I warrant he cannot wait to be rid of us!”
Her anger made her feel dizzy and she put a hand to her head to steady herself. Victoria turned away from the revelers below and went back the way she had come. She became slightly disoriented and it was a few minutes before she found herself in the familiar passageway that had led her to this part of the castle. Finally, with thudding heart, she located the stone staircase and descended the steps. The maid awaited her as she had promised, and the pair returned to the dining room.
Sir Peregrine and Edmund rose to their feet until she was seated, and Victoria saw they had awaited her return before dessert was served. “I'm so sorry,” she murmured.
“Not at all,” their host said smoothly.
The dessert was trifle, Victoria's favorite. Perversely, she didn't want any. Without raising her lashes, she spoke to her mother. “I'm afraid I have a dreadful headache.” It wasn't a total lie; she did feel strangely light-headed.

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