The Reluctant Duchess (28 page)

Read The Reluctant Duchess Online

Authors: Catherine Winchester

“Even my brother can’t raise large amounts of
money in a day!” Lavinia exclaimed.

“I
didn’t ask for money, I asked for gold and jewels equivalent to that value, and you can’t deny that the King can easily lay his hand on that much and more. Doubt it’ll even put much of a dent in his collection.”

“He won’t just hand it over,” Annabelle argued. “They’ll arrest
Frederick, or follow him back here.”

“Maybe,” he conceded. “Which is why the meeting is in the middle of
Hounslow Heath. Frederickdie and my men will be waiting, staking out the area beforehand so if they see anyone other than a lone messenger, they’ll scarper quickly.”

“You seem to have thought of everything.” Annabelle sounded sullen.

“I won’t hold it against you if you’re still hoping for a rescue,” he laughed. “I’ll send the food up soon.”

Once the door had closed behind him, Annabelle and Lavinia lay back on the bed and began to whisper.

“He sent some men away with Frederick,” Annabelle noted.

“Leaving less than six kidnappers,” Lavinia completed the thought. “Could you hear how many horses left?”

“I think three, including Frederick’s horse, which would leave us facing four men.”

Lavinia nodded her agreement.
“For now though, we behave and try and lull them into a false sense of security.”

“Unless an opportunity presents itself. Have you ever fired a gun before?”

“James taught me how but that was years ago now.”

“Then I think you should have the gun. I probably couldn’t bit the broad side of a barn.”

Their conversation halted when they heard footsteps on the stairs and moments later, one of the kidnappers brought in two plate of food.

 

Richard and Sampson got to Stalbridge at around 7.30 that night and headed to the Bridge Inn. The detective, Isaac, who had been sent to keep an eye on Frederick was in the bar area, chatting to the locals but came over when he spotted them.

“Boss,
Sir,” he nodded to them in greeting. “Is something wrong?”

“Lady Wyatt and the Dowager Duchess
have been kidnapped.”

Isaac’s
eyes widened. “But he’s still in town, he hasn’t gone anywhere all week.”

“Are you sure?” Richard asked.

“Well for obvious reasons, I can’t keep eyeballs on him all the time but the road from the estate goes right past this inn, and there’s no missing his coach, it’s the grandest in these parts. Plus, Mary didn’t say anything about him going away.”

“Mary’s the servant you’ve been courting?” Richard asked.

Isaac nodded.

“Then I think we need to go the house and check if he’s
still there and if not, see how much the staff knows.”

 

The Wyatt estate had clearly seen better days and there was a general air of neglect about the house and grounds.

Richard jumped from his horse and ran to the front door, pounding on it until it was answered. The delay meant that Richard had got his breath back by the time the butler answered. He looked at Richard with contempt.

“Where is Wyatt?” Richard demanded before the butler had spoken.

“He has gone out riding, sir.”

“At this time of night?

“I wasn’t a
ware that there were limits on the times someone could ride.”

“Listen here, you imbecile, Wyatt has kidnapped his own sister, Annabelle, and the King’s sister, who happens to be my mother. Now you will help me find out exactly where he is, or I will make it my business to ensure that you are charged with aiding and abetting the kidnapping!”

Having secured their horses, Sampson joined Richard.

The butler had paled. “You had better come in.” He showed them to the parlour and summoned the rest of the staff.

In short order, Richard established that
Frederick had been drinking heavily recently and behaving erratically. They told him that a messenger had come to the house that afternoon with a letter and soon afterwards, Frederick went out for his ride. The staff thought it unusual, as his girth made riding difficult, so he preferred the carriage these days.

Isaac
arrived then, having needed time to find his own horse to ride out to the estate.

The butler’
s initial hostility had stemmed from Richard’s attitude, and it soon emerged that none of staff had any great loyalty to Frederick. They hadn’t been paid in weeks but they couldn’t leave because Frederick wouldn’t give them a reference.

“It’s still free room and board,” the head parlour maid explained when he asked why they stayed. “Better than the workhouse.”

Isaac was in the corner with Mary, the maid he had been courting, trying to explain why he had lied to her. She didn’t seem to be taking the news that he was a spy very well.

“This doesn’t help us find Annabelle or my mother though. There has to be some clue as to where he went.”
Richard was beginning to sound desperate.

“What about his correspondence?” Sampson asked.

“That’s in the library desk, but he keeps it locked,” the butler said.

Within five minutes, they had pried all the drawers open and were looking through
Frederick’s letters.

“Nothing!” Richard exclaimed
, once they had scanned every piece of paper that they could find.

“He must keep
his letters from Old John separate,” Sampson reasoned “Or perhaps he took them with him.”

“Or burned them,” Richard added.

They searched every inch of the desk again just in case they had missed something but they hadn’t. Next Richard began going through the library books, rifling through them in case Frederick had stashed any letters there. He was interrupted by the sound of horse hooves on the driveway and rushed out to find a garrison of infantry arriving.

“By order of the King, we’re here for
Frederick Wyatt,” the Captain announced.

Richard saluted him. “Captain Richard Armstrong, formerly of the 37th North Hampshire
Regiment. Frederick is gone, I’m afraid; we were just searching his desk.”

The Captain dismounted and approached Richard, holding his hand out.

“A pleasure to meet you, Your Grace. I’m Captain Alvers of the 39th Dorsetshire Regiment. I was told that we might run into you and was given this.” He pulled a letter from his pocket and handed it to Richard.

“Thank you
. Come in, please.” He and the Captain went back into the house and Richard stopped by the butler. “Please make sure the regiment is taken care of and in return, I will make sure that your wages are paid up to date once this is over.”

“Of course, Your Grace.”

Richard, the Captain and the two detectives headed back into the study and Richard opened the letter that he’d been given and skimmed the contents.


It’s from William, my uncle. The King received a ransom demand not long after mother and Annabelle were taken. 50,000 pounds in gold and jewellery, to be delivered by a lone messenger on Hounslow Heath, tomorrow at noon. Annabelle and Mother will be released near a garrison or police station once they have the goods.”

“I
s he going to pay?” Sampson demanded.

“He is,” Richard assured him. “There’s n
othing else in here that might help us.”

“Does he have any proof against
Frederick?” Sampson asked.

“It doesn’t say.”

Sampson looked to the Captain.

“We received orders to find and detain
Frederick Wyatt, the Marquess of Dorset and transport him to London for trial. The only other detail I was told, is that the Duke might be here and we were to cooperate with him.”

“Do we go to
Hounslow Heath?” Sampson asked.

“No, we can’t risk them seeing us. Besides, they don’t say where they will release them, so they could be anywhere in the country.”

“Well perhaps but…” The Captain trailed off, unsure if his advice was warranted.

“Go on,”
Richard prompted.

“Well they were taken from
Hounslow Heath, no? Clearly they are familiar with the area. Is it possible they went back to London, or somewhere else local to the Heath?”

“I doubt it,” Sampson answered. “
I found tracks from another carriage nearby heading west towards the Great West Road.”

“What about the turnpikes?
Wouldn’t someone at the tollhouses have noticed them?” the Captain suggested.

“Not necessarily,” Richard argued. “Besides, they could have laid a false trail, gone through a few tollhouses then turned back.”

Richard and Sampson looked at each other. “Is this Old John’s work?” Sampson asked.

“For all we know, Old John is just a myth.” Richard reasoned.

“From the research I’ve done into the crimes around the coffee house, I’d bet good money that he isn’t.”

“Then he is exceptionally
cunning. And London just gets bigger and bigger, it would be like trying to find a needle in a haystack. Besides, my uncle is there and he has far more resources at his disposal than we do.”

“So we just leave London to him?”

“Unless we have evidence that Annabelle and Mother are there, yes!” Richard snapped.

“Excuse me, Your Grace,
” The Captain interrupted. “In the meantime, I would like to send my men out to question the tenants and townspeople. Perhaps one of them saw him leave.”

“That’s fine, o
f course,” Richard nodded. “According to the groom, he left on a chestnut thoroughbred, 15 hands with a white star and four white socks.”

Sampson’s brow creased as the Captain left.

“What?” Richard asked.

“I was just thinking
, if Frederick is as rotund as people say, a thoroughbred won’t get him very far.”

“Thank you, Sampson
but as much as it annoys me, I hardly think that animal cruelty is at the top of his priorities at the moment.”


What I was wondering is, how fast he could travel? Judging by that portrait in the hall, which is probably very ‘flattering’, he must be 16 or 17 stone. A thoroughbred is built for speed, not strength and with a weight like that on its back, he’s not going anywhere very quickly.”

“But if he left a few hours ago, it could get him to Hounslow Heath by no
on tomorrow.”

“True.”

“So what do we do now?” Richard asked. It galled him to think of Annabelle and his mother out there, somewhere; frightened, cold and needing him, yet he couldn’t help them.

“Let’s go through his room,” Sampson suggested. “Hopefully either we or the soldier
s will find something helpful.”

Chapter
Eighteen

Richard was dozing when Sampson gently nudged him awake.

“How long was I asleep?” Richard asked, rubbing his eyes to shake off the drowsiness he felt. He had been looking through documents on the dining room table last night, and had fallen asleep where he sat.


Just three hours. I thought you needed the rest.” Sampson handed him a cup of coffee.

“Thank you.” Richard sipped the coffee as he looked around the room which, to put it mildly, looked as if a tornado had swept through it. They had spent the night searching everywhere that they could think of in the hopes of finding a clue.

“What time is it?”

“A little after
six, the sun isn’t even up yet,” Sampson answered.

“Did you and Isaac get any sleep?”

“Some,” He hedged. “The garrison are already up, at first light they’re going out to search the local countryside. Isaac is just having a quick wash.”

“We’re wasting
time here.” Richard sighed. “We must have been through every piece of paper in this house and so far, all we have is a receipt for passage to America from Plymouth tomorrow.”

“The Captain has already sent word back to London about that and there is a Royal Navy port at Stonehouse.
They’ll be all over the port looking for Frederick, there’s no way he’ll make it to that boat.”

“But my mother and Annabelle could be dead by then. We’re going to have to go to the ransom meet.”

“But like you said, they could run if they spot us.”

“True but I was thinking more that we
should wait at a tollhouse that leads back here.”

“Here?”

“Passage is booked from Plymouth, so it makes sense that Frederick will be headed back in this direction, if not to this house.”

“Only a fool would come back here.”

“Frederick isn’t a fool but I do think that he believes himself to be better than everyone else; his hubris could work to our advantage.”

“Won’t he stick to back roads?”
Sampson asked

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