Joanna Maitland – His Forbidden Liaison (страница 6)
Jack made Ben as comfortable as he could, adding extra parcels of silk to stop him rolling with the movement of the coach. Then he looked up at the lady.
‘Pray sit.’ She indicated the other half of the bench seat. ‘There is no need for you to remain on the floor. Not now.’
‘Thank you, ma’am.’ Jack ran a nervy hand through his hair. Then he dived into his pocket for a handkerchief to mop his brow and clean his hands. ‘I’d wager I look as much of a ruffian as those five.’
‘I think not. You, sir, are clearly a gentleman, and they—’ She shuddered. ‘They were not.’
‘No, I—’ Jack stopped, thunderstruck, for she had taken a pistol from the seat under her skirts and was calmly returning it to the leather holster by the window. ‘A pistol, ma’am?’
‘After last night, I was prepared to use it, I may tell you. It was concealed in my skirts all the time I was dealing with those men. It gave me a degree of courage I might not otherwise have had,’ she added simply.
‘Thank you.’ She would not meet his eyes. ‘Thank you,
‘Nor I yours, ma’am. My name is Louis Jacques, from Paris. My poor wounded companion is a German, Christian Benn. I am escorting him to Paris, on behalf of a mutual friend.’ Jack cursed inwardly. He had been paying too much attention to the fair Amazon’s eyes, and hazarding his mission as a result. He really should have prepared their cover story with much more care. He had assumed, stupidly, that he would never have to go into detail. How wrong could he be! His brothers, Dominic and Leo, would never have been caught out in that way. They always had a plan B, and usually a plan C as well.
Jack resolved to be more prudent in future. And also to tell this lady nothing more. For all he knew, she might be a Bonapartist, in spite of the fact that she had saved them. Indeed, he should have thought of that before. Still, he had told her only his
He plastered what he hoped was a charming smile on his face, and said, in his most confiding voice, ‘We are much in your debt, ma’am, and I should be glad to know your name, if you would allow it.’
She seemed to have been taken in by that smile, for she returned it. And hers was genuine. ‘My name, sir, is Marguerite Grolier, and I am a weaver from Lyons. Which is where this coach is now going.’ She twinkled. ‘If you and your companion are bound for Paris, you will have no objection to our route, I take it?’
The injured German was still lying unconscious on the bales of silk. From time to time, he moaned, but he had not yet opened his eyes. It was probably a mercy, for his pain must be intense.
‘I think we should stop soon, Mr Jacques,’ Marguerite said, breaking the silence that had held for nearly an hour. After those first few exchanges, when her companion’s rich voice had filled her senses, her attempts to converse with him had been politely but firmly rebuffed. He had been unwilling to talk about himself or his companion. It seemed that Mr Jacques’s attention was all still on escaping from the danger behind them, even though they had covered quite a distance. However, they had more pressing matters to deal with. The injured man needed a surgeon. ‘Marseilles is well behind us, sir, and you are both out of danger now. Those men cannot follow us.’ She was trying to sound reassuring.
Mr Jacques frowned in response. But after several moments, he shrugged his shoulders and relaxed just a little. ‘No, you are probably right.’
Thank goodness he was seeing reason, and talking to her at last, though his voice was somehow harsher than before. ‘Forgive me, but why were they chasing you in the first place? I am sure they were not what they said. Not constable’s men.’
He laughed mirthlessly. ‘Of course, you did not see them all on the quayside. I am pretty sure that they were accomplices of the two men who attacked you last night. I am afraid that you and I were more than gullible, ma’am, in taking the landlord’s word that your two attackers would be handed over to the authorities. I saw them both standing, free as air, outside the inn. No doubt they were in league with that scurvy landlord. And the other five were their accomplices, waiting for their share of the spoils.’
Marguerite exclaimed in disgust.
‘Quite so, ma’am. They all came out of the inn just in time to spot Benn and me, making our way to the
‘Oh, heavens! So it was all because of me that poor Herr Benn was shot? How dreadful.’ She clasped her hands together in an attempt to control her racing pulse. Suddenly, another thought struck her. ‘I suppose I should be grateful that the two injured men remained behind, for if they had recognised me, they would surely have suspected that I was hiding you.’
‘Aye. And they might have assaulted you again. You and I had the luck of it, this morning. Unfortunately, poor Benn—’ he glanced across at the motionless body on the floor ‘—has suffered grievously, even though he was snoring innocently throughout last night’s attack.’
‘He has paid for that now, poor man.’ Marguerite dropped quickly to her knees and put a gentle hand to Herr Benn’s brow. It was damp and hot. She looked back at Mr Jacques. ‘We must get a surgeon to him. He has the beginnings of a fever. If the ball is not removed…’ Her voice tailed off. They both knew that such a fever could be fatal.
‘You are right, ma’am. If it will not inconvenience you too much,’ he continued politely, as if he were conversing in some lady’s salon, ‘we could stop a moment when you change horses so that Benn and I could get down. The post-house landlord might be able to direct me to a surgeon.’
‘Let us hope so. It is a blessing that he remains insensible.’
‘Aye.’ He nodded.
‘I…I would be able to keep him so, if you think it wise. I have…I always carry some laudanum in my bag.’
‘Do you indeed, ma’am?You astonish me. First a candlestick, then a pistol, and now a phial of laudanum.You are full of surprises.’
Marguerite felt herself blushing. ‘I…I have an invalid mother. I know the value of laudanum. And also its dangers. But sometimes…well, sometimes, it is the only solution.’
‘Forgive me, ma’am, I did not mean to suggest—I am sure your phial may well be very useful if we have a need to keep him insensible. I certainly would not wish him to wake while the surgeon is ministering to him.’
‘No, of course not. Ah, look.’ She pointed out of the window to a bend in the road ahead of them. ‘There is Rognac. We should arrive in less than another quarter of an hour. I recall the posting house there was more than adequate when we were travelling south to Marseilles. Let us hope the landlord can direct you to a surgeon.’
‘Hmm. The place does look a mite small. But I trust you are right.’ He reached down to help her back on to the seat. ‘I am sure it would be best if you were not kneeling on the floor when we arrive at Rognac, ma’am, though I do thank you for your care of my companion. And I hope we have not delayed your journey too much. You have been a true Samaritan to us.’ He smiled at her then, with real generosity of spirit. It wiped the lines of care from his face and made him look years younger.
His voice might still be hard, but Marguerite felt her heart lift. And without his hand under her arm, she would have staggered as she resumed her seat, for she had suddenly begun to feel strangely dizzy.
Marguerite had refused to leave Rognac. How could she possibly travel on to Lyons before poor Herr Benn had seen a surgeon? He had groaned horribly as he was carried from the coach and into the posting house. Even now, when he was lying on clean sheets in the best bedchamber of the inn, he was still moaning.
Oh, when would Mr Jacques return with the surgeon? Herr Benn’s need was becoming ever more desperate. Marguerite soaked her cloth in the bowl of cool water once more. She was just about to lay it across the injured man’s forehead when he stirred and half-opened his eyes.
He said something incomprehensible. Not French. German, perhaps? She leant across him and bathed his brow again. His gaze was fixed on a point somewhere beyond her shoulder. She knew he was not seeing her.