Читать книгу Brazen in Blue - Rachael Miles - Страница 16
ОглавлениеChapter Nine
Adam rose early, having barely slept. During his investigations into the wharf fire, he’d lived in the cottage for almost a year. But, somehow, with Em sleeping inside, the night noises all sounded like men searching the forest. It—or Em’s soft breathing—had kept him alert and wary.
At daybreak, he retrieved his horse from the old cottager, then rode to the village, and from there, up the market path to Hartshorne Hall. No one could know that he had spent the night in the forest or that Emmeline was hiding there.
The Hartshorne Hall carriage yard was bustling. Stableboys brought round the carriages of the remaining guests in a steady stream. Children who had only the day before been perfectly dressed and well mannered were exercising their animal spirits by chasing their siblings around the yard. Their parents, knowing they would soon be trapped in carriages, allowed the behavior. Carriage by carriage, the wedding guests left for homes in the country or in town.
Adam slid from his horse and untied his pack. A stableboy led his horse away to be groomed.
Jeffreys gestured to him from the estate office door. “I assume you’ve come for the shipment of grain.” He tilted his head slightly toward a group of guests standing within earshot.
Adam nodded. “Have you made it ready? I’d like to be on the road within the hour.” Adam spoke loudly enough for the guests to overhear.
“Ah, yes, sir.” Jeffreys held open the door, and the two men stepped through. Jeffreys in an instant dropped all pretense. “As you suggested, Maggie and I packed the granary bags with those things we thought her ladyship would need most. We’ve strapped the whole lot to the roof and rear. Once you leave, I’ll deliver it myself to Michael.”
“Can you give me a sense of which bags she might need sooner than later?” Adam looked around the room, still filled with her ladyship’s trunks.
Jeffreys held out a packet of papers folded and sealed. “For her wedding journey, we’d made an inventory keyed to each particular trunk, so I’ve simply adapted it to the bags.”
“Were you aware she thinks to visit her father?” Adam set the pack on the desk.
A pained expression crossed Jeffreys’s face. “Lord Colin gave her the idea. We, perhaps unwisely, kept the worst aspects of her father’s character away from her. It was as her grandfather Morley wanted.”
“Perhaps you should warn me about those aspects.” Adam leaned forward, listening. Of course, not one part of the plan could be easy.
“Lady Emmeline’s father is a petty, shallow man, though not without intelligence. He was proud of his daughters because they were pretty, but jealous of his wife for the same reason. He had a theory that he could predict the cards, the dice, and the horses, using his facility for mathematical problems.”
“He was a gambler.” Adam noted the detail. If necessary, he could use it.