A Dangerous Pursuit (Regency Spies & Secrets Book 1) Laura Beers (well read books .TXT) đź“–
- Author: Laura Beers
Book online «A Dangerous Pursuit (Regency Spies & Secrets Book 1) Laura Beers (well read books .TXT) 📖». Author Laura Beers
“Let me help you,” Madalene attempted. “I can give you money, lots of it, and you can just return to France.”
“This isn’t about the money,” Miss Gaillard said as she took a step back. “This is about revenge.”
“Miss Gaillard, please—”
“My name is Marie,” she said, speaking over her, “and I am tired of living a lie.”
Marie picked up a bullet from the table and placed it on the ground next to Madalene. “If you try to escape before the sun sets,” she threatened emotionlessly, “I won’t hesitate to kill you the next time we meet.”
Madalene’s eyes grew wide as she bobbed her head. It was evident that Marie meant every word.
“I’m glad that we can see eye to eye, Mademoiselle Dowding,” Marie remarked with a sinister smile. “Although, I am sorry that I have to kill Lord Hawthorne, but I have no doubt that you will have another suitor before long.”
Not bothering to wait for her response, Marie left, closing the door behind her. Madalene didn’t dare move from her spot until she heard the sound of the wagon being pulled away by a team of horses.
When it grew quiet once more, Madalene struggled to stand, then glanced out the curtained window. There was no one in the courtyard, and nothing that could help her. She turned back towards the table and saw a large shard of metal.
Madalene picked it up with her fingers and started rubbing it back and forth over the rope. It finally started fraying after what felt like hours but was probably only moments. She continued using the metal shard until the rope was weak enough that she was able to break through it.
As the rope dropped to the floor, she took a moment to run her hands over her reddened wrists and inspect the cuts on her fingers from the metal shard. She wondered what she could possibly do to warn Lord Hawthorne of Marie’s evil designs.
“Think,” Madalene said, thinking out loud. “What would Lord Hawthorne do?”
Madalene frowned, knowing exactly what he would say to her at this precise moment. He would have chided her for leaving the muff pistol in her reticule, which she had left on Edith’s dressing table. She hadn’t thought that through when she went to search the wagon and outbuilding. Then again, who would have thought that Miss Gaillard was mad and intended to use the wagon to blow up hundreds of innocent people?
Either way, she needed to retrieve the muff pistol and somehow find a way to stop Marie from killing anyone else.
Madalene opened the door and ran across the courtyard. She raced up the steps and nearly collided with Mrs. Kipper at the top of the stairs.
“Where have you been, Miss Dowding?!” Mrs. Kipper exclaimed in astonishment. “Whatever happened to you?”
“Follow me,” Madalene ordered as she ran towards Edith’s room. “I need you to send word to the constable that someone is planning on blowing up a bomb at Fieldstone Square during Lord Desmond’s rally today.”
“I beg your pardon?” Mrs. Kipper asked with labored breath as she stopped at the doorway.
Madalene picked up her reticule and reached inside for the muff pistol. She pulled it out and held it in her hand. The housekeeper’s eyes grew wide.
“Miss Gaillard is not who we thought she was,” Madalene explained. “She is mad and wants to kill hundreds of people.”
Mrs. Kipper frowned. “That is impossible. Miss Gaillard is such a nice woman.”
“We were all deceived by her, but she admitted to me that she killed Edith,” Madalene replied, returning the pistol to her reticule. “We need to stop her before it is too late.”
Mrs. Kipper’s face paled. “Why would she kill Edith?”
“That isn’t important right now,” Madalene asserted as she slipped the reticule around her right wrist, wincing at the pain from her earlier bonds. “I need you to focus, Mrs. Kipper. Can you go inform the constable of what Miss Gaillard intends to do?”
With a nod, Mrs. Kipper replied, “I will go myself.”
“Good,” Madalene replied as she hurried out of the room.
Mrs. Kipper called after her. “Where are you going?”
“I am going to find a way to stop Marie from killing Lord Hawthorne!” Madalene shouted over her shoulder.
“Who is Marie?” Mrs. Kipper yelled back.
Madalene didn’t have time to stop and explain. Instead, she ran out the main door and approached a hackney that was parked down the street from the orphanage.
“I need a ride!” she shouted up at the driver.
Keeping his gaze straight ahead, he replied dismissively, “I don’t give rides to ladies.”
“But you must!”
He met her gaze and frowned. “Are you aware that you have dried blood in your hair and on your face?”
Ignoring his question, she said, “I will pay you a pound if you take me to the Blue Boar right now.”
He eyed her curiously. “You don’t want to go to the Blue Boar, Miss. It is deep within the rookeries, and it ain’t safe for a young miss like you.”
“You won’t take me?”
He shook his head. “Not even if you paid me two pounds.”
“Five pounds.”
“Pardon?” the driver asked in disbelief.
Stepping closer to the hackney, she said, “I will pay you five pounds if you take me to the Blue Boar.”
“Do you have that kind of money on you?”
Madalene shook her head. “I do not,” she admitted. “I only have two pounds in my reticule.” She pointed at the building behind her. “But this is my orphanage, and I live on Grosvenor Street. If you come by tomorrow, I will gladly give you the rest of the money.”
She could see the uncertainty crossing the man’s face, and she knew she needed to continue to plead her case. “I assure you that it is a matter of life and death,” she asserted.
The man gestured towards the door. “Get in before I change my mind,” he barked.
Madalene rushed to open the door to the coach and
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