Mademoiselle At Arms by Elizabeth Bailey (ebook reader online .TXT) đ
- Author: Elizabeth Bailey
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To her intense disappointment, she discovered that all papers had been removed from desks and cupboards. Not the most stringent search, conducted all morning, turned up one solitary sheet. There was nothing to replace the all important letter from her father. But she found an unknown ladyâs discarded garments, and selected some of those that she tried on, sending Kimble off down the secret passage to load them onto the horse she had borrowedâunbeknownst to its ownerâfrom Father Saint-Simon. Kimble had bedded the animal down at the local inn. And then she had been disturbed by the eruption into the room of Major Gerald Alderley and his companion, Captain Hilary Roding.
On this second excursion, forewarned, she would use no light and keep as quiet as a mouse, she vowed, and thus refrain from attracting the attention of the militia at the gates. Arrived at the secret door, she grasped the lever that opened it and placed the lantern on the floor.
âThis we will leave. I do not wish that the soldiers there will see it shine.â
A panel slid open and she stepped into the relative light of the little dressing-room, Kimble close behind her. Coming from the gloom of the passage, even the corridors seemed sufficiently illuminated for them to see their way. And the bedchamber, for which Melusine instantly headed, was almost bright.
âThat is good. There is light enough from the sun,â she said, relieved.
âWhat are you after this time, miss?â asked Jack.
âA thing Marthe told me of,â Melusine answered, her attention on the garments that were still lying higgledy-piggledy, just as she had left them. She saw her discarded nunâs habit still on the floor and scooped it up. Martha had not been pleased to find her spare one borrowed for that expedition when the major had found her outside the ballroom. Besides, it did not fit her well, which was why the loose wimple had slipped. She would take this one back with her. One never knew when it would be necessary to resume her disguise.
âJacques,â she said, turning to the lad, and holding the habit out, âtake this for me and leave it in the passage where we have left the lantern. I do not know if I will have to escape quickly once more.â
âAye, miss,â Kimble agreed, taking the garments, âbut where will I find you?â
âI do not know. I must go perhaps in all the rooms. Not up here, I think. I shall start at the bottom. Oh, wait!â She seized Jackâs arm as he was about to go out of the room. âGo you through the passage and find the other door. Martha said to me that it must come to the bibliothĂ©que.â
âThe what, miss?â asked Kimble, frowning.
âI do not know the word in English. The place for reading.â
âYou mean the bookroom, miss. Will I meet you there?â
âYes, yes, I shall await you. Now go.â She thrust him out of the room and made for the stairs.
The library was on the ground floor, Melusine recalled from the previous visit, for she had searched through a desk in a room filled with bookshelves of leather-bound volumes. But she was not sure just how to reach it. It had been brighter than the rest, for dawn light had come in through high unshuttered casements above the bookshelves.
Melusine glanced at the walls as she sped down the four flights of stairs, and noted with relief that some paintings remained. Here and there, a rectangular patch, darker than the rest, showed that some had been removed. Well, one must hope, that was all.
In the flagged entrance hallway at the bottom, where extra light came in from a window above the double doors, it was easy enough to distinguish a family group, and a landscape which clearly included Remenham House in the distance. But, moving through into the first of the large main rooms that led one into another around the house, with here and there an antechamber between, it was obvious that the task was not going to be easy.
If only one might open the shutters and let in the light. This gloom was impossible.
Moving to the shuttered window, Melusine dragged the heavy drapes back. Yes, this was a little better. Parbleu, but must she do this all through the house? Evidently she must, for not only could she not properly see the paintings and portraits that hung on the walls, but she was in imminent danger of bumping into the sheet-shrouded furniture.
She had just passed into a little antechamber beyond when she suddenly heard a faint knocking.
Her heart thudded. Dieu du ciel, what was it? She turned slowly, listening for the direction of the sound. It came again. It seemed to emanate from the back of the house. She looked about and discovered a door partially hidden by shadow.
Melusine crossed to open it, and immediately the knocking intensified in volume. The room behind was another small antechamber, presumably linking the back rooms. Swiftly following the sound of knocking, she crossed right and passed through a door near the windowsâand found herself in the bookroom. Suddenly remembering Kimble, her heart thudded with excitement. Had he found the secret door?
Running to the centre, she tried to judge where the knocking came from. There was a huge desk of heavily carved ebony at one end, and at the centre, a couple of straight-backed chairs stood before a great fireplace at the outer wall, flanked by two bookshelves with casement windows above. Over the mantel, set into an ornately carved panel with fluted columns at each end, was a portrait of a man on horseback. Every other wall comprised bookcases, except where the doors appeared. The entire place was a masterpiece of wooden carving, a design of interleaving carried throughout.
Melusine turned and turned, unable to imagine just where the secret door could be. Upstairs, in the little dressing-room, the panel was opened by means of tugging a small candlesconce in the wall. Here, it might be anything at all. And nothing to tell her where to begin.
âJacques?â she called out, forgetting the need for silence.
âHere, miss,â came faintly from somewhere close at hand.
âCan you not open it?â she cried.
âI dropped the lantern,â Jackâs muffled voice told her. âCanât see a thing.â
âOh, peste,â exclaimed Melusine, and louder, âWhere are you? Call, that I may find you.â
She moved quickly to the nearest bookcase, and listened intently to the sound of Jackâs voice. She could not judge its direction, and began to move swiftly along the bookshelves, her hand running behind her across the spines of the calf-bound volumes.
She had traversed perhaps three bookshelves, passed across the door that must lead to the hall, turned the corner, and was just about to reach the fireplace when she abruptly became aware that something under her fingers had felt wrong. Moving back to the corner again, she ran a hand back over the leather-bound booksâwhich, she realised, were not books at all.
Her fingers passed over a cunningly wrought surface of wood, with just the correct amount of protrusion, the precise colours of dyed leather, and cleverly gilded surfaces and neatly painted lettering. But the whole set of some three or four shelves were of wood.
Melusine tapped on it. At once there came an answering knock. She had found him! Excitement welled.
âWait, Jacques! I will find the way to open this.â
It took several frustrating moments, working at the protrusions of the carving down the side of the bookshelves, tugging at leaves, pushing at flowers. But at length, there was a click, and with a swish, the panel of painted books swung outward from the wall.
An astonished Jack Kimble was revealed in the aperture. Melusine started back, blinking.
âParbleu, but I find that this is excessively clever, this passage.â
Jack stepped out, and pushed the door to. It clicked and the bookshelf was once more intact. They stood back together and stared at it.
âYou could not tell it,â said Melusine, âunless you were as close as we.â
A sudden clatter of booted feet sounded in the hall beyond. Jack looked towards the door. At the back of her mind, Melusine noted an odd look in the boyâs face, but there was no time to explore it. Swiftly she ran her hands over the carvings, trying to find the lever to the secret panel again. She was too late. The door to the library burst open.
âHa!â uttered Captain Roding triumphantly. âGot you!â
âYou!â Stunned, Melusine moved quickly away from the tell-tale bookshelf. âBut how do you come here?â
âDown on a routine patrol, unluckily for you,â he answered grimly. âI was just looking the place over when I heard you calling out.â
âOh, peste,â exclaimed Melusine crossly. âIt is all the fault of that lantern.â
âIâm that sorry, miss,â Kimble said glumly.
âIt does not matter, Jacques.â She glared at Hilary. âIf it is that your men there are going to arrest us, then why do they not do so?â
âLeft to myself, Iâd let them,â he replied grimly. But he looked back into the hall and spoke to the sergeant who could just be seen behind him. âAll right, Trodger. Iâll take over here. Get the men back to their posts.â
âSir!â came from Trodger, and the booted feet clattered off and out of the front door.
âNow then,â said the captain sternly, âIâm not going to ask you what youâre doing here. Iâd only get a pack of lies in reply.â
âThen it is good that you do not ask me,â Melusine snapped, and flouncing away from him, went to sit in the large chair behind the desk at the far end of the room. She watched, puzzled, as her cavalier frowned at the newcomer, glancing from him to Melusine and back again.
The captain saw it too and nodded at the boy. âYou the fellow Gerald spoke to?â
Kimble flushed beetroot, and Melusine had a flash of insight.
âJacques!â
She got no further, for Kimble came towards her, speaking fast and low. âIt were that there major, miss. I didnât betray you, I swear I didnât. Seemed like he knew so muchâmore than me, miss. Andâand he wanted to help you.â
âSo this is the way you serve me,â exclaimed Melusine, her quick temper flaring as she jumped up, slammed her hands on the desk and leaned towards him over it. âWhat is it that you told him?â
âNothing, miss, I swear. At leastââ
âDonât be more of a lunatic than you can help,â broke in the captain, addressing himself to Melusine. âIf the boy had sense enough to send word to Gerald as he was told to do, then God be praised!â
âParbleu,â broke from Melusine, as she turned on him instead. âBy traitors I am surrounded!â
âStop talking utter twaddle,â ordered Roding, marching up to the desk. âYou ought to be glad someone cares enough about your wretched little neck to try and save it. And if you dare to produce any kind of weapon at all,â he added, taking a plain brass-barrelled little pistol from his own pocket and levelling it, âI will have no compunction in blowing off your head, you madcap female. Youâre dealing with me now, not Gerald.â
Melusine looked resentfully at the pistol. âI see well that I am dealing with you. Do not imagine that I cannot do so, as well as I can this GĂ©rard.â
âDo you tell me you think you can outwit Gerald? I wish I may see it.â
Melusine did not reply. Her anger died and she eyed him. She could manage the major. Let her see if she could manage this one, perhaps turn all to suit herself?
âWhat do you think to do with
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