He said suddenly, “How did it feel today, having a command of your own again?”
Galbraith did not appear to hesitate.
“Like me, sir, I think the ship felt uneasy without her captain.”
Their eyes met, and held. The barrier was down.
There was nothing else. For either of them.
The carriage with its perfectly matched greys wheeled sharply into the drive and halted at the foot of the steps. Sillitoe jumped down with barely a glance at his coachman.
“Change the horses, man! Quick as you can!”
He knew he was allowing his agitation to show itself, but he was powerless against it. He left the carriage door open, the watery sunlight playing on its crest. Baron Sillitoe of Chiswick.
A servant was sweeping the steps but removed the broom and averted his eyes as Sillitoe ran past him and threw open the double doors before anyone could be there to greet him.
He was late. Too late. And all because he had been delayed by the Prime Minister: some errand for the Prince Regent. It could have waited. Should have waited.
He saw his minute secretary, Marlow, coming towards him from the library. A man who knew all his master’s moods but had remained loyal to him, perhaps because of rather than in spite of them, Marlow recognised his displeasure now, and that there was no point in attempting to appease him.
“She is not here, m’ lord.”
Sillitoe stared up and around the bare, elegant staircase. There were few paintings, although the portrait of his father, the slaver, was a notable exception, and fewer objets d’art. Spartan, some called it. It suited him.
“Lady Somervell was to wait here for me! I told you exactly what I intended-” He stopped abruptly; he was wasting more time. “Tell me.”
He felt empty, shocked that it had been so simple to deceive him. It had to be the case. No one else would dare, dare even to consider it.
Marlow said, “Lady Somervell was here, m’ lord.” He glanced at the open library door, seeing her in his mind. All in black but so beautiful, so contained. “I tried to make her comfortable, but as time passed she became… troubled.”
Sillitoe waited, controlling his impatience, and surprised by Marlow’s concern. He had never thought of his small, mild-mannered secretary as anything but an efficient and trustworthy extension of his own machinations.
Another door opened soundlessly and Guthrie, his valet, stood watching him, his battered features wary. More like a prize-fighter than a servant, as were most of the men entrusted with Sillitoe’s affairs.
“She wanted a carriage, m’ lord. I told her there would be great crowds. Difficulties. But she insisted, and I knew you would expect me to act in your absence. I hope I did right, m’ lord?”
Sillitoe walked past him and stared at the river, the boats, the moored barges. Passengers and crews alike always pointed to this mansion on the bank of the Thames. Known to so many, truly known by none of them.
“You did right, Marlow.” He heard horses stamping on flagstones, his coachman speaking to each by name.
He considered his anger as he would a physical opponent, along the length of a keen blade or beyond the muzzle of a duelling pistol.
He was the Prince Regent’s Inspector-General, and his friend and confidential adviser. On most matters. On expenditure, the manipulations of both army and naval staffs, even on the subject of women. And when the King finally died, still imprisoned in his all-consuming madness, he could expect an even greater authority. Above all, the Prince Regent was his friend.
He attempted to look at it coldly, logically, as was his way with all obstacles. The Prince, “Prinny,” knew better than most the dangers of envy and spite. He was quick to see it among those closest to him, and would do what he could to preserve what he called “a visible stability.” Perhaps he had already tried to warn him what might become of that stability, if his inspector-general were to lose his wits to a woman who had openly scorned and defied that same society for the man she loved.
And I did not realise. He could even accept that. But to believe that the future King had betrayed him, had given him a mission merely to keep him away and safe from slander and ridicule, was beyond belief. Even as he knew it was true. It was the only explanation.
Marlow coughed quietly. “The horses have been changed, m’ lord. Shall I tell William to stand down now?”
Sillitoe regarded him calmly. So Marlow knew too, or guessed.
He thought of Catherine, in this house or around the river’s sweeping bend in Chelsea. Of the night he had burst in with Guthrie and the others and had saved her. Saved her. It was stark in his mind, like blood under the guillotine during the Terror.
He thought of Bethune’s stupid, conniving wife, and Rhodes, who had expected to be created First Lord of the Admiralty. Of Richard Bolitho’s wife; of so many who would be there today. Not to honour a dead hero, but to see Catherine shamed. Destroyed.
Now he could only wonder why he had hesitated.
He said curtly, “I am ready.” He brushed past his valet without seeing the cloak which was to conceal his identity. “That fellow from the Times, the one who wrote so well of Nelson…” He snapped his fingers. “Laurence, yes?”
Marlow nodded, off guard only for a moment.
“I remember him, m’ lord.”
“Find him. Today. I don’t care how, or what it costs. I believe I am owed a favour or two.”
Marlow walked to the entrance and watched Sillitoe climb into the carriage. He could see the mud spattered on the side, evidence of a hard drive. No wonder the horses had been changed.
The carriage was already wheeling round, heading for the fine gates on which the Prince Regent himself had once commented.
He shook his head, recalling without effort the grand display of Nelson’s procession and funeral. A vast armada of boats which had escorted the coffin by barge, from Greenwich to Whitehall, and from the Admiralty to St Paul’s. A procession so long that it reached its destination before the rear had started to move.
Today there would be no body, no procession, but, like the man, it would be long remembered.
And only this morning he had heard that the end of the war was imminent. No longer merely a hope, a prayer. Could one final battle destroy so monstrous, so immortal an influence? He smiled to himself, sadly. Strange that on a day like this it seemed almost secondary.
Sillitoe pressed himself into a corner of the carriage and listened to the changing sound of the iron-shod wheels as the horses entered yet another narrow street. Grey stone buildings, blank windows, the offices of bankers and lawyers, of wealthy merchants whose trade reached across the world. The hub, as Sir Wilfred Lafargue liked to call it. The coachman, William, knew this part of London, and had managed to avoid the main roads, most of which had been filled with aimless crowds, so different from its usual bustle and purpose. For this was Sunday, and around St Paul ’s it would be even worse. He felt for his watch but decided against it. Half an hour at the most. But for the delay with the Prime Minister, he would have had ample time in hand, no matter what.
He leaned forward and tapped the roof with his sword.
“What is it now? Why are we slowing down, man?”
William hung over the side of his perch.
“Street’s blocked, m’ lord!” He sounded apprehensive; he had already had a taste of Sillitoe’s temper on the drive to Chiswick House.
Sillitoe jerked a strap and lowered the window. So narrow here. Like a cavern. The smell of horses and soot…
He could see a mass of people, and what appeared to be a carriage. There were soldiers, too, and one, a helmeted officer, was already trotting towards them. Young, but lacking neither intelligence nor experience, his eyes moved swiftly to take in Sillitoe’s clothing and the bright sash of the order across his chest, and then the coat of arms on the door.
“The way is blocked, sir!”
William glared down at him.
“My lord!”
The officer exclaimed, “I beg your pardon, my lord, I did not know…”