'I did not come here only to call on a neighbor,' I said. 'I was charged with delivering this to you. From London.'

Easton frowned. He took the folded paper-thick, cream-colored, and expensive-walked to his desk, sat down, and opened a drawer. He removed a pair of spectacles, put them on, and opened the paper. He read the one word on it and went utterly still.

I approached the desk. Easton stared down at the page, his face drained of color.

The one word on it was Corn. Obviously a code, but what Denis meant by it I could not say.

The expression on Easton's face was telling me, however. The brigadier stood slowly, his skin wan, the man looking ten years older than when I'd walked in.

'You brought this from Mr. Denis,' he said.

'I did. Denis… asked me to.'

Now what was in his eyes was abject fear. Easton studied me anew, taking in my large build, my big hands, the walking stick I held, inside of which rattled a sword.

'I suppose I ought to have known. What else did he ask you to do? Tell me quickly; I've faced it before.'

I looked at him, puzzled. 'Nothing. To deliver the message was my only charge. What does it mean?'

The brigadier let out a breath and sank to his chair. He put both hands on the desk and looked up at me, shoulders slumped in defeat.

'You've brought me my death sentence, my boy. That's what it means. This is my last day on earth.'

Chapter Two

A death sentence. Denis's first commission to me had been to warn a man that his life was in danger.

I might have suspected Denis of playing a jest on me, but one look at the terror in the brigadier's eyes made me know that he, for one, took it seriously.

'Why should James Denis want to kill you?' I asked.

Easton's face was damp with sweat. 'You do not know?'

'I told you, I was directed to hand you the message, that is all. I know nothing about it.'

Easton got to his feet again, fists on the desk. 'I must ask you to leave, Captain.'

'Tell me what this is about, and I might be able to help you.'

'I will make it an order.'

I set my feet, my hand firm on my walking stick. I was twice the brigadier's size and the creaking butler who'd answered the door would be no match for me.

'Neither of us are in the army any longer,' I said. 'I advise you to get away from here. Denis was polite enough to give you a warning, perhaps even a sporting chance. I would take it.'

'Yes.' The brigadier nodded, swallowing. 'I must… prepare my carriage.'

'And have Denis or one of his pugilists accost you on a lonely road? You have an ocean at your disposal. A boat to France or the Netherlands is what I'd advise.'

'A boat.' Easton's eyes focused a bit, and he looked around his study. 'If I leave, I can never return. My wife…'

'Where is your wife?'

'Visiting my daughter and grandchildren. In Kent.'

'Let her stay there. You go, and I will talk to Denis. Send no word to your wife or daughter, in case he intercepts it. Send a message when you're safe-not to your wife or to me, but to Lucius Grenville in London. I will see that your family receives it.'

'Grenville?' Easton looked puzzled. 'That self-important dandy? Why should I involve him?'

'He is a friend and trustworthy. Now, you need to be off. The tide is out, but if we go to the point you might be able to hire someone willing to take you at once.'

'I have a boat of my own. Down in the Broads.'

'Which Denis will no doubt be watching. Hire someone, chosen at random, and go. Denis is not a man to hesitate. Gather what you need-quickly-and be off.'

In the end, I had to go with him to the boat. The brigadier and I rode out on a pair of his horses, he with a small pack strapped to his saddle.

I took a direct route to the coast, deciding that if Denis's men were watching and following, they would be less likely to attack us in the middle of a village high street than on a deserted back lane.

In any case, I saw nothing of the hired pugilists Denis employed to do everything from serve brandy to dispose of men who disobeyed him. What Easton had done to draw Denis's displeasure I couldn't imagine, and Easton wasn't about to tell me.

At the point, I refused a fisherman far too eager to sail Easton across the North Sea, and chose one I more or less had to threaten to do it. I could too well imagine the eager fisherman taking Easton's money and dropping him overboard halfway to Amsterdam.

The rain continued without abatement, and I was soaked through by the time I helped the fisherman and his son push the boat off the sands and into the waves. Easton had already disappeared into the tiny cabin, clutching his bundle of belongings, several guineas poorer. The fisherman had driven a hard bargain.

I had no doubt the fisherman would make it to Amsterdam or wherever he was bound. No matter how un- seaworthy a man's craft looked, I knew these fishermen could sail a goodly distance and back in safety.

I was left with the horses. I mounted one and led the other back to Easton's, where I relinquished both to his groomsman. I told Easton's butler to shut up the house and send the servants on holiday. The butler eyed me in trepidation, but I did not give him time to argue before I departed again.

I seethed that Denis had sent me on such an errand and seethed at the brigadier for making it necessary. I was also angry at Easton for not having the sense to run before Denis caught on that he'd been crossed.

Therefore, I was in a perfectly foul mood when I reached the public house in Cley. I was not happy with Bartholomew's round-eyed stare at my ruined clothes or his, 'Oh, sir.'

'My baggage has already been sent to Lady Southwick's,' I said waspishly, 'so they will have to take me as I am. Hire a horse for me, will you? I do not relish the idea of tramping over miles of muddy roads.'

'Yes, sir.'

Bartholomew had learned to simply vanish when I spoke that sharply.

He could not find a horse to hire, but he did find a cart. It was slow and smelled of rotting vegetables, and the wheels squeaked, but at least I could sit and stretch out my bad leg.

We bumped our way south and east, while a fresh breeze blew in from the coast, bringing with it more rain. Bartholomew hunkered into his greatcoat, but I didn't mind the rain in my face. Though I'd adjusted to living in London, I was country grown, used to sharp ocean winds, not stagnant fog that smelled of London's many cesspits. London, especially in the summer, could be noisome and appalling. Perhaps I missed my native land more than I knew.

Southwick Hall stretched wide arms across a green lawn, situated so that approaching guests would have a view of magnificent fountains placed in tiers leading to the front door.

'Gaudy trash,' Lady Breckenridge had called the place, and I saw why when the cart drew closer.

The long, four-story house had a pleasing symmetry when viewed from afar, but the architect had decided to lavish this pleasant outline with pilasters, columns, hexagonal windows, plaster curlicues, pediments, and half- clothed marble women who held up giant urns or pulled back stone draperies. Much of the decoration was in imitation of the ancients, but in such a mishmash of cultures and eras that it confused the eye and upset the stomach.

The inside of the house was not much better, I saw when I entered. The lofty entrance hall was painted with multicolored gods, goddesses, nymphs, satyrs, maidens, shepherds, mermen, and other creatures of the sea, all surrounded by an abundance of gold-leafed moldings certain to give the onlooker a headache.

Bartholomew had already given the carter his coin and legged it around to the back of the house. I envied

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