“He will not get it for a farthing under two thousand pounds, if I have anything to say about it,” she said. “Lord Mends would give a vital organ for it.”
“Which organ, I wonder? If I’m thinking of the correct fellow—elderly, pear-shaped, and pedantic—wears wigs. That him?”
“Yes,” she said.
“Not the freshest organs, I’d say,” he said.
She drew her spectacles down slightly. Over them, she directed a look at him that reminded him of a tutor he’d once had.
“You’re adorable when you look like that,” he said. “Be sure to use it on Ashmont. He’ll eat out of your hand.”
She adjusted the spectacles and looked away. “You are simply bursting with marital advice,” she said.
“I find this situation inspiring.”
She gave a little huff, also charming.
“The important thing is, my father knows nothing about rare books,” she said. “He simply snatches whichever impressive-looking one is handiest. Covered in gilt, for instance. We own quite a few of those. Costly books, but not rare. Too many copies printed, for instance. That sort of thing. When I can get them cheap, I buy them and put them on the shelves at his eye level.”
He pictured her furtively adding garish books to the shelves. The picture was delicious. He laughed.
“Yes, I’m a liar and I cheat my own father,” she said. “Only you would find that admirable.”
“Ashmont will like it, too,” he said. “I realize you agreed to marry him for mercenary reasons. With your family’s strong encouragement.” Add to that Lord Frederick manipulating behind the scenes, and what chance had she had? “All the same, he’s not a bad fellow at heart or difficult to manage, if you know his quirks.”
“What’s happened is nobody’s fault,” she said. “No one forced me to consent. Nobody locked me in a dungeon and fed me stale bread and water. They were merely . . . excessively enthusiastic. In short, I knew what I was doing.” She frowned down at her hands, neatly folded in her lap. “Or so I thought.”
“Thing is, you’re no more capable of marrying a tame fellow than my sister was. Speaking of Alice, I do believe we’ll arrive before sundown, after all. We’ve made surprisingly good time, in spite of—”
He broke off as the offside horse reared, as though it meant to fly up into the nearby trees. The chaise gave an almighty jolt, throwing Lady Olympia forward. Ripley grabbed her before her head hit the front of the vehicle, and pulled her back.
“Plague take the fellow, how could he let—dammit to hell! Now the dog’s off.”
Olympia had been looking at him, and it was only out of the corner of her eye that she’d discerned the off horse shy at something. That set off a small earthquake, propelling her from the seat—and in the same instant, practically, Ripley pulled her back and half onto his lap. Hastily she wriggled off and into her place.
She couldn’t tell what was going on, only that the postilion was struggling to bring the horses to order, and the chaise was slowing.
“What was it?” she said.
“I couldn’t see,” he said. “A bird. A squirrel. A rabbit. And the damn dog’s gone after it. Cato!”
She turned her gaze to the boot. Empty.
Looking to the left, she saw, through an opening in the low hedges, the dog dart across a field. Above the clumps of trees dotting the field here and there, mounds of grey clouds moved restlessly.
Even before the chaise had fully stopped, Ripley wrestled the door open. He stepped down from the vehicle and marched to the edge of the road. “Cato!” he called.
Caught up in the chase, the dog kept running.
Olympia alit from the chaise and trotted to Ripley’s side.
“He doesn’t know his name,” she said.
“I’ll be damned if I’ll call him Sam.” Ripley put his fingers to his mouth and let out a piercing whistle.
The dog went on running, growing smaller and smaller as he raced across the field toward the trees beyond. He soared over a fence.
“Single-minded,” Ripley said. “You wait here.” He started across the field.
She jumped down from the post chaise. “I have no intention of waiting,” she said. “He’s my dog and my responsibility.”
“Ten minutes,” he said, walking briskly. “I’m not chasing him for hours. I give him ten minutes to come to his senses. Then we get back into the carriage and go on our way.” He glanced back. “Postboy’s fooling with the leading rein, but the horses look to be all right and nothing seems to be broken. Ten minutes. No more. Then Cato may go to the devil.”
She nodded. She hated to think of the dog running happily after its prey, then wandering through the night in an unfamiliar neighborhood, where vile men like Bullard could get hold of him. But if Cato had run away, that was that. They needed to reach Camberley Place before nightfall.
Ripley stomped on. “That is Satan’s own dog. Did you see him leap?”
“I nearly expected to see him sprout wings,” she said.
“There he is, and whatever else he is, he must be part greyhound.”
Olympia looked where he pointed. The dog’s chase had brought him somewhat nearer, but he was still in pursuit. Whatever the creature was, it was good at eluding predators. Cato was prodigious fast. In a straight run, he’d have caught his prey, but it ran erratically.
Ripley whistled again. The dog ignored him.
“He’s having too much fun,” she said.
“We’ll have to break his concentration,” Ripley said. He started into the field. “You go that way.” He gestured to his left. “Make a lot of noise and wave your hands. Try to get his attention. I’ll go the other way. With luck, we’ll get him between us, and he’ll want to play with us instead.”
He walked briskly while he talked, and Olympia hurried to keep up.
“Cato!” she called “Time for dinner!”
“He just ate dinner!” Ripley shouted back.
When they’d stopped a few miles back, to change horses and postboys, Ripley had fed the dog, saying he looked famished.
As though dogs didn’t always look famished.
“He’s a dog,” she said. “He won’t remember.”
“Dinner!” Ripley shouted. “Rabbits. Delicious rabbits!”
“Squirrels!” she called. “Foxes!”
“Badgers! Weasels! Beef, thick and bloody, the way you like it!”
They went on calling, and the lurcher went on running, in zigzags and in circles, sometimes coming nearer to them, and other times dashing farther away.
She put her fingers to her mouth and whistled. The dog paused and looked toward her.
She heard Ripley shout, and turned in time to see him fall forward to the ground.
The Swan at Battersea Bridge, with its constant comings and goings, turned out to be the wise choice for waiting for information. Since various delays had cost time, the two dukes estimated they were about two hours behind their prey. This was sufficient, it turned out, for word of the Duke of Ripley’s activities at the White Lion in Putney to travel, via watermen and others, back to them.
As they were about to set out, however, the boy Jonesy disappeared. Trying to track him down delayed their departure.