“Thank you, Alexandra,” Mary told her with a grateful smile. “I truly appreciate that.”
“In the meantime, I think it might be a good idea for you to read your father’s journals. He must have left a clue for you somewhere in there, or if not, then you must at least try to find whatever it is this person was looking for. If he was so intent on getting his hands on it, then it must be important. But be careful, Mary, because whatever it is that he’s up to, I’m afraid that he might just be getting started. Once he discovers that you have no intention of heeding his warnings, he may become far more vigilant.”
Mary swallowed hard and nodded. “I understand.”
“Good,” Alexandra told her with a bright smile. “Then after breakfast, I shall teach you how to fire a pistol, and you must promise me that you will go nowhere without it.”
Mary gaped at Alexandra as if she were completely mad. “Can’t I just. . .” She took a sharp breath. “I’m sure that a dagger will serve just fine.”
Alexandra pinned her with a hard gaze. “You need to get very close to your attacker for that to work. Most people would lose their nerve before they managed to deliver a fatal wound. A pistol is much more reliable. In any event, it is my condition for helping you.” She offered her a sly smile. “Are we agreed?”
Mary responded with a slow nod. “Yes,” she muttered. “We are agreed.”
CHAPTER TEN
Later that day, after taking a much needed nap, Mary went in search of Alexandra. She found her in the parlor with her son, Richard, on her lap, tickling the chortling infant with a feather. It was such a delightful scene that Mary couldn’t help but laugh. “You certainly appear to be enjoying yourselves,” she said.
Looking up, Alexandra immediately favored her with a warm smile. “We certainly are; this is one of his favorite games,” she said as she handed Richard over to his nurse. “Did you sleep well?”
“Oh yes, I feel quite rested now, thank you.”
“Good. Then let’s have some lunch before we head out,” Alexandra said.
“Head out? And where, may I ask, are we going?”
“Just a little way out of town,” Alexandra replied, taking Mary’s arm and steering her toward the dining room. “I know of a very secluded spot where you can have your first lesson.”
“Good heavens!” Mary exclaimed, recalling their earlier conversation. “I was hoping you might have forgotten.”
“Well, as you can see, I have not,” Alexandra said, taking her seat at the long mahogany dining table and suggesting that Mary do the same. The food was brought in a moment later: grilled trout bathed in a creamy lemon and dill sauce, small potatoes, and a tomato and onion salad.
“I’m not at all sure that I will be any good at it,” Mary complained as one of the servants placed a piece of trout on her plate. She took a sip of her wine. “Not to say that you aren’t an excellent teacher, for indeed I am quite certain that you are, but I’ve never even held a pistol in my hands before, and. . .well, to be perfectly honest, it rather frightens me.”
Alexandra chuckled. “It isn’t nearly as difficult as you might think. It requires practice to get your aim right, but we’re not attempting to make you the finest shot there ever was. The sole purpose of this is for you to have some means of protection. Oftentimes there isn’t even a need to fire; the mere fact that you are holding a pistol in your hands can be enough to deter an attacker.”
“But—”
“No more buts, Mary,” Alexandra told her sternly. “This was my condition for letting you stay here, remember?”
Mary nodded reluctantly as she took another sip of wine. They’d made an agreement, and there was no way for her to back out of it now unless she wanted Alexandra to think her a coward—not a favorable option, by any means. No, she would simply have to calm her nerves and follow Alexandra’s lead.
“This is it,” Alexandra said a couple of hours later. They’d ridden through the woods on the outskirts of the city, veering off the road until they’d eventually arrived at a small clearing.
Dismounting, they tied their horses to a birch that stood to one side. “Here, take this,” Alexandra said, holding a pistol out toward Mary. “Get a feel for it.”
Mary hesitantly took the pistol from her. It was heavier than she’d expected. Turning it over in her hands, she studied it with growing curiosity, unable to wonder how many lead shots she’d pulled out of bleeding soldiers at Waterloo. This was the first time she was taking a close look at the sort of weapon that had delivered all those patients to her. The fact that she would soon attempt firing it made her feel slightly odd, as if she were about to commit a sin of some sort.
“How do you like it?”
Mary looked up to find Alexandra watching her with a crooked smile. “I’m not sure,” she admitted. “Something about it feels wrong.”
Alexandra grinned. “You’ll get used to it. Here, I’ll show you how to load it.” She opened a leather pouch and measured a small quantity of black powder. “Pour this down the barrel—yes, just like that. Now, take the shot and wrap it in this bit of cloth. There’s a ramrod right there, just beneath the barrel; take it, and ram the shot home.”
Mary followed Alexandra’s instructions to the letter and was swiftly met with a nod of approval, even though she’d never felt more awkward in her life. Yet she had to admit that in spite of her reluctance to learn about firearms, she was really quite grateful for the lesson.
“Now then,” Alexandra said, stepping up beside her, “stand like this.”
“Like this?” Mary asked, copying Alexandra’s wide stance.
“Yes, just like that. Good. Now, put your right hand here and hold it firmly in place. Your index finger goes on the trigger. Then take your left hand and use it to support your right—no, not like that.” She moved Mary’s hand to the correct position. “Like this.”
Mary glanced at Alexandra with renewed enthusiasm. “Should I try to fire?” she asked.
“You can,” Alexandra told her, stepping away to a safe distance. “Aim for that tree over there and—”
A loud crack split the air as Mary pulled the trigger. But her stance had slackened in the meantime, making her completely unprepared for the sudden force that hit her. In fact, it knocked her completely off her feet and onto the ground while the pistol itself went flying.
Silence followed, and then a loud burst of laughter. “Are you all right?” Alexandra said, standing over her breathless friend, who was now lying smack on her back in the lush grass.
“I think so,” Mary murmured, still mildly startled by the situation.
“Heavens, that looked funny,” Alexandra said, covering her mouth with both hands in an obvious attempt to contain her giggles. “You’re not hurt, I hope? Here, let me give you a hand up.”
Mary frowned as she took the proffered hand. “No, I’m fine. I had no idea that it would be so difficult,” she muttered, smoothing out the wrinkles in her gown. “Did I at least hit my mark?”
“You certainly did,” Alexandra cheered, pointing to the tree that was now split open on the side. “So your aim is pretty decent. Now we just need to work a little on your footing.”
They continued practicing for the next couple of hours, before deciding that they’d had enough for the day and that it was time to head back home.
Upon their arrival, they handed over their horses to the grooms at the mews. As they made their way toward the front of the house, Mary suddenly caught Alexandra by the arm. “Is that not Lady Cassandra, your sister-in-law?” she asked.
“It is,” Alexandra said. She glanced at Mary. “I didn’t realize that the two of you were acquainted with one another.”
“I met her the day before yesterday when your brother took me for a ride in the park. She was chasing after her dog.”
Alexandra chuckled. “That sounds just like Cass,” she said.
“But who is that lady she is with? She looks so extravagant and stylish.”
“That, Mary, is my mother-in-law, the Duchess of Willowbrook. Now, come along and I shall introduce you to her straight away. Lady Willowbrook!” she then called out, drawing the attention of the duchess, a woman who still looked remarkably young for her age.
Lady Willowbrook and Lady Cassandra quickly waved in acknowledgment as they began heading toward them. “We were just considering stopping by your house for a visit,” Lady Willowbrook said as they drew nearer.
“Well, you are most welcome,” Alexandra replied. “In fact, I would like to introduce you to a dear friend of mine, the Marchioness of Steepleton.”
“Hello again,” Lady Cassandra told Mary with a quick smile.
“No Trevor today?” Mary asked cheerfully.
“Not today.” Lady Cassandra leaned closer and lowered her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “If he were to take off like that while I’m out with Mama, I’d never hear the end of it.”
“I see that the two of you have already met,” Lady Willowbrook said brightly, casting a chastising glance in her daughter’s direction. “Well, it is a pleasure to make your acquaintance, my dear.”
“The pleasure is all mine, Your Grace,” Mary told her.
Lady Willowbrook immediately responded with a girlish giggle as she waved her hand dismissively. “Oh no, you must not call me that. Heavens, it makes me feel rather antiquated.” She took Mary firmly by the arm and began steering her toward Alexandra’s front door. “We are all friends here, or at least we shall be once we have finished our tea, so I really must insist that you call me Isabella.”
“Very well then,” Mary said and grinned, delighting in the other woman’s high spirits. “But only if you will return the favor by calling me Mary.”
As soon as they were all comfortably seated in the parlor, Isabella turned to Mary and Alexandra. “We ordered some new gowns for Cassandra this morning. I daresay she’ll be the belle of the ball for the remainder of the season; no young gentleman with a pair of eyes in his head will be able to resist her.”
“Thank you, Mama,” Cassandra said with a note of embarrassment. “But the truth of the matter is, I don’t have very many gowns left for the remainder of the season, after spilling punch down the front of my green one at the last ball I went to. So Mama decided to take me shopping for some new ones in hopes of replenishing my wardrobe.”
“And were you successful?” Mary asked as she took a sip of her tea.
“We picked out some lovely fabrics for five new gowns, one of which should be ready just in time for the ball on Friday—the one at Glendale House,” Isabella said. “It will be a light pink one, which I daresay will go extremely well with Cassandra’s complexion.”
“That is, of course, if I even make it to the ball without ruining it somehow,” Cassandra moaned as she picked at a tear in her neckline. “I don’t understand why this is always happening to me. No man in his right mind will marry someone as disorderly as I.”