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The Street Philosopher.
by Matthew Plampin.
Crimean Peninsula.
September 1854.
1.
Kitson's well-worn boots crunched through the s.h.i.+ngle as he walked down towards the sh.o.r.e. It was a cold, unwelcoming afternoon. The sky was low and slate-grey, and the waters of the bay churned with a heavy swell. Sea birds croaked dismally as they hung, wings outstretched, on the brisk wind. Most of the men who filled the landing zone were in uniform, but there were enough ragged-looking civilians among them for Kitson to stride past without remark. Reaching a small rise in the stony beach, he paused to scratch his beard and take stock of the scene around him.
On this, the third day of the invasion, it was the turn of the Earl of Cardigan's Light Brigade to disembark. Kitson pulled a pocketbook and pencil from his shabby, faded frock-coat. Squinting, he peered out at the rows of troop transports and frigates anch.o.r.ed in the deeper waters, and attempted to make out their names, jotting down those he could see. There were so many vessels in the bay that the horizon was obscured by a dense forest of masts, funnels and rigging. The echoing blasts of their steam horns drifted over to where he stood scribbling intently into his book.
Flotillas of long rowing boats were ferrying soldiers from the transport s.h.i.+ps. Teams of blue-jacketed sailors, seemingly impervious to the cold, waded out into the surf to drag the boats' prows up onto the beach. Landing planks were thrown down, and hussars poured out, their scabbards held over their heads to avoid any chance of a freak spray or splash rusting the blades within. Against the dull, washed-out tones of the afternoon, their uniforms seemed intensely colourful, a vivid combination of rich blacks, glowing reds and acid yellows. The blue-jackets stared as the cavalrymen calmly returned their sabres to their belts and strolled slowly inland as if the Crimea were already theirs. Kitson scanned the crowds of plush busbies and brocade-encrusted jackets, noting the regiments for his report.
The breeze changed direction, and a faint, inhuman shrieking reached the correspondent's ears. He stopped writing mid sentence. A bone-white horse was dangling over the side of one of the larger iron-screw steamers, suspended from a small crane. Leather straps were fastened around the creature's torso, its legs hanging limply down as it cried out in terror. Beneath it, rocking precariously on the waves, was a crude raft, made from several rowing boats lashed together. The squat black form of an artillery piece already sat awkwardly upon it, tied down with rope; the makes.h.i.+ft platform was unbalanced by its weight, and tipped drunkenly with the rise and fall of the sea.
After a short, tense descent, the horse's hooves touched the raft. Several sailors reached out at once, unfastening the straps and patting the beast's neck and muzzle rea.s.suringly. The horse slipped on the s.h.i.+ning planks, but was quickly on its feet again, nostrils flaring as it snorted with distress. Already, the next was on its way down, a chestnut this time, whinnying loudly as it came; and before long, three warhorses stood upon the raft as it floated unsteadily beneath the overcast sky.
Disaster was so inevitable, and so familiar, that the blue-jackets greeted it with weariness rather than alarm. One of the horses became tangled up in the cords holding down the gun and, immediately panicking, started to kick and flounder, screaming as it did so. The others promptly reared up, shaking off the men who tried to settle them, adding their voices to what was soon a piercing chorus. With a sharp whipping sound, straining ropes started to snap. A second later the gun toppled overboard, pulling the horse caught up in the ropes after it. Both vanished instantly into the murky brown-green water. The raft lurched upwards on the side where the lost gun had stood, causing the two remaining horses to fall, and then slide off messily into the sea.
Back on the beach, Kitson winced and made a quick entry in his pocketbook.
A few other rafts, similarly troubled, bobbed and span among the looming iron-clads. Some of the transport captains, seeing the mayhem below, had decided to dispense with any attempt at conveying the horses to sh.o.r.e and were simply having them pushed from the deck, leaving it to the beasts themselves to find their way to the beach. Kitson watched them tumble down the sides of the tall s.h.i.+ps into the waves, legs kicking wildly, landing in an explosion of foam. He tried to trace the dots of their heads as they swam for the sh.o.r.e. Some of them he lost; others didn't seem to be moving at all, so slow was their progress. His eyes started to ache with the effort.
Blinking, Kitson remembered the telegram, which he'd tucked inside the pocketbook's front cover. He pulled it out. The crumpled piece of yellowed paper bore terse words from O'Farrell back in London, shouted out in mechanical script: Ill.u.s.trator Robert Styles STOP Lands Ill.u.s.trator Robert Styles STOP Lands Eupatoria Eupatoria sixteenth September sixteenth September STOP HMS Arthur STOP STOP HMS Arthur STOP. It had arrived about three weeks earlier, at the telegraph office in Varna. Cracknell, predictably enough, hadn't been impressed.
'Men dropping dead from b.l.o.o.d.y cholera all around us, not a drop of decent brandy for five hundred b.l.o.o.d.y miles, a b.l.o.o.d.y great war about to commence, and what does our editor send out to his brave correspondents? A b.l.o.o.d.y ill.u.s.trator ill.u.s.trator!'
Kitson had muttered his concurrence. Inwardly, however, he'd been intrigued, and pleased that the London Courier' London Courier's reporting team was to be enlarged. After months spent following Richard Cracknell through the brothels and slums of Constantinople, and then trailing behind him across the meadows of Bulgaria, Kitson had come to feel almost as if he were a manservant rather than a junior reporting partner. The thought of a peer, an equal, had a distinct appealand what was more, this Mr Styles, as an ill.u.s.trator, a professional artist, would surely be a man of some culture. He'd know about the successes and failures of the Academy Summer Exhibition, at least. Kitson longed for such conversation in a manner he wouldn't have thought possible half a year earlier.
Before him, the waiting hussars yelled encouragement as horses started to reach the sh.o.r.e. Kitson looked up from the telegram. The blue-jackets in the sea were attempting to get hold of the dazed animals before they could stagger out of the water, but the men were inexperienced, and allowed many to escape. Once on the beach, the horses shook their manes, looked quickly about them, and then bolted. One, a grey, charged by close to where Kitson stood, hooves clattering through the stones, eyes wide with fear, water streaming down its sea-darkened flanks. Several hussars gave chase, raising their arms in the air, whistling shrill signals that, on this occasion, the highly trained horse failed even to notice.
The stiff breeze knocked off one of the cavalrymen's busbies. Cursing, he left the pursuit and strode crossly to where it lay amongst the pebbles.
Seeing his chance, Kitson tucked away the telegram and turned over a fresh page in his pocketbook. 'Excuse me, trooper, but might I enquire as to your orders? D'you know when are we to move upon Sebastopol?'
The hussar was a tall corporal with a thick blond moustache, dressed in the blue overalls of the King's Royal Irish. He s.n.a.t.c.hed up the busby and brushed it roughly with the back of his hand. Then he looked at Kitson, irritation written plainly on his face. 'What?'
'I'm from the London Courier London Courier,' Kitson explained. 'We are reporting on the campaign.'
'And why the devil would you be doin' that?'
Kitson met the man's hostile stare with a brief, amiable grin. He had been asked similar questions many times before, in the same suspicious tones, and had a standard response. 'Why, so that the British public might read of the heroism of their troops, of course, and the progress of their n.o.ble undertaking, thereby easing-'
The hussar was not listening. 'I cannot be seen conversin' with the likes of you,' he interrupted impatiently, tugging the busby's golden strap under his chin. 'Now get out the d.a.m.ned way.'
His shoulder struck hard against Kitson's as he sprinted off after the errant horse, which was now somewhere amongst the piles of supplies that covered the rear of the landing zone. Kitson staggered, losing his footing for a moment, and dropping his pocketbook as he waved an arm to steady himself. As he stooped to pick it up, the telegram fell from beneath its cover. Caught by the wind, the slip of paper curled away across the stones, rising up into the air. For a moment, Kitson considered giving chase; but then just watched it go.
The H.M.S. Arthur H.M.S. Arthur, one of the older frigates in the bay, was anch.o.r.ed a good distance from the beach with her sails rolled. As her pa.s.sengers were non-military, she had been allocated only two longboats, making the disembarkation painfully, tediously slow. In addition, the s.h.i.+p was taking on cholera cases for immediate transport back to Scutari. Every longboat from the Arthur Arthur, after it had been pulled up on to the stones and disgorged its civilian cargo, then had to be loaded with pale, moaning soldiers, each one bound to a stretcher, before it could sail back. Like every other operation that day, lifting the sick up to the s.h.i.+p once they reached her was made many times more difficult by the swell. At least two had been lost to the waves.
The invalids were receiving a great deal of attention from those leaving the Arthur Arthur. The majority were soldiers' wives who had been camped out with the army throughout the miserable summer in Varna, but left behind when the invasion force had set sail for the Crimea. Rows of anxious faces, framed by grimy bonnets, poked over the deck rail, both hopeful and fearful that someone familiar might be among those being carried aboard so precariously. They gasped when the sailors stumbled, and they wailed when men went into the sea; but they'd already seen far too much death that year to be badly shocked.
Kitson approached the cholera cases awaiting evacuation. They were laid out in lines across the s.h.i.+ngle like rotten railway sleepers. He looked at the soldiers' stained uniforms, streaked with vomit and faeces, their waxy, agonised faces, their rigid limbs that poked out awkwardly from under their blankets like snapped branches, and felt nothing but relief that he had so far managed to escape infection. This cold-hearted reaction would have shamed him six months earlier. Like the soldiers' wives, however, like everyone on the campaign, he had grown somewhat hardened against the misery of others.
He picked his way around to where the disembarked wives had gathered in a large crowd, huddled against the wind, shawls drawn in close around them. Many were calling out names at the invalids, in the slight hope of eliciting responses from them. The only able-bodied men present were the servants of the few officers' wives who had been obliged to travel aboard the Arthur Arthur, standing alongside their mistresses, a little apart from the grubby spouses of the common soldiery. There was no one present who might conceivably be Mr Styles. Kitson perched on a coil of thick navy rope and lit a cigar, settling down to wait.
Before long, another longboat sc.r.a.ped up on to the sh.o.r.e. Drab civilians piled over its sides, many not waiting for the landing planks in their eagerness to walk again upon dry land. As they dispersed, drifting off into a maze of crates, sacks and a.s.sorted pieces of military machinery, Kitson noticed a man vault athletically out of the boat. He threw a leather folder and a canvas bag to the ground, and turned quickly to offer his arm to a slender young woman who was stepping on to the top of a landing plank, holding up the hem of her skirts before descending with practised grace. The poise and careful courtesy of this interaction appeared entirely out of place in that dreary, chaotic afternoon. As Kitson watched, the man retrieved his belongings and the pair started in his direction, the lady's gloved hand in his elbow, their heads lowered against the breeze. A group of sailors heaved a large mahogany trunk from the longboat, puffing as they rushed it inland, overtaking the strolling couple. After thirty yards or so, they set it down with a groan; the black chest was so heavy that it sank several inches into the pebbles. Rubbing their sore palms together, the blue-jackets promptly returned to their boats.
There were some distant screams as a warhorse leapt from the foam close to the soldiers' wives, trampling several of the cholera cases as it galloped off into the landing zone. The pair, who had by now reached the chest, both looked around to find the source of this sound, giving Kitson his first proper sight of their faces. He caught his breath: the woman was Madeleine Boyce. Grinding out his cigar on the navy rope, he got to his feet and walked towards them.
Mrs Madeleine Boyce was a lady of considerable reputation. Although only a shade above twenty, her fame as a beauty was already well established. That afternoon, as ever, her clothes were immaculate; a grey silk dress with a dark blue bonnet and cloak, unostentatious but radiating quiet expensiveness. Her cheeks bore the slightest flush from the sharp sea wind and the cold spray it carried. A few strands of dark hair had escaped from under her bonnet, and trailed across her cheek. Seeing Kitson approach, she smiled warmly.
'Mr Kitson! What a pleasant surprise!' Her voice, even when raised against the bustle of the beach, was soft, with the light accent of a Frenchwoman who had been among the English for many years. She gestured at the activity around them. 'How extraordinary all this is!'
Kitson returned her smile, marvelling at her relaxed demeanour. Does she have the faintest notion, he wondered, of the difficulties her presence here will cause? 'It is remarkable, Madame Madame, truly remarkable, what wonders can be achieved by our modern armies. Why, King Agamemnon himself would gape with awe at the sight before us today. That so many thousands of fighting men can be landed, and in so short a time, quite amazes the mind.'
He glanced at her companion. The fellow was young also, a number of years younger than Kitson himself, certainly no more than twenty-two or -three. His wide, guileless face was clean-shaven, his skin tanned and unlined, his posture straightthis was no veteran of the staging post at Varna. He wore a black velvet jacket that was not only unsoiled, but also reasonably new and in good repair; a soft, broad-brimmed felt hat in a deep shade of green sat upon his head, and long, light brown curls were tucked behind his ears. The leather folder, now under his arm, was plainly an alb.u.m of drawings and sketches. There could be no doubt who he was. Kitson had located Mr Styles.
'Allow me to introduce myself, sir,' the young man said, extending his hand, 'Robert Styles. Pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr Kitson. Mr O'Farrell a.s.sured me that you would be here to meet me, even if Mr Cracknell was indisposed.'
Kitson took Styles' hand. The skin was oddly smooth against his own callused palm. Standing there, exchanging pleasantries with a fas.h.i.+onable lady and an artist, he was struck by a strange, momentary sense of familiarity, as if his old life in the salons and picture galleries of the Metropolis had somehow followed him to the sh.o.r.es of the Black Sea. 'Welcome to the Crimea, Mr Styles. May I say how glad I am that you are joining us, sir. Your efforts will doubtless enrich our coverage of the coming conflict enormously.'
Styles smiled nervously. 'I only hope I do not disappoint, Mr Kitson. Much faith has been placed in me, it seems.'
'You are too modest, Mr Styles,' interjected Mrs Boyce gently. She met Kitson's eye. 'He is a man of true talent, Mr Kitson. Whilst we were on board the Arthur Arthur, he took several studies of me, all quite excellent.'
'Really, Madame Madame?' Kitson looked at the ill.u.s.trator. Styles was blus.h.i.+ng fiercely, intensely pleased by Mrs Boyce's praise. It was clear enough what had transpired between them. Madeleine Boyce conquered fellows like this Styles without even properly realising that she was doing it. Kitson almost cursed aloud: here was yet another complication to consider. So much, he thought, for my optimism about the arrival of Mr Styles. 'Is that where you first met one another, may I ask? On the Arthur Arthur?'
Styles nodded. 'The vessel made a stop at Varna, sir, and Mrs Boyce came aboard. We were introduced soon after.'
'Indeed, Mr Styles. What serendipity.' Kitson turned back to the officer's wife. She had removed one of her gloves and was idly studying the exposed hand. 'Well, I must say that it is good to see you again so soon, Madame Madame. We poor Courier Courier scribes were resigned to meeting you next upon English soil.' He cleared his throat pointedly. 'Mr Cracknell will be especially gratified, I'm sure.' scribes were resigned to meeting you next upon English soil.' He cleared his throat pointedly. 'Mr Cracknell will be especially gratified, I'm sure.'
Suddenly self-conscious, Mrs Boyce pulled her glove back on. 'And how fares your good senior? He is well, I hope?'
Styles was listening very closely, his brow furrowed. Our young ill.u.s.trator is no fool, thought Kitson. He saw the change that came over her when I mentioned Cracknell's name. 'He perseveres, Mrs Boyce, in his usual manner. His, ah, inexhaustible pa.s.sion for our task continues to inspire all in his...o...b..t. Myself in particular.'
She smiled at this replynot the confident smile that charmed and dazzled so many, but a genuine, involuntary expression of deep delight. Kitson looked away.
A small mule-cart was weaving slowly through some Commissariat tents pitched at the rear of the landing zone, heading in their direction. It was driven by a stout infantry sergeant, with a private sat at his side. The bra.s.s regimental number on the front of their shako helmets was just visible: these soldiers were from the 99th Foot.
'I see that your escort approaches, Madame Madame,' Kitson observed, unable to keep a note of relief from his voice. 'The Lieutenant-Colonel will be most pleased to learn that you have arrived without mishap.'
The dreamy smile vanished. Mrs Boyce inclined her head stiffly in reluctant acknowledgement of her husband's existence.
'And we must leave you now, I'm afraid,' Kitson added apologetically. 'There are duties we must perform, and certain facts of our present situation with which Mr Styles here must be familiarised. I feel sure, however, that we will encounter one another again in the near future.'
Farewells were exchangedrather hastily, as Kitson wished to avoid being caught conversing with Mrs Boyce by one of her husband's non-commissioned officers. It would be reported, various a.s.sumptions would be made, and trouble would surely follow. He was starting to feel that trouble was something with which the nascent Courier team was already too familiar.
Madeleine watched the newspapermen walk away across the stones, taking care to give the cart a wide berth. A minute later, the modest vehicle pulled up close to where she stood. The squat brown mules were shaking their heads and braying, unsettled by the sounds of the teeming landing zone.
'Mrs Boyce?' said the sergeant. 'We're 'ere t'collect you, ma'am.' She nodded absently. The two soldiers climbed down from the cart and started towards the chest.
Turning away, Madeleine gazed inland, past the beach to the farmlands beyond. 'Je suis ici, Richard,' she whispered, 'je suis ici.'
2.
More cholera cases were being carried down towards the sea from the camps, bound for the Arthur Arthur. Kitson and Styles pressed themselves against a row of ammunition crates to let them pa.s.s. The men already seemed beyond all help, flies cl.u.s.tering around their mouths and eyes in black knots. The ill.u.s.trator felt a clammy nausea close around him. He was not yet used to such sights.
The new colleagues walked on through a copse of short, small-leafed trees and out into a broad expanse of farmland. An undulating quilt of lavender and wheat stretched away to the horizon, dotted with farmhouses, fruit orchards and wide-bladed windmills. A few rays of sunlight broke through the clouds, dappling the landscape beneath. Soon the diseased soldiers were left behind, and Styles began to recover himself. The Crimean countryside was a welcome change indeed from the open sea, and seemed remarkably peaceful. Even the ma.s.s of white military tents pitched off to the east looked like the site of an enormous fair. Red-coated infantry drilled in long lines, the shouts of their sergeants mingling with the jaunty tunes of regimental bands, and the clanking of countless pans and kettles.
Styles asked whether they might stop for a moment, so that he could take in this sight properlyperhaps even make a quick sketch. Kitson continued to stride on ahead at some speed, however, with no sign of having heard him. Hands in his pockets, he was staring down at the ground, entirely absorbed in private thoughts. The ill.u.s.trator didn't repeat his request. He was determined not to prove an annoyance. Kitson's heavy beard and dusty, discoloured clothes seemed to rebuke him for his late arrival on the campaign, for the months of hards.h.i.+p he had missedand to demand that he demonstrate his suitability for the task that lay ahead.
Thomas Kitson, also, was someone with whom he felt he had a deep kins.h.i.+p. During the course of his briefings at the London Courier London Courier, Styles had heard a good deal about the junior correspondent. More than two months after Kitson's departure, the magazine's offices on the Strand still hummed with talk about the unaccountable fellow who had abandoned a promising career in art criticism to follow Lord Raglan's Army. He was exceedingly knowledgeable, these gossips said, and had been expected to rise to the summit of his profession before longyet he had decided to risk everything, his very life included, to chase after battles with the notoriously unpredictable Richard Cracknell. The verdicts of his former colleagues were harshthey theorised that Kitson, in the last years of his youth, had developed a craving for glory, for a reputation that anonymous reviews of picture-shows could never bring him. Either that or he had received some sort of hard, disorientating blow to the head.
But one powerful voice had been raised in Kitson's defence, sending his detractors scuttling for cover: that of old Mr O'Farrell, the Courier' Courier's editor-in-chief. 'The man of whom you speak so dismissively can summon forth images with his pen that none of you wretched inkhorns could ever hope to match,' he had snapped. 'He desired a challenge, a subject of import, of weight weight, well away from the vapid commonplaces of Metropolitan conversationand I was not prepared to deny him it!'
This outburst had heartened Styles enormously. This was his wish as wellto witness something great great, something that would make him more of a man and more of an artist. He, too, had met with his share of opposition, from fearful relatives and uncomprehending friends, all looking at him in utter mystification when he told them of his contract with the Courier Courier. Hearing O'Farrell speak of Kitson in this manner had made him believe that his decision was justified, that he was off to perform a n.o.ble task with like-minded souls. Yet here he was, out on the campaign at last, in Mr Kitson's company no less, and they had barely exchanged a word beyond their initial greeting. This was not how he had envisioned his first hour as a member of the Courier Courier team. team.
The two men started along a narrow mud track, and the silence stretched until Styles could bear it no longer. 'May I ask where we are heading, sir?' he said, loudly and a little plaintively. 'I'd a.s.sumed we'd be going straight to camp in order to commence our duties, but we seem to be heading in the very opposite direction.'
Kitson pointed towards some nearby chimneys, just visible over a bank of brush to their right. 'Mr Styles,' he began, a touch of amus.e.m.e.nt in his voice, 'you will soon discover that our foremost duty as Mr Cracknell's juniors is not to draw or write but to secure the Courier' Courier's provisions. We will find what we need over there.'
'Does the army not provide for us?'
This prompted a sarcastic laugh. 'The army, my friend, can hardly provide for its own. On the first night here the soldiers had no tents tents, let alone sufficient rationsand this was in heavy rain. Sir George Brown, commander of the Light Division, was obliged to take shelter under a cart. We newspapermen are a long way down the list of priorities.' Kitson waved a thin forefinger in the air. 'The first lesson of life on campaign, sir: make your own arrangements!'
The track wound around a low hill to bring them before a large manor house with a walled yard. It was a smart residence indeed, built from even blocks of pale stone. Heavy shutters, painted dark green, covered every window; the house's owners had clearly left to escape the approaching war. The wide, cobbled yard was fringed with outbuildings and stables, somewhat cruder in style but all coated with a creamy whitewash that made them glow warmly against the surrounding hedgerows.
Kitson headed confidently across the yard. A handful of peasants stood behind carts and barrows that had been arranged to form improvised market-stalls, upon which a small selection of produce from the surrounding fields had been laid out for purchase. These peasants resembled the Arabs Styles had seen at Constantinople, but with a touch of the Orient about their eyes. All were male, and most were bearded; they wore mud-stained smocks made from sackcloth and canvas, and brimless fur caps upon their heads. Every one of them was watching the Englishmen closely. A couple made observations in a guttural language Styles was pretty sure wasn't Russian.
'Crim Tartars,' murmured Kitson. 'The original inhabitants of this peninsula, here long before Catharine the Great took it under her dominion. They are serfs, effectively. They've taken to congregating outside this placethe seat of a squire, I believe, or the Crimean equivalentwith whatever wares they can sc.r.a.pe together. The French Commissariat has been coming over here to purchase food for their senior officers, but these fellows will happily sell to us as well.' He took out some coins and jangled them together in his palm. 'They are careful to keep their distance from the camps, though. The private soldier on campaign is not known for his courteous dealings with locals.'
'Did they not think to flee?'
'It would seem not. Some are no doubt hoping that their Russian masters will be defeated, and they will be able to reclaim a portion of this land for themselves. Others, the more loyal ones, are standing guard.'
The ill.u.s.trator looked about him at the ramshackle market and the shuttered manor house. 'Guarding what what, sir? Nothing of any value has been left behind, surely?'
Kitson approached a stall and began inspecting some misshapen loaves. 'You would be surprised, Mr Styles. The rich men of the Crimea left their homes in some haste. Ancient volumes, pictures, objects of virtu virtuall have been ferreted away in the slight hope that the storm of war will leave them unmolested.'
He bought one of the loaves with a large copper coin. As he took the money, the stall-holder nodded to the Courier Courier man as if in recognition. 'I have tried to draw attention to this matter, but I'm afraid that Cracknell isn't particularly interested, so nothing will come of it. Our good senior is many things, Mr Styles, but he cannot be called a man of culture.' man as if in recognition. 'I have tried to draw attention to this matter, but I'm afraid that Cracknell isn't particularly interested, so nothing will come of it. Our good senior is many things, Mr Styles, but he cannot be called a man of culture.'
Mention of Cracknell's name caused Styles to remember Mrs Boyce's singular, unsettling smile back on the beach. It was unlike any look of hers he had seen beforeand he had studied her closely, with a devoted eye. 'What is Mr Cracknell really like, Mr Kitson?' he asked suddenly. 'So much is said of him back in London. The most unsavoury stories ...'
Kitson chuckled. 'Don't believe all that you hear, Mr Styles. Richard Cracknell can be somewhat ... provocative, it is true, but he is an accomplished correspondent, and a man possessed of a truly fearsome determination. We are fortunate indeed to be with him. He wishes to take this unprecedented chance to experience war at first-hand, and wring everything out of it that he can.'
'And how did you both come to be acquainted with Mrs Boyce?' Styles tried to keep his voice level. 'Why were you so surprised to see her here?'
The correspondent headed for another stall. Upon it was a wicker basket stuffed with scrawny, clucking chickens. 'Mrs Boyce has a rare beauty, does she not?' Kitson's expression was unreadable.
He has detected my attachment, Styles thought quickly; and despite his casual tone, he disapproves. This is why he was so quiet after our meeting. He has been biding his time before delivering his admonition, trying to catch me off-guard, to chide me as if I were an infatuated schoolboy. Styles felt a defiant anger well up inside him. He would not disavow his feelings, nor would he apologise for them. He loved the divine Mrs Boyce with all his soul. They were fast friends, confidantes even, and he was certain that in time they would become much moreregardless of what Mr Kitson might think about it.
He could not deny, however, that Kitson's familiar conversation with Mrs Boyce back on the beach had disturbed him a little. Kitson was no rival, of that Styles was certain; his manner, coolly polite to the point of irony, had indicated this clearly enough. Something disquieting had been there, thougha sense of shared history between Mrs Boyce and the Courier Courier correspondents, an earlier chapter Styles was not party to. He had to know more. correspondents, an earlier chapter Styles was not party to. He had to know more.
'She does indeed,' Styles replied forcibly. 'Beyond any other I have seen.'
Kitson made no reaction to this bold declaration. He pointed out a bird to the stall-holder. The Tartar plucked it from the basket, wrung its neck with practised efficiency, and then exchanged it for two more of the correspondent's coins.
'She was to be sent home, you know, by her husband.' Kitson's tone was matter-of-fact. 'Due to the danger of disease. G.o.d alone knows how she managed to change his mind. I only hope that her presence here doesn't prove too problematic.'
Styles frowned. 'What do you mean?'
Kitson tucked the chicken into a capacious pocket. Its scaly feet stuck out, still twitching spasmodically. 'She told you of her husband, I take it? Of how things stand between them?'
'She did.'
Over the course of the voyage from Varna, Mrs Boyce had spoken of her husband at great length. Styles had heard of every trouble visited upon her by Lieutenant-Colonel Nathaniel Boycewho, by his wife's account, was a despicable, prideful boor given to all manner of senseless cruelty. Intoxicated by the intimacy that had developed so rapidly between them, Styles had sworn to himself that he would free her, that he would bring this precious lady the happiness she so richly deserved.
Kitson regarded him doubtfully. 'One must be very careful, my friend, in trying to build an acquaintance with Mrs Boyce, no matter how, ah, innocent innocent it might be. Countless young gentlemen, you understand, have lost themselves in those ebony eyes, nurtured torturous dreams of lying in the tresses of that luxuriant, perfumed hair, and so forth.' He paused, the slightest suggestion of a smile on his lips. 'The Lieutenant-Colonel is famously zealous in dispatching his rivals. They say that he has even shot several of them, in duels or elsewhere, to convince them to desist.' it might be. Countless young gentlemen, you understand, have lost themselves in those ebony eyes, nurtured torturous dreams of lying in the tresses of that luxuriant, perfumed hair, and so forth.' He paused, the slightest suggestion of a smile on his lips. 'The Lieutenant-Colonel is famously zealous in dispatching his rivals. They say that he has even shot several of them, in duels or elsewhere, to convince them to desist.'
Styles studied Kitson's face again. Was this a warning? Or was it mockery? Either way, he decided that he would hear no more. 'Are you trying to frighten me frighten me, Mr Kitson? Because if so, I must state that Mrs Boyce and I-'
'Mr Styles,' Kitson interrupted firmly, 'enough games. There are some things you should know about Madeleine Boyce.'
But before he could say any more, a ripple of apprehension ran through the Tartar stall-holders gathered in the yard. They began to talk urgently, gesturing beyond the wall. Styles heard the sound of several score of boots marching in time, approaching the farm at a steady speed. The Courier Courier men turned together to face the gate, their conversation forgotten. men turned together to face the gate, their conversation forgotten.
'd.a.m.n it,' Kitson muttered. 'Soldiers.'
There was a hard bark of martial instruction, and the first line of an infantry company wheeled into sight. Guided by their corporals, the square of redcoats advanced to the centre of the yard and stamped to attention. The faces beneath their shakos were sallow and lean, and menacing in their impa.s.sivity. A sergeant-major appeared behind them, three silver chevrons s.h.i.+ning on his arm. Walking slowly towards the manor house, a hand on the hilt of his sword, he made a careful, contemptuous survey of the stalls. Seeing Kitson and Styles, he paused, narrowing his eyes. Kitson touched the brim of his hat with a forefinger. The sergeant-major did not reciprocate.
Styles noticed the soldiers' regimental numeral. 'The 99th. Isn't that Boyce's regiment?'
Kitson nodded. 'And best avoided by us Courier Courier men if at all possible. Come, we should buy what else we need and be gone.' men if at all possible. Come, we should buy what else we need and be gone.'