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Rakes and Radishes.
by By Susanna Ives
Author's Note
The existence of Neptune was mathematically determined before the actual planet was observed through a telescope. For many years, astronomers had noted inconsistencies in the orbit of Ura.n.u.s and some theorized that the variation was caused by the gravitational pull of an unseen planet. In 1845, John C. Adams, a young Englishman, accurately calculated the location of Neptune and sent his work to Sir George B. Airy, the Astronomer Royal of England. Unfortunately, Airy refused to confirm the location with a physical observation. A year later, French mathematician Urbain J. J. Leverrier, working independently of Adams, predicted Neptune's location. In September 23, 1846, using Leverrier's data, German astronomers at the Urania Observatory in Berlin confirmed Leverrier's computation.
Source: Smith, Bradford A. "Neptune." World Book Online Reference Center. 2004. World Book, Inc. http://www.worldbookonline.com/wb/Article?id=ar386900
Acknowledgments.
I would like to thank my husband who indulges my pa.s.sion for writing, chocolate and travel, and who called me from the airport while waiting on his plane to say the heroine should calculate the Orbital Eccentricity. To my lovely children whose laughter and intellectual curiosity spill onto my pages. To a wonderful writer and friend Cathy Leming for her unwavering support and spot-on critique. My grat.i.tude goes out to the mystery writing genius and Mojito Literary Society co-member Tina Whittle for believing in Rakes and Radishes Rakes and Radishes since its conception. I am indebted to Nancy Mayer who answered my dumb Regency 101 questions, as well as Abigail Carlton for all those hours she spent on the phone listening to my brainstorms. To the brilliant writer and teacher David Fulmer for making me attend cla.s.s. And to Alissa Davis for her patient guidance and insight into improving the story. since its conception. I am indebted to Nancy Mayer who answered my dumb Regency 101 questions, as well as Abigail Carlton for all those hours she spent on the phone listening to my brainstorms. To the brilliant writer and teacher David Fulmer for making me attend cla.s.s. And to Alissa Davis for her patient guidance and insight into improving the story.
Chapter One.
Norfolk, England 1819.
Lord Blackraven could see her from the rocky cliff. She walked, trancelike, into the murky ocean of her doom. The moonlight illuminated her pale skin as her raven hair floated on the water. He jammed his heels into his stallion's ribs, sending the beast sailing over the ravine. The branches slapped his face, keeping him from his beloved. He screamed her name wildly, "Arabellina! Arabellina!"She heard his call but mistook it for the fevered voices in her confused mind. Lord Blackraven was never coming back. He was dead. Stabbed. Every dream of happiness lay buried with him. She took a long breath, her last, and sank into the swirling waves, the stone tied to her feet taking- A quick motion in the periphery of Henrietta's watering eye yanked her attention from her book. Had the mail coach come? She anxiously peered out the window to the cobblestone road just beyond the ivy-covered garden gate.
No mail coach. Just her elderly neighbor standing in her worn, sagging morning dress, shooing chickens off the road with a straw broom. Henrietta's heart sank. The mantel clock chimed the hour, sounding like two spoons being clanked together ten times. The mail was twenty minutes late! This proved what she always suspected, that the Royal Mail Service held a personal grudge against her.
Nestling back in her chair, she drew the thick woolen blanket about her to s.h.i.+eld herself from the ever-present draft in the old parlor, and returned to the last page of The Mysterious Lord Blackraven. The Mysterious Lord Blackraven.
She took a long breath, her last, and sank into the waves, the stone tied to her feet taking her deep into the sea's turbulent belly."Arabellina! No!" Lord Blackraven scrambled down the rocks as the last bit of Arabellina's raven hair disappeared under the foaming waves. He dove in, grabbing her sinking body and pulling her up.In her confused state, Arabellina fought his arms. He lifted her shaking body to the surface and wiped the curls from her face, his eyes frantically searching hers."Am I dead? Is this heaven?" she asked."No, my love. It is I, Lord Blackraven. I've come back for you, my darling. I love you. I've always loved you."
Henrietta closed the book, wiped her weeping eyes with the sleeve of her muslin gown, and peeked out the window again. A chicken and a few fat, dirty sheep. But no mail coach.
Oh, hang it!
She exhaled, blowing stray black curls off her forehead. In just three days she had gobbled up the novel while waiting on a letter from her cousin Mr. Edward Watson. Now she would have to wait another year for her next book-and pray to G.o.d that Edward's letter would arrive first!
She tossed the finished volume onto the side table with its sisters. She had promised to smuggle the books to the other ladies in the village. They, too, were wild to read Mrs. Fairfax's latest gothic creation, even if they had to hide the sensational volumes under their beds or in their sewing boxes. Henrietta had no need for such measures. Her father gave little notice to his daughter's reading habits, too lost in his theoretical world of numbers and s.p.a.ce.
She watched the diamond-shaped patches of sunlight s.h.i.+ning through the crosshatched panes of the ancient parlor window, exposing every flaw in the newly painted walls. She sighed, frustrated. The clean lines and airy colors of the Greek cla.s.sical style didn't translate onto the low timbered ceilings and pitlike fireplaces of Rose House. Henrietta could feel the medieval ghosts of old sitting about some great table, pounding their ale mugs in disgust at the new cool mint walls with delicate faux gilt. This room-this house-was hopeless. No paint, cla.s.sical vases or Grecian sofa could hide its Tudor quaintness. Her best efforts only looked like an annoyed pig dressed in a silk gown.
She returned her gaze to the window. Outside, spring was barreling in. Little green buds bulged from the rose bushes, all the animals sniffed each other, and the village men walked about encased in dirt, holding hoes, with copies of Lord Kesseley's latest planting guide in their worn pockets. Everywhere, undeniable signs of spring, but Henrietta's heart was still stuck in winter, waiting. Why hadn't Edward written?
Henrietta rubbed her late mother's pendant as if the tiny ruby necklace could ward off her misgivings. If a letter didn't arrive soon, she might resort to Arabellina's tragic example. She closed her eyes, imagining herself weighted with sorrow, stones sewed to her scarlet gown, wading into the rocky oceans of Italy.
Her raven hair flowed loose in beautiful silken curls, not frizzing as it usually did in the salty winds. Her ivory skin glowed, unmarred by the blemish on her chin that had popped up overnight.
"Henrietta, I mean, Arabellina. Don't do it. I love you!"
Arabellina turned. Towering high above her on the rocky cliff's edge stood Lord Blackraven, who looked suddenly like Mr. Edward Watson. A black cape billowed in the wind behind him. His beautiful mahogany locks blew about his face, and the moonlight illuminated those intense, heavily lashed green eyes that made her heart flip-flop.
"How can you say you love me when you never wrote? Every day I waited for a letter that you were safe in London and not robbed by some highwaymen, left to die alone on a deserted road. One small poem of how you dreamed and yearned for me every moment we were apart. But nothing! I'm so devastated. How could you leave me in this barren place?" Arabellina looked at the waiting waves, swirling and foaming about her.
"Stop! Don't take your life! I wrote you every day. Poems and poems."
"I never received them."
Lord Blackraven paused, biting his index finger as Edward was p.r.o.ne to do. Then he said, "It was the Royal Mail Service! That villainous Royal Mail! Why I could crush him-it- with a-a large rock."
"A large rock?"
"The Royal Mail is quite huge. It carries 500,000 letters a day. They employ 150,000 horses each year."
"Never mind the mail service! You said to wait, and for weeks I've waited and waited!"
"The mail's come," interrupted Mrs. Potts.
The rotund housekeeper stood at the parlor entry, drying a large wooden spoon with a rag, an infuriatingly knowing look in her eyes. Beyond the window, the mail coach rattled and crunched up the cobblestones past Henrietta's house. Pa.s.sengers clung to the top and edges. How could she have missed it?
Henrietta feigned a bored yawn. "Already? My, how late the morning has grown."
"Hrmph," the housekeeper said and left. Cruel woman.
Henrietta willed herself still until Mrs. Potts's footsteps echoed in the back of the house. Then she flew up to her chamber, threw on her pelisse and bonnet and rushed back down, slowing to a casual saunter as the ma.s.sive front door thudded closed behind her. All of the neighbors were leaving their homes, as well, and heading up the street. The arrival of the post was the most exciting part of everyone's day.
The mail carriage paused before a dirty, narrow pub that seemed to sag under the weight of four floors of filthy, shuttered windows. The hunched postmaster, pub owner and sometime barber limped out with the village mail. A young mail boy high up on the perch threw down a knotted yellow bag and waited. The postmaster heaved his small bag into the air three times before an exasperated pa.s.senger, hanging off the side, snagged it. The carriage jerked to a start and thundered down the road, kicking dirt and loose cobbles behind it.
Everyone followed the postmaster inside the ancient pub that smelled like a thousand years of bad fish and hops. He dumped the mail onto a battered old table, then held each letter to the tip of his nose, slowly reading each address and putting it into the correct pile. The villagers looked on, speculating which child, grandchild or physician had sent a letter. It was the same conversation every mail day of every year.
Henrietta lingered about the entrance, trying not to appear eager.
The door swung open and the reek of livestock and mud a.s.saulted her nose as her neighbor's tall form ducked under the doorframe. He wore his usual ensemble of muddy doeskins and a worn green coat. s.h.a.ggy chestnut curls sticky with perspiration and in terrible need of a barber fell into his gray eyes. Fuzzy side-whiskers softened his otherwise hard, lean face. Judging from the dirt under his nails, one would think he hadn't a pa.s.sel of farmhands and tenants and was reduced to planting crops with his fingers. His hound Samuel, a big boned, thick brown dog of no obvious breed, trotted in behind him, sniffing about the floor.
When Samuel saw Henrietta, he scrambled around his master's boots and jabbed his nose under the hem of her skirt. She knelt, letting the happy hound give her wet licks on her cheek. She looked up. Kesseley stared down at her, unsmiling. His face wore that tight expression again, chin high, eyes hard-the look she always pretended not to notice. If only he could be a tenth as pleased as his dog to see her.
"Good morning, Samuel, and you too, Kesseley." She rose and gave him a nervous smile.
"You look like you've been enjoying yourself this morning."
"I was in the fields."
"Where else would you be but in your beloved dirt?" She chuckled, hoping he would do the same. Instead, he looked down at his mud-caked boots, a frown bending his lips.
"I'm finis.h.i.+ng the planting," he said. "We're starting a new crop rotation schedule this year."
"The one from...Flanders?" His head jerked up, a light sparked in his eyes, and Henrietta felt her heart lighten.
"I thought my talk of farming bored you," he said.
"Still, I remembered every word." She touched his wrist. A wave of gentle warmth moved through her. She missed the times when it was so easy between them. "I suppose you will be leaving for the Season in a few days."
"Yes."
"I've made you a little surprise present, but you must come to the house to get it."
Finally a grin, albeit a tiny one, crossed his face. "Henrietta? A secret? You know you can't keep secrets. You might as well tell me before you blurt it by accident."
"That is not true. I keep many secrets from you. You just tend to remember the unfortunate surprise present for your ninth birthday."
"Just tell me."
"But I won't." She wagged a teasing finger before his face. "I will make you wait in unbearable antic.i.p.ation."
"Do you want me to tell everyone how years ago you tried to run away with a traveling production of A Midsummer's Night Dream A Midsummer's Night Dream masquerading as a fairy, and I had to dash off to Ely to save you?" masquerading as a fairy, and I had to dash off to Ely to save you?"
"You always hold that over me, don't you?" she cried, in mock annoyance, but then giggled. "Well, I daresay, I would be leading a much more exciting life traipsing around England in gaudy green pixie wings than stuck here. here."
His eyes flashed. "Yes, you've made it quite clear that you don't care for our village or..." He halted, but even so the arrested words hung in the air, so loud he could have shouted them. Or me. You don't care for me. Or me. You don't care for me.
That familiar, p.r.i.c.kly awkwardness filled the air.
"A diary!" she cried, trying to recapture the previous moment when he had been smiling. "I made you one. That's the surprise." She opened her palms and shrugged her shoulders. "You are right, I can't keep secrets."
"A diary?" He hiked a brow.
"Since you are going to London for the Season to find, well, a wife, I thought that you could write about when...when..." Oh Lud, suddenly her present seemed like the stupidest idea she'd ever had. "When you meet her, her," she finished.
"Her?"
"Your future wife. So you can capture the moment forever in your heart and never let it fade away."
The muscles at the back of his jaw twitched. She felt so foolish. She just wanted him to fall in love with a wonderful lady as she had fallen in love with Edward. "I've done the wrong thing again, haven't I?" she said.
"No, it's nice. Thank you for thinking of me."
"I always think of you," she whispered. "You're my dearest friend." Why did they have to keep up this nonsense? Why couldn't he be easy Kesseley again? Edward was making her sick with worry and she had no one to confide in.
"That's four pence for these letters and a journal, Miss Watson," the postmaster called out.
Henrietta rushed forward, put her coins on the table and scooped up a large bundle of mail. Surely one letter was from Edward! She started for the door, then remembered and turned back to Kesseley, who still waited for his mail. "Please come by before you leave."
"Of course."
She bent down to Samuel, who had rolled on to his side, exposing his belly for a good scratch. She cupped her hand and pretended to whisper in the dog's ear, but kept her eyes on Kesseley's face. "You'll make sure he doesn't forget, won't you?"
He yelped.
"He said yes." Kesseley chuckled. A chuckle! She grinned to hear the comforting sound again.
"I can always count on dear Samuel." She curtsied and then hurried outside, her mind quickly returning to the matter of Edward and his lack of correspondence.
She eagerly shuffled through the letters.
Then again.
And again.
And one more time to make sure.
Nothing. Just the March edition of Town and Country. Town and Country. She turned it over and shook it. No letter from Edward fell out. She turned it over and shook it. No letter from Edward fell out.
It felt like a foot had stepped on her heart and flattened it. Now another dull, useless day stretched out before her like a play seen over and over again: going through the household accounts, sewing for the Foundling orphanage, fighting with Mrs. Potts over supper, discussing her father's mathematical theories over burnt mutton, and reading Edward's poems by the candlelight until she fell asleep. She began to trudge home, resigned.
"Henrietta! Wait!" Kesseley ran out of the pub to catch up with her, waving a journal, faithful Samuel at his heels. "I'm in the Journal of Agriculture! Journal of Agriculture!"
He popped the page with his knuckle. Henrietta leaned over and read, "Increasing Turnip Yield by Addition of Ash Const.i.tuents" by the Earl of Kesseley. Why couldn't she get any good news? Then pride in Kesseley's eyes made her feel guilty for her jealous thought.
"Kesseley, that's wonderful."
"Come, let's have a gla.s.s of ale or tea to celebrate."
But all Henrietta wanted to do was go home, curl into a small ball under her blanket and feel sorry for herself. "Thank you, Kesseley, but II don't feel so well."
Concern leaped into his eyes, and he seized her arm. "Did you get some bad news?"
"No. I just have a headache. Congratulations again." And she meant it. She knew from her father's struggles what it meant to have one's work published. She gave his hand a rea.s.suring squeeze, then let go. "Do come by before you go. I will give you the diary. You needn't write about your wife, perhaps just crop rotations or ideas of future articles."
"Henrietta, wait-"
"I'm so sorry, I have to go." She pulled away and continued home to her haven of self-pity. She could feel him watching her leave, disappointed. Guilt flopped about like a fat fish in her heart. Why did he always make her feel so awful about herself? She never wanted to disappoint him, yet inevitably she did.
Maybe she should go back and have one small cup of tea. But then he would go on and on about the minute details of ash const.i.tuents, whatever they were. She didn't have the energy to feign interest in Kesseley's many agricultural experiments. Not today. She would make it up to him on another occasion, she promised, trying to make herself feel better, even as she knew she had made that same promise many times before and never fulfilled it.
At home, Henrietta threw her bonnet on the sofa so hard it knocked off the silk irises she had sewn on to it. She sat down, put her chin on her hand and let her thoughts swing from guilt over Kesseley to anxiety about Edward.