Through the Smoke
Page 86An odd smile curved Cutberth’s lips.
“What is it?” He was trying to act no differently than usual, but the stress he was feeling added an unwanted quaver to his voice.
“I guess you haven’t heard the news. I spoke to your cousin earlier. I no longer have a job here to protect,” he said and galloped away.
Wythe didn’t have the means to go after him, not without his own animal. So what now? What was he going to do about Cutberth? The ex-clerk was no friend of the earl’s. Or Rachel’s, either. But he would know exactly what happened as soon as Thornick and the others were discovered in the rubble.
Damn it! He couldn’t set off an explosion, not now that Cutberth had seen him with gunpowder.
He would have to find Rachel and kill her the hard way, he decided, and then bury all the bodies. As long as the corpses were never discovered, no one would know he had been involved.
If only he could get hold of that little whore before daybreak. Everything hinged on timing.
Dear God, his hands were shaking. He needed something to calm his nerves.
He withdrew his flask, only to find that it was empty. How could he have forgotten? He’d drunk the whole thing while waiting for Thornick, Collingood, Henderson and Greenley.
Truman urged his horse into a faster clip. It wasn’t safe to travel at a full run, not at night. But he had to find Rachel as soon as possible. There were too many people, people like Cutberth, who blamed her instead of themselves for their recent turn of bad luck.
“My lord! You go on. I will catch up when I can,” Linley called.
Truman couldn’t wait for him. He had to find the woman he loved. All the things that had once seemed so important to him were nothing in comparison to her.
“Go back,” he called. “Wait at the manse.” He had tried talking Linley into staying in the first place. His butler was too old to help with something like this. He had done enough for one night, anyway. But he’d insisted. “Two is better than one,” he’d said.
Truman appreciated the devotion, but with Rachel’s safety in jeopardy, he had to stay focused, had to act quickly.
He leaned over to avoid the tree branches that swatted at him as his horse charged down the familiar path to the colliery. Cosgrove House came up on his right. It seemed as quiet and dark as he would expect it to be so early in the morning, but he was still tempted to stop there. The memory of Wythe telling Rachel, “I could throw your body into the ocean,” kept playing in his head. If his cousin had anything to do with why Rachel hadn’t come home—anything at all—the forbearance Truman had shown him over the years would be gone in an instant. The promise he’d made his parents would mean nothing. Neither would the fact that Wythe had once saved his life. He was carrying his pistols and wouldn’t hesitate to use them.
It seemed to take longer than usual to reach the office, despite his breakneck speed. He was relieved when he finally charged into the clearing. But he found everything as he had seen it last night.
Except that there was a keg of gunpowder sitting out.
He got off his horse to investigate. Black powder was expensive, and it could be dangerous. It was not to be left out in the open.
The locker where they stored the gunpowder was closed but the key had been left in the lock. Another storage shed close by, this one full of tools and Davy lamps, had been broken into quite forcibly and the door stood ajar.
He couldn’t see how. Maybe the damage had happened earlier, before he met with Cutberth. Or immediately after. Cutberth could have done it in anger.…
“Rachel?” he called.
There was no answer.
“Rachel!” Where could she be? His imagination suggested many places, but none eased his fears. “I don’t want to live without you,” he murmured. Especially now, when he’d finally allowed himself to hope, to believe, he could have her forever.
Just in case she could have gone into the mine—or been dragged there—he walked down to the pithead. But the gate was locked and all seemed quiet. Should he search the mine, despite that? He was tempted, just to be sure he had covered every possibility. If Cutberth could get the key to Rachel’s shop from Wythe’s office, he could certainly come by the key to the pithead after working in the office for so long. But searching the tunnels would take forever. The time would be better spent heading to the village so he could check on Cutberth, Thornick, Greenley and the others. He would wake the whole damn village if he had to.
He hurried back to his horse, but almost as soon as he climbed into the saddle, he heard the approach of someone else, also on horseback.
Unsure of who or what he might face, he pulled out one of the pistols he had brought from the house as Cutberth entered the clearing. “What are you doing here?”
His ex-clerk reined in a few feet away. “Where is he?”
“Where is who?”
“Anything I have to in order to find Rachel. What have you done with her?”
His eyebrows shot up. “Nothing! I haven’t even seen her.”
“She went out looking for me and hasn’t come back.”
He lifted his hands. “I swear to you. If she is gone it has nothing to do with me. I am not here to start trouble. I was merely hoping for another word with your cousin.”
Truman squinted through the darkness, trying to ascertain his expression and decide whether he was telling the truth. “Why would you expect Wythe to be here?”
“Because this is where he was not more than half an hour ago.” He pointed at the powder keg. “He was wrestling that toward the pit.”
His cousin was the one who had gotten out the gunpowder? Surely this couldn’t be true. “What could he have wanted powder for?” Truman asked.
“That’s what I came back to find out. Something isn’t right, my lord. Thornick, Collingood, Henderson and Greenley are all missing.”
This news made Truman sick to his stomach. “Then they’ve got Rachel.” He couldn’t think of another explanation, but Cutberth didn’t seem convinced.