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Georgette Heyer - Devils Cub

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Devils Cub Georgette Heyer Copyright 1932 by Georgette Heyer Cover - photo 1

Devils

Cub

Georgette Heyer

Copyright 1932 by Georgette Heyer Cover and internal design 2009 by - photo 2

Copyright 1932 by Georgette Heyer

Cover and internal design 2009 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

Cover image Fine Art Photographic Library

Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systemsexcept in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviewswithout permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

Published by Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

(630) 961-3900

Fax: (630) 961-2168

www.sourcebooks.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Heyer, Georgette, 1902-1974.

Devils cub / Georgette Heyer.

p. cm.

Sequel to: These old shades.

1. Aristocracy (Social class)--England--Fiction. 2. England--Social life and customs--18th century--Fiction. I. Title.

PR6015.E795D48 2009

823.912--dc22

2009034378

Printed and bound in the United States of America.

VP 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

One

There was only one occupant of the coach, a gentleman who sprawled very much at his ease, with his legs stretched out before him, and his hands dug deep in the capacious pockets of his greatcoat. While the coach rattled over the cobbled streets of the town, the light from an occasional lantern or flambeau momentarily lit the interior of the vehicle and made a diamond pin or a pair of very large shoe-buckles flash, but since the gentleman lounging in the coach wore his gold-edged hat tilted low over his eyes, his face remained in shadow.

The coach was travelling fast, too fast for safety in a London street, and it soon drew out of the town, past the turnpike, on to Hounslow Heath. A faint moonlight showed the road to the coachman on the box, but so dimly that the groom beside him, who had been restive since the carriage drew out of St Jamess, gasped presently, as though he could no longer keep back the words: Lord! youll overturn us! Its a wicked pace!

The only answer vouchsafed was a shrug, and a somewhat derisive laugh. The coach swayed precariously over a rough stretch of ground, and the groom, clutching the seat with both hands, said angrily: Youre mad! Dyou think the devils on your heels, man? Doesnt he care? Or is he drunk? The backward jerk of his head seemed to indicate that he was speaking of the man inside the coach.

When youve been in his service a week you wont call this a wicked pace, replied the coachman. When Vidal travels, he travels swift, dye see?

Hes drunk three parts asleep! the groom said.

Not he.

Yet the man inside the coach might well have been asleep for all the sign of life he gave. His long body swayed easily with the lurch of the coach, his chin was sunk in the folds of his cravat, and not even the worst bumps in the road had the effect of making him so much as grasp the strap that swung beside him. His hands remained buried in his pockets, remained so even when a shot rang out and the vehicle came to a plunging standstill. But apparently he was awake, for he raised his head, yawning, and leaning it back against the cushions turned it slightly towards the off-window.

There was a good deal of commotion outside; a rough voice was raised; the coachman was cursing the groom for his tardiness in firing the heavy blunderbuss in his charge; and the horses were kicking and rearing.

Someone rode up to the door of the coach and thrust in the muzzle of a big pistol. The moonlight cast a head in silhouette, and a voice said: Hand over the pretties, my hearty!

It did not seem as though the man inside the coach moved, but a gun spoke sharply, and a stabbing point of flame flashed in the darkness. The head and shoulders at the window vanished; there was the sound of a fall, of trampling hooves, of a startled shout, and the belated explosion of the blunderbuss.

The man in the coach drew his right hand out of his pocket at last. There was an elegant silver-mounted pistol in it, still smoking. The gentleman threw it on to the seat beside him, and crushed the charred and smouldering portion of his greatcoat between very long white fingers.

The door of the coach was pulled open, and the coachman jumped up on to the hastily let-down step. The lantern he held lit up the interior, and shone full into the face of the lounging man. It was a surprisingly young face, dark and extremely handsome, the curious vividness overlaid by an expression of restless boredom.

Well? said the gentleman coldly.

Highwaymen, my lord. The new man being unused, so to say, to such doings, was late with the blunderbuss. There was three of them. Theyve made off two of them, that is.

Well? said the gentleman again.

The coachman seemed rather discomposed. Youve killed the other, my lord.

Certainly, said the gentleman. But I presume you have not opened the door to inform me of that.

Well, my lord shant we do I his brains are lying in the road, my lord. Do we leave him like that?

My good fellow, are you suggesting that I should carry a footpads corpse to my Lady Montacutes drum?

No, my lord, the coachman said hesitatingly. Then then shall I drive on?

Of course drive on, said the gentleman, faintly surprised.

Very good, my lord, the coachman said, and shut the door.

The groom on the box was still clasping the blunderbuss, and staring fascinated at the tumbled figure in the road. When the coachman climbed up on to the box again, and gathered the reins in his hands, he said: Gawd, aint you going to do anything?

There isnt anything you can do for him, replied the other grimly.

His heads almost shot off ! shuddered the groom.

The equipage began to move forward. Hold your tongue, cant you? Hes dead, and thats all there is to it.

The groom licked his dry lips. But dont his lordship know?

Of course he knows. He dont make mistakes, not with the pistols.

The groom drew a deep breath, thinking still of the dead man left to wallow in his blood. How old is he? he blurted out presently.

Twenty-four all but a month or two.

Twenty-four! and shoots his man and leaves the corpse as cool as you please! My Gawd!

He did not speak again until the coach had arrived at its destination, and then he seemed to be so lost in meditation that the coachman had to nudge him sharply. He roused himself then and jumped off the box to open the coach door. As his master stepped languidly down, he looked covertly at him, trying to see some sign of agitation in his face. There was none. His lordship sauntered up the steps to the stone porch, and passed into the lighted hall.

My Gawd! said the groom again.

Inside the house two lackeys hovered about the late-comer to take his hat and coat.

There was another gentleman in the hall, just about to go up the wide stairway to the saloon. He was good-looking in a rather florid style, with very heavily-arched brows and a roving eye. His dress proclaimed the Macaroni, for he wore a short coat decorated with frog-buttons, fine striped breeches with bunches of strings at the knee, and a waistcoat hardly reaching below the waist. The frills of his shirt front stuck out at the top, and instead of the cravat, he displayed a very full handkerchief tied in a bow under his chin. On his head he wore an amazingly tall ladder-toupet, dusted with blue hair powder, and he carried in his hand a long tasselled cane.

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