put out with Margaret for leaving the house aloneâthough she had never minded when Margaret spent time with friends before.
At the end of the block, Joan waited for a post chaise to pass, allowing Margaret to catch up with her. âDo you know where Red Lion Square is?â
Joan looked wary. âYes. My cousin has a post near there. Why?â
âCould you please walk there with me? My friend Emily lives there, and perhaps she might help me.â
Joan shrugged an apathetic reply. âI suppose. âTisnât far out of my way.â
Margaret was surprised she agreed so readily. Joan was apparently eager to be rid of her.
As she trudged behind Joan along busy Oxford Street, Margaret rehearsed how to explain her predicament to Emily, mortifying though it was. Emily would be happy to have her, once she quit laughing over her costume. But could she talk her parents into allowing her to stay? They were unlikely to believe her word over Sterling Bentonâs. Sterling could be so convincing, so persuasive. He would have them believing his nephew the soul of propriety and her a deluded ninny with an overinflated view of her âirresistibleâ charms. Mr. Lathrop would gently admonish her to be sensible and send her home with Sterling without a second thought.
She shuddered. Perhaps instead of asking to stay, she would ask Emily to loan her enough money to see her out of town and somewhere safe. Margaret would pay her back with interest as soon as she received her inheritance. She loathed the thought of borrowing money from friends. But she would have to set aside her pride. Pulling the mobcap down more snugly over her black wig and spectacles, she realized she already had.
They walked north and then turned into quiet and pretty Red Lion Square. There, Margaret led the way across the squareâs central garden. She paused behind one of the trees to survey the Lathrop town house across the street. Joan stood behind her. All was still, save for the flicking tail of a horse harnessed to a carriage waiting several houses away.
Margaret was about to cross the cobbles when she realized with a start that she recognized the landau with its brass candle lamps, as well as the coachman at the reins. Margaret retreated behind the tree once more. As she peered around it, the Lathropsâ front door opened and Sterling Benton appeared, framed by lamplight at its threshold, speaking in earnest confidence with Emilyâs father. Sterling shook his head somberly, appearing the perfect image of concerned stepfather. Mr. Lathrop nodded and the two men shook hands.
Sterling had certainly gotten there quickly. She and Joan had left perhaps only thirty or forty minutes before. Of course they had walked, while Sterling had a horse and carriage at his disposal. Heâor Marcus, more likelyâmust have come to her room soon after sheâd left and discovered her gone. Thank heaven she left when she did.
Clattering horse hooves galloped into the square, and Margaret peered around the other side of the tree. A man in a chimney-pot hat and cropped coat rode up, quickly dismounted, and tied his reins to a post. The manâs hurry sounded an alarm in Margaretâs mind. Was this the man from Bow Street Murdoch had announced before Margaret left? Had Sterling planned to hire a watchman but now commissioned the same man to find and apprehend her?
The newcomer trotted up the walkway toward Sterling and Mr. Lathrop. There on the stoop, the three men spoke, Sterling gesturing and frowning. He pulled something from his pocket and handed it to the officious-looking man. She could not see the object clearly from that distance, but based on the way the man studied it, she guessed it might be a framed miniature portrait. The one commissioned by her father for her eighteenth birthday?
Evidently, Sterling had arranged for the runner to meet him at the place he expected to find Margaret. Where he would have found her had