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pityโ€ฆ we understood you to be a keen angler. Francis could have invited you to fish the lake that lies on our land.โ€™

โ€˜Alas, I must forgo the pleasure on this occasion,โ€™ I replied. Francis made no comment โ€“ and now I saw it, plainly enough: he was relieved at the prospect of my departure.

โ€˜Can you not at least delay your ride until the afternoon?โ€™ His wife persisted. โ€˜As you know, Sir Richard sleeps lateโ€ฆ you could take dinner here, then bid him farewell.โ€™

โ€˜Much as I would like to, I fear not,โ€™ I told her. โ€˜There are matters at home requiring my attention.โ€™

To which the mistress of Foxhill was about to utter some further protest, had she not been silenced by her husband.

โ€˜For heavenโ€™s sake, Madam,โ€™ Francis said sharply. โ€˜Belstrang has stated his intention, and he has his reasons. I pray you, let the man be.โ€™ Turning to me, he said smoothly: โ€˜We are delighted to have had your company, sir, which Iโ€™m certain will have cheered my father a good deal. You leave with our warmest thanks, and our affection.โ€™

It was all I could do to manage a polite nod. For in truth, my growing dislike for this man had hardened into something else: a deep distrust. I saw no hint of the affection he had spoken of. It merely stiffened my resolve to discover what had happened, down in the distant Forest of Dean.

I left Foxhill early the next day, riding back into Upton where I re-crossed the Severn. But instead of turning northwards towards Worcester, I took the road south towards Tewkesbury. A much longer ride lay ahead, into a part of rural England I barely knew.

And the man who now set forth on that journey, was no longer ex-magistrate Robert Belstrang of Thirldon: he was William Pride, a man of business. That was my integumentum โ€“ my cover name, if you will, plucked out of the air. I hoped the diversion would bring results; at the least, it would continue to distract me from fears of losing my home.

***

The day was sunny, the early cloud having lifted. Leucippus took the road at a good pace, and we reached the bustling town of Tewkesbury well before mid-day. We had crossed the border into Gloucestershire now, and I stopped to rest the horse, letting him eat from the nose-bag while I took a light dinner at the nearest inn. Here I called for ink and paper, and penned a brief letter to Hester informing her of my intentions, paying the host to send it to Worcester by the first carrier available.

Then I was back in the saddle, crossing the river again on to the road to Tirley. Thereafter it was a steady ride, south-west through the villages of Haffield and Rudford. By late afternoon we were in Westbury, where I watered the horse again. The country was rich and green, yet unfamiliar to me. I pressed on past the great bend in the river, to enter the ancient Forest of Dean. The roads were fewer and narrower now, and I was obliged to stop and ask a carter for directions to Lydney: another four or five miles. Whereupon at last, as evening drew in, I reached the village and drew rein.

It was quiet, little more than a hamlet

on the River Lyd, with the great forest at its back. I knew the mills and forges Mountford had described to me were upstream, in the woodlands which stretched away as far as I could see. A track led off towards the Severn, which was but a short distance from here. Tomorrow I would venture forth, posing as a man with money to invest in iron works. But for the moment both Leucippus and I needed rest and sustenance. To my relief there was an inn close by: The Comfort, the sign read. I was soon inside, ordering a room and board and stabling for the horse.

The host was one Henry Hawes, a ruddy-faced Forest of Dean man with an accent I could barely penetrate. But he was courteous, and it was a relief to ease the stiffness from my limbs over a supper and a mug of locally-brewed ale. In response to my casual questions, however, he grew somewhat wary. The Mountford family were indeed well-known, he allowed: one of the biggest employers at their foundries, the nearest being up the Lyd, a mile and a half away. But they were not great landowners hereabouts, like the Catholic Wintours with their noble connections. What, he wondered, was my interest?

I assumed a casual manner, mentioning a small share in iron mines elsewhere, which I might be seeking to increase. William Pride, I decided, should be something of a free-wheeler, prepared to take risks with his money; I believed it would open a few doors. My host having left me to attend to his customers, I finished my drink and surveyed the room, with its thickening fug of tobacco smoke. The drinkers were all working men, downing their ale after a hard dayโ€™s toil. Feeling wearied, I rose to go to my chamber, only to be accosted by a heavy-bearded fellow in dusty clothes, who barred my way.

โ€˜I heard what you were saying to Henry Hawes, sir,โ€™ he stated. โ€˜Do you know the Mountfords well?โ€™

I told him I had some slight acquaintance with the family.

โ€˜I ask because thereโ€™s some here would be glad to have news,โ€™ the other continued, jerking his thumb over his shoulder. Several other men, I saw, were now looking in my direction. โ€˜Like, when theyโ€™re likely to get paid again.โ€™

โ€˜Iโ€™m unable to answer that, my friend,โ€™ I told him, with a shrug. โ€˜Iโ€™m here to look about, nothing more.โ€™

โ€˜Is it so?โ€™ The man regarded me, noting my good clothes and my sword, then: โ€˜Foundry business, is it?โ€™

I gave a nod, suppressing my distaste at his impertinent tone;

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