Price of Desire

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Price of Desire Page 25

by Goodman, Jo


  “Honey.” Lady Rivendale pursed her lips disapprovingly. “That is on no account a name that should be attached to a woman with her acumen. Do you know what I would call her?”

  Still smiling, though somewhat distractedly, Griffin took the bait. “Do tell.”

  “I would call her Olivia.” The countess had the pleasure of seeing all of his attention return to her and his smile falter. She patted his cheek lightly. “A consequence of being so well set in society.” With that parting shot, Lady Rivendale excused herself by calling out to one of her many acquaintances across the way.

  Griffin stood in his fixed position a few moments longer, then turned slowly on his heel and took his leave of the gaming rooms for the sanctuary of his bedchamber.

  Olivia saw him go but could not leave the table to follow. She had fully expected him to draw her to some private corner and have words with her, so his exit gave her pause. She played out two more full deals and was prepared to begin a third when she spied Mason’s silver-threaded head above the others and called him over to take her place.

  Griffin was lying on his bed when she found him. He had removed his frock coat, loosened his cravat, and pulled off his boots, all of it accomplished on his way to the bed without benefit of his valet or the use of his dressing room. Olivia collected his leavings as she crossed the floor and carried them away for Mason to deal with later.

  Griffin rested with one arm cradling his head and the other thrown across his eyes. He lifted the latter just enough to spy her activity. “What are you doing?”

  “Helping Mr. Mason. He is spelling me at the table.” She left the dressing room and came to his bedside. “Can I get you something? Refreshment? Beetle and Wick will draw you a bath, if you like. Everyone else is engaged at the moment.”

  “So I observed. A veritable beehive of activity. Odd, that, since I gave no instructions to open in my absence.”

  “And gave none to suggest we shouldn’t.” Olivia sensed he was spoiling for a quarrel and since her ground was shaky at best, she opted for delaying the inevitable. “You are weary, my lord, and unlikely to be at peak form to set forth your best argument. Why not allow me to provide for your comfort first? You will thank me in the morning when you are feeling more the thing.”

  “Your approach is novel, Olivia. I will give you that. I confess I’ve had no dinner, nor any appetite until now. Can you find something in the kitchen?”

  “Of course.” When she would have turned to go, Griffin’s hand snaked out and captured her wrist. She glanced down at his fingers curled around hers, then at him. “Yes?”

  “A bath would be most appreciated.” When she nodded, he squeezed her hand once, then released it. “Thank you.”

  Olivia merely walked from the room, but in her heart she knew she was fleeing.

  Griffin was most definitely feeling more the thing after a long soak to wash away the dust of the road and a repast of beef stew, applesauce, and warm, crusty bread. He read by the fire until he recognized the change in the activity on the floors below and heard Olivia’s tread on the stairs. He stepped outside his room and indicated she should join him. He accepted the strongboxes as she came abreast of him, then stepped back and allowed her to precede him into his bedchamber.

  He opened the upholstered lid of the window bench and set the boxes inside.

  “You don’t want to make entries in your books this evening?” asked Olivia.

  “No. That, too, can wait until morning.”

  “You are certain? Are you unwell?” The change in his routine troubled her, and his faint smile was not reassuring.

  “Sit down, Olivia. I wish to speak to you.”

  Nodding a bit jerkily, she dropped onto the window bench when she backed into it. “Yes?”

  Now that he had her full attention, Griffin was uncertain how he should begin. He had rehearsed some version of it during his return journey, but he hadn’t taken into account how the carefully guarded expression in her own face would tie this tongue.

  “You always knew I was married,” he said, starting with the most obvious point. “I never pretended otherwise and never asked you to indulge in the same.”

  Olivia did not know if a response was called for, so she simply nodded.

  “This morning—before Gardner arrived—I had it in my mind to tell you the whole of it. About my marriage, that is. It seems self-serving to say that now, after the fact, but it is the truth. I would have prefaced it with an apology, of course, and asked you how I might atone for my boorish behavior.”

  “You apologized last night,” she said. “I imagined your atonement came this morning in the form of scones, hot cocoa, and your request to accompany me on my walk.”

  “Then you must raise your expectations, Olivia, for that was merely a prologue. You deserve more.”

  She could not think of a reason why he would believe that, but she did not say so. Better to bring him around to what he meant to say than devote time to why he meant to say it. “It is late, my lord, so if you would be so kind…” She set her hands in her lap and folded them together.

  “Yes. Of course.” Griffin looked around for a place he might sit, realized he would find none of them comfortable at present, and opted to remain on his feet. “You heard Gardner say that he found my wife. What you did not have occasion to know was that I have hired a dozen or so men over the years to locate her. The last word I had on where she might be came shortly before I met you. There was some reason to believe she was in Paris. On the intelligence I was given by the gentleman I’d hired, I decided to make the trip myself. She was not there, nor could I find evidence that she might have been.”

  He saw a shadow of concern cross her face but did not know the cause for it. “There is something you want to know?” he asked.

  Still frowning slightly, she shook her head. “It is difficult to understand, I think, though I suppose you will come to it eventually.”

  “Come to what?”

  “How she came to be lost.”

  “If you are imagining an abduction or some other manner of foul play as others are wont to believe, set your mind at rest. Lady Breckenridge is not lost as much as she is in hiding. She did not wish to be found and still may not know that it’s finally happened. Gardner did not approach her, merely discovered her location. Whether she will be there when he returns for her is yet to be seen. If she learns of the inquiries on her behalf, she may go again.”

  Griffin watched Olivia listen to him with the whole of her body. She leaned forward, head inclined just a bit to the right while a small vertical crease deepened between her eyebrows. Her gaze was centered and focused, and her hands had unfolded and lay open in her lap. He was touched and humbled that she would honor him with all of her attention.

  “It’s been a little more than six years,” he said. “Elaine’s departure was not entirely unexpected. She threatened as much from time to time as the mood struck her. You will perhaps find it odd, or perhaps a measure of her contempt for me, but she never attempted to hide the fact that she had taken lovers—and there was a succession of them—although she was adept at concealing the truth of it from others. It was her care for her own reputation, and in a smaller measure, mine, that lulled me into believing she had decided there was some benefit to a marriage such as we had.”

  Griffin finally set himself, as was often his habit, on the arm of a wing chair. He stretched one leg to the side and rested his arm across the back. “We were friends once, or so I thought. That has been the most difficult thing to reconcile. Elaine is seven years my senior, a second cousin on my father’s side, and was a frequent visitor to Wright Hall when I was growing up. As a child, I thought she was a magical creature, the queen of my sisters’ fairy court. I adored her then and that did not change when I learned she was very much of the flesh. I cannot find it in myself to be ashamed of it.”

  “Nor should you,” Olivia said gently.

  Griffin steeled himself against Olivia’s compassion and
went on. “Elaine and I married six months after my father’s death. It was a rather hastily planned affair. We were not yet through a year of mourning, and I was deeply engaged in learning the extent of my family’s debts. I had my mother to consider, for she could not be convinced there was the least need for frugality, and then there were my sisters, who would have to make good marriages if they were to be properly cared for.”

  Olivia closed her eyes briefly so he would not be put off by the sympathy she could not help but feel. He had been a young man, not yet twenty at his father’s death, and barely that as he exchanged vows with a woman who seemed bent on taking advantage of his adoration for her. “You learned your lady was carrying your child.”

  Nodding, Griffin slowly released a breath. “I had imagined that some day I would find the courage to propose, but I had no confidence that she would accept. She’d had proposals before and remained unmarried by choice. I thought she was admirably free spirited, a woman with an income large enough to support her somewhat disdainful opinion of men. Her refusal to yield to the expectations of society was more fascinating than troubling, a point of admiration rather than alarm.”

  Olivia almost smiled then. How he would have been drawn to this woman, convinced that her unconventional manner demonstrated strength of character, never suspecting it could conceal the lack of it. “Her parents did not press her to marry?”

  “There is only her mother, a widow who never remarried. Again, not for lack of suitors and opportunity. She is a handsome woman with independent means in the same vein as Lady Rivendale but without that lady’s lively humor and delicious appreciation for life.”

  Griffin pushed his fingers through his hair and offered a grin rife with self-mockery. “It all seems so clear in the retelling, doesn’t it? You must wonder at my naïveté.”

  She shrugged. “Everyone is naive at nineteen. We only think we are not, and that is the cruel irony of it.”

  Griffin appreciated her generosity. He could have pointed out that she was not naive at nineteen, indeed, not at twelve, nor eight, nor six. “Elaine miscarried, but I think you suspected that. It occurred only a few weeks after the wedding. Sometimes I think how life would have been different if we had not rushed to marriage, but that is naturally a ridiculous use of time and gray matter.”

  And in every way a human response, she thought. “Do you believe the child was yours?”

  He gave her full marks for not avoiding the question. She could be fearless in her own fashion. “I did at the time. I came to doubt the truth of it soon after. I said nothing to her about my suspicions, and I cannot say if that was a mistake or not. What I believe is that it would have changed nothing in the end. Elaine would have still engaged in her affairs, and I could have not kept her at my side. I do not know when I came to the realization that she could not help herself, but there you have it. I do not offer it in defense of her behavior. As fantastical as it seems, she was compelled to be with men. With any man. With many men. I did not think she knew I meant to divorce her, but it may have been what provoked her to leave when she did.”

  “How is it possible she could have disappeared so completely for so long?”

  “I did not try to find her immediately. Indeed, I did not know for better than a week that she had fled. I was operating this establishment by then, a situation that I believe I’ve mentioned she found most disagreeable, and she was at Wright Hall. Word came from her own mother that she was gone. My mother-in-law made it clear in her missive where she believed the blame should be placed. The hell was an abomination to them, and the choice I made to take it in hand myself was viewed as a very public snub of the ton and a complete disregard for my role and responsibilities as viscount and head of my family. As this view was shared by my own mother and to a lesser extent by my sisters, there was some sympathy for Elaine.”

  Olivia imagined that was in no small part due to Griffin keeping his own counsel. “Were you ever tempted to tell them all of it?”

  “Not my own family, no. It was—is—a private matter.”

  “Yet you are telling me.”

  “Yes.”

  She thought he would explain his reasons for it, then it occurred to her that he might have no explanation, that what he was finally giving into was a need to tell someone. Who better than a woman with so many dark secrets of her own? She would not judge, merely listen, and that was what he wanted from her. Still, it bound them in some way, and perhaps it was this that he wanted as well.

  She watched Griffin slide into the wing chair and sprawl casually, wearily, across it. “How is it that your wife avoided whispers among the gentlemen and wags of the ton? Pray, do not say her discretion alone accounts for it. That is not possible. If she was as compelled to act in certain ways as you say, it would have become known.”

  Closing his eyes, Griffin pressed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger. His words, when they finally came, held all the heaviness of a man who knew defeat. “Like a bitch that does not soil her own den, my wife did not choose her lovers from the society in which she mingled. She took servants to her bed. The grooms. Gardeners. Footmen. We once attended a week-long entertainment hosted by one of her dearest friends, and she slipped away to raise her skirts for the coachman, then the second butler, and finally the steward. I made excuses for her absences. No one among the servants complained.”

  Olivia watched his hand fall to the arm of the chair and lie there limply. She caught his dark gaze and was struck by the weight of his grief. Absent from his recitation, from his tone, indeed, from his expression, was bitterness. There may have been a time he’d known that emotion, wrestled with it, but it was no longer his constant companion.

  She lifted her arm and made to reach for him, caught herself, and returned her hand to her lap. He was so focused on her face that it did not seem to her that he was aware of the gesture, then his hand turned a few degrees and partially exposed his palm. His fingers spread, curled, beckoned her.

  Olivia came to her feet slowly. She took one step toward him, paused, then took another. It required but two more to close the distance. Her fingers brushed the back of his, were caught, then entwined. She would have dropped to her knees in front of his chair, but he tugged her toward him at an angle that brought her onto his lap. She twisted slightly to spare him her weight, and she caught his uneven, mildly mocking grin as he took it upon himself anyway.

  She sat very still, her hand linked in his, uncertain of what she should do. She had an urge to touch his face, so she did that, palming his cheek, tracing his scar, brushing his lower lip with her thumb and lingering at the corner of his beautifully sculpted mouth.

  “You still grieve,” she said quietly. “How you must have loved her.”

  “Once.” He kissed the pad of her thumb before she drew it back. “Once, Olivia, she was my world. It was a long time ago, and only briefly. What I imagined she felt for me was just that, my imagination. I know now that she is incapable of any finer feeling. Sometimes she amused herself playing at being in love—or what she thought it must be—but her affairs never lasted long. She knew a great deal about lust, and nothing at all about love.”

  “It is all rather difficult to comprehend. You pity her, don’t you?”

  “I do now. I despised her for much longer than I ever loved her.”

  Olivia considered that. She was in no hurry to pose her question. The circle of his arm around her waist and the niche he made for her against his shoulder was a comfortable fit. “Then why have you made searching for her so important? It cannot be only for purposes of divorce. As distasteful as that end might be to you, it could be accomplished without her presence, couldn’t it? It is she who broke her vows and abandoned the marriage.”

  Even as she was putting the question to him, she was aware that he was regarding her rather oddly. “What?” she asked. “Have I taken too great a liberty? Said something I ought not have?”

  “You really don’t know, do you?”

&n
bsp; Olivia was perfectly at sea and did not take pains to conceal it. She simply stared at him, waiting.

  “I was so certain that someone would have told you by now. Truss. Mason. The lads. Even the patrons could have whispered it in your presence. Most of them have heard the gossip.”

  “Then it is much, much older than a nine days’ wonder, for I have never learned of it.”

  “So I see.” His fingers gently tightened on hers. “After Elaine’s disappearance became known, I was questioned quite thoroughly by the authorities. There are many people, Olivia, even after so much time has passed, who suspect me of murdering my wife.”

  She said nothing for a long moment, trying to take it in. How surpassingly singular that their lives should be touched by so much in the way of injury. The difference, though, was that he carried the burden of suspicion while she carried the burden of guilt. She could not say if one weighed more heavily than the other. She knew only there were days when she was crushed by it and could not fathom it would be so different for him.

  “But you were here in London when Lady Breckenridge left,” said Olivia. “Didn’t you tell me that?”

  “I did, and I was. And, yes, there were many who could support my presence here. Apparently, when one is a person of property and some influence, it is not enough to be firmly situated in one location while a murder is taking place in another. I could not very well deny that I had the means to engage in murder for hire.”

  “But where was the evidence that her ladyship was killed…or even dead? There can have been no body.”

  Griffin’s smile was wry. “Now you are allowing logic to influence your argument. My mother-in-law was not so particular as that when she leveled her accusations and made her concerns public.”

  “But her daughter…Was she so unaware of her daughter’s behavior that she would risk bringing it to light?”

  “I will never believe she was unaware, but what she used to support her charge was the divorce, except in her version it was Elaine who desired it. I was named the adulterer.”

 

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