by Julia Quinn
“He’s never going to touch me again!” they heard Miranda roar.
“Well, it doesn’t look like you’ll have much argument from your wife on that point,” Olivia chirped. She nudged his chin with her knuckles. “Buck up, big brother. You’re about to become a father.”
“Soon, I hope,” he muttered. “I don’t think I can take much more of this.”
“If you think it’s bad, just think how Miranda must feel.”
He leveled a deadly stare at her. Wrong thing to say again. Olivia shut her mouth.
Back in the birthing room, Miranda was holding her mother-in-law’s hand in a death grip. “Make it stop,” she moaned. “Please make it stop.”
“It will be over soon, I assure you.”
Miranda yanked her down until they were nearly face to face. “You said thatyesterday !”
“Excuse me, Lady Rudland?”
It was Dr. Winters, who had arrived an hour after the pains had started.
“If I could have a word with you?”
“Yes, yes, of course,” Lady Rudland said, carefully extricating her hand from Miranda’s. “I’ll be right back. I promise.”
Miranda nodded jerkily and grabbed hold of the sheets, needing something to squeeze when the pain overtook her body. Her head lolled from side to side as she tried to take a deep breath. Where was Turner? Didn’t he realize that she needed him in here? She needed his warmth, his smile, but most of all, she needed his strength because she didn’t think she had enough of her own to get her through this ordeal.
But she was stubborn, and she had her pride, and she could not bring herself to ask Lady Rudland where he was. Instead she gritted her teeth and tried not to cry out from the pain.
“Miranda?” Lady Rudland was looking down at her with a concerned expression. “Miranda, darling, the doctor says you have to push harder. The babe needs a little help coming out.”
“I’m too tired,” she whimpered. “I can’t do it anymore.”I need Turner. But she didn’t know how to say the words.
“Yes, you can. If you just push a little harder now, it will be over much more quickly.”
“I can’t…I can’t…I—ohhhh!”
“That’s it, Lady Turner,” Dr. Winters said briskly. “Push now.”
“I…Oh, it hurts. It hurts.”
“Push. I can see the head.”
“You can?” Miranda tried to lift her head.
“Shhh, don’t strain your neck,” Lady Rudland said. “You won’t be able to see anything, anyway. Trust me.”
“Keep pushing,” the doctor said.
“I’m trying. I’m trying.” Miranda clamped her teeth together and squeezed. “Is it…Can you…” She took a few giant gulps of air. “What kind is it?”
“I can’t tell yet,” Dr. Winters replied. “Hold on. Wait a minute…There we are.” Once the head had emerged, the tiny body slipped out quickly. “It’s a girl.”
“It is?” Miranda breathed. She sighed wearily. “Of course it is. Turner always gets what he wants.”
Lady Rudland opened the door and poked her head into the hall while the doctor saw to the baby. “Turner?”
He looked up, his face haggard.
“It’s over, Turner. It’s a girl. You have a daughter.”
“A girl?” Turner echoed. The long wait in the hall had worn him down, and after nearly a full day of listening to his wife cry out in pain, he could not quite believe that it was done, and he was a father.
“She’s beautiful,” his mother said. “Perfect in every way.”
“A girl,” he said again, shaking his head in wonder. He turned to his sister, who had remained at his side throughout the night. “A girl. Olivia, I have a girl!” And then, surprising them both, he threw his arms around her and hugged.
“I know, I know.” Even Olivia had a hard time keeping the tears in her eyes.
Turner gave her one last squeeze, then looked back to his mother. “What color eyes does she have? Are they brown?”
An amused smile spread on Lady Rudland’s face. “I don’t know, darling. I didn’t even look. But babies’ eyes often change color while they’re small. We probably won’t know for certain for some time yet.”
“They will be brown,” Turner said firmly.
Olivia’s eyes widened in sudden awareness. “You love her.”
“Hmmm? What did you say, brat?”
“You love her. You love Miranda.”
Funny, but that tightness in his throat he always felt at the mention of the L-word was gone. “I—” Turner stopped short, his mouth opening slightly in stunned surprise.
“You love her,” Olivia repeated.
“I think I do,” he said wonderingly. “I love her. I love Miranda.”
“It’s about time you realized it,” his mother said pertly.
Turner sat slack-jawed, amazed at howeasy it all felt now. Why had it taken him so long to realize it? It should have been clear as day. He loved Miranda. He loved everything about her, from her delicately arched eyebrows to her often sarcastic jibes and the way her head tilted when she was curious. He loved her wit, her warmth, her loyalty. He even loved the way her eyes were slightly too close together. And now she had given him a child. She had lain in that bed and labored for hours under tremendous pain, all to give him a child. Tears welled up in his eyes. “I want to see her.” He almost choked on the words.
“The doctor will have the baby ready in a moment,” his mother said.
“No. I want to see Miranda.”
“Oh. Well, I don’t see any harm in that. Hold on just a moment. Dr. Winters?”
They heard a hushed expletive, and then the baby was thrust into her grandmother’s arms.
Turner flung the door open. “What’s wrong?”
“She’s losing far too much blood,” the doctor said grimly.
Turner looked down at his wife and nearly stumbled in terror. There was blood everywhere; it seemed to be pouring from her, and her face was deathly pale. “Oh, God,” he said in a strangled voice. “Oh, Miranda.”
I gave you birth today. I don’t know your name yet. They haven’t even let me hold you. I thought I might name you after my mother. She was a lovely woman, and she always hugged me so tightly at bedtime. Her name was Caroline. I hope Turner likes it. We never discussed names.
Am I asleep? I can hear everyone around me, but I can’t seem to say anything to them. I am trying to remember these words in my head so that I may write them down later.
I think I am asleep.
Chapter 20
The doctor managed to staunch the bleeding, but he was shaking his head as he washed his hands. “She’s lost a lot of blood,” he said grimly. “She’s going to be weak.”
“But she’ll pull through?” Turner asked anxiously.
Dr. Winters raised his shoulders in a melancholy shrug. “We can only hope.”
Not liking that answer, Turner pushed past the doctor and sat down in a chair by his wife’s bed. He picked up her limp hand and held it in his. “She’ll pull through,” he said hoarsely. “She has to.”
Lady Rudland cleared her throat. “Dr. Winters, do you have any idea what caused all of the bleeding?”
“It could be a tear in the uterus. Probably from when the afterbirth pulled away.”
“Is this a common occurrence?”
The doctor nodded. “I’m afraid I must go. There is another woman in the area who is expecting, and I need to get some sleep if I’m to attend to her properly.”
“But Miranda…” Lady Rudland’s words trailed off as she looked at her daughter-in-law with dismay and fear.
“There is nothing more I can do for her. We must only hope and pray that her body heals the tear, and she does not bleed again.”
“And if she does?” Turner asked flatly.
“If she does, press clean bandages up against her as I did. And send for me.”
“And if we did, is there any chance in hell that you could get here in time?
” Turner asked caustically, grief and terror ripping away all politeness.
The doctor chose not to reply. He nodded his head. “Lady Rudland. Lord Turner.”
As the door closed, Lady Rudland crossed the room to her son’s side. “Turner,” she said soothingly. “You should get some rest. You’ve been up all night.”
“So have you.”
“Yes, but I…” Her words trailed off. If her husband were dying, she’d want to be with him. She dropped a kiss on the top of Turner’s head. “I’ll leave you alone with her.”
He spun around, his eyes flashing dangerously. “Damn it all, Mother! I am not here to say my final good-byes. There is no need to talk like she is dying.”
“Of course not.” But her eyes, filled with pity and grief, told a different story. She quietly left the room.
Turner stared down at Miranda’s pale face, a muscle working spasmodically in his throat. “I should have told you that I love you,” he said hoarsely. “I should have told you. It’s all you wanted to hear, wasn’t it? And I was too stupid to realize it. I think I’ve loved you all along, sweetheart. All along. Every since that day in the carriage when you finally told me that you loved me. I was—”
He stopped, thinking he’d seen movement in her face. But it was just his own shadow, moving along her skin as he rocked back and forth.
“I was just so surprised,” he said, once he found his voice again. “So surprised that someone could love me and not want any sort of power over me. So surprised that you could love me and not want to change me. And I…I didn’t think Icould love anymore. But I was wrong!” His hands flexed jerkily, and he had to resist the urge to take her by the shoulders and shake. “I was wrong, damn it, and it wasn’t your fault. It wasn’t your fault, puss. It was mine. Or maybe Leticia’s, but definitely not yours.”
He picked up her hand again and brought it to his lips. “It was never your fault, puss,” he said entreatingly. “So come back to me. Please. I swear, you’re scaring me. You don’t want to scare me, do you? I assure you, it’s not a pretty sight.”
There was no response. He wished she’d cough, or restlessly shift position, or anything. But she just lay there, so still, so unmoving that a moment of sheer terror descended on him and he frantically turned her hand over to feel for her pulse on the inside of her wrist. Turner sighed in relief. It was there. It was soft, but it was there.
He let out a weary yawn. He was exhausted, and his eyelids were drooping, but he could not let himself sleep. He needed tobe with her. He needed to see her, to hear her breathe, to simply watch the way the light played across her skin.
“It’s too dark,” he muttered, getting to his feet. “It’s like a goddamned morgue in here. He searched the room, shuffling through drawers and closets until he found some more candles. He quickly lit them all and shoved them into holders. It was still too dark. He strode to the door, flung it open, and yelled out, “Brearley! Mother! Olivia!”
Eight people immediately answered his summons, all fearing the worst.
“I need more candles,” Turner said, his voice belying his terror and exhaustion. A few maids immediately scurried off.
“But it’s already so bright in here,” Olivia said, poking her head into the room. Her breath caught when she saw Miranda, her best friend since infancy, lying so still. “Is she going to be all right?” she whispered.
“She’s going to be just fine,” Turner snapped. “Provided that we can get some light in here.”
Olivia cleared her throat. “I should like to go in and say something to her.”
“She isn’t going to die!” Turner exploded. “Do you hear me? She isn’t going to die. There is no need to talk that way. You don’t have to say good-bye.”
“But if she did,” Olivia persisted, tears rolling down her cheeks. “I should feel—”
Turner’s control snapped, and he shoved his sister up against the wall. “She isn’t going to die,” he said in a low, deadly voice. “I would appreciate it if you would stop acting otherwise.”
Olivia nodded jerkily.
Turner suddenly let her go and then stared at his hands as if they were foreign objects. “My God,” he said raggedly. “What is happening to me?”
“It’s all right, Turner,” Olivia said soothingly, cautiously touching his shoulder. “You have every right to be over-wrought.”
“No I don’t. Not when she needs me to be strong for her.” He strode back into the room and sat back down next to his wife. “I don’t matter right now,” he muttered, swallowing convulsively. “Nothing matters but Miranda.”
A bleary-eyed housemaid entered the room with some candles.
“Light them all,” Turner ordered. “I want it bright as day in here. Do you hear me? Bright as day.” He turned back to Miranda and smoothed his hand over her brow. “She always did love sunny days.” He caught himself in horror and looked frantically at his sister. “I mean—sheloves sunny days.”
Olivia, unable to watch her brother in such a grief-stricken state, nodded and quietly departed.
A few hours later, Lady Rudland entered the room carrying a small bundle wrapped in a soft pink blanket. “I brought your daughter,” she said softly.
Turner looked up, shocked to realize that he had completely forgotten about the existence of this tiny person. He stared at her in disbelief. “She’s so small.”
His mother smiled. “Babies usually come that way.”
“I know but…look at her.” He reached out his index finger to her hand. Tiny fingers grasped it with surprising firmness. Turner looked up at his mother, amazement at this new life clearly written on his bleak face. “Can I hold her?”
“Of course.” Lady Rudland settled the bundle in his arms. “She’s yours, you know.”
“She is, isn’t she?” He looked down at the pink face and touched her nose. “How do you do? Welcome to the world, puss.”
“Puss?” Lady Rudland said in an amused tone. “What a funny nickname.”
Turner shook his head. “No, it’s not funny. It’s absolutely perfect.” He looked back up at his mother. “How long will she be this small?”
“Oh, I don’t know. For a little while, at least.” She crossed over to the window and pulled the drapes halfway back. “The sun is starting to come up. Olivia told me that you wanted some light in the room.”
He nodded, unable to take his eyes off his daughter.
She finished fussing at the window and turned back to him. “Oh, Turner…she has brown eyes.”
“She does?” He looked back down at the baby. Her eyes were closed in sleep. “I knew she would.”
“Well, she wouldn’t want to disappoint her papa on her first day out, would she?”
“Or her mother.” Turner looked over at Miranda, still deathly pale, then hugged this new bundle of life closer to him.
Lady Rudland glanced at her son’s blue eyes, so like her own, and said, “I daresay Miranda was hoping for blue eyes.”
Turner swallowed uncomfortably. Miranda had loved him so long and so well, and he had spurned her. Now he might lose her, and she’d never know that he realized what a stupid ass he’d been. She’d never know that he loved her. “I daresay she would,” he said in a choked voice. “She’ll just have to wait until the next one.”
Lady Rudland caught her lip between her teeth. “Of course, dear,” she said consolingly. “Have you given any thought as to names?”
He looked up in surprise, as if the idea of a name had never occurred to him. “I…No. I forgot,” he admitted.
“Olivia and I thought of some pretty names. What do you think of Julianna? Or Claire. I suggested Fiona, but Olivia didn’t like it.”
“Miranda would never allow her daughter to be named Fiona,” he said dully. “She always hated Fiona Bennet.”
“That little girl who lives near Haverbreaks? I never knew.”
“It’s a moot point, Mother. I’m not naming her without consulting Miranda.”
Lady Rudland swallowed again. “Of course, dear. I’ll just…I’ll just leave you now. Give you some time alone with your family.”
Turner looked at his wife and then at his daughter. “That’s your mama,” he whispered. “She’s very tired. It took a lot of her strength to get you out. I can’t imagine why. You’re not very big.” To demonstrate his point, he touched one of her tiny fingers. “I don’t think she’s even seen you yet. I know she would want to. She would hold you and hug you and kiss you. Do you know why?” He awkwardly brushed away a tear. “Because she loves you, that’s why. I’d wager she loves you even more than she loves me. And I think she must love me quite a bit because I haven’t always behaved as I should.”