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His Lady Brat (Rakes of Mayfair Book 6)

Page 9

by Melinda Barron


  “Tell me about your marriage. Was it happy?” He sounded as if he were sitting in a salon, taking tea with someone to whom he’d recently been introduced.

  “Why are you doing this to me? I…” She felt tears well up in her throat. He’d hit on the one thing that she never wanted to talk about, and he didn’t seem as if he were going to give up on it, either.

  “Tell me.” The seductive tone in his voice made her shiver. She turned her head toward the wall.

  “Telling you my life story would be worse punishment than the spanking.” Her shoulders were already starting to ache. If he made her stand here much longer there would be true pain. But she’d felt pain before, both physical and emotional. She would be able to endure it to keep her secrets to herself.

  “Yes, I figured that out,” he said. “When you’re ready to talk you may sit on the bottom of the bed and begin. Until then, you may stay in the position you’re in, and ponder your wicked ways.”

  “Can’t you just spank me? You’re going to do it anyway, whether I talk or not.” Belinda had lost any of the warm feelings she’d had for Barton that morning. She never, ever talked about her early life, and he had no business asking about it. The second he’d started delving into areas where he didn’t belong, she clammed up.

  “No, I can’t. I want some information. I want to know what turned you from Lady Strauss into Lady Brat. And I have all afternoon, all of tonight, and all of tomorrow to wait. Barring that, we can extend our trip as long as I see fit.”

  Belinda screamed in frustration. She shook her head and stood suddenly, trying as hard as she could to move away from the bed.

  “No, I won’t do it.” He stood and, to her surprise, he undid the ties that kept her arms in place.

  “Is this some sort of trick?” she asked.

  “No, I just want your confession about your past life to be because you want to give it, not because you’re in pain and think I might let you go because of it.”

  She rubbed her wrists and rolled her shoulders, wondering what she should do. She judged the distance to the door, then decided it would do her no good. She would still be in the house, and out in the middle of nowhere.

  “The rain has stopped,” she said. “Shall we go for a walk?”

  “My, my, Lady Brat, you’ll do anything to get out of this spanking, won’t you?”

  “Yes,” she admitted, and then she laughed when he did, too.

  “Even walk in the mud, in your stockings and corset.”

  “If needs be,” she said. “Of course I could put a dress on, too.”

  He got up and went to what she’d now started to think of as his array of torture devices. He picked up a whip and let it trail on the floor. Belinda’s eyes widened and she took a step away.

  “No, you can’t be serious.”

  “I’m going to wrap this around your shoulders, with the ends hanging down over your breasts.” He let the whip trail behind him as he walked toward her. “If you try anything while we’re out, I will use it on you, Belinda. I don’t like the idea, not at all, but I am willing to follow through on it. Do you understand? Do we have an agreement on it?”

  “Yes,” she whispered as her gaze stayed on the lethal looking device he held in his hands. “I swear to you I will not try to run.” She had been hoping that, by going outside and enjoying the smell of the fresh rain, the threat to spank her would subside. Now she could see that it would not.

  He took a step closer, and then he placed the whip around her neck. It felt cold and shivers ran up her spine as the leather settled on her body.

  “I don’t like the feel of this,” she said.

  “Remember that when you act up,” he said. “I was taught to use it most effectively. That means I can stand back and smack it against your ass and not break the skin.”

  He sounded so matter of fact that it made her shiver. She said a silent prayer that she would never taste the leather in the way he described.

  “Shall we go, Lady Brat?”

  “I think that is a wonderful idea,” she said. To her surprise he offered her his arm. She looked down at her feet. “May I put on my shoes?”

  They went downstairs, passing two servants as they walked. It struck her as off that neither of them looked at them as if anything was out of the ordinary. It made her wonder how many women he’d had at this house, how many he’d paraded around half-naked.

  It wasn’t a subject she could bring up, truthfully. If she asked him about former lovers he would want to do the same with her, which meant she would have to tell him about the number of men who had been in her bed. There were quite a few; maybe not as many as people in society thought, but there had been far too many. The thought made her sad, because if a man knew about it he would not respect her.

  That was the main problem in it all, respect. And she didn’t help matters by acting the way she did, by treating people as she had treated Clarissa.

  “You are deep in thought,” he said as they stepped from the house into the gardens. “Do you want to tell me what it is? I promise you, Lady Brat, that anything you say to me will not be spread throughout the realm.”

  “Really?” Belinda laughed softly. “Something tells me that you are not telling me the truth. People have rarely told me the truth. Even Taylor, whom I loved deeply, lied to me. I had no idea he was a thief. People don’t really believe me, but it’s the truth.”

  “I believe you,” he said. “You returned Clarissa’s jewels. Of course you did it because Alice spoke to Taylor in the séance at the house party. Do you believe such things?”

  “I do,” she said. “I would like to talk to Alice about it, still. I have not had the time to speak with her personally.”

  He moved them toward a cupola, and she knew they were not really going to go for a walk. Still, leaving the bedroom without being whipped made her feel better about things. Maybe she could talk to him. Heaven knows she had never talked to anyone else… not really. She’d never even told Taylor about her beginnings.

  They sat down on the bench just under the stone covering just as the rain started again. She shivered a bit, but the heat from his thigh, which rested against hers, was a comfort.

  “Let me tell you something about me.” He paused and then continued, “Those of us who are the youngers, who are so far behind in the line that we will never become the earl, were not given as much care as the older ones.”

  He glanced at her, and then put his hand on her knee. Like the heat of his thigh, she rather enjoyed this feeling.

  “One day, me and my cousin decided we were tired of hanging around the house and doing nothing.” He paused again, and she wondered where this story was taking them, what it would reveal about him.

  “We were very bad boys that afternoon, and it got us into a great deal of trouble,” he said. “It was the first time I’d ever tasted a strap, and I hated it. It’s why I don’t really want to use one on you. I know the pain of it, and the anger that it brings.”

  She was so glad to hear that, but it made her decision tougher. She either had to tell him the truth about herself, or submit to something that even he did not want to do.

  “Tell me what you and your cousin did that day,” she said. “What was his name?”

  “Ian,” he said. “He is now a landowner near the Scottish border,” he said. “He has a wife and three children and from the letters that he sends me he enjoys his life very much.”

  “And you, do you enjoy your life?” she asked.

  “I do, well, sometimes,” he said. He didn’t elaborate, and she didn’t push. If she pushed him he would push her.

  Instead she decided to change the subject. “You didn’t tell me what you did.”

  “It’s horrible,” he said. “I’m embarrassed by it, truthfully. And it is still remembered at my home near York. It was on All Hallow’s Eve.”

  He paused again and she said, “Go on.”

  Despite her prodding he didn’t speak again, and it made her
wonder what had happened. Had he killed a man? Had his cousin?

  “Ian and I went to the graveyard,” he said. “We didn’t do it to call upon a spirit. We knocked over two headstones and made it look as if someone had tried to dig up a grave, a very old one.”

  She could tell by the sound of his voice that he was still feeling the effects of what he’d done.

  “What happened?” she asked.

  “Well, we went back home, and the next day the event was all over the village,” he said. “They accused two young boys who were known to cause trouble. It wasn’t for another three days, when they threatened to send the boys to the reformatory school as punishment, that Ian and I finally confessed.”

  “And you still feel guilty,” she said.

  “Oh, yes.” He reached his arm out from under the cupola. She watched as rain filled his palm.

  “Why?” she asked, and then she laughed. “You talk about me not opening up to you, and trying to get you to tell me this story is like pulling rotten teeth.”

  He laughed. “Rotten teeth would be easy to pull,” he said. “It is good teeth that would be hard to get out of a person’s mouth. Very well, since you bring up a good point I will finish the tale without any more prodding.”

  He cleared his throat. “At first the authorities did not believe us,” he said. “We were the sons, after all, of noble men. Our fathers owned land, my father was an earl. They thought we were trying to save the boys from their fate. But when I gave the names of the people buried under the stones we’d damaged they knew we were telling the truth. They had kept the names silent.”

  “They did not send you to reformatory school,” she said.

  “No.” He brought his hand back under the canopy and let the water that had collected in his hand drop to the ground. “My father paid to have the stones replaced, and then he took a strap to my ass, every day for a week.”

  “Every day?” Such an idea shocked her.

  “Fifteen strokes a day,” he said. “I swear I was sore for a year. Ian’s father took him to their home, and I have no idea of his punishment. He won’t talk of it, even to this day.”

  “It must have been something horrible,” she said.

  “Yes, I think it was,” Jonathan said. “I have never forgiven myself for it, but I have learned to live with what happened. The shame of it, the pain that I caused my parents. It took years before the people of the village forgave them. They blamed them for my actions.”

  “I’m so sorry,” she said. “But I still don’t understand how it hurt you so much. You didn’t kill anyone.”

  “We disrespected the dead,” he said. “My father taught me that you don’t ever disrespect the dead. You learn from them. He said it was almost as if we were trying to erase them from the world, which was a horrible thing to do.”

  He cleared his throat once again. “I need scotch,” he said with a laugh. “But, as I said, I’ve come to terms with it. You learn to forgive yourself.”

  Something told her he was going to ask her to confess next, and she really wasn’t ready to open up to him.

  “I’m rather hungry,” he said. “I think it is probably time for luncheon. The cook here makes a very good stew. I hope that’s what she’s prepared for this meal. If not I’m going to suggest it to her for tonight.”

  He stood and looked down at her. “I have a feeling you need to go upstairs and change, though. I don’t mind you prancing around half naked; as a matter of fact it stirs my blood. But I don’t think you should go to the table like that. Call for a maid, her name is Brandy, I believe, and she will help you dress.”

  “So that means no spanking?” she asked in disbelief.

  “Thinking of my own beating makes the idea very distasteful,” he said. “We’ll eat, and then later in the day we’ll talk again.”

  “While I appreciate your story, I don’t think that I’m going to open up to you,” she said. “I am a person who stays only to herself.”

  “We shall see,” he said. He helped her up, and once they were in the house he left her at the stairs. “I’m going to check the kitchen. You go and ready yourself.”

  Once she was upstairs she took off the whip and tossed it under the bed. “Out of sight, out of mind,” she said, just as the maid came in. She dressed quickly, and when Brandy was gone, Belinda sat down near the window and looked out at the rain.

  She knew that she could tell him her secret, let him know what had set her on the path that had led her to ruin. But what good would it do? He wouldn’t care, would he? No man ever had. She was alone, by herself, and telling him of her past would do nothing but cause more pain.

  The more she thought about it the angrier she got. How dare he try and delve into her past? It had nothing to do with him, nothing at all!

  To her surprise the door opened and Jonathan came in.

  “If you’ve come for a confession you won’t get it,” she said. “You’ll just have to beat me again. My life is none of your business.”

  “You’ve received no beating, Belinda,” he said. “I’ve come to tell you that lunch is ready, a slab of beef and a good soup. The stew is for dinner.”

  “I don’t want your stew, or your pity,” she said.

  “I only offer food,” he said.

  In response she picked up a nearby figurine and threw it at him. He ducked and strode from the room and she picked up a glass figurine, the nearest thing she could find, and threw it at the door. It shattered into pieces but he didn’t return.

  Belinda threw herself onto the bed and burst into tears. She knew there was no way around it. At some point she was going to have to tell him everything. And when she did, her carefully planned world would come crumbling down.

  She was the only person who knew what had happened, who understood the horrible hand that life had dealt her. Now she was going to have to tell him, and she was sure that he would tell every person that he knew.

  She would be the laughing stock of London. She lay down on the bed and closed her eyes, tears streaming down her face. She wasn’t certain how long she lay there.

  When she opened her eyes again the room was darker. She could hear the sounds of a broom. She looked up to see a maid sweeping up the remnants of the figurine she’d broken.

  Jonathan sat in a chair nearby, an open book on his lap.

  “How long have I been crying?” she asked.

  “Quite some time,” he said. “Long enough for me to enjoy the tray of food the maid brought up. Would you like something to drink, or eat?” His voice was low and even.

  She shook her head. The maid left and Belinda turned to him.

  The silence stretched out and then Jonathan cleared his throat.

  “Tell me, Belinda, did your behavior start before, or after, your husband’s death? And what brought on this crying fit just now?”

  She shook her head and ran her hand through her disheveled hair. She hadn’t the strength to keep her secret intact any longer.

  “My husband is not dead. His death was faked. He is now living in Paris with my sister.”

  Chapter 8

  At first, Jonathan was too stunned to say anything. He’d expected her to say a man had hurt her and she did the awful things she did because of that. But he’d never thought she’d say that she was still married.

  “Uh, um,” he muttered.

  “Stunned, aren’t you?” she asked.

  “Yes,” he admitted. “When did this happen?”

  “Ten years ago, when I was twenty-two.”

  Jonathan’s stomach roiled. “How could you keep something like this secret?”

  “It was simple, really. My husband and my sister started an affair soon after we married. When I discovered it he laughed in my face, said there was nothing I could do to stop him, and that my sister was a far better lover than I was.”

  “Belinda, I’m sorr…”

  “Don’t.” She sat up and wiped her cheeks. Her eyes were red and he felt like he’d just pulled a sec
ret out of her that would end the world. “I don’t want your pity. Strauss told me that he’d offered for my sister, but my father had refused, because she was younger than me. So he changed his offer. He used me to stay close to her. Things changed when my father found out what was happening. He demanded that Strauss break off the affair. Strauss refused.”

  “And then?”

  “Then, my father came up with a solution. He paid Strauss a great deal of money to pretend to be dead and move to Paris. He receives an exorbitant amount of funds each year to play dead. I suppose when my father passes, he’ll come back to London with my sister and their children and everyone will find out the truth.” She turned her face away from him for a moment, and then turned back. “Years ago, I received legal papers in the post. They were in French, and I have no idea what they said, so I paid a girl at the university to translate them for me. They were divorce papers. He’d claimed I’d abandoned him, and my sister, or I assume it was my sister, forged my signature. I’m sure they’re legally married now.”

  Jonathan sat forward, his hands clasped together over his knees.

  “Why has your father…”

  “Put up with me? Quite simple, really. I’m an embarrassment to him, true. But an even bigger embarrassment would be if society found out his son-in-law had an affair with his other daughter. I have no idea if he knows about the divorce. He cut all ties with me after Strauss and Gloria left. He blamed the entire mess on me; said I didn’t know how to keep a husband.”

  “He and my mother live quietly in Avon, where I’m sure news of my antics reaches him from time to time.”

  “You receive no funds from him?”

  Belinda’s laugh filled the room.

  “Certainly not! I was the villain, you see. I hadn’t even wanted to marry Strauss, but my father said it was a good match. He was the last of a long line, his entire family dead. When he died, I would inherit everything. The blackheart left me with debts, though, and I had to sell his country home to cover them. Soon after, I took my first lover.”

 

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