by Jo Beverley
“Susan, when is he going to stop watching me? Probably never. I’ll think of something.”
“David!” But then she stopped herself from lecturing him like an older sister. She wouldn’t tell him about Con’s protection, however. Not yet. He was overconfident as it was.
“Wait for a few months at least.”
“A few months.” He laughed. “You know that’s not possible. Unless you’ve found the gold.”
She shook her head. “I’ve spent most of the day looking for cunning hiding places, and I’m running out of places to search.” She paced the room in frustration. “It has to be somewhere the earl went, at least now and then, and he spent nearly all his time in his rooms. He used the dining room occasionally when he had guests, and the drawing room once or twice. . . .”
“What about the storerooms and cellars below?”
She considered, but then said, “I can’t imagine it. He thought it beneath an earl’s dignity to go into such places. I don’t think he even visited the kitchens.” She looked at him. “I can’t stay much longer, and I don’t think I’m going to find that money. I do wish you were just the earl’s estate manager.”
“Well you know,” he said with a smile, “if I was I’d be dashed bored. Probably into all sorts of other trouble.”
“Alas, how true.” She took his hands. “For my sake, love, try to be at least careful.”
He gave a comforting squeeze. “I am careful—because I have the welfare of everyone around here in my hands.”
He might not have intended it as a gentle rebuke, but it was. He was her younger brother, but he was past her control and a commander of men. All she could cling to was that Con had promised to try to keep him safe. Unlike the old earl, he would keep his word.
She pulled free with a light smile for him, and told him about the notes she’d found. “It was as if he hated Mel and Lady Belle.”
“Mel said a couple of things that suggested that he and the earl were at odds. He kept him sweet with money, but also with things for his collection.” He grinned. “Some of it is even more bogus than it’s supposed to be.”
“Perhaps the earl found out about that.”
“Possible, I suppose.”
Susan frowned. “But why include Lady Belle in his animosity?”
“Jealousy? I did hear that the earl courted her when she was young. Before Mel.”
Susan remembered that. “They must both have been very young. She was eighteen, wasn’t she, when she took up with Mel? She could have been countess and she chose to live in sin with a smuggler instead? A wise choice, but extraordinary.”
And so different from her own choice. For the first time in her life Susan wished she’d been more like her mother.
“And he held a grudge for nearly thirty years? Truly insane.” David shook his head. “But by God, I’ll bet he did bring about Mel’s capture. I wish he were still alive to pay for that betrayal, but he’s beyond my reach.”
He was all Captain Drake, and suddenly she shivered.
He turned suddenly watchful eyes on her. “How did you find out that Gifford knows?”
She had to do rapid assessments. She’d confessed her past to Con, but she couldn’t bear to tell David. “He told the earl, and the earl told me.”
“So the earl’s on our side?”
“To a moderate degree. I think I persuaded him of how important smuggling is here.”
He nodded. “Good. I’d better go. I’m engaged for the evening.”
“Not—”
“Dammit, Susan, I do have interests other than smuggling, you know. It’s a cricket match over at Paston Harby.”
She laughed with relief. “To be followed by a drinking match at the Black Bull. Do try not to get into another fight, love.”
He kissed her on the cheek. “You too. Try to keep on the right side of Wyvern.”
With a carefree smile he was gone, and she tried to begin as she meant to go on by not fretting about what he might do next.
She ate her meal in her rooms, served by a maid, as was proper for a housekeeper. As she ate she read a novel—Guy Mannering by Sir Walter Scott. The high emotions had appealed to her a few days ago, but now the book seemed ridiculous in comparison to the real, feverish emotions swirling through her life.
She exchanged the novel for a book about beetles and made herself concentrate on it and not think about smuggling, friends . . . or lovers.
At a knock on the door, she said, “Enter.”
Maisie popped her head around the door. “The earl wishes to speak to you, Mrs. Kerslake. They’re still in the dining room.”
Again? Instead of fear, silly hope leaped inside her.
Idiot. They were friends.
Only friends.
Yet there was that matter of curiosity. . . .
“They?” she asked.
“The earl and Mr. de Vere, ma’am,” Maisie said, as if it were a nonsensical question. As indeed it was. But Susan had the information she needed. He wasn’t alone.
She hardly thought de Vere a pattern card of respectability, but she trusted Con not to do anything embarrassing in front of a third party.
“Thank you, Maisie.”
She checked herself in the mirror, tempted to reach for her cap and fichu again, but there was no need for that. They were friends.
She was tempted to change into a pretty dress, rearrange her hair. . . .
They were only friends.
She settled her mind about that, straightened her spine, and went briskly to the dining room by the corridor route.
Con was relaxed at the table, fingers cradling a mostly empty brandy glass. He smiled slightly at her, but it was a deep, thoughtful smile. The decanter was over half empty and there was no way to tell how much of it de Vere had drunk. De Vere was on his feet waiting for her, looking bright-eyed. She wondered what was going on in his mischievous mind.
They must have decided that there was no point to formality, for neither man was wearing a cravat, leaving their shirts wickedly loose at the neck.
Con raised his glass and sipped from it.
“Yes, my lord?” She tried to make it crisp. Crisp as the starched cravat he so obviously was not wearing.
Race de Vere spoke, however. “We would like to see this torture chamber, Mrs. Kerslake.”
Con raised his brows, suggesting that he thought it folly, too, but he didn’t contradict his secretary.
“Now?” She glanced between them. “It would be better left until the morning.”
“Did the late earl visit it in daylight?” Con asked.
After a moment she said, “No. But—”
“Then we probably should see it in the appropriate manner.” He pushed back from the table and rose, steadily, it seemed. “Don’t worry. We expect it to be suitably horrid. In fact, de Vere is depending on it.”
She gave Race de Vere an unfriendly look, but he showed no effect of it.
Con said, “If it frightens you, give us directions and we’ll go by ourselves.”
“Frightens me?” she said, turning to him. “No, it doesn’t frighten me.” Then she saw the glint of humor in his eyes and knew he’d tossed out a deliberate challenge. The trouble with friends was that they knew you all too well.
Even across a bridge of eleven years.
She swept up the candelabrum from the table. “It’s more ridiculous than horrid. But if you want to see it, come along.”
She led the way down the dark corridor, but paused by the arch above the stairs that spiraled downward. These particular stairs had been made with true medieval narrowness, and were tricky, especially with the candles in her right hand. She transferred them to the left, then held her skirts up with her right.
Someone touched her arm, and she started.
It was Con. She’d known it was Con. She’d known his touch, like ice, like fire.
He took the candles from her and stepped in front. “I’m sure it’s the noble hero’s part to lead the wa
y down stairs like this, and after all, I am suitably left-handed. Race, I trust you to fight off any demons or dragons that attack us from behind.”
She entered the downward spiral, therefore, between the two men, encased in their fragile bubble of light and protection. She was truly relieved to have one hand free to trace the wall as they went. She didn’t like these tight stairs. She always felt trapped, as if the air would go.
When they stepped out into a small, plain chamber she sucked in a relieved breath. She especially hated the stairs in the dark. She should have remembered that.
Only one narrow corridor led off the room.
“Down there, I assume,” Con said.
“Yes. It was made narrow to increase the spine-chilling effect. It is all done for effect. Shall I lead the way, or do you wish to?”
He passed her the candles. “ ‘Lead on, Macduff,’ ” he quoted. “If there’s a trap, I assume you know how to avoid it.”
“No trap. It is completely harmless, I assure you, though designed to stir fear.”
She spoke calmly, but the narrow corridor pressed in on her, even three candles seeming feeble in the dark. The iron-bound door with a small barred opening seemed to waver in the flickering light.
She pressed down the cold iron latch, and pushed the heavy door open. It gave a long, eerie squeal. Prosaically, she said, “It was apparently quite difficult to make the door produce just the right noise.”
“The miracles of modern engineering.”
A hint of laughter in his voice warmed her and swept away fear.
Friends. Coming here with a friend was so different from coming here with the earl, as in the past. He’d insisted in showing it off to her three times.
She placed the candelabrum on a table among assorted strange implements, and stood back to watch the men’s reactions.
“The room is not entirely below ground,” she said as if giving a guided tour, her voice resonating in the chamber. “You will note the high barred windows, gentlemen. By day they let in a little light. For expected night visits, the torches on the walls are lit, and the brazier, of course, for heating hot irons and such.” She gestured to the implements on the table. She didn’t know what most of them were, and she didn’t want to.
“The torches produce a lot of smoke,” she continued, “but if the wind is right, it escapes through the windows.”
Con and Race were wandering through the unsteady chiaroscuro of the room, studying the tools of torture on walls, shelves, and tables, glancing at the wretched victims. Three hung in chains on the wall along with ancient weaponry. Another screamed silently as his foot was crushed by the iron boot. On the pièce de résistance, the rack, a woman stretched, arched in agony.
The waxwork figures were astonishingly realistic, and the first time she’d come here she had been shocked. She looked at the two men, but couldn’t read their thoughts.
“No waxworks of the torturers?” Con asked, flipping a cat-o’-nine-tails on the wall without expression. Of course, they were used in the army and navy on real flesh. They were used in the streets on thieves and whores, too.
“The earl or his guests liked to play those parts.”
Susan looked at de Vere, expecting to see him reveling in his treat, but he was looking around with a slight frown. “Why?” he asked.
She found herself sharing a look with Con. It was an excellent question, but to those familiar with Crag Wyvern and the Demented Devonish earls, it hadn’t occurred.
“Because he was stark, staring mad, of course,” Con said. He looked at Susan. “Does any of this actually work?”
She knew what he was asking: Had it ever been used? “Of course not, but it’s designed to be played with.” She went to one of the haggard wretches hanging on the wall, scarred, bruised, and burned. “The burns aren’t wax, but painted metal over wood, so a hot iron can be put against them. They can be covered with mutton fat to create smell and smoke. There are bladders of red fluid in various places that can be pierced to bleed.”
Con shook his head. “He could have joined the army surgeons and had so much more fun.”
Susan was hit by a sudden feeling of associated shame. This place had nothing to do with her, but she had thought it merely ridiculous when she should have been deeply horrified.
Like the dragon’s bride fountain.
She glanced at the rack, struck by a similarity between the arched figure there and the arched “bride” bound to the rock. What a foul and twisted mind it had been to think up such things.
She should have seen them for what they were. She should have avoided contact with the mad earl entirely. Instead she had chosen to work here, and thus had let Crag Wyvern coarsen her.
She had almost been snared by the dragon.
Thank God for de Vere and Con, who’d seen real horror and suffering, the suffering of friends and heroes in battle and under the surgeon’s knife, while the demented earl and his idiot guests played mad games here.
She longed to leave now, but Con had walked over to the rack. “And this?”
“It is operational to a degree. Do you want to see?”
“Oh, by all means.”
“Dammit, Con, it’s a woman,” de Vere protested.
“It’s wax and a wig, and should we feel less pity for the tortured man than for the tortured woman?”
Susan went over and grasped the handle on the large, ratcheted wheel. It took all her strength, but she turned the mechanism another notch. The taut figure stretched another impossible inch. Its back bowed, and a high-pitched shriek of agony bounced around the stone walls.
“Christ Almighty!” Con leaped forward and pulled the locking pin, letting the wheel spin backward and the ropes go loose. The figure sagged, its waxen arms flopping bonelessly. A long wheeze told of the bellows mechanism relaxing somewhere inside.
For a moment they all stood like waxworks themselves, then Con seized a hangman’s ax off the wall and severed the ropes at the victim’s hands. The next blows cut through the ones at her feet and into the wood beneath. Then he swung again, to dig deep into the wooden wheel, splitting it.
De Vere hauled the victim out of harm’s way, but then he shed his jacket and grabbed a mace. He smashed the heavy iron ball into the bed of the machine, sending splinters flying. Con laughed, ripped off his jacket, and swung the ax.
Stunned, Susan retreated from swinging weapons and flying wood and two maniacs who had moments before seemed to be civilized gentlemen. But her hand over her mouth was holding back laughter as much as anything—at the wildness of it, and the rightness. It was past time parts of Crag Wyvern were smashed to bits.
Perhaps she was dazzled, too, at the sight of Con in destructive fever, swinging that mighty ax. It should frighten her, but he was so magnificently physical that she felt dizzy. His back was to her now, and through waistcoat and shirt she could see the muscle and power in ferocious action.
From the first blow, there’d been nothing tentative about him. Her gentle, fun-loving Con was used to wielding weapons to destroy, used to swinging them to cut through to the marrow, to kill before he was killed.
It appalled her.
It made her prickle with raw lust.
She tore her eyes away to look at de Vere, equally masculine, equally ferocious. More so. His face was toward her, and there was something terrifying about the fury and passion with which he destroyed, as if he’d reduce wood and metal to splinters, to dust, to nothing.
His violent certainty, however, stirred nothing in her, while she wanted to rip Con’s clothes off.
She looked back at him, wondering what his face would show. He suddenly stopped to stand looking at the destruction, leaning on the ax and sucking in breaths. His shirt was plastered to his skin again, this time with sweat.
De Vere was still smashing the mace down on the shattered machine. Would Con try to stop him? She thought he might be killed and braced herself to run forward, to interfere.
Instead he turned to f
ace her.
No madness in his face, but a deep and dangerous fire that made her instinctively retreat. He walked toward her, his eyes dark, and she would have retreated further, but her back was already against the great door, cold iron bolts digging into her flesh.
She didn’t know what his face showed, but she was nothing but instinct now. Instinct to flee. Melting instinct to surrender to the dragon.
He collapsed over her, hands and strong arms catching him but caging her, and lowered his head to claim a ruthless kiss.
She could, perhaps, have escaped. She didn’t know what he would have done if she’d ducked away. She could have turned her head. Instead, she surrendered.
With the clang and crash of continued destruction filling the stone chamber and violence in the very air she breathed, she surrendered to a kiss that had nothing to do with the sweet explorations of eleven years ago.
Did she remember a taste? She thought so, but that could be illusion. She remembered his smell, though, strong now with maturity and heat, spicy and deep, and branded in her senses.
Lady Anne. The thought came from somewhere far away in the distant sanity of her mind.
For Lady Anne’s sake she would not reach, or touch, or curl her arms around his wide shoulders. But she let herself stay to be consumed by the dragon’s hot mouth and potent smell so that her nipples ached and her legs shook.
They betrayed her in the end and she began to slide down, the bands and bumps of the unforgiving door scraping along her back. He came with her, mouth still on hers until he straddled her and captured her head to demolish her entirely.
Hands clenched, she still would not touch, but tears leaked, perhaps because she would not touch. . . .
Silence.
There was silence.
Still ravaged by his hungry mouth, she forced her eyes open to the flickering room. She couldn’t see de Vere, but he must be watching them.
She touched then, pushing at Con’s shoulders and arms, fighting free to gasp, “Stop it!”
Silly thing to say, and far too late. He’d stopped anyway, eyes closed. Too late for other reasons, as well.
That kiss had kindled deeper, stronger fires. . . .
She could see de Vere now over Con’s lowered head, apparently sane, watching them with knowing interest. Con still had her pinned to the floor with his weight and his legs. Her back was bruised and stinging, her legs cramping.