A Bride by Moonlight

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A Bride by Moonlight Page 21

by Liz Carlyle


  “Then next year, perhaps Town will have more appeal,” she said neutrally.

  “Well, we might have gone this year.” Diana had opened a small pasteboard box filled with tassels and was poking through it. “But everyone’s in mourning.”

  Lisette propped one hip on the edge of the table and watched her work for a moment. “Diana,” she said curiously, “how did Lord Saint-Bryce die? I never heard.”

  Diana looked up from the box. “Apoplexy, Dr. Underwood said, though for a time we thought he might recover.”

  “So it was not . . . sudden?”

  “No, he survived for a time,” she said. “But he could not speak, and his right arm and leg would not work. Walton and Prater had to carry him to his bed.”

  “Well, thank goodness they found him,” said Lisette.

  “But they didn’t,” she said, blinking rapidly. “I did.”

  “You did?” Lisette echoed. “Oh, Diana, how terrible!”

  She looked suddenly grief stricken. “I was passing by his study on my way to the schoolroom,” she said. “I heard this frightful thud and just knew something bad had happened. When I went in, he could not speak. Fortunately, Walton and Prater were just around the corner.”

  “Well,” said Lisette pensively. “How life does change, and in the twinkling of an eye. Speaking of which—will Lady Hepplewood reconcile herself, do you think, to Miss Willet?”

  Diana laughed. “Oh, that betrothal will never last,” she said, holding the tassels straight out in both hands. “Which do you think? The blue? Or the gold?”

  “Well, there isn’t much color in the main reception rooms,” remarked Lisette, who had begun to drift about the bedchamber. “They are neutral, but pleasingly so.”

  “I know,” said Diana. “I chose all the furnishings. I love ivories and golds. And Cousin Cordelia really does not care, so long as everything is of the finest quality imaginable.”

  “Is that what Loughford looks like?” Lisette stopped by the hearth, and turned. “Everything of the finest quality?”

  “Oh, yes, but everything there is old,” said Diana, warming to the topic. “Classically so. Loughford is—oh, it is, I think, the most beautiful house on earth.”

  “And yet it is in disrepair,” said Lisette.

  Diana’s head jerked up from her work. “Who told you that?”

  Lisette felt her eyes widen. “I—why, it was Gwyneth, I think.”

  “Gwyneth is full of nonsense.” Diana sounded exasperated. “The house is well kept.”

  “Perhaps Lady Hepplewood merely suggested otherwise to her brother?” Lisette lightly suggested. “Perhaps she wished an excuse to stay here instead?”

  Diana opened her mouth, then shut it again, apparently pondering. “That may be so,” she finally admitted. “But the pair of them—Duncaster and his sister—are thick as thieves.”

  “Ah.”

  Lisette continued to drift for a time, admiring the elegant chimneypiece and a landscape hanging upon it. Diana pinned the samples and took them to the window in turn, occasionally asking her opinion. When she’d settled on the champagne with gold tassels with a white muslin backing, Diana turned to the pieces of leather—Lady Hepplewood wished to have a pair of sofas to flank the hearth, she said.

  It seemed a frightful extravagance for a room to be used only on occasion, and Lisette could only conclude Lady Hepplewood suffered no shortage of funds. Or perhaps Duncaster gave her an allowance for the furnishings? Or paid the bills outright?

  Musing on it, Lisette bent down and picked up an oddly pierced kettle that hung from a long hook in the firebox. “This is lovely,” she remarked.

  “Isn’t it?” said Diana, sorting out her scraps. “Saint-Bryce—Gwyneth’s father, I mean—brought it home from his travels in the Orient—or was it was Africa? He was a great traveler in his youth. I don’t know what the thing’s purpose was—some heathen ceremony, no doubt—but we found it useful for steaming herbs.”

  The thing was remarkably ornate and heavy, with a chamber for water, and a pierced platform above. “What sort of herbs?” she asked.

  Diana took a pin from her mouth. “Like lavender and rosemary for restlessness,” she said, “or eucalyptus for congestion. Lord Hepplewood rested far better when it was steaming.”

  “How soothing,” she said, putting it back on it’s hook. “Well, have you decided?”

  “No, come look,” asked Diana a little fretfully. “Do you think this will alter in the afternoon light?”

  Lisette put the contraption back and returned to the table. As they began another round of pinning and choosing, she began gently to pry. “Lord Hepplewood’s last days must have been difficult for Lady Hepplewood,” she said absently. “I understand he had become senile?”

  Diana flicked her gaze up. “At first he was just weak and a little confused,” she said. “Toward the end, though, yes, he began to ramble incoherently.”

  Lisette leaned over the table. “Is that why they argued so often?” she asked, dropping her voice conspiratorially. “Had he gone out of his head? Become hard to manage?”

  Lips pursed, Diana set her pincushion aside. “Lord Hepplewood wanted us all to go home,” she said. “Perhaps they quarreled about that once or twice. I believe that . . . well, perhaps he feared he was dying? And one always wishes, I think, to die at home in one’s own bed.”

  “But Lady Hepplewood did not wish to return?”

  Diana shook her head.

  “Why?”

  Diana lifted her slender, birdlike shoulders. “Cousin Cordelia says Northumberland is too cold,” she said. “And that it’s time Tony got out on his own, and experienced a taste of life in London.”

  “Apparently he got more than a taste,” said Lisette dryly. “Besides, he must be nearly my age. Had he never ventured from home?”

  “He spent, I think, two years at Oxford,” said Diana, “but it did not suit him. And he whiled away a Season or two in London, but nothing came of it.”

  Lisette was confused. “When the late earl was working in London, did Tony and Lady Hepplewood not accompany him?”

  “Sometimes.” Diana picked a bit of lint from her fabric. “Generally, though, he took the train down alone, and stayed in Clarges Street,” she said. “Tony never seemed to have much interest in politics—and until recently, no interest in society.”

  It was odd, thought Lisette. The new Earl of Hepplewood did not sound quite as bad as the prodigal Napier had described. Perhaps it was true that Diana had blinders on where Tony was concerned.

  Lisette pondered how to ask her next question, and came up with nothing tactful. “Duncaster told us Hepplewood accused Lady Hepplewood of trying to kill him,” she said quietly. “He didn’t credit it, of course. And then there were some strange letters Hepplewood wrote to Whitehall . . .”

  “Letters?” Diana looked stricken, her head jerking up like a startled deer. “Is that why Napier—Lord Saint-Bryce—started coming here?”

  “I’m not perfectly sure.” Lisette shrugged. “We don’t often discuss his work. Did you help care for Lord Hepplewood?”

  Diana swallowed hard, and nodded. “We all did. I sat with him almost every day. Gwyneth, too. When he was ill, we soothed his brow with cool compresses and cajoled him into taking his beef tea. We took turns reading the Bible, and even the newspapers.”

  “You must have loved him very much,” said Lisette softly.

  “I did!” She looked suddenly as if she might burst into tears. “He was—why, he was like a grandfather to me. I owed him everything. I was devastated when he died. We all were.”

  “Even Lady Hepplewood?”

  “Yes.” Diana nodded vigorously. “Oh, yes, even given their age difference, theirs was a love match. In later years, yes, they may have had quarrels. What couple does not?”

  It was precisely what Duncaster had said—and it left Lisette deeply puzzled. In her admittedly limited experience, quarrels came early in a relationship, not afte
r long years of marriage.

  She opened her mouth to press the issue but was interrupted when the door swung open again. It was Prater, who had cast off his livery in favor of a long canvas apron.

  “Marsh has given me leave to help you, Miss Jeffers,” he said. “Just tell me what I’m to do.”

  With a murmured apology to Lisette, Diana excused herself and went to the pile of discarded green fabrics. Lisette watched for a moment, her mind turning over all that she had learned. But Diana was obviously well occupied now.

  After a murmured good-bye and an absent wave, Lisette began the long trek back to her bedchamber, feeling oddly uneasy—and more uncertain—than ever.

  CHAPTER 9

  Every True and Perfect Thing

  “All the world’s a stage,” Shakespeare once wrote, “and all the men and women merely players.” And in Royden Napier’s estimation, no one embraced that concept more thoroughly than his temporary fiancée. Even he, long hardened by skepticism, could at times believe the infernal woman half in love with him.

  The resulting emotions left him feeling perplexed and oddly thwarted.

  Over tea at Squire Tafton’s tidy manor on a graying afternoon, Elizabeth played the doting wife-to-be to perfection, tucking close against him on Mrs. Tafton’s snug camel-backed settee, and gazing adoringly up at him at every opportunity.

  With her warm scent wafting up to tease at his nostrils, Elizabeth regaled their hosts with hilarious anecdotes from his childhood—made entirely of whole cloth, but gleaned, she glibly lied, from his dear old nanny. Then she explained in dramatic detail how her eyes had first met Napier’s across a crowded drawing room. She had known at once, Elizabeth declared on a breathless sigh, that he was The One.

  The squire smiled, and declared Napier the most fortunate of men.

  Napier thought he was instead the most stupid—and perhaps the most besotted—for listening to Elizabeth’s tales even a tiny bit wistfully. She was patently dangerous. And he—well, when in God’s name had he turned starry-eyed?

  He was the last man on earth who should have done so. As a child, he’d never even read fairy tales, let alone believed them. In his work at Number Four, he dealt on a daily basis with the darkest deeds a man’s soul could conceal. Oh, he had known women—delightful, deeply desirable women, some of them—and had the honor of bedding a few. But not a one had made him feel a hearts-and-flowers sort of longing.

  And he didn’t feel it now, damn it.

  What he felt was lust, he assured himself. A burning, seething lust for a woman who was a near stranger to veracity—a lust he’d half a notion to put to an end in that most expedient and effective of ways: by taking the red-haired vixen up on the suggestion that sometimes lingered in her eyes.

  Suddenly, Napier realized that, for decency’s sake, he needed to shift a little bit away from said vixen.

  He forced his focus mind back to his hosts and imagined them naked in bed. It was an effective countermeasure, his burgeoning erection shriveling at once. Missing several teeth, Tafton was a lanky, sprawling, good-natured fellow who took his tea with more enthusiasm than grace.

  His wife was round and plump, and almost shyly bedazzled by her guests. Unaccustomed as he was to blinding anyone with his charm, Napier tried not to snort out loud.

  As to Elizabeth, she quickly set Mrs. Tafton at ease. Too much at ease, perhaps, for Napier’s comfort, because as soon as the tea tray was removed, Mrs. Tafton asked a little wistfully if Miss Colburne would care to see the newest little Tafton?

  For the first time, Napier saw a look of grave uncertainty dash across Elizabeth’s face. But it was quickly veiled.

  “Oh, yes, if you please, ma’am,” she said breathlessly. “It would be my greatest pleasure.”

  “We have our two girls, both half grown,” said Tafton once his wife disappeared up the staircase, “and the apples of my eyes they are. But a son—well, I don’t mind telling you, my lord—we’d pretty nearly given up hope.”

  Napier understood that, to a country squire, a son was of the utmost importance. Daughters, it was to be hoped, would marry well and go on to live their own lives with whatever family they married into. But a son was expected to stay behind, to help his father run the farm, and in time, run it himself.

  In a trice, Mrs. Tafton was back down the stairs with a bundle in her arms, a young housemaid trailing dutifully behind. “And here is our Andrew, Miss Colburne,” she declared, bending over to present him for Elizabeth’s inspection. “Just up from his nap, he is, so in a fine temper, too.”

  Napier leaned over and dutifully declared the infant the handsomest of children—which, in his limited experience, was perfectly true. Andrew Tafton had the roundest blue eyes he’d ever seen, and a pair of fat, cherubic cheeks to go with them. And when the child encircled Elizabeth’s index finger in one of his tiny fists, kicking his feet with such joy and vigor, Napier felt something almost painful tug inside his heart.

  But Elizabeth merely sat speechless, her face gone a little pale.

  Mrs. Tafton seemed not to notice, and thrust the child at her. “Would you care to hold him in your lap, Miss Colburne?”

  Elizabeth seemed to return to herself with a little jerk. “Oh, yes,” she whispered, extending her arms.

  Mrs. Tafton placed the bundle gently in her arms, and for an instant, Elizabeth sat rigidly forward on the sofa, the child borne awkwardly across her elbows.

  “Oh, you may tuck him close, my dear,” said the squire’s wife dotingly. “Andrew shan’t shatter, I promise.”

  At that, Elizabeth cast a shining, almost hopeful gaze up at Mrs. Tafton, then drew the child to her breast. Fisting both hands, the babe yawned hugely, then relaxed into a drowse again, his pale, feathery lashes sweeping half shut.

  For a time the room was held captive, as Elizabeth rocked the child and cooed the silliest things while the squire and his wife looked on with delight. But it was not the happiness upon his hosts’ face that tore at Napier’s heart.

  It was the look upon Elizabeth’s.

  As she gazed down at the child held so gingerly to her heart, her soft expression held both joy and sorrow, and told him more than a thousand words might have done.

  He wondered, fleetingly, if she were unable to bear children. She was some years past the age when a woman would be expected to marry, and God knew she was beautiful in an unusual way. But many men, he knew, simply would not consider taking a barren wife—though the very word grated on Napier. It was cold term, and full of ugly implications.

  And in her case, it seemed especially cruel, for a woman of Elizabeth’s intelligence and determination would have so much more to give a man than a mere child.

  Yet it was her intelligence and determination that had brought her life perilously near ruin, Napier suspected. Perhaps that accounted for her unwed, childless state? Perhaps Elizabeth’s priorities had required her to coldly pare away certain choices from her life.

  What a shame—and what a loss—were that true.

  Soon enough, however, Elizabeth passed the child back to Mrs. Tafton, her face fixed into that smooth, smiling countenance again, her every true emotion carefully masked. There was no point, he realized, in mentioning the fleeting pain he’d seen on her face. It couldn’t be his concern. And he knew Elizabeth would have denied the emotion.

  When at last they had taken their leave of the squire and his lady, Napier handed Elizabeth back up into their borrowed curricle, and tried to forget how she’d looked with the child tucked to her breast.

  “Well, how did that go?” she murmured when he leapt up beside her.

  He cut her a dark, sidelong glance. “Those poor people are destined be twice disillusioned,” he muttered, snatching up the reins. “Once when the wedding falls through, and again when it dawns on them what a sorry specimen of landed gentry they’re getting for a neighbor.”

  Elizabeth gave an unladylike guffaw, sounding entirely recovered. “At least you’ve begun to accept your
fate.”

  “Which fate would that be?” he said quietly, giving the reins a snap. “The fact that you wouldn’t have me? Or my pending lord-of-the-manor incompetence?”

  At that, the laughter left Elizabeth’s eyes, and she looked at him very oddly.

  Damned bloody idiot, he thought.

  Where had those words come from? But her mouth slowly twisted into a wry smile. “Oh, I think we’re both too jaded to believe our own lies,” she said. “But as to you, Napier, I think you give yourself too little credit.”

  “Oh?” he managed, cutting her another sidling glance. “How’s that?”

  She waved a dismissive hand. “Why, managing an estate like Burlingame Court cannot be any more difficult than managing the Metropolitan Police—vastly easier, I daresay.”

  “I can’t think how,” he said, “when I scarcely know corn from hay.”

  “Do you know every street corner and watch-box in greater London? Every magistrate in Westminster? All the laws of the land?”

  “No, but—”

  “No, but you administer justice all the same,” she interjected. “You‘ll find administering an estate no different. I expect it’s more about having a knack for management, and a grasp of human nature. It is not about one’s book knowledge, for that can be had from . . . well, books.”

  Oddly, her opinion reassured Napier, though she could not have known much more on the subject than he did. “Speaking of a knack for management,” he said dryly, “you managed our hosts rather handily.”

  She looked at him archly. “Is that not what I was employed to do?”

  “You do it rather too well,” he complained. “You’re charming and witty and beautiful—and I’ll be thought an idiot and a cad when you throw me off.”

  “Oh, Napier, such lofty compliments! Careful your tongue doesn’t turn black.” She lifted her chin, eyes sparkling green with mischief in the afternoon light. “Besides, perhaps you will throw me off instead?”

  “And be thought an outright scoundrel?” he said, frowning. “Come, Elizabeth. We had this discussion somewhere between Twyford and Reading. I cannot do it.”

 

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