Perfect Romance

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Perfect Romance Page 29

by Duncan, Alice


  He struggled into it. Loretta noticed the wet spot on his lapel and reached up to brush at it, which didn’t help any. “I’m sorry I got your coat wet.”

  Malachai squinted sideways, trying to see his lapel, then tugged to get the garment to fit properly. It was rather wrinkled. “Doesn’t matter,” he said. With narrowed eyes, he surveyed his beloved. “I think you’d better wash your face and powder your cheeks. You look like you’ve been crying.”

  She smiled. “I have been. But you’re right. I’d probably better visit my old room before we brave the parents and guests.” She took his arm.

  He patted her hand where it rested on his arm and shoved aside the listing chair. “As to where we’ll live, let’s talk about it later. I like your place, but we probably should discuss it. After all, we want to rear our children in the best possible surroundings.”

  Our children. A thrill went through Loretta. She tried not to let it show. “I think San Francisco is a good place to rear children,” she murmured.

  “San Francisco’s a great place,” agreed Malachai. “I don’t want to move away from San Francisco.”

  They continued to discuss San Francisco’s many merits as Malachai opened the French windows, scanned the hall in both directions for interlopers, all of whom seemed to have given up and gone away, then led Loretta to the back staircase.

  Fifteen minutes later, with Loretta’s cheeks freshly powdered and her hair neatly rearranged, Malachai stepped aside to allow Loretta to precede him into the front parlor. Her eyes were still a little bit puffy, but they didn’t look bad. This was especially true since they sparkled so brightly. She’d noticed them in her mirror, and had been pleased. Love truly did do wonders for one’s looks. It helped, too, that she’d replaced her spectacles. The puffiness of her eyelids was hidden slightly behind her lenses.

  As soon as she swept into the room, movement stopped and chatter ceased. Everyone in the entire parlor and in the dining room beyond stopped what they were doing and turned to stare at her and Malachai. Loretta felt herself heat up from embarrassment. She hesitated at the doorway until the comfort of Malachai’s huge presence behind her bucked her up. There was nothing like a large man at one’s back to give one courage—although she knew life shouldn’t be like that.

  At this moment, however, Loretta was willing to allow the world to fend for itself. She and Malachai had an announcement to make.

  It was Jason who broke the spell. He’d been standing beside the fireplace with Marjorie, Joshua Pearlman, the lady violinist, and Mrs. Linden, who appeared upset. Almost as soon as the guests froze in shock at the advent of Loretta and Malachai into their midst, he lunged away from the fireplace and strode over to the parlor door. “There you are!” he said heartily, as if everything were normal. Taking their clue from him, most of the guests returned to their conversations.

  “Here we are,” Loretta said wryly. Her amusement at everyone’s confusion was helping boost her self-confidence. “And we have an announcement.” Under her breath, she added, “I’m sure you and Marjorie and Mother will be pleased with it, Jason, curse you all.” She stuck out her tongue at her stand-in brother, then grinned to let him know she was happy in spite of her words.

  Jason’s eyes widened. “You mean . . ?” He looked at Malachai, who nodded.

  “She finally gave in,” he said in his deep, grumbly, thundery voice. Loretta loved his voice.

  “Well, I’ll be damned.” Jason took Malachai’s hand and shook it vigorously. “Congratulations, old man! I’m very happy for both of you.”

  “Condolences might be more on the money,” Malachai growled. Loretta smacked his arm, and he grinned, his white teeth against his tanned skin making her breath catch. She wondered if she’d ever get used to his masculine presence. She hoped not, because it was very exciting.

  Before they could plan their announcement, Jason turned around, lifted his head and his arms, and clapped. He wore evening gloves, so the clap wasn’t as effective as it might have been, but when he roared out, “Quiet, everyone! We have an announcement!” people paid attention.

  Once more, chatter in the room stopped, and everyone turned to stare at Jason, Loretta, and Malachai. Jason stepped aside with a sweeping gesture of his arm. “I’ll let these two tell it.”

  Malachai stepped into the breach as if he’d been born to command. Which, come to think of it, he might well have been. She wouldn’t be surprised if he’d been fathered by some adventurous sea captain somewhere.

  “Miss Linden and I are engaged to be married,” he said without preamble. Their audience gasped.

  “He doesn’t mince words, does he?” Jason whispered in Loretta’s ear.

  “No, he doesn’t, thank God.”

  “Engaged?” Loretta’s father blinked and peered around the room. Loretta suspected he was trying to find his wife, whom he always expected to handle the family’s social emergencies.

  “Engaged?” This was a squeal, and it came from Loretta’s mother, thereby aiding her father in his quest. She helped him further by breaking away from the group she’d been with and hurrying up to her daughter, her arms held wide. “Oh, Loretta! I’m so happy!”

  Loretta felt silly when her mother threw herself at her. Fortunately, Malachai still stood at her back, so he could both brace and embrace the both of them.

  And then the onslaught began. Loretta’s father, elbowing people out of his way, charged at them, removed his wife from where she clung to Loretta, and embraced his daughter in a hug the likes of which Loretta hadn’t experienced since she was a little girl. It almost made her cry again to see how happy her parents were. She was glad she’d made them happy, even if it did mean her own marriage.

  She had a feeling she wasn’t going to mind being married to Malachai, though. Not one little bit.

  # # #

  Malachai sighed with contentment, cupped his hands behind his head, and sank back against the pillows Loretta had thoughtfully propped up against the headboard. “That didn’t turn out as bad as I’d feared it would.”

  She snuggled against him, running her fingers through his thick chest hairs. “What didn’t? The announcement or the lovemaking?”

  He peered down at her tousled head and wondered if she was joking. His darling wasn’t a very ardent joke smith, so he presumed she was serious, although he couldn’t fathom how there could be any doubt about the lovemaking. “The announcement.”

  She snuggled closer. “Ah. I thought that’s what you meant.”

  “Your parents aren’t going to be disappointed that we won’t be having a big wedding, are they?”

  “Good heavens, no! They’re so happy I’m finally getting married, they wouldn’t care if we eloped.”

  Malachai felt his eyebrows lift. “Now there’s a good idea.”

  Loretta didn’t speak for a minute, then said slowly, as if still mulling the matter over, “You know, Malachai, really isn’t a bad idea.”

  “Huh?”

  “If we eloped, it would save a lot of fuss, wouldn’t it? I mean, my parents are socially prominent and you’re the famous Captain Quarles of the Moor’s Revenge. If we got married in the regular way, not only would it take time to arrange, but there would be a lot of publicity, and I know you hate publicity.” She smiled sweetly up at him. “I think it would be fun.”

  He grunted. “You only want to elope so you can get married without being considered conventional.”

  “Pooh.”

  Nevertheless, at noon the next day, Captain Malachai Quarles and Loretta Linden were united in holy matrimony by a justice of the peace at San Francisco’s Municipal Courthouse without any fanfare, and with Dr. Jason Abernathy and Miss Marjorie MacTavish in attendance as witnesses.

  A month later, Mr. and Mrs. Linden hosted a grand ball in their honor. All the best people came. William Frederick Tillinghurst’s name wasn’t mentioned once. Malachai thought wryly that it was as if San Francisco society was embarrassed that it had once clasped Tillinghurst to
its bosom and now intended to pretend he’d never existed.

  # # #

  September, 1915

  “Damn you, Malachai Quarles!” A hideous scream followed this bellowed profanity.

  Malachai, who was pacing in the reception hall, directly at the foot of the staircase leading up to the bedrooms in his and Loretta’s huge Lombard-Street mansion, winced as if he were a cringing coward rather than a rough-and-ready sea captain (retired). Derrick Peavey, Loretta and Malachai Quarles’ somewhat vague footman, looking fairly seedy in his brand-new uniform, blinked and stared up the stairs, his mouth agape.

  “Dinna worry, Captain Quarles,” Marjorie said in a soft, understanding voice. “It’s only Loretta.”

  “But she’s in pain,” Malachai whimpered.

  Marjorie laughed. Malachai didn’t appreciate her laugh one bit. “It’s normal, though. Ever since the fall, you know, God decreed that women would give birth in pain.”

  Still pacing, Malachai grumble, “Stinking plan, if you ask me.”

  Given Marjorie’s conventional predilections, Malachai wouldn’t have been surprised to have received a reprimand from the woman. Instead she laughed again. He’d rather have been scolded.

  This was awful. It was nerve-wracking. It was the most God-awful, miserable, frightening, panic-inducing—

  “Owwwwwww!” came from upstairs.

  Malachai clamped his teeth together. His head ached from grinding them so hard for so long. He didn’t care. Loretta was in pain. And it was all his fault.

  “Aaaaaaagh!”

  “I can’t take too much more of this,” Malachai growled.

  Loretta shrieked again, and he lost his composure completely. With a bound, he started up the stairs.

  Marjorie jumped to her feet. “Captain, please! Leave Dr. Abernathy to contend with her by himself. He canna want another patient to deal with. Loretta’s plenty enough all by hersel’.” As if inspired, she added the one thing that might have stayed Malachai’s progress. “Think of the bairn, Captain.”

  He paused halfway up the staircase. “The bairn,” he whispered. “But it’s the bairns. At least, we think it is. Are.” He rubbed a hand over his stubbly face. “She was huge. Oh, God.”

  But he slowly came back downstairs.

  Twenty minutes later, when he was on the verge of total nervous collapse, he heard an upstairs door open. Racing to the foot of the staircase, he gazed upward, praying that everything was all right up there. He hadn’t heard a scream or a curse word for at least five minutes, and his nerves were jumping like water on a hot skillet.

  “I’m sure it’s all right, Captain,” murmured Marjorie.

  Derrick Peavey, for whom all this noise and nervousness had been a trifle too much, cowered in a chair against the far wall of the hall.

  The maids, Molly and Li, crept into the room from the kitchen, where they’d been preparing sandwiches and coffee, at Dr. Abernathy’s instructions. Malachai glanced at them, but didn’t speak. Ever since Loretta informed him that the staff of their house was afraid of him, he’d been trying to be less gruff in his dealings with people. He’d discovered that housemaids and housekeepers, unlike sailors, didn’t take it as natural when he hollered at them.

  Suddenly, Jason Abernathy appeared at the head of the staircase, grinning down upon the assembly like a mischievous imp, if imps grew to six feet. “Relax, Quarles,” he said. “Everything’s fine.”

  Malachai couldn’t relax. “What is it? Are they? Loretta?”

  Chuckling, Jason said, “Loretta’s fine.” He started down the staircase. “She’s not too happy with you at the moment, but she’s fine.”

  Behind him, Malachai heard Marjorie say, “And the bairn?”

  “Make that two bairns,” Jason said.

  He reached the foot of the stairs and held out his hand for Malachai to shake. Malachai’s innards were in too much of a turmoil to respond properly, so Jason grabbed the hand dangling limply at his side and shook it without his help. “Congratulations, Captain, you’re now the father of a fine, healthy boy and a fine, healthy girl. And, if I may be allowed an opinion on the matter, both of them are beautiful.”

  “It was twins,” whispered Malachai, stunned. “Twins. Twins!”

  Shoving Jason out of the way, he took the stairs three at a time. Still grinning, Jason gazed after him, then turned and smiled at Marjorie, who was wiping tears away. “Go on up, Miss MacTavish. Mrs. Brandeis is swaddling them, but I’m sure she can use your help.”

  Without a word, Marjorie rushed up the stairs after Malachai.

  Derrick Peavey, still hunched in his chair and obviously disconcerted to have seen the captain whom he had known and revered for more than twenty years in such a state, looked at Jason, his eyes wide. “It was the Moors done it.”

  Jason only laughed.

 

 

 


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