The Dark Regency Series: Boxed Set

Home > Other > The Dark Regency Series: Boxed Set > Page 18
The Dark Regency Series: Boxed Set Page 18

by Chasity Bowlin


  “As someone made you jump?” he asked.

  She laughed, a cold sound that rasped across his skin like a sharp blade. “I never jumped, Rhys. I took such pleasure in making you a cuckold that I would never have ended it.”

  “What happened to you then?”

  He couldn’t believe that he was actually conversing with her as if she were Elise, but more importantly, he couldn’t fathom that some part of him believed that in some way, in that moment, she was Elise.

  “I was betrayed by my lover and please don’t be trite by asking which one, for I shan’t tell you.”

  “Do you not want to see him brought to justice?”

  She turned, her hands tracing a sensuous path over her breasts, her nipples peaked from the cold. “She’s lovely, this new wife of yours.”

  Cold fury swept through him. “Stop toying with me, Elise. And stop toying with Emme.”

  She laughed and the sound was so familiar it made his blood run cold. “Very well, I’ll behave. I can’t tell you who he was, because if I did, then I would be giving you something you wanted—justice for your poor dead sister!”

  “You would deprive yourself of justice for that reason?”

  “Not deprive myself, so much as make you work for it,” she said, and leaned recklessly against the window. “You’ll get what you want, Rhys, but even in death, I won’t make it easy for you.”

  In that instant, she was gone. The tension left Emme’s face and she collapsed. Rhys moved forward quickly and caught her before she struck her head, but the stone floor scraped her flesh nonetheless.

  She opened her eyes again. “Should I even ask what I’m doing here?”

  He shook his head, “It was Elise. I think she enjoys using you to toy with me.”

  It took several moments for Emme to fully comprehend what he’d said. Only after she’d fully returned to her senses she recognized that he’d spoken with a certainty that was far different from the skepticism which usually greeted any talk of her abilities.

  “No doubts, Rhys? No equivocations, now? You believe?”

  He chuckled, but it was a self-deprecating laugh, and she could hear the tension in his voice, “I’m a convert, darling.”

  He helped her up, and slipped her dressing gown onto her shoulders. “I think you’re going to have to begin wearing night rails, much to my dismay.”

  They went back to their room, and as Emme climbed into the bed, Rhys carefully locked the door, and slid the key into the pocket of his dressing gown. The cold threats that Elise had issued were not far from his mind. He would do whatever was necessary to find the killer and when it was done, he would see her spirit banished from the house. If had to bring in the Archbishop of Canterbury himself, her spirit would depart and he and Emme would have peace.

  He climbed into the bed, and pulled her against him, pressing her body close to his. He had feelings for her that he dared not examine too closely. It was enough to acknowledge that they existed, without putting a name to them. She was his, and he would protect her from all threats, worldly and otherworldly. He didn’t sleep, but kept watch on her as she rested, safe in his arms.

  Chapter 12

  Over breakfast the following morning, Rhys considered how to proceed. Elise had written of her sexual exploits in great detail, save for the names of her many lovers. She’d used initials or nicknames. He’d finished reading the journal the previous night while Emme had slumbered beside him. He’d been hesitant to sleep, afraid that she would have another episode. Episode, he thought bitterly, as he sipped his coffee. It wasn’t as if she had become ill or was having fits of some sort. When he’d confronted her in the tower, in that moment, she had not been Emmaline. Elise had been inside her, controlling her, using her. He couldn’t risk Elise’s spite. The panic he’d felt the night before was proof of that.

  Lady Eleanor entered the room, looked at both of them, and then with a haughty lift of her chin showed both of them that she held firm in her disapproval. After filling her plate, she seated herself at the table. She sipped her tea and then unleashed her venomous tongue.

  “I had understood that you would be remaining in London for several weeks in order to introduce your new bride to society.”

  On a heavy sigh, filled with his frustration, Rhys replied, “We went to London to meet with Emme’s family and soothe any unpleasantness on that front. As for gossip, and society, at this point, I couldn’t care less,” he finished coolly.

  Sensing that a disagreement was in the offing, Emme rose. “I think I’ll go and have a visit with Lady Phyllis.”

  Rhys nodded, “I think that is a fine idea.”

  When Emme had left the room, Eleanor looked back at him. “She’ll never make a proper duchess.”

  His voice was cold when he spoke. “Eleanor, when I was younger, I tolerated your interference and your criticisms and allowed you to push me toward Elise against my own better judgment. There could be no more improper duchess than she, spreading her thighs for the lowest of servants, and every peer she met who was willing to accommodate her.”

  “There is no need to be crude,” Eleanor said, her tone stiff. “Contracts had been signed, Rhys. It was imperative that they be fulfilled.”

  “You’ve left me with little choice. You continue to revile my current marriage, and I am attempting to illustrate that it could be, and has previously been, far worse. Emme and I are wed. Your disapproval will not change it. I suggest then, that you attempt to develop and demonstrate your acceptance. If you do not, then you can return to your own home, assuming that Alistair hasn’t leveled it.”

  “You speak so ill of my son, yet your own behavior is far from above reproach,” she said, and the defensiveness of her tone was not lost on either of them.

  “Your son, madam, is a profligate gambler, a libertine, and a wastrel.”

  Eleanor’s lips thinned and firmed, and when she spoke, her voice was clipped. “He will be arriving here in a day or so. Phyllis has invited him for an extended visit.”

  “I’ll make certain we have an accurate accounting of the silver then,” he said, as he left the room.

  Furious, he went directly to the stables. He didn’t ask for assistance, but saddled his horse, Maximus and took off over the fields. He let the horse have his head, knowing that he needed the run as much as his master. The wind ripped at his hair and his clothing, and the darkening sky reflected his mood.

  A storm was rolling in, but he paid it little heed. It wouldn’t be the first time he’d ridden in the rain. Perhaps, he thought, it would cool his ire. Eleanor had been a help to his mother in those first ugly years following Melisande’s death. The truth was, during that time, she had run the household. She had overseen the home, and the children in it, grieving for their lost sibling and their distant parents. Those memories prevented him from tossing her from Briarwood Park, and demanding that she never return. Regardless, if she continued, he would be forced to banish her, as Jeremy had once banished Alistair.

  “I do wish Eleanor wouldn’t provoke him,” Lady Phyllis said. “For his sake and for yours. Rhys rarely loses his temper, but when he does, it can be fearsome.”

  It was odd that Lady Phyllis phrased it in that way. “I am sure I have nothing to fear from Rhys’ temper, Lady Phyllis.”

  Phyllis plastered a cool smile on her face, one that belied not even a hint of emotion.

  “I didn’t mean to imply, well, that is to say, he and Elise argued so bitterly, but I am sure you wouldn’t. ”

  She trailed off, unable to finish the statement, but her meaning was quite clear. Rhys wouldn’t lose his temper with her because she wouldn’t take lovers and flaunt them in front of him.

  “Rhys was entitled to be angry with Elise. She behaved abominably, but that doesn’t mean that he murdered her! He didn’t harm her in any way. Surely you believe that?”

  Phyllis sighed and sipped her tea, contemplating her answer. That she had to contemplate before speaking of her son’s innocenc
e was telling.

  “I have always wanted to believe him innocent, and I do, truly. But occasionally, I have doubts. The rumors, the whispers, they are difficult to ignore. Also, I think that even if he had murdered Elise, he might have been justified. She was destroying this family, destroying his happiness. Destruction and misery were the only things that poor girl could every give anyone.”

  Emme was shocked and horrified. “Your son, Lady Phyllis, is a man of unquestionable honor. He did not kill Elise, regardless of her sins. Any who would whisper of his guilt, who would spread rumors, do not know him as I know him. And as you know him.”

  Phyllis nodded. “Forgive me. You are right, dearest. Rhys is a good man, and a wonderful son. I should never doubt him.”

  The subject was dropped as Lady Eleanor entered the room. Her cold gaze settled on Emme before she spoke.

  “Your husband is quick to jump to your defense, Lady Emmaline.”

  “As a husband should be, Lady Eleanor.”

  The other woman’s lips lifted in a grotesque mimicry of a smile. “Indeed. Will you endeavor to be so proper a wife?”

  Emme sighed. “Your animosity for me is groundless. I am well aware that my social standing was not equal to Rhys’ and neither was my fortune. I did not come here to trap him, and the circumstances resulting in our compromising situation were entirely accidental. For the sake of everyone else in this house, would it not be best to maintain civility?”

  Eleanor glared at her, “You wretched little upstart! You dare to take me to task? I have been a member of this household for decades. I am well aware of what is best for this family!”

  Seeing that reason would not be achieved, Emme rose. “If you’ll pardon me, Lady Phyllis. I have some correspondence to see to.”

  As Emme stepped into the hall, she could hear the conversation continuing behind her.

  “I cannot have you treating her that way, Eleanor,” Phyllis said quietly. “She is my daughter-in-law, and she is making Rhys happy. Don’t you want to see him happy after all that he has suffered?”

  Eleanor’s voice was cold and hard as she replied, “His duty to the family name should make him content.”

  When Rhys returned from his ride, the storm was raging in full force. Lightning crashed, splitting the grey sky, and thunder rumbled ominously. Entering the house, he strode directly to his chambers. His valet awaited him with fresh clothing. He removed his muddied boots and sodden garments. The fire had been built up, warming the room considerably, but he still felt the chill. He rubbed himself briskly with a towel, before donning fresh breeches and a shirt.

  “Where is Her Grace at present?” he asked Timmons, his valet.

  “I believe she is in the sitting room, Your Grace,” the smaller man responded, indicating the adjoining door.

  Rhys didn’t bother with a cravat or waistcoat, and dismissed his valet, “I’ll ring for you later.”

  He crossed to the adjoining door and pushed it open. He crossed through the duchess bedchamber and entered the small sitting room beyond. Emme sat at the escritoire, her head bent as she peered at the page before her. A pair of spectacles perched on the end of her nose. They had not been an affectation, after all, he realized. “Good afternoon.”

  Emme started. Her attention had been so focused on what was before her, that she hadn’t heard him enter. Her hand flew to her racing heart and her lips parted on a soft cry.

  “You frightened me half to death.” She took in his casual dress and his bare feet which explained why she hadn’t heard his approach.

  He smiled apologetically. “Forgive me, it was not my intent to sneak up on you. I wished to once again apologize for my aunt’s behavior toward her. I am at a loss as to what to say to improve the situation.”

  Emme stood and walked toward him, placing her hands on his chest. She could feel the comforting warmth of his skin through the linen of his shirt and the steady thrum of his heart beneath.

  “There is nothing to forgive. You, contrary to your opinion, do not control everything and everyone. Eleanor is entitled to her opinion of me and she will hold that opinion regardless of what we say or do. Only time and perhaps familiarity will allow her to become more accustomed to my presence.”

  “And in the meantime, I should ignore her insults to you?” he asked, somewhat heatedly. Emme chose to ignore the tone, recognizing that the anger was directed more at Eleanor and himself that towards her.

  “If I can ignore them, can’t you?”

  He considered it. “No, I can’t. I am going to send her back to Arden Hall, Alistair’s estate.”

  Emme shook her head. “Rhys, your mother is dependent on Eleanor’s company. I know that she appears to be fine, but let us be honest. She is fragile in ways that most have no inkling of. How long has it been since she has made a decision regarding the running of this household?”

  Eleanor had run the household for nearly two decades. Phyllis had not functioned independently since Melisande’s murder. She loved parties and entertaining; she enjoyed company, but lacked the focus to arrange those entertainments or to run the household.

  “I can’t run a household of this size, Rhys. The simple truth is that you did marry far beneath your station and your wife is ill equipped for the duties of being a duchess.”

  He grasped her hand that rested over his heart and pulled it to his face, pressing his mouth against her palm. “I don’t give a damn about your social standing or your fortune. Any misgivings I had when you came here were about your character, and I was wrong to have ever doubted you.”

  She smiled at him. “Wrong! You were wrong? I didn’t think that was permitted.”

  He nipped at her fingers, playfully. “It was an aberration, and will never be repeated.” Growing more serious, he said, “I will not make any decision about Eleanor for the time being, provided she maintains civility.”

  Emme didn’t press. It was a concession for him, and she knew that he had made it for her.

  Changing the subject, she said, “I think we need to look at the murders a bit differently. Rather than trying to decipher from Elise’s journal who the murderer was, I thought we should examine acquaintances that Elise and Melisande had in common and who was present at Briarwood at the time.”

  It was a smart approach.

  “Michael and Spencer were both here that summer, as was Alistair, but they were children at the time.”

  “But Jeremy wasn’t. He would have been fifteen that summer?”

  “Sixteen,” he said absentmindedly. “Alistair and Jeremy were of an age and were thick as thieves then. Pommeroy was here as well, visiting with father.”

  Emme considered that for a moment. Pommeroy was a letch and a roué , and he certainly seemed to be obsessed with ladies.

  “Was Lord Pommeroy one of Elise’s lovers?”

  He didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. Lord Pommeroy had a neighboring estate; they socialized with one another and had for decades. He was, in a loose sense of the word, a friend of both Jeremy’s and Rhys’. Elise would have sought him out as a means of punishing them both for any perceived slights or wrong doing on their part.

  Rhys paced for a moment and then strode to the window where he looked out onto the lawn. His gaze traveled to the lake. Pommeroy knew the estate, had been present during the various accidents that had befallen Emme, and lived close enough to come and go from the estate on a daily basis with no one the wiser.

  “I believe that he was one of Elise’s lovers, yes, but is he capable of murder?”

  Emme walked toward him, and placed her hands against his back, stroking in a soothing motion. “I have learned that we are all capable of horrible things with proper motivation.”

  Rhys woke early the following morning. He dressed in rough clothing and went into the southern wing of the house. It had been closed off following Elise’s death. She had used that wing as her own private sanctuary. She’d entertained her lovers there, as it faced the forest paths that led in from the
road. It had been a convenient way for her lovers to travel to and from the house without being seen. The discretion had been for their benefit rather than for Elise’s. She’d flaunted her lovers, boasted of them.

  Dust and cobwebs hung thick and heavy throughout. As he entered, Rhys noted the heavy footprints in the dust there. They were large and could only belong to a man. From the number of prints, he could only surmise that the man had paced alarmingly or had made numerous passes through the dust-shrouded corridor.

  Rhys moved further along the corridor and into the large drawing room. Elise had entertained there, inviting her more adventurous lovers to sample forbidden desires. He’d once received a bill from a brothel where she had hired women to come in for the evening and help her “entertain”. He’d paid it and in doing so had instructed the madam that she was never again to fulfill his wife’s requests.

  The bitter argument that had ensued between them had rung throughout the house. In recollecting it, it was little wonder that most people believed he had killed her. On that night he had threatened to.

  With a sigh, he began to examine the room for some clue, for anything that might identify the lovers mentioned in the diary. He noted that the liquor was still present. Brandy and port told him nothing, as he couldn’t think of a single gentleman who didn’t have an abiding appreciation for both.

  He searched the shelves and drawers. He found nothing except crude drawings of a very explicit nature. Whoever her lovers had been, their artistic skills had been quite limited. Replacing the drawings, he moved toward the window and opened the curtains, allowing more of the early morning light to filter in.

  While standing there, looking out over the lawn, an awareness settled over him; the strange sensation of no longer being alone. His skin prickled and the hair at the nape of his neck stood on end. She was there, her face reflecting back at him in the glass of the window. His breath fogged in front of him as an undeniable chill swept through the room. Slowly, he turned, alternately hoping that the room would be empty behind him, and that it would not be.

 

‹ Prev