Ferguson, J. A. - Call Back Yesterday.txt

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by Call Back Yesterday. txt (lit)


  deepened even more. “Please sit, Miss Kincaid.”

  This time she said nothing. She sat in her chair by her

  typewriter and folded her hands in her lap, ignoring how

  the brocade crinkled beneath them.

  He opened his mouth to speak, then closed it as he

  looked past her. At her typewriter, she knew, although she

  watched him steadily. Again it was simple to read his

  thoughts. He wanted her gone from Rosewood Hall. Yet

  he wanted her skills with the typewriter to remain.

  “It would be best,” Dr. Garnett said in the same

  strained tone, “if you don’t encourage my father in his

  antics. If you did not notice, he was overexerting himself

  at dinner in an effort to impress you.”

  “I’m sorry. I don’t understand. I simply listened while

  he told of his visit to London.”

  “He was too frenetic. He needs quiet. That is what his

  doctor has ordered.”

  “Dr. Garnett, I had no idea that he was so ill.” She

  started to rise, but he motioned for her to stay seated.

  She watched as he paced the room, easily skirting piles

  of books and not once stepping on a page on the floor,

  even though he kept his gaze focused on her. How many

  hours had he walked back and forth across his office while

  he pondered some tidbit of information he had discovered?

  “My father must have serenity.” He paused and affixed

  her with his powerful eyes. “I should have followed my

  first inclination and sent you away from Rosewood Hall

  without delay. Instead, I let your machine seduce me into

  changing my mind.” His lips tightened into a straight line.

  “I shan’t allow you to seduce my father from his life one

  day early.”

  This time, when Darcy surged to her feet, she ignored

  his gesture to remain where she was. She would not sit

  here and let him spew his rancorous spite at her. No

  position should require her to endure this.

  “I bid you good night, Dr. Garnett,” she said, her voice

  shaking with fury on every word. “I shall be here in the

  morning to continue my work unless you wish to tell me

  otherwise now.”

  “I shall let you know in the morning.”

  Although she wanted to accuse him of tormenting her

  with this delay, she simply nodded. Anything she said now

  might guarantee her being shipped back to London even

  before morning.

  “Good evening, Dr. Garnett.” She walked toward the

  door.

  “Miss Kincaid?”

  “Yes?” She did not turn.

  When he gripped her arm and swung her to face him,

  she intended to order him to release her and to tell him she

  was resigning from this position and state that she would

  be leaving Rosewood Hall at first light. She said none of

  those things when she found herself falling into his eyes’

  emerald depths, fearing she would be scorched by the fiery

  passions within them.

  His fingers gentled on her arm, curling up along her

  sleeve before tightening just enough to draw her a halfstep

  closer. She barely noticed, for she was lost in his eyes.

  Those eyes had seemed so familiar from the very first time

  she had looked into them. If she gazed into them long

  enough, would the answer to this puzzle be found?

  She knew Simon Garnett. She was as certain of that as

  she was of her desperate wish to return to the banks of the

  Nile where she had been born. She knew his many moods,

  and she knew how he chewed on his bottom lip when he

  was concentrating on a problem he had not yet solved.

  Most of all, she knew his alluring touch. It was the

  most familiar thing of all. Even though he had never

  touched her as he did now.

  “Don’t go,” he murmured.

  “I don’t want to go.” She was astonished at her

  breathless response, for she should be lashing out at him

  for treating her with such impertinence. Yet the words were

  a truth which surged out of her lips as if they had been

  kept silent for too long.

  She was not sure whether to shiver at the brush of his

  breath or melt into the heat that rushed through her. Beneath

  his mustache, the hint of a smile urged her to lower even

  more the wall of propriety he had breached. His full lips

  would certainly be as fiery as his touch. Even as she

  watched, the coolness in his eyes warmed to the heat

  pulsating from his fingers. His other hand rose to cup her

  cheek, setting her skin alight, as if the sun had suddenly

  risen and sent its rays through the garden. Slowly her hand

  rose to cover his.

  “There is so much to say. I—” He jerked his hand

  away from her face. Blinking, he abruptly looked down at

  his fingers on her sleeve. He lifted them away, first one,

  then another. Almost as if he could not bear to release her.

  “Good evening, Miss Kincaid.”

  She eased back from him, frightened of how the very

  brush of his skin against her had undone every lesson she

  had ever been taught. Alone with a man—her employer—

  she should have been on her guard against any untoward

  behavior. Rather, she had let him snare her in his seductive

  trap with what should have been a chaste touch, albeit one

  that overstepped the bounds of propriety.

  But his indecorous actions were not the real reason

  she was so unsteady she had to grasp the back of a nearby

  chair to keep herself on her feet. It was the very knowing

  how wondrous his fingers would be upon her. She had

  anticipated his caresses with a longing born of

  foreknowledge.

  “Good evening, Miss Kincaid,” he repeated.

  Was the tinge of desperation in his voice or in her

  ears? Either way, she knew he was right to want to put

  some space between them.

  “Yes, yes. Good evening, Dr. Garnett.” Her fingers

  fumbled along the door until she found the knob.

  As she turned it, her eyes were caught by something

  glowing close to the ceiling. Her companion light she saw

  each night? It had never appeared anywhere except above

  her bed as she fell asleep. Her guardian angel’s reflection,

  she had told herself when she needed comfort. What was

  it doing here?

  Yet it was not the small circle of light she was

  accustomed to seeing. It was a floating film, resembling a

  wisp of cloud amidst bright sunshine. Even as she watched,

  the film collapsed into the ball she had seen so often, then

  it vanished.

  “Is there something else, Miss Kincaid?” asked Dr.

  Garnett in his coolest voice. He held a book open in his

  hands, cradling it as gently as he had her cheek.

  “No. No, of course not. Good evening, sir.” She hurried

  out of the room and into the hallway.

  Pressing her back against the raised panels along the

  wall, she fought to catch her breath and slow her swift

  heartbeat. Dr. Garnett’s bold touch had bewildered her,

  but not as much as the swell of sorrow rising through her

&nb
sp; as the light disappeared. A sorrow that was not hers. It

  had come from the filmy glow.

  What was going on here at Rosewood Hall?

  Five

  ~~~ “You speak of things I do not understand,”

  Meskhenet said.

  “Do you understand this?” The stranger’s broad hands,

  which were as coarse as the sand beneath her sandals,

  framed her face. He tilted Meskhenet’s mouth toward his

  and bent toward her.

  She pulled back. “You dare much, stranger, to come

  into the Pharaoh’s palace and try to kiss the Pharaoh’s

  sister. Men have died for less.”

  “I know.” Sorrow dimmed the fire in his eyes.

  “Who?” she asked, knowing the very question

  suggested a betrayal to her brother, the Pharaoh. That was

  not so, for there were laws her brother despaired at, but

  the priests in Ra’s temple insisted they were the god’s own

  decrees. Meskhenet’s argument her brother was the

  reincarnated god who should be able to decide how his

  people were ruled had done no good in budging the

  Pharaoh.

  “Does it matter?” he asked. “The Pharaoh’s laws must

  always be obeyed. That is the decision of the gods

  themselves.”

  “But only when they are fair.” She put her fingers to

  her lips. If she was overheard—if this man spoke of her

  traitorous words to anyone else, even her close relationship

  to the Pharaoh might not save her.

  “You are wise, Beloved of Thoth.”

  “Why do you call me that?”

  He pointed to the pendant she wore about her neck.

  When he smiled, she was sure his face was as bright as

  the sun upon the Nile. He reached out to lift the pendant,

  and his finger brushed her skin. That scintillating heat

  soared through her like a bird gliding over the river.

  “You wear this,” he said, running one fingernail along

  the design on the pendant. “Only those who are beloved

  by Thoth would wear it.”

  “That is silly. Many wear jewelry inscribed with the

  ibis-headed god to honor Thoth.” She pointed to his sandals

  which were decorated with a similar symbol, although not

  as finely rendered.

  “But I cannot call you by your given name, for that is

  forbidden. For me, you are the Beloved of Thoth.”

  Meskhenet knew she should have understood that right

  from the beginning, but her mind was ajumble with the

  unknown, yet enticingly familiar sensations roiling through

  her with each word this man spoke. Quietly, trying to regain

  control of her errant emotions, she asked, “What is your

  name, stranger? It is not forbidden for me to speak it.”

  “I am called Kafele.”

  “Kafele the architect?”

  He bowed his head toward her again, but his smile

  revealed his pride. “I am honored you know of me.”

  “How could I not? You are overseeing the building of

  my brother’s tomb in Thoth’s Valley.”

  “It is my greatest honor.”

  “I hear it is beautiful beyond all others dug out of the

  mountain there.”

  “It will be.” He chuckled, surprising her for he had

  been so somber in his speech before now. “It is a blessing

  the Pharaoh has many more years before he will need his

  tomb.”

  “You worked as well on my father the Pharaoh’s

  tomb.”

  “Do you wish to speak only of death? I know you are

  curious why I am in your garden.”

  “That is true.”

  His voice softened. “I have heard many songs of your

  beauty, and I wished to see the truth for myself.”

  “So my brother the Pharaoh’s tomb can be accurately

  painted?”

  “No.” He held up his hand as he had before. “When I

  hear your name lauded, my heart is filled with such joy I

  needed to learn why. Now that I behold you, I know it was

  meant I should be here with you.”

  She could not halt her fingers from rising to settle on

  his. As he drew her to him, she did not resist. She could

  not resist. Her other hand curled up over his shoulder. It

  was as unyielding as the wall surrounding her garden.

  When his arm encircled her waist, he pulled her up

  against his naked chest. His mouth found hers, and she

  thrilled in his kiss. It was . . .

  ***

  “Blast and damnation!”

  Darcy quickly closed her notebook, shocked at the

  curse and the slamming office door. She stared at Dr.

  Garnett, who was striding toward the desk with the

  determination of a runaway wagon. He held a single piece

  of paper, but his knuckles were white and his mouth a

  straight line.

  “Sir?” she asked, hoping he would not plow over her.

  “Oh, Miss Kincaid. . .” His expression revealed he

  had forgotten she was there.

  She stood, holding her notebook protectively. “If you

  need some time alone to—”

  “Time?” He laughed sharply. “I have no time, and I

  have all the time in the world.”

  “Excuse me?”

  He tossed the paper onto the typewriter.

  “What is this?” she asked. Was she being dismissed

  after only three days? If so, she could not understand why

  he had delayed this long. She had been fearful that he would

  send her back to London after her first dinner with him

  and his father. . .and the way Dr. Garnett had touched her.

  Dr. Garnett had acted as if nothing were amiss when

  she returned to the office the next morning. The only

  difference was his voice sounded more gruff than before.

  They had worked side-by-side like the strangers they were.

  “Read it,” he ordered.

  She set her notebook beside the typewriter. With

  trembling fingers, she lifted the fine vellum. She read it

  quickly. She was not being fired. It was a letter written to

  Dr. Garnett. It stated if his manuscript could not be

  delivered to the publisher in two months, the offer of

  publication would be withdrawn. It was signed with a

  scrawl she could not decipher.

  Dr. Garnett fingered his mustache that could not hide

  his scowl. His coat was wrinkled, and he was wearing the

  same green waistcoat he had worn yesterday. He must have

  worked through the night, then found this waiting.

  Quietly she asked, “Is this a problem?”

  “A problem?” He stared at her as if she were mad. “A

  most unanticipated problem. I was in London only last

  month and spoke with Caldwell.”

  “The gentleman who signed this?”

  A grim smile barely tilted his lips. “One and the same.

  During my visit, he told me I would have until next summer

  to complete the work. It’s ludicrous to think I could finish

  the book this far ahead of schedule.”

  “But aren’t you going to try to finish the book as he

  requested?”

  “Try?” He cursed vividly as he dropped to the sofa.

  “Why bother?”

  Darcy placed the letter on the desk. “And, if you don’t

  bother, what
will you do? How many years of your life

  have you invested in this book, sir?”

  “I shall not present Caldwell with less than the best I

  can do. Two months.” He crossed his arms over his chest.

  “How in hell do they expect me to perform such a miracle?”

  With a sigh, Darcy glanced at her typewriter. She could

  answer him, but he would not like what she had to say. He

  never would finish the book by complaining. Perhaps he

  had become too accustomed to having his every need

  anticipated before he was even aware of it. She had almost

  been seduced into such a life, but it never could have been

  truly hers. She would have remained an outsider in the

  closed circle of the British aristocracy who considered pure

  bloodlines so important. For their horses, for their dogs,

  and for themselves.

  She bit her lip as he walked toward the door, then

  called, “Dr. Garnett?”

  He slowly faced her. “Miss Kincaid, if you’re about

  to launch upon a lecture on the fact the effort in itself is a

  reward, let me warn you I have no interest in listening.”

  “Do you want me to continue?”

  “Continue.” Frustration burned in his eyes, anger

  tightened his jaw.

  “If you plan to halt your work, there’s no need for me

  to continue typing your manuscript. However, if you wish

  to finish before your deadline, you should know I am

  willing to work whatever hours are necessary.”

  His eyes narrowed. “Why?”

  “I need this position, sir.” She linked her hands behind

  her in a pose identical to his. That way he would not see

  how they quivered as she imagined crawling back to

  Kincaid Fells. “And I was engaged to help you complete

  this manuscript.”

  “You’re being honest, aren’t you?”

  “Yes.”

  He looked past her to her typewriter. A flurry of

  emotions crossed his face, each replaced by another before

  she could gauge his thoughts.

  She held her breath, waiting for his answer, although

  she was not sure why. His decision should be simpler than

  the one Meskhenet had made to trust Kafele. Clenching

  her hands by her sides, she wondered why she was letting

  the story linger in her head when Dr. Garnett’s next words

  might destroy any chance to finish her book.

  Walking back to her, Dr. Garnett asked, “You are

 

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