by Cheryl Holt
“No, you won’t, and you must depart at once. I believe I’ve betrayed Mr. Oswald sufficiently for one evening, don’t you?”
She slid away and went to the door. She peeked into the hall and gestured for him to hurry out.
He hesitated, debating whether he should argue, debating whether he should remain, but she didn’t realize she had no control over what was about to happen. In the future, she would have plenty of reasons to hate him, and he didn’t need to supply any extra ones so early in their relationship. It would only make matters harder between them down the road.
He went to the door too, and as he passed her, she reached into her pocket and withdrew the key.
“Don’t come back,” she warned. “You won’t be able to get in.”
He might have told her there was another entrance, a secret staircase that he’d used often as an adolescent when he’d been anxious to sneak out unseen.
But he didn’t tell her. She’d learn about it later on.
“Good night,” he said.
She didn’t offer the same goodbye, and he walked out, dawdling until she spun the key in the lock. Just to be sure, he tried the knob.
“Go!” she hissed on the other side of the wood.
He strolled away, feeling disconcerted and more alone than he’d been in a very long time.
CHAPTER FIVE
“You’ll remain by my side all evening.”
“I don’t know why I should have to.”
“Because I said so.”
Veronica peered over at her stepfather. Usually, she could manipulate him—within reason—but he was being abnormally recalcitrant.
She was an inch away from letting loose with vitriol, but it was pointless to fight with him. She had to sweet-talk and flatter and cajole, had to plant an idea in his head, then hammer away until he presumed it was his own.
He was a self-important twit who believed people were impressed by his cleric’s collar. In reality, he was widely recognized as a belligerent incompetent. It never occurred to him that she might have views that differed from his own or that she might not care two figs for his opinion.
They were at Summerfield Manor again, Stanley hosting another supper party with neighbors invited to meet Miss Ralston. For a horrifying interval after their invitation arrived, Oscar had claimed they wouldn’t attend, but of course, he couldn’t bear to refuse.
He loved to be observed as he strolled through the house, loved to remind others that he was Stanley’s only brother.
“I like Miss Ralston very much,” Veronica said. “I hope she and I will be great friends.”
“If you wish to befriend her, it will be while you are beside me so I can keep an eye on you.”
“Why are you so upset? Have you been quarreling with Uncle Stanley?”
“Yes. That is why I nearly didn’t come, but it’s important for my parishioners to see me out and about. And that I extend my forgiveness to Stanley. I must shower him with Christian kindness.”
Veronica wanted to gag. Oscar was the least Christian-behaving man in the world, and he and Stanley were always at odds. Stanley constantly taunted Oscar over how he might not inherit Summerfield, and Veronica thought it was terrific fun.
“There’s Miss Ralston now.” Veronica gestured to where the woman was standing in the corner, and she flashed her prettiest smile. “Please, Papa Oscar. Just for a few minutes? You can watch me the whole time.”
“Oh, all right,” he ultimately grumbled, “but stay where I can see you. I’d better not have to chase you out in the garden ever again.”
“I wouldn’t dream of going anywhere without your permission,” she lied.
She slipped away, and as she felt his stern gaze following her, she sighed with exasperation. She was eighteen and lived in a bloody preacher’s rectory. Her stepfather was hated by all. They were disliked, isolated from society, with Stanley their sole relative. Despite how Oscar nagged, Veronica intended to enjoy herself.
At the prior party, he’d left early, so he’d made her leave too. She’d missed the dancing, and it couldn’t happen again. She had to find more ways to sneak away—especially with James and Lucas visiting.
James was her rescue plan, her escape route to the exciting life she deserved. Previously, she’d been too little to attract his attention, but she’d grown up. He was too smart to tarry in a boring place like Summerfield. With his having quit the army, he would move to London where he and Lucas would wallow in adventures she couldn’t begin to imagine.
It seemed fitting that they take her along. She was determined to marry James, so she needed opportunities to flirt. A friendship with Miss Ralston was an innocent ploy to spend more time at the manor with him.
Plus, Veronica wouldn’t let Miss Ralston have James all to herself. She might get ideas. She might look at handsome, virile James, then at elderly, decrepit Stanley, and decide she’d rather have the younger man. But he wasn’t available to Miss Ralston or any other female.
Miss Ralston had to understand that she could only have what Veronica was willing to give her. And it certainly wasn’t James Talbot.
* * * *
“Will she agree?”
“Yes.”
“Has she told you she will?”
“No, but I expect to have her affirmative answer in the morning.”
Stanley glared at James, visually warning him to be silent. Stanley was in no mood to have another inane discussion about Miss Ralston. The bargain was struck. Why hash it out all over again?
James had resided at Summerfield most of his life, and as a boy, Edwina had spoiled him, so he occasionally assumed his position to be higher than it was. He occasionally assumed he had the right to question Stanley, but no one was allowed to do that.
Stanley was king of his domain, but in light of his current predicament, he’d had to confide in James, and he loathed that fact. He didn’t like James to know his business, didn’t like to be beholden to James on any level, but he’d finally been confronted by a situation he couldn’t manage on his own.
“She might surprise you,” James said.
“No woman ever has.”
“She has a stronger constitution than you envisioned and an ingrained sense of right and wrong. She might refuse just on general principles.”
“She won’t.”
James scoffed. “One blasted time, I’d like you to be mistaken. It would humor me immensely to see you thwarted.”
“I won’t be. I specifically chose her because she’s all alone. If she doesn’t behave as I’m demanding, she has nowhere to go, and I’ve always found a female’s need for fiscal security to compel her into any circumstance that will provide it. How do you think whores end up flat on their backs?”
“You’re such an ass,” James snorted. “She doesn’t want to marry you.”
“Who would?”
“She’s having second thoughts. She might renege. It could happen.”
“It won’t. I took her to church with me, and Oscar was in fine form.”
“Yes, I spoke with her afterward. She was extremely distressed.”
“Marvelous,” Stanley mused. “She realizes why I require an heir. She’ll view it as her duty to protect the people at Summerfield. She won’t disappoint me.”
The house was filled with guests. He and James were huddled together in the main parlor, observing the crowd.
Miss Ralston was across the room, chatting with Veronica, and Stanley made a mental note to talk to her about the girl. Veronica spread trouble wherever she went. Unfortunately, there were few young ladies in the neighborhood who were close in age to Miss Ralston, so it was natural that a bond might bubble up. Stanley was determined it wouldn’t.
“I wish,” James said, “you’d picked someone who wasn’t quite so nice.”
“What an idiotic comment.”
“I just hate to have her hurt. It would be easier to bear if she was less likeable.”
“How am I hurting her?” Stanle
y gestured around the ornate parlor. “If a child catches in her womb, she’ll spend the rest of her life—in luxury, I might add—in this grand mansion. Her son will be lord and master after I’m gone. That’s hardly a detriment.”
“But until you pass away, she’ll be wed to you. I wouldn’t exactly cite it as a benefit.”
“There are worse things than marrying a rich, landed gentleman such as myself.”
“Yes,” James caustically concurred. “She could fail to conceive, and you’ll ship her off to parts unknown, ruined and with coach fare and a few pennies in her purse. You won’t think twice about her after that.”
“No, I won’t.” Stanley scowled. “And why would you? Don’t tell me you’re becoming a romantic at the ripe old age of twenty-five.”
James shrugged. “I like her.”
“Bully for you. Like her. Don’t like her. As far as my bargain with you, it changes nothing. Now if you’ll excuse me”—he nodded to where Veronica was still chatting with Miss Ralston—“I can’t have that little tart getting too cozy with my fiancée. I’d better run her off.”
“Yes, heaven forbid that Miss Ralston have any friends at Summerfield.”
It was an old complaint that harkened back to James’s own childhood. There had been scarcely any children on the estate, which was the reason Stanley had sent James to boarding school against Edwina’s vehement wish that he not.
James never thought Stanley proceeded with James’s interest in mind, but every blasted choice had bestowed boons on James that he’d never deserved.
“Well,” Stanley said, “heaven forbid that it be Veronica anyway. She is not—and never will be—a suitable companion for Miss Ralston. You should watch out for her too. I hear she has the morals of an alley cat.”
“This is not news to me,” James replied.
“I didn’t suppose it was. Be careful she doesn’t lure you into a jam.”
“She couldn’t.”
“I’m never surprised by the mischief a pretty girl can instigate. Don’t let yourself be snared in her net.”
“She’s not smart enough to trap me.”
“If that’s what you believe, then you’re a fool.”
* * * *
“What are you doing out here by yourself?”
“Moping. What does it look like?”
James was on the verandah, leaned on the balustrade and peering out into the dark garden. He stared over his shoulder at Lucas.
“You, moping?” Lucas said. “You never mope.”
“I’m trying new things.”
“The vicar finally left. We’re going to dance again. Come inside and help me move the furniture.”
“I don’t want to move furniture or dance.”
“So? Come inside anyway. We have too many women and not enough men.”
“Have you become Stanley’s social secretary?”
“Yes. It appears I’ve found my calling.” Facetiously, Lucas added, “My father will be so proud.”
James chuckled and spun around as Lucas joined him, and they studied the house. The rooms were bright and gay, the light from dozens of candles wafting out, giving the mansion a festive glow. Guests were mingling, laughing, and drinking Stanley’s liquor, which James liked to see.
“You’re actually sulking,” Lucas said after a protracted silence.
“I told you I was.”
“What’s wrong? Is it being back at Summerfield?”
“You know I always hated it here.”
“No, you didn’t. You hated Stanley. You didn’t hate the estate.”
James considered, then nodded. “I suppose not.”
“If he’s harassing you, we don’t have to stay. It’s not as if we’re children who must blindly obey. Let’s head to London. I can’t figure out why we’ve tarried as long as we have.”
“You were opposed to going right away,” James reminded him. “You’re broke, and there will be creditors chasing you who still haven’t been paid from the last time you were on furlough.”
“There is that.”
“Why don’t you write to your father? You could ask him to square your debts.”
“I’m not ready.”
Lucas had no shame. He overspent and overindulged in every conceivable way. Yet when push came to shove, he’d slink home to Lord Sidwell and beg for rescue. Lord Sidwell would huff and bellow and scold, then he’d relent and bail Lucas out—literally on occasion—but Lucas had to be in very dire straits before he’d seek the man’s assistance. With their dawdling at Summerfield, his situation was hardly ominous. There was no reason for a fast departure.
“Seriously,” Lucas said, “let’s ride out in the morning. Bugger Stanley. If he’s upsetting you, I’m happy to take my chances in London.”
“I can’t leave now.”
“Why not?”
“I agreed to help him resolve a problem he’s having.”
“What is it?”
“It’s nothing. It’s just…I swore I would.”
“Well, I must point out that if you’re letting yourself be sucked into one of Stanley’s schemes, you have only yourself to blame when it crashes down.”
“You’re correct.”
“Whatever he’s asked of you, you shouldn’t proceed. It can’t be to your advantage.”
“He told me if I aid him, he’ll give me the information about my parents. And a thousand pounds to boot.”
“You believed him?”
James hemmed and hawed, not sure how to answer. He and Stanley had such a strange relationship. Stanley insisted he’d been kind to James because Edwina had insisted, but Edwina had been dead for almost two decades. So what was Stanley’s motive? Why persist? It made no sense and never had.
Stanley had never liked James and claimed he didn’t like to support James or have him on the premises. But the instant James got fed up and tried to sever ties, Stanley would lure him back, and James was unable to evade Stanley’s incessant pull.
Where Stanley and Summerfield were concerned, James had no spine whatsoever.
Did he trust Stanley? Did he assume Stanley would follow through on a promise?
“I don’t not believe him,” he ultimately said.
“What does that mean?” Lucas asked.
“Don’t listen to me. I’m morose and miserable.”
“You certainly are, so we’ll have to start the dancing without you. What with Vicar Oswald finally leaving, we barely have the energy for amusement. Your glum attitude would ruin what’s left.”
Suddenly, Miss Ralston appeared in one of the windows. She was wearing her schoolteacher’s dress—gray fabric, white collar and cuffs, every inch of skin covered from chin to toe—and it occurred to James that she must not have a garment that was more fetching. Not a single gown suitable for a party. It was the saddest notion ever.
Yet even attired in the drab, conservative outfit, she was shockingly pretty. On seeing her, his pulse raced.
Stanley might be expecting to marry her, but that act had no bearing on how James behaved. He’d be more than happy to show her things that Stanley never could.
Would she hate James in the end? He prayed that she wouldn’t.
“There’s Miss Ralston,” Lucas said.
“What do you think of her?”
“She’s much too fine for the likes of Stanley Oswald.”
“My opinion exactly.”
“Let’s bet on whether I can seduce her,” Lucas eagerly suggested, and on hearing the ridiculous remark, a wave of jealousy swept through James.
“You never could,” James told him. “She doesn’t like you.”
“Not like me? Don’t be absurd. Women love me.”
“Not her. She finds you vain and annoying.”
Lucas’s jaw dropped in astonishment. “She didn’t say that.”
“She did.”
“Then I’ll just have to spend the evening changing her mind, won’t I?”
He waltzed away, and James snic
kered to his retreating back, “Good luck.”
“Luck has nothing to do with it,” Lucas scoffed. “It’s skill and charm and cleverness. She doesn’t stand a chance against me.”
Lucas flitted inside, and James observed until Lucas sidled up to Miss Ralston. His flirtatious charisma was visible even from James’s removed vantage point.
The entire charade was too ludicrous to watch. He spun and fled into the garden.
* * * *
Rose hurried down the garden path. She wasn’t sure where she was headed, and thankfully, there were lanterns lighting the route so she wouldn’t barrel into anyone as she had when she’d nearly knocked down James Talbot.
The party was still in progress in the house behind her, and she’d begun to feel as if she couldn’t breathe. With Lucas Drake fawning over her, Veronica Oswald pretending friendship, and Mr. Oswald glowering, she’d had to escape.
As she went farther and farther, the laughter and voices dimmed. Finally, she was away from the festivities, away from the lanterns. It was dark and quiet, the moon gleaming off the water in the pond.
She saw the bench where Mr. Oswald had seated her when he’d unveiled his sordid proposition, when he’d talked about Scotland and local custom and handfasting. His proposal was an insult to Rose, as if she was nonessential in even the most elemental fashion.
She was desperate to discuss the situation with someone, to get advice. She’d struggled for hours to compose a letter to Amelia or Evangeline but, in the end, she hadn’t put pen to paper. What could she possibly say to her two old friends?
Both women would be shocked beyond belief, and they had no more experience with men and matrimony than Rose had. The only effect a pleading missive would render would be to alarm Amelia and Evangeline about their own pending marriages.
If Miss Peabody would throw Rose into such a horrid quandary, what might she have done to Amelia and Evangeline? There was no way she could explain to Amelia and Evangeline. And even if she’d dared, they hadn’t the means to help her.
She had to help herself, the problem being that she had no idea what to do. She didn’t have any power or influence over Mr. Oswald, and she certainly didn’t have any funds to leave. Mr. Oswald had them, and he would provide them to her after she’d participated in his squalid scheme.