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Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2)

Page 11

by Lisa T. Bergren


  CHAPTER TEN

  Cora

  Our touring cars pulled up along an ancient city gate at Nîmes, and Will came back to speak to us, allowing us to remain seated.

  “More and more,” Will said, gesturing behind him to the ruins, “we’ll glimpse the remains of the Roman Empire. We’ll drive about the city so you can get your bearings—be sure to watch for the Maison Carrée, a Roman temple. In a bit, we’ll visit the Pont du Gard, the highest aqueduct the Romans ever built. And tonight, we’ll attend a bullfight in an amphitheater that was erected close to two thousand years ago.”

  “A bullfight?” squealed the girls.

  I felt less enthused. We were to dress to the nines and then sit on stone seats to watch men harass a bull? I’d had far more fun sneaking past the bull in Mr. Hanneman’s fenced north quarter back home. That animal had won prizes at the state fair.…

  Well, I told myself, at least the amphitheater will be of interest. My heart skipped a beat. A real Roman amphitheater.

  “That gate appears sunken,” Vivian said, hands on hips, waving at the Porte Auguste with her fan, then turning the fan on herself again. It was only midmorning, but with the roofs folded back on our touring cars, the summer sun had already set us to perspiring.

  “Well noted,” Art said after taking our photograph from across the street, looking up at the place. “Over time, the city has been built up and roads paved and paved again. The Porte Auguste is but one of two city gates left. We’re fortunate it remains at all. See those two larger arches at the center? They were for the chariots and horses—and the two smaller arches on either side were for pedestrians. Quite organized, don’t you think?”

  Vivian gave it a dubious look, clearly ready to move on, and Art returned to his vehicle. But my eyes moved to Will, who was presumably sharing the same information with the young men in the car ahead of us, waving back toward the gate, pointing to the far right and then tracing the line to the left. Something Felix said made him laugh, and he was so handsome in that moment—brown hair shining in the sun, eyes alight with joy—that I sucked in my breath. I’d not seen him even smile in the last two days. And to see him laugh…

  Vivian looked over at me and frowned. “What is it?”

  “Nothing,” I said, quickly glancing back to the gate after I sat down beside her again. “I only was thinking…would it not be a delight to travel back in time and see Rome in all her glory?”

  “Hmph. Maybe,” she said, continuing to fan herself. “Perhaps travel via chariot was cooler than this infernal touring car.”

  “Be glad we’re not in buggies,” I chided.

  “Or on mules!” laughed Lil.

  I nodded, smiling with her, but as I did so, my eyes slipped back to Will. He was striding past to rejoin Art and Hugh in the car behind us. We shared a long, delicious glance.

  “What’s your secret, Cora?” Nell asked, and my heart skipped a beat as I quickly looked to her, worried she’d caught us. The girl was madly fanning herself, her apple cheeks truly resembling apples, they were so flushed.

  “Excuse me?”

  “How do you manage to look so fresh while the rest of us perspire?” She dabbed at her forehead with a lace-edged handkerchief.

  “Trust me, I’m far from cool,” I said, picking up my own fan, relieved to have narrowly avoided discovery and now feeling the heat of embarrassment.

  The driver in the touring car behind us beeped his horn, and our vehicles made their way into the flow of traffic. Blessed air blew by us, and we held onto our hats.

  Antonio, riding in front with the driver, turned to tell us what we were seeing as we drove. The Maison Carrée, an elegant Roman temple built in AD 2, was “one of the best preserved in the world,” shouted Antonio over the noise of the wind. I craned my neck to get a better view of the elegant, finely fluted columns that surrounded the temple. Next, past many stately, grand homes, was the vast Jardin de la Fontaine. Antonio droned on about the eighteenth-century gardens capitalizing on the water source here in the city. “Above them in the distance, the octagonal structure, you see?” he said. “It is Tour Magne, once part of the Roman walls.” Antonio shook his head sorrowfully and lifted his dark brows. “One of the best views of the city is up there.” Clearly, he regretted that we hadn’t time to stop.

  We moved on, turning and turning again until the huge amphitheater came into view. “Les Arénas,” Antonio said, lifting a proud hand toward it in the distance, as if introducing us to his girlfriend. I brought a hand to my chest and gasped. I’d never seen so grand a structure. If this was so remarkable, what would it feel like to see the Coliseum in Rome?

  “She holds twenty-five thousand spectators,” Antonio said over his shoulder, looking from us to the arena. “Chariot races, gladiators, and now, tonight, a bullfight.”

  “I confess I prefer the bullfight to a gladiator fight,” Vivian said.

  “Not me!” Lil said with a giggle, leaning toward Nell. “I’d prefer to see men in all their…manliness.”

  “Lillian Kensington!” Vivian said, sounding aghast. But we were all smiling.

  We drove out of the city, then, out into the countryside, past farms with neat and tidy rows of lavender, olive groves, and vineyards. An hour later, we turned, and up ahead, we could see greenery that could only mean one thing…a river. We pulled up beside a small chateau that overlooked what we learned was the Gardon River, and the men led us around back to where five rowboats were waiting.

  “Oh, a boat ride,” Lillian said, clapping her small hands together.

  “I admit,” Vivian said to me, “it does sound welcome. To be on the water.”

  I nodded in agreement, waiting for us to be assigned our boats. Will told the younger girls they’d be with him and Hugh. I shoved aside my disappointment, pretending to have nothing but my own assignment in mind. “You, Cora,” Will said, barely looking at me, “will join Felix and Art.”

  “Excellent,” I said, turning to take my brother’s proffered arm as we traversed across the wide expanse of rough limestone to reach the boats. Was Will avoiding me? Afraid to be too close to me lest he betray his feelings? Angry I hadn’t ended it with Pierre? Or was he changing his mind? He hadn’t spent any time with me in the days since the funeral, and now with the bear gone…perhaps he was solely thinking about getting us through the tour and getting back to school.

  Perhaps everything had changed.

  “Vivian and Andrew, please go and join Antonio in the last boat,” said Will over his shoulder as we walked. They grouped together behind us, and I envied them, the chance to float the river, holding hands, sharing longing looks, without fear of repercussion. Ahead, I could see the two detectives, each in their own boat, already at the oars. As we clambered into our assigned boats, Yves shoved off with his own oarsman, taking the lead in scouting for any trouble…or perhaps, noticing the boulders that dotted the blue water, he only sought the best route down.

  Felix offered his hand, and I stepped carefully into the boat while the oarsman steadied it. Felix sidled in, well accustomed to the rocking ways of wood upon water, then Art. “I’m relieved to be in your boat this time around,” I said lowly to Felix as he sat down beside me.

  “Oh?”

  “Yes. Well I remember your expertise with an oar in a water fight,” I said.

  He smiled and reached out to take my hand. “I think it was in that moment, seeing you sopping wet and still laughing, that I realized you were truly my sister.”

  I smiled and looked down, embarrassed by our intimate moment.

  “Though an oar is a far less effective weapon than a paddle,” he said. “Besides,” he whispered, leaning close to my ear, “our oarsman appears to want nothing of any fun whatsoever.”

  I dared to look at the stern man—dressed all in white, with a blue handkerchief smartly tied at the neck—and almost burst out laughing. From his expression, one would have thought this excursion was a form of medieval torture rather than a delightful resp
ite. I ducked my head and tried madly to cover my giggle. But when Felix let a burst of pent-up air out as he turned—pretending something had caught his eye—I was lost. Together, we laughed and laughed.

  The oarsman flicked his chin forward, toward us. “Qu’est-ce qui est si drôle?”

  “He wants to know what amuses you,” translated Art from up front, bending over his camera to take our photograph.

  “Well, clearly, friend, it is not you,” Felix returned. “Is life so horrendous that you should appear like your horse died en route to the boat?”

  “Felix!” I cried, aghast.

  “He doesn’t understand English,” Felix whispered, smiling at us both.

  “Hmph,” said the man, clearly dismissing us. Either Felix was right, or he thought us idiots.

  “Ignore him,” Felix muttered, and offered his arm. I looped my hand through. “Let’s not allow anything to ruin this gorgeous day on the river, even this fine man manning our oars!” he said, cheerfully waving at the man.

  Art shook his head, bemused, and we entered the strongest current of the river, moving rapidly down and around the bend. I took off one glove and leaned over to let my hand drag in the water, watching as my fingers left four rivulets behind them. I dipped it lower, relishing the cooling effect.

  The other two boats came closer, and we tied up for a bit, drifting and chatting. Art took more photographs of the group.

  “May I have a couple of those for postcards, Art?” Vivian asked.

  “Certainly. We’ll get them developed in Nîmes before we move on, and you can post them.”

  “Oh, I want one too!” Nell said. “May I have one?”

  “Yes, of course.”

  I looked everywhere I could at the scenery, working hard not to glance in Will’s direction. A champagne cork popped, and then another, and glasses were pulled from a basket and passed along.

  “Please,” Felix said, offering his to the oarsman. “You appear to need it far more than I.”

  “Non,” the man said gruffly, giving his head a stiff shake.

  I bit my lip, trying not to laugh. The man looked angry enough to jump overboard and swim to shore. Or deck Felix.

  Tiny, perfect strawberries were passed next, and we tossed the uneaten tops in the river, watching as they floated for a while and then disappeared.

  Will was half turned in his seat, and when we rounded the bend, I could see why. Up ahead was a triple-level limestone bridge, and we all gasped at the sight of it. At the bottom of the bridge were sturdy arches with columns and breakers thick enough to weather two thousand years of whatever the river brought her way. Above that firm foundation were three levels of beautiful arches.

  “The Pont du Gard,” our young bear said proudly, turning back to us. “At a hundred and sixty feet, it is the highest bridge the Romans ever built. They considered it a testimony to their empire and took great pride in it, and for good reason. Here we are,” he said, gesturing across the river, “in the midst of a waterway that has flooded every spring of every year since that bridge was first erected. And still”—he shook his head—“two thousand years later, there she remains.”

  The oarsmen separated our boats from the others on the river as we neared the bridge, giving them more room to maneuver, and we all grew quiet, in awe as we got closer and closer, then slid underneath the monolith and past her. “That aqueduct carried water that originated at the springs in Uzés,” Will said, “thirty-one miles from Nîmes, and was in use for close to five hundred years.”

  I couldn’t keep myself from it any longer. I looked over to Will, who stared back at the bridge as long as it was in sight. I knew how he loved architecture…the bones of a structure. And I longed to hear him talk about it. See the excitement in his eyes as he explained to me just what a mechanical engineering marvel it really was. But it dawned on me that he wasn’t going to be an architect. He was already the next Bear McCabe. And the thought of it made me feel unaccountably sad.

  “Already sad to be leaving the Pont du Gard?” Felix asked, putting a knuckle under my chin.

  “What?” I asked, trying to focus on what he was saying. “Oh, yes. You got me. Have you ever seen anything like it?”

  “I think not,” he said, giving his head a little shake, his blue eyes wide with wonder. “Truly, a most magnificent excursion, this,” he called out, verbally saluting Will. “More champagne?” He held up a bottle.

  Will shook his head, and when Felix turned to me, I did the same.

  “Friend? Ami?” Felix asked the oarsman, again lifting the bottle. The man practically growled at him.

  With a smile and a cock of his eyebrow that said all the more for me, Felix tipped up the bottle to his mouth and drained it.

  William

  They returned to Nîmes, and after getting settled into a sumptuous mansion, they separated to their rooms. A light lunch was sent to each suite, where the clients were to rest and change before a quick dinner and then a walk over to the amphitheater to enjoy the bullfight.

  With a long groan, Will stretched out atop his bed, staring at the high ceiling and crystal chandelier above him. He checked his wristwatch. He had four hours before they were to meet in the salon downstairs. Will closed his eyes and considered a quick bath. He winced as he thought about squeezing into his light summer suit, tighter than ever, and joining the others in all their finery. Especially considering he’d be sitting in the too-small suit through a sultry summer evening in the amphitheater, on a stone seat.

  No. I can’t do it. Not one more day, not one more hour.

  His eyes popped open, and he glanced over at his armoire. There was an excellent tailor around the corner. His uncle had purchased a suit from him last summer. And had it fitted for him within the hour. Might he find something similar?

  The funds in his bank account at home were meager, but he saw no argument against the purchase. He had his uncle’s private purse, still full of a wad of bills, even after paying for his burial. And if he were to play the role of a full-fledged bear for the remainder of the summer, ought he not look the part?

  Will emerged from his room that night feeling like a new man. He had on a tan suit in the finest weave that, blessedly, breathed far better than the light wool of his old suit. He smiled as he paused in front of his door, straightening his tie along a collar that finally, finally fit around his neck. And inside his hotel armoire was a brand-new formal suit as well. It would allow him to circulate among the well-to-do at any function ahead and actually make others turn their heads in admiration rather than cover their mouths and whisper, laughing over him. In addition, the tailor had persuaded him to purchase an extra pair of trousers, two smart, crisp shirts, and a second tie, as well as a belt and two pairs of shoes from the cobbler next door.

  Will had spent a fortune, most everything in his uncle’s private purse, but what else could he do? Truth be told, if he was to hold his head up high and take Cora’s arm like a man, he could not tolerate looking as he had heretofore. She deserved better if they were ever to have a chance to be together.…

  He strode down the grand marble staircase to meet the others. Cora turned as he entered, as if sensing his presence, and he smiled, briefly allowing his eyes to settle on hers before moving on to Vivian’s, as if she and Cora held equal favor in his heart. But he had to concentrate to keep his gaze on Vivian and then move on to Felix, because all he wanted to do was to look back to Cora. To make sure she had noted his new clothes, to make sure she looked happy and…proud.

  The thought made him pause. What was that about? He wanted to make her proud? She wasn’t the kind of girl who was moved by the finery of her new set. So was this really about him?

  He frowned in confusion even as he forced a smile for Lillian and Nell, who were coming to run their hands over his sleeves and coo over his new suit.

  “Sir?” said a servant, coming to him with a telegram on a silver tray.

  Will reached for the envelope and turned away for a momen
t of privacy. He slid the telegram out and discovered it was from his uncle’s attorney back home.

  Unfortunate news –STOP– Bills overdue funds short –STOP– Must complete tour to bring accounts to date –STOP– Will you still get paid your fee without Stuart –STOP– Please advise –STOP– Carlyle Connor

  He sucked in his breath and took a few steps away from the laughing, chatting people behind him, feeling almost dizzy. He’d known that Uncle Stuart wasn’t flush, but he’d thought he’d likely discover a nest egg in his bank account. After all, the old man had been hoping to retire. But on what? Had he assumed Will would support him?

  Will massaged his temple and then ran a hand down his face. I just spent so many dollars…on clothes. Clothes…

  “Are you all right?” Cora asked in a whisper, suddenly at his elbow. “You look positively ashen.”

  He glanced down at her and watched as her big blue eyes moved down to the telegram in his hand. He didn’t want her to be worried. Not for him. Not for his future. Not when he hoped they might have a chance. Some sort of chance…

  “It’s fine. A surprise. But I’ll deal with it. Come,” he said, forcing a smile to his face and lifting his arm to her. “Nîmes awaits.”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  Cora

  We dined upon a favorite of Nîmes, the brandade—a salt cod puree with olive oil and milk—and caviar and tiny, perfectly toasted slices of bread. After dishes of the smallest but most succulent raspberries I’d ever tasted, smothered in cream and crystallized sugar, we left for the arena, promenading down the street in pairs.

  Daringly, Will offered me his arm again.

  “You look exceptionally dapper this evening, Master McCabe,” I said under my breath. “New suit?”

  “Indeed,” he said from the corner of his mouth, then he turned smiling eyes down at me. “But you always look exceptionally beautiful, regardless of what you wear.”

  I smiled and squeezed his arm, feeling electrified, every fiber of my being awake and alive. I’d never experienced anything like it. I’d had twinges of it with Pierre—but this, this…

 

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