A Lord Rotheby's Holiday Bundle

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A Lord Rotheby's Holiday Bundle Page 28

by Catherine Gayle


  All was as it should be.

  “Very well,” Aurora continued. “Now, gentlemen, each of you must come and fetch a slip of parchment. On each slip is a clue to your next clue. You must all find a series of ten clues, though they will all be different, save for the very last one. Whichever pair finds the final item and returns it here, to me, first shall be declared the winner.”

  “And what shall be our prize?” called out Mr. Bentley.

  Oh, goodness. How could she have forgotten a prize? What a hostess she was turning out to be, forgetting such things as that.

  But then Quin stepped out from near the window, where he had been playing whist with some of the older crowd. “The winning pair shall select what is to be the first dance at Friday’s ball,” he declared.

  Oh, yes. That would be lovely. And it seemed to suit the gathered hunters rather well, also, as they all mumbled to their counterparts.

  Then the gentlemen came over to her to fetch their thrice-folded clues before returning to their partners for the hunt to begin. Still, once they were all set to go, no one made a move to begin.

  “What are you waiting for?” Aurora asked. “The hunt is on!”

  Without further ado, each of the partnerships opened their clues and huddled their heads together, interpreting what they were to look for and determining where they ought to begin their search.

  Within moments the salon had cleared out except for Quin and his fellow card players. Aurora sat back on a nearby settee and sighed. The difficult part, for her at least, was over. Now she merely had to wait for the winners to arrive.

  Hopefully the hunt would not go on so long that she could no longer keep her eyes open. That would be rather badly done on her part. But with the way she was feeling, she might very well fall asleep where she sat if she had to wait more than about thirty minutes. Oh, blast. Why had she made it so there were ten clues? She could have done five, and that would still have been more than enough to provide ample entertainment for the evening.

  In the quiet, she watched Quin from across the room. He still seemed rather carefree and relaxed, much as he had that morning when they awoke. When had the change taken place? She couldn’t be certain. Sometime since he had told her of Mercy’s death and of his father.

  It was good to see him this way. To see him actually enjoying himself. Indeed, just at that moment, he played a card and laughed out loud at the frustrated harrumph her father gave. There was something very different about Quin now from when they first married. His eyes no longer looked haunted. They seemed alive—still with a devilish gleam, to be sure.

  A rush of footsteps scurried past in the hall outside the salon, complete with excited voices and a feminine giggle or two. Out the window, a single lantern seemed to be floating along in the air of its own accord, headed toward the orangery.

  After a few more moments, Lord Merrick and Lady Emily reentered the salon. “I’m quite certain that very tapestry is in here, my lord, and not in the great hall like you thought,” Lady Emily said. They slipped past Aurora, moving purposefully along the length of the room almost to the windows. “See? This is the one.”

  Merrick lifted the bottom corner to reveal a clue placed between it and the wall. He unfolded the parchment and read aloud: “In the room where once they came to pray, beneath Lord Rotheby your next clue shall lay.” He crinkled his nose and frowned. “I do not believe I wish to look beneath Rotheby, ma’am.”

  Several barely muffled snickers sounded from the card tables, plus one very loud, “I beg your pardon,” from Rotheby himself.

  “His portrait, silly. The abbey’s chapel was turned into a portrait gallery. Come on, let’s go find the clue.”

  Just as rapidly as they had come, they were gone again.

  For the next while, the only sounds other than the card game were those of deciphering clues in the hall.

  “An armed babe?” from a masculine voice. “I have not seen a single child in this entire abbey. What could that be?”

  “Perhaps it is the sculpture of Cupid? Shall we go off to check the kitchen garden, then?”

  “Indeed.”

  Then more silence, before: “Where else will we possibly find a ceiling that looks like a star?” This was from a lady. “We’ve already been to the dormitories and the portrait gallery. I don’t believe I’ve seen that anywhere else. We could spend hours trying to find it.”

  “I know I’ve seen it elsewhere. But where was it? I can’t seem to recall at the moment.”

  “Well, we’ve already checked this entire floor. Shall we go up or down?”

  “Down, that’s it! The undercroft. Quinton keeps his office there.”

  From the sounds of things, Aurora had done an excellent job with her clues. They made the couples stop to think. Not only that, but some were clearly going to be more familiar to the ladies of the group, and others would be more appropriate for the gentlemen. She couldn’t help but be rather proud of herself.

  A few moments later, Rebecca and Lord Norcutt came bursting into the salon, laughing so hard there were tears in their eyes and they held their stomachs in a doubled-over position. Norcutt was dripping wet from head-to-toe.

  “Have you won, then? Where is it?” Aurora asked, barely concealing her amazement that a dull dog like Norcutt could have her dearest friend in such stitches. That sort of laughter was usually reserved for Aurora, not Norcutt. She supposed, given that they were to marry, it was only appropriate.

  “N-n-no,” Rebecca finally managed. “We have hardly won. For that matter, we haven’t even found our third clue.”

  “After I fell into the pond, attempting to see if a clue hung from a tree branch, we decided that perhaps the two of us would be better off allowing the remainder of the water to remain in your pond, ma’am,” Norcutt added.

  His comments also earned a few chuckles from those at the card tables.

  “But perhaps,” Rebecca suggested, “Lady Quinton might appreciate it if you stopped dripping the contents of her pond all over the floor of her salon.”

  It took every fiber of self-control Aurora possessed to refrain from saying, “Indeed,” but somehow she managed it. Quin ought to be proud of her for that. She was most decidedly proud of herself.

  Maybe she was growing a bit—becoming less selfish.

  “Oh, dear,” Norcutt said, looking down at the large and growing puddle at his feet. “I do apologize, Lady Quinton. I shall rush off to have my valet make me more presentable at once.”

  She chuckled and nodded in his direction. Who would have ever thought she’d find Lord Norcutt amusing? Certainly not Aurora.

  A sharp pain shot through her stomach, and she fought to keep her gasp as silent as possible. Once it receded, she glanced around to see if anyone had noticed. Luckily, Rebecca had gone over to watch the game of whist after Norcutt had quit the room. No one was paying her any mind.

  Aurora remained where she was, carefully monitoring her breathing so that if another pain overcame her, she would not be discovered. Oh, dear good Lord, please let someone come to claim their prize soon. She doubted she could last much longer without expiring on the spot. It would be much easier to deal with whatever was happening if she could be alone in her chamber.

  But who was she lying to? With whatever was happening…Aurora knew precisely what was going on inside her body. She had been right. She had the same problems as her mother.

  She could only hope that the miscarriage would hurry and finish its course, that it would not be a long ordeal. The sooner it was over with, the sooner she could move on with her life—however her life would be.

  The only thing she really had left to worry about was how to tell Quin. If only they hadn’t already informed Lord Rotheby of the pregnancy. He still expected Quin to produce an heir. Which really meant he expected Aurora to produce an heir. Something her body was making it abundantly clear it was not prepared to do.

  Would Quin seek an annulment? Was that even possible? She still didn’t
know, but she wouldn’t be able to stop him if it was lawful. Maybe it would be best, after all. Then she wouldn’t have to see him each day, to be reminded of all that had passed between them.

  A commotion sounded from the hall, with footsteps coming their way. “We have it, my lady!” Was that the elder Miss Osbourne’s voice?

  “Indeed, we do,” called out Mr. Bentley. Aurora had been right about which Miss Osbourne she had heard. “But I’m not certain what we’re expected to do with it.”

  What on earth could he be talking about? Aurora stood to meet them as they entered, but then froze to her spot when she heard a bark. A dog’s bark.

  “What is that?” she asked of no one in particular. But before anyone could respond, Miss Osbourne rounded the corner and turned into the salon with a puppy in her arms, squirming around and licking her all over, and generally doing as puppies do. Oh, good God in heaven.

  “I’m afraid that is not what your clue sent you to find” she started to say, but Quin cut her off.

  “Indeed, you are the winners, Mr. Bentley and Miss Osbourne. How very clever of you to solve that final clue.”

  Quin had gone daft. “But the last clue told them to bring back a delphinium from the hermitage,” Aurora sputtered.

  “I’m afraid you’re mistaken,” he said. “The final clue read ‘From whence you might go to find Cook or a cup, seek out a maid holding Lady Q’s pup’. It seems that they have brought precisely what the clue demanded.”

  “I never wrote that clue. I don’t have a pup.”

  But then Miss Osbourne came across the room and transferred the wriggling, excitable little angel into her arms, and it immediately started licking Aurora all over her face and arms and everywhere else it could find with its tongue. “It seems, my lady, that you do now.”

  “Indeed, I suppose I do.” How delightful. But oh, dear good Lord. Why had Quin decided to do something nice for her? Why now, when she was on the verge of crushing his dreams?

  Her puppy stayed with her as they waited for the rest of the hunters to return to the salon. Slowly, one grouping at a time, they all made their way back, once they realized that the pup had already been delivered.

  All except Sir Jonas and Nia.

  Indeed, more than a quarter of an hour passed after the rest of the hunters had returned, including Lord Norcutt in dry attire, before those two made their reappearance: she looking shame-faced, and he looking angry. Oh, dear. She wished they would simply accept the fact that they were destined to be together. Aurora couldn’t imagine a more perfect match. However, it seemed that couples Aurora found herself intent upon putting together tended to find themselves intent upon staying apart.

  Perhaps she ought to stop trying, altogether.

  She likely wouldn’t.

  But for the moment, she had a puppy asleep on her lap, and far more to worry about than the mistakes others chose to make.

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  26 June, 1811

  I give up. I tried to match Rebecca with Lord Tucker Flynn, as I thought they would suit. Rebecca then affianced herself to Lord Norcutt. Lord Tucker seems all too inclined to chase after Miss Vivian Osbourne’s skirts, though for the life of me I cannot imagine why a handsome, virile, and engaging man such as himself would want to associate himself with a chit hardly out of the schoolroom. And while it is quite obvious to me that Nia and Sir Jonas have far more than a simple attraction between them, they are both far more inclined to ignore each others’ existence. They ought to listen to me, every one of them. But since they refuse, I’ll leave them to their own devices at tonight’s ball. In the meantime, I have decided it is best to focus my attentions elsewhere. Such as naming my puppy. I rather like the name Zeus, but Quin claims that is far too important a name. He prefers Thief, since the pup likes to steal the position in bed Quin believes to be his. We’ll have to find a compromise eventually.

  ~From the journal of Lady Quinton

  “Would it be terribly gauche of me to allow Zeus to join us at the ball?” Aurora asked from where she sat while her lady’s maid dressed her hair.

  Zeus. She couldn’t name the blasted puppy after a god, for Christ’s sake. Least of all the most formidable of all the Greek gods. Quin had given her the hound because he thought it might make her happy—somewhat as a peace offering for the brutish way he’d treated her when they first married—but he never imagined she’d coddle it quite the way she had been.

  Not that he minded. It was rather endearing, actually. If she was this head-over-ears in love with a pup after less than two full days, he could only imagine how she would be once their baby was born. Or how it would be if she loved him half as much as she loved the dog. He had to admit, he was more than only slightly jealous.

  “I do not think any of our guests would think you gauche or ill-mannered for such a thing, Aurora, particularly since all of the ladies seem to be of one mind where Thief is concerned. But what will you do if he decides to relieve himself on Lady Aylesbury again? Her Grace may have been willing to forgive once, but if he destroys a ball gown? Not as likely.”

  “Zeus has made great strides in that area today, actually,” she retorted. “We only found three messes in the salon all day.”

  “Only three?” he replied with more than a small dose of skepticism. The pup was too young to have control over his needs yet.

  “And two more in the refectory. Perhaps another in the gallery.”

  He laughed. “Perhaps?”

  “Yes, perhaps. But you must admit that is far better than the dozen or more accidents he had yesterday.”

  Her desperation to convince him of the dog’s improvement was his own fault. Just last night, Quin had threatened to put Thief in a baby’s nappy after stepping in an unexpected pile in his office. Which, of course, meant more work for his valet in preparation for tonight’s ball, since it had smeared all over his Hessians.

  But he never would have done it. One can’t keep a dog in a nappy, after all. One must simply teach the dog what to do and where to do it. “Yes, the dog has made great strides. Perhaps he will only need to wear the nappy for six months,” he said with a smile, earning an annoyed swat from his wife’s fan.

  Her lady’s maid stepped away just then, smiling at the work she’d done with Aurora’s coiffure. Quin wasn’t sure what to make of it. It looked lovely, to be sure. But she looked lovely with it falling about her shoulders in waves, or pulled into a simple chignon at the nape of her neck, or a multitude of other ways. He couldn’t understand the need to spend so much time on the task.

  “Are you ready now?” he asked. “We should head down to the ballroom. It is time for our guests to begin arriving, so we should be there to form the receiving line.”

  She nodded and took his arm. They made their way through the winding hallways of the abbey, down a stair and into the grand foyer. Every flower in the county had to have been somehow collected in his home. Quin hadn’t seen the like at Quinton Abbey since before Mercy died, when joy still resided here.

  But there would be joy here again. Tonight, in fact. And if he hadn’t been so intent on achieving misery, perhaps he could have enjoyed more of the past fortnight. Aurora was doing everything in her power to provide him with all that had been lacking in his life, and if he would quit fighting against her so much, perhaps he could experience a bit of it.

  Forster directed them to the entry of the ballroom, which fairly glimmered in the wash of candlelight.

  “The townspeople won’t believe their eyes,” Quin said to his wife. “You’ve more than outdone yourself with all of this.”

  Aurora just smiled up at him and settled in to her place by his side. With his arm around her waist, Quin couldn’t help but think how perfectly she fit him, like they were truly made for each other.

  Just before giving Forster the nod to begin allowing their guests entrance, Quin leaned down to whisper in Aurora’s ear, “Have I mentioned lately that I love you? Because I do. Love you, that is.” He reall
y ought to tell her more often. That would be his new goal. He would make a point to tell her every day.

  He gave Forster the signal, and the doors opened. In only moments, a line formed before them, filled with both the guests who had been in his home for the last fortnight and people he hadn’t seen since he was a small boy.

  Aurora smiled up at him with such joy he thought the ice of his heart would melt into a puddle on the ballroom floor. “And I love you,” she whispered back.

  He must have misheard her. She couldn’t have meant it.

  But he had no opportunity to question her on the matter, as Norcutt was standing before him with Lady Rebecca on one arm and Lady Aylesbury on the other. It was time, once again, to play the dutiful host.

  Within a half hour, the ballroom had filled to overflowing and more people were still trickling in. Not only were the twenty members of the house party all present and accounted for, but Aurora seemed to have invited everyone old enough to walk who lived within a ten mile radius.

  Quin glanced down the receiving line to determine how much longer they might be rooted in place. What he saw nearly evaporated his newly-found joy.

  Griffin.

  And Phoebe, too, blast her.

  The evening had just taken a decided turn for the worse. Quin wanted a brandy.

  ~ * ~

  “Mr. Poole, I am so glad you’ve come this evening,” Quin said, taking the guest’s hand in his own. Something was wrong. Aurora heard it in the tone of his voice, in how it had suddenly gone from cordial to tense within the span of a moment. “I do apologize, but I must excuse myself.” Turning to Aurora, he said loud enough for only her to hear, “There is something I must attend to. Please continue doing what you’re doing. And no matter what happens, stay inside.”

 

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