“Then for your health, might I recommend the Blackhaven waters?”
He glanced at her with amusement. “A little harmless trickery?”
“Oh, there’s no trick. It’s only mineral water from the hills, which trickles underground and comes out at the Pump Room. But many people have noticed improvements in their health.”
“Any reputable physicians?” he asked wryly.
“I don’t know. But when Lady Serena was very down a month or so back, she took the waters and is now quite restored.” She didn’t mention that she was also restored to Lord Tamar, which was probably at least as much to do with the improvement. “But if you feel a physician would benefit you more, I believe Dr. Lampton is very well thought of.”
“By the rich troubled with nervous disorders?”
“By everyone, I think. I believe the 44th use him, too, now that their surgeon is abroad. It would do no harm if you asked Dr. Lampton to call. And in the meantime, it would certainly do you no harm to drink the waters.”
He regarded her with some amusement. “Very well,” he said unexpectedly. “Take me to your wretched waters.”
As they walked, a few acquaintances greeted her, one or two by name. All looked askance at her scarred escort. She wondered if the limp made him appear more or less of a threat. But since his temper was erratic at best, she was just grateful no one stopped to make conversation. Until, within sight of the pump room, they encountered Mrs. Winslow and Miss Muir.
Mrs. Winslow’s eyes lit up at once. Fresh grist for her rumor mill, Caroline realized as she paused politely to greet the ladies. And as they both waited agog, there was nothing for it but to introduce her companion.
“Allow me to present Mr. Benedict of Haven Hall, who has recently employed me to teach his daughter. Sir, Mrs. Winslow, the squire’s lady, and Miss Muir.”
“Oh my,” said Miss Muir, who was deaf as a post and often spoke without seeming to realize other people could hear her.
“What a surprise,” Mrs. Winslow commented after exchanging distant bows with Benedict. “And do we not get to meet the new pupil?”
“One day, I’m sure,” Caroline said hastily. “She is currently in the ice parlor with her aunt.”
“Ladies,” Mr. Benedict said coldly, raising his hat and walking on.
With an apologetic smile, Caroline hurried after him. “There is the pump room,” she said as they reached the entrance with its fake Grecian pillars. “I believe you can swim. Or simply drink the water.”
“Thank you,” he said gravely. She nodded and turned away. Mrs. Winslow and Miss Muir were still gazing in her direction. “What will you tell them about me?”
“That you are grumpy and afraid of doctors,” she said and walked away.
His surprised laughter followed her and made her smile as she raised a hand to the ladies and cut up the side road toward High Street.
Chapter Eight
Caroline didn’t return with the family to Haven Hall. For one thing, she needed time to think about Colonel Fredericks’s information, and for another, she felt unaccountably guilty that she hadn’t already told her employer what she knew. Nor did she understand why any of this should be so important to her. Her employer’s private life wasn’t really any of her business, except insofar as it affected her pupil.
“I’m sorry to bring you out again,” she said to Williams when she finally met the carriage at four o’clock in the gathering dusk.
“Don’t be,” Williams said cheerfully, stepping down from the box to open the door and let down the steps. “It’s good for me and the horses.”
Although it was dark by the time they reached home, it was hardly late, and Caroline wasn’t prepared for the whirlwind that flew across the hall and into her arms with enough force to make her stagger. Tiny lolloped at her heels, barking. Caroline fended him off with one hand, distractedly ruffling his head while she hugged the child.
“Rosa, what on earth’s the matter?” she demanded, peering down into her face.
Rosa shook her head, smiling through dried tears.
“You thought I wouldn’t come back?” Caroline guessed.
Rosa nodded.
“Well,” Caroline said. “I wouldn’t be a very pleasant person if I just wandered off without saying goodbye to you. Or to your father and aunt. Am I so unpleasant?”
Smiling again, Rosa shook her head violently.
“There you are then.” She hugged Rosa again, then released her. “Come, I think it’s time we both washed and changed for dinner.”
As she turned to the stairs, she saw Mr. Benedict watching them from the corner of the passage that led to his study. He stood in the shadows, as if he hadn’t intended to be noticed, one shoulder leaning against the wall. Her heart gave one of its all-too-frequent lurches, but she carried on as if she hadn’t seen him.
Twenty minutes later, having refreshed herself and changed into her slightly less dull gown, she straightened her shoulders, picked up the packet of invitations, and went downstairs in search of her employer.
Caroline always preferred things to be straightforward and open. And yet, even as she sought to make them so, she was aware she now had her own secrets. She could never reveal the effect he had on her. She didn’t even know what it was. She just hoped it would pass, for it was entirely uncomfortable. And totally wonderful.
I’m addled. I’m madder than all the Benedicts put together and I must pull myself together.
With this stern admonition to herself, she raised her hand and knocked smartly on the study door.
“Come in,” said the distracted voice beyond.
Had she really hoped not to find him? No, but she wasn’t looking forward to the difficulties of the coming interview.
Opening the door, she walked into the study. From the hearth, Tiny didn’t trouble to even lift his head this time, though he did thump his tail on the floor a couple of times by way of welcome.
His master kept on writing busily. “I thought it would be you,” he observed as his pen flew across the page. Impatiently, he dipped it in the ink and scribbled another couple of words, added a definite full stop, and all but threw the pen into its stand before he rose to his feet.
“Miss Grey,” he acknowledged. “My train of thought tends to wander these days. I need to write it down while it’s still lucid. What can I do for you?”
She set the packet of invitations on the desk in front of him. “Lady Tamar gave me these for you and your family. And me. They are invitations to a party at the castle.”
His lip quirked. “I shall not stop you going.”
“You are kind. But I wanted to talk you about taking Rosa.”
“No.”
“That’s not really a discussion,” she observed. “Sir, I do not wish to simply drop her in there and leave her to cope alone. I have a plan to build up her tolerance and even appreciation of company.”
To her surprise, he gestured her to the sofa and came out from behind his desk. He limped over to the decanter and poured a glass.
“No, I thank you,” she said hastily when he cocked an eyebrow in her direction.
Taking his glass, he sauntered over to the sofa and sat beside her before taking a mouthful of brandy.
“Very well,” he said wryly. “Now I’m ready.”
So, she outlined her proposal to introduce Rosa gradually to greater intimacy with Helen and then with her sisters, and to the castle, all before the party which she hoped Rosa might actually enjoy, even for an hour or two.
He was frowning by the end, though not, it seemed, from anger. “And you think that this will somehow encourage her to speak?”
“I don’t know,” she replied. “But I think it might help. It strikes me that she is too…comfortable not speaking. Here, we don’t just accept her silence but largely understand her meaning. She doesn’t need to speak. My highest hope is that she will recognize how much more fun her relationships could be if she joins in normal chatter. But even if she doesn
’t, if it doesn’t happen so quickly, she will at least be more comfortable in company.”
“And if the company is…unkind to her?”
“Unkindness is something we must all get used to. But in this case, I see no reason why anyone would be. The Conway girls are very good natured, and in Blackhaven, even other children tend to follow the castle’s lead.”
He waved that aside. “Children’s unkindness is one thing.”
Caroline stared. “You cannot imagine adults would be unkind to her?”
“I cannot imagine you have not encountered unkindness in adults,” he retorted. “If you hadn’t, you wouldn’t be here.”
She flushed. “I am the governess. Rosa is a gentleman’s daughter.”
He fixed her with his harsh gaze. “You don’t know anything about this gentleman.”
“I know a little,” she said with difficulty. “And I suspect more.”
His eyes narrowed. “Such as?”
She held his gaze. “That you are an officer, a soldier.”
He never blinked. “What makes you think so?”
“Colonel Fredericks, who is an old family friend of Lady Tamar’s, thought he recognized your name. Are you Colonel Benedict?”
He threw the rest of the brandy down his throat and stood up. “I was. So the story is out.”
“I don’t believe so. Colonel Fredericks is a man of understanding and discretion. Of necessity, I gather.”
He flung over to the decanter and sloshed another generous measure into his glass. “And Lady Tamar will tell no one such a juicy piece of gossip?” he mocked. “She would have to be inhuman!”
Caroline frowned, uncomprehending. “I don’t believe it is juicy gossip to discover a man is a respected officer who escaped a French prison.”
He stood by the sofa, staring down at her. “Is that what he told you?”
“Isn’t it true?”
He threw himself onto the sofa. “So far as it goes. Did he say nothing else?”
“What else is there?”
“Family scandal,” he said bitterly. “That is what I’m trying to protect Rosa from. That is why we came here to the middle of nowhere and why I never use my former rank.”
“Colonel Fredericks said nothing like that.”
“He wouldn’t to you and Lady Tamar, would he?”
“I suppose not,” she said honestly. “But then, I don’t believe Colonel Fredericks is a gossiping kind of gentleman. Nor would he spread tales about a man he respects.”
“Respects?” He laughed, a harsh, grating sound. “My dear girl, there is nothing to respect.”
She didn’t know if she hurt for him believing such a thing, or for herself in case it was true. “Why not?” she asked unsteadily.
He took a gulp of brandy. “That is a story for another day. For the rest, you’d better hear it from me because I don’t want a whisper to reach Rosa from other sources.” He gazed toward the fire, as though seeing his story in the flames. “I came home after more than two years abroad, sick and injured, to discover my wife expecting another man’s child. Not only that, he was living in my house. I threw him out, and the next day, my wife and her unborn child died.”
Caroline swallowed. Everything in her ached. “I’m sorry,” she whispered.
“Why should you be sorry? The news was all round London within hours. So as soon as my wife was buried, I took Rosa and left.”
Caroline nodded slowly. “But it wasn’t that tragedy that deprived her of speech, was it?”
He shook his head. “No. She’d stopped talking almost a year before that. No one could tell me why. Even my wife.”
“You carry a lot of guilt,” Caroline said quietly, “for something that wasn’t your fault.”
He glanced at her. “I’ve given up apportioning faults. I have my share of them. For one, this isolation is not just for Rosa’s sake. I need it.”
“I gathered that.”
A smile flickered across his face and vanished. “Of course, you did. But I accept that I am a selfish bas—” He broke off. “A selfish man. Begin your plan for Rosa if you will. On one condition.”
“That if I catch one whiff of the scandal you mentioned, we do not attend the party?”
“What a superior governess you are. Except that you may, of course, attend the party under any and all circumstances. You never know, you might find a prince to sweep you off your feet.”
“My feet remain firmly on the ground,” she said dryly.
He sat back, regarding her over his brandy. “Come, Miss Grey, is there no romance in your cynical soul? You are young and attractive. You can’t have given up hope of a better life than governess to someone else’s children.”
“It is the life I have chosen,” she said stiffly, rising to her feet. “And I am perfectly content.”
“Why do I not believe that?” he murmured.
“I have no idea. I have given you no cause to doubt my honesty or my commitment.”
She swung away, hurrying to the door before she said more, or, worse, succumbed to the emotion suddenly tearing her up. She didn’t expect him to move, let alone do so with such speed that he suddenly blocked her passage to the door.
“Don’t run away. I was only teasing in my clumsy way. I did not mean to make you angry.”
“I would not presume,” she muttered.
His lips curved. “Yes, you would.”
She hiccoughed an unexpected laugh, and his smile broadened encouragingly.
“I’m sorry for upsetting you,” he said ruefully.
“I am not upset,” she said, drawing in her breath. “Not really. Merely, I gave up all notions of marriage and motherhood before I took my first position.”
He searched her eyes. “Someone let you down.”
“It is a common story. Unfortunately, I am not a woman who changes her affections with ease.”
“Then you still love him?”
It was a pain she had lived with for so long that she was almost surprised to find it lessened. To find him lessened to something almost paltry. It was the damaged man before her who filled her mind. And her heart.
No. Please no.
“I don’t think of such things,” she said desperately. “They mean nothing to me now. Excuse me.”
She bolted ignominiously from the study, resolving never to be alone with him again.
*
“You got him to drink the waters,” Miss Benedict said in a stage whisper. “Thank you!”
Caroline, who’d just taken her seat at the dinner table, flushed. “I merely showed him the way to the pump room.”
“Well, I’m sure I see an improvement already. You must go every day, Javan.”
“Must I?”
It was on the tip of her tongue to ask exactly what his injuries were, but since it was none of her business, and might, besides, upset Rosa, she swallowed back her questions and concentrated on her dinner.
Miss Benedict chattered about what a pleasant town Blackhaven was, and it was finally borne in upon Caroline that none of them had ever been there before today.
“Miss Grey, how is your handwriting?” Mr. Benedict asked in a rare pause.
“Legible, I believe,” she replied. “Why?”
“I have an additional task for you, if you wish. I would pay you extra for it, of course.”
“What would it entail?” she asked suspiciously.
“Making a fair copy of my semi-illegible notes.”
“Ah, your book,” she guessed. “Is it finished?”
“Almost.”
“I would be happy to help,” she said. “If I can.”
And her heart beat and beat because it would involve spending more time in his company. Despite what she’d promised herself barely two hours before.
*
Javan Benedict watched his daughter until she fell asleep. Because of her excitement during the day and her fear of Miss Grey not returning, it took her longer than usual, but he didn’t mind. The g
overness was correct. Rosa did need to do normal things, to grow used to such minor expeditions today’s. And she should not be so terrified of losing the governess she’d known less than a fortnight. Her morbid fear of abandonment had probably been heightened by the fact she had so few people around her.
There was more to bringing up a child than merely protecting her.
His heart was full as he gazed at her sleeping face. Marjorie thought he was too good to sit with his daughter every night. But it was no hardship to him. She was the comfort at the end of his day, his reason to begin another, a reminder of the rare goodness and sweetness in the world. She was his only joy and it broke his heart to think he might not be doing the best for her.
He had his reasons, of course. Reasons Miss Grey would surely discover in time. His revelations about the scandal had seemed to inspire more understanding than contempt or pity, neither of which would have been bearable from her.
Inevitably, his thoughts lingered on the governess. If he had guessed she would become such an obsession, he would have turned Braithwaite down. He hadn’t wanted a young, beautiful female to teach Rosa. He’d wanted a sensible older woman, strict but kindly, a motherly figure—which her true mother had never been—not this girl who disturbed his thoughts and his lusts. He’d held her in the rain, and in the grip of his waking shock had kissed her soft, startled lips, in terrible fear that he’d hurt her.
He hadn’t wanted to hurt her. He’d wanted to take her in the rain, in his bed, before the fire in his study, anywhere she would have him. She wouldn’t, of course, for she was a well-bred lady dependent on her pure reputation. And in truth, he would never take that from her, no matter how urgently his body demanded it. He had just been without a woman too long not to fantasize.
But that was too easy an excuse, unworthy of her, or even him.
As Rosa’s fingers released his in sleep, he rose and walked across the room, conscious of new excitement in his heart. Caroline Grey would come to his study now, to be introduced to the work he’d so foolishly offered her.
Something had changed. Leaving Rosa, he no longer felt merely prepared to face another day. He wanted to.
His gaze fell on the door to Miss Grey’s bedchamber, and his whole body tightened. Was she there now? Waiting for the sounds of him leaving, which she must surely hear. In many ways, it would be so much more natural to knock on her door and ask her to accompany him to the study. He wanted to see her in her own, personal room, about whatever tasks she gave herself—scrubbing the mud from her everyday gown, writing to her family… But that wouldn’t be fair or right. He liked that she wasn’t afraid of him.
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