Devon and Blake crossed the hall slowly, looking up at the high timber ceiling, the stone walls and sparse furnishings.
“What a magnificent house,” Blake said.
Rebecca managed a smile. “Thank you. Father has always been reluctant to modernize it, so it still shows its medieval origins, though the south wing is new. My grandfather had a ballroom added with crystal chandeliers. Unfortunately, it’s never been used. At least not in my lifetime.”
Devon and Blake reached the fire and stood beside her to warm their hands as well.
“It is good to be here,” her husband said, lifting his exhausted gaze to meet hers, and for the first time that day, he gave her a small nod of encouragement. It was not much, but it was something, and it revived a tiny fragment of hope.
His gaze turned upward and swept around the expansive hall, which had once been used for feasts and banquets. “This place is very different from Pembroke Palace,” he said. “I can see why you felt secluded.”
Just then she heard that familiar tapping upon the winding staircase. Her father’s cane. He took the final step and reached the ground floor. His white hair had not been combed, his clothing was shabby and wrinkled, as if he had not donned a fresh shirt in days. How old he appeared, as he hobbled across the hall toward her.
Suddenly Rebecca was overcome by despair and walked straight across the room into his arms. “Father, I am so sorry.”
But what did she have to be sorry for? She had only been trying to save herself from a life of misery.
And what of the accusations? She could not bear to think of it being true.
“No, my dear,” he replied, wrapping his frail arms around her. “I am the one who is sorry. I have been weak. I failed you.”
She pulled back to look into his eyes. She wanted more than anything to understand what he meant. Was he implying he had committed a terrible sin? Or was it simply an apology for arranging a marriage she did not want?
She turned around and looked at her husband, who was watching her.
“If you wish, Blake and I can see to the horses,” he said.
“No, Devon, please stay.” She turned to her father again. “We have come a long way to speak to you.”
His brow crinkled with apprehension. “I understand.” He limped toward the fire.
“Lord Creighton,” Devon said, “allow me to present my brother, Lord Blake Sinclair.”
They shook hands.
Her father gestured to both men. “Look at you, brothers without a doubt. The same dark features.”
Rebecca was quick to interrupt. “Father,” she said, “we must speak to you about Mr. Rushton. He came to Pembroke Village, and he is not prepared to give up his intentions to have me as his wife.”
The flames from the fire reflected in her father’s eyes as he glanced uneasily at each of them. “You spoke to him?”
“I did,” she replied. “He has made some grave accusations.”
Her father paused, then spoke harshly. “What has he told you?”
Rebecca could not bring herself to say it. She was thankful when Devon answered for her. “He has threatened to expose you as a murderer, sir.”
Her father backed away from them and sank into a chair. He cupped his forehead in a hand. His fingers were trembling. “Heaven help me.”
She went to him, knelt down and rested her hands on his thin knees. “Is it true, Father? Please tell me it is not.”
At last he dropped his hand, and she could see his face. “Did he try to use this to force you to leave your husband?”
She nodded. “Mr. Rushton expected I would obey in order to protect you. But you must tell me, Father, is there anything to protect? I cannot accept what he says as true. Tell me he is lying.”
She stared into her father’s eyes, searching for the truth.
“Of course it is a lie,” he told her. “You know I am not that kind of man.”
For the longest time, she sat and stared at him. She wanted to believe it, truly she did, but something inside her was not yet satisfied. She thought of the note about the bracelet.
“Mr. Rushton says you gave a bracelet to a woman named Serena Fullarton. In fact, he has a letter that she allegedly wrote, and he claims that she is your victim, and she is buried here on the estate.”
His hands were shaking as he looked up at Devon and Blake. “I do not know that woman, nor do I know how she obtained my stationery. Perhaps Rushton stole it in order to frame me, so that he could have you.”
“But did you know about the letter?”
He hesitated. “No, I swear it.”
None of this was making sense to her. She wanted to shake her father. She was having a hard time believing any of what he was saying. “If you are innocent, why did you give in to him? Why did you not stand up to him and defend your honor and protect my happiness? Why did you not refuse his demands? Or send for the police?”
There was pleading in her father’s tone. “I have not been well in recent years, Rebecca. You know that. I am not young and strong like your husband. I did not have any fight left in me.” Tears pooled in his eyes, and he covered his face with a hand. “I am a coward, afraid of everything, even leaving this house.”
“Do not say that, Father.”
She could hear the shame and humiliation in his voice.
“You have been so good to me,” he said. “So devoted. I should have fought harder to keep you here with me.”
“But I could not remain here forever,” she said. “I am a woman now. I needed to live my own life.”
She felt a hand on her shoulder—her husband’s hand, squeezing gently. “It is almost midnight,” he said. “We must go.”
“Where?” her father asked, taking hold of her wrist as she tried to stand. “What are you going to do?”
“Rushton expects your daughter at his door tonight,” Devon explained, “and he has threatened to expose you as a killer if she does not comply. I mean to confront him, sir, and inform him that she will never be his. She is my wife now. This blackmail must stop.”
Her father stared for a long time at Devon, blinking up at him, then at last he spoke. “This is the second time you have offered your assistance, Hawthorne, when I have found myself in a difficult predicament. I am grateful.”
“It is more than a difficult predicament, Father,” Rebecca said. “The man has accused you of murder.”
Her father’s Adam’s apple bobbed. “He is a villain. He has always been so, you know it yourself. He is obsessed with you and will do anything to have you. I have not been strong enough to oppose him, but it is clear that your husband is very different from me.” He stood and limped to Devon and grabbed hold of his wrist. “I have had enough of this pain and turmoil. Do whatever you must to protect my daughter. She deserves happiness, and Rushton will destroy any hope of that. Please, do whatever it takes...”
Rebecca recognized a look of comprehension in her husband’s eyes as he took hold of her arm and led her toward the door. She, too, understood her father’s message.
He wanted Rushton dead.
Chapter 24
The Pembroke coach pulled up in front of Mr. Rushton’s country house shortly before midnight. It was a large home of Dutch design, flanked by two pavilions, which gave it balance and breadth.
Though the rain had stopped, a thick, heavy fog blanketed the land and put a damp chill in the air. Devon stepped out of the coach, offered his hand to Rebecca, and walked with her to the front entrance. Blake followed a few steps behind, carrying a pistol.
Before Devon knocked on the door, he looked into his wife’s face and saw her distress, for she did not know whether her father was lying or telling the truth. Quite frankly, neither did he.
“We shall get to the bottom of this,” he assured her. “You have my word.”
She only
nodded.
Devon rapped the heavy brass knocker. Blake stepped to the side and pressed his back against the wall, remaining out of sight.
The door opened, and Devon faced a well-dressed gentleman who was clearly not a servant. He wore a dark jacket and looked to be in his mid-forties with strong facial features, a long, straight, patrician nose, and golden brown hair. He was fit and slender. There was confidence in his smile. It was Rushton, without a doubt.
His smug smile disappeared, however, the instant he met Devon’s gaze.
“I thought you were going to leave him,” he said to Rebecca, his blatant arrogance causing Devon to squeeze his hand into a tight fist. “Was he not willing to let you go?”
During the brief coach ride from Creighton Manor, they had discussed exactly what needed to be said, but suddenly Devon was hard-pressed to hold to the plan, when what he really wanted to do was walk in, grab the slimy worm by the throat, and toss him out a window.
“I am not leaving my husband for you or anyone else,” Rebecca said. “Go ahead and expose my father if you must, but I think you will have a difficult time proving anything, because I shall be the first to appear as a witness and tell the court how you issued threats against the Marquess of Hawthorne and his family, in order to pressure me to become your wife. If anyone has a history of wrongdoing, sir, and a motive for misconduct, it is you.”
A contemptuous frown set into Rushton’s features. He looked at both of them as if pondering how best to proceed, then he glanced over their shoulders at their coach.
“I don’t think you understand what is at stake here,” he said. “Why don’t you both come inside, and I will ring for tea. We will discuss the matter in some depth.”
“No,” Rebecca said. “There is nothing to discuss. I came here only to tell you that—”
But now that Devon was here, seeing for the first time the man who had once torn his wife’s skirts and attempted to force himself upon her, he could not simply walk away. He stepped forward and pushed the door open, forcing Rushton to step back onto the black and white checker floor and make way.
“I beg your pardon, darling,” Devon said to Rebecca. “I have decided I would like to hear him out after all.”
Devon could almost feel Blake’s grimace just outside the door, for they had not intended to enter the house, and now his brother would have to wait in the chilly darkness or somehow sneak inside.
Standing nose-to-nose with Rushton, Devon kept his gaze fixed on the man’s brown eyes. He was aware of Rebecca stepping quietly into the hall behind him and waiting in silence for the two of them to step apart.
Rushton backed away first, then turned to the footman across the hall. “Bring tea.”
The young man made himself scarce, and Rushton escorted them to the drawing room, which was adorned in blue and yellow drapes and furnishings. Once inside the room, Devon looked up at a large family portrait in a gilt frame over the fireplace—a mother, father, and son. They were dressed formally. The mother wore a blue satin gown, pearls and diamonds around her neck, and a tiara on her head.
“My parents and me,” Rushton said. “I had it painted last year. The artist was able to copy our likenesses from our individual portraits and create this masterpiece.”
But Rebecca had once mentioned Rushton’s father was a merchant. “Where is your family now?” Devon asked.
“Dead, for twenty-five years.”
“My condolences.” Devon strolled around and looked carefully at the furnishings and other paintings on the walls. “You wish to enlighten us about the situation...” he prompted.
“Yes. I don’t believe you understand the significance of it.” He sat down and crossed one leg over the other. “Please, sit down. Would you care for a biscuit?” He casually pointed at a plate of cookies on a side table.
Rebecca dropped her hands to her sides in obvious frustration. “Do not continue, sir, with this ridiculous attempt to arouse our apprehensions by keeping us in suspense. Come out with it, if you please, or I will walk out of here this instant.”
He smirked. “You’ve obviously had your hands full with her,” he said to Devon, “while I have been missing out.”
Devon’s blood went cold at the mere insinuation that there could ever be anything between them. “You heard my wife,” he said. “Say your piece.”
“Very well,” Rushton replied, rising from his seat. “Five years ago, I became acquainted with a woman named Serena Fullarton at some local gatherings in the village, and discovered she was having a secret affair with your father.”
“I find that difficult to believe,” Rebecca said. “My father has always been a very private person. I would have known of it.”
He glared at her. “Ask him.”
“I did. He denied it.”
“Then he’s lying.”
She was taken aback. Devon merely watched and listened to all of it with great scrutiny.
Rushton continued. “I saw them together on numerous occasions at your father’s rotunda by the lake, where I often went walking on warm days, and on one particular afternoon, I heard them arguing. The young lady was distraught, and I could not help but move closer and listen to their conversation, uncertain about whether or not I should intervene. Consequently, what followed will haunt me forever. I remained too far away, you see, and could do nothing but watch from a distance as your father wrestled the young lady to the ground and strangled the very life out of her. I, of course, hurried to the scene, but was too late. When I arrived and pulled your father to his feet, she had already expired.”
The color bled from Rebecca’s cheeks. “I don’t believe it.”
Devon went to her side.
Rushton continued. “Your father confessed to me that Miss Fullarton was carrying his child and demanding that he marry her. He did not want her as his wife, however, only as his mistress, so he lost his temper. Once the ghastly deed was done and he collected himself, he buried her there by the rotunda, where she lies to this day without a headstone. I can even attest to the fact that she was buried wearing the bracelet your father gave to her. I am sure the magistrate will find it a simple challenge to trace the bauble to its purchaser.”
Devon looked at Rebecca whose brow was knitted in disbelief and strove to focus on the details.
“How would you even know the bracelet was from him?” Devon asked. “Perhaps it was you who killed her.”
Rushton shook his head. “As I tried to explain, I had become acquainted with her in the village, and she had revealed some of her secrets to me.” He approached Rebecca, who was breathing heavily. “Perhaps what you need to do is question your father about all of this again and watch the color drain from his face when he is reminded of the gruesome details. Then you will know the truth, won’t you?”
Just then, a noise from the hall diverted their attention, and they turned. Lord Creighton came hobbling into the room with his cane in one hand, a sword already drawn from its scabbard in the other.
Rushton immediately withdrew a pistol from his jacket. Devon grabbed hold of Rebecca’s arm to pull her out of the way, and Blake ran into the room, his pistol aimed at Rushton.
“She shall expose the truth now,” Creighton said. “You sir are a villain and a blackmailer, and I will not permit you to cause my daughter further anxiety. She has chosen her husband and will not be bullied.”
“Pity you missed it,” Rushton replied, “but I have already delivered the truth to her, so you are too late with your attempt at heroism. She knows what you did.”
The earl raised the sword, but his stiff, misshapen hand could barely keep it steady. The tip of the sword dipped low. Rushton aimed his pistol at Creighton, then at Blake, then back at Creighton.
“Give her the whole truth,” the earl said.
Rebecca tried to go to him, but Devon held her back. “Father, tell me it is not
true,” she said. “Tell me you did not kill anyone.”
The earl glanced briefly at her. No one made a move or uttered a word for a long, tense moment. Then at last he answered in a tremulous voice, his whole arm shaking from the weight of the sword. “I was in love with Serena, and I was with her that day at the rotunda.”
“But what happened?” Rebecca asked. “Did you kill her?”
The earl seemed barely able to form words. “Not on purpose.”
“Father...”
Devon moved to take her hand, but she was distracted.
“I confess, I was involved quite improperly with her, and we argued that day.”
“Over your bastard child in her womb,” Rushton put in.
The earl raised the sword again and garnered his strength. “No, sir. It was your bastard child she carried. I always understood that, which is why I would not marry her.”
Suddenly he strode toward Mr. Rushton, aiming the sword at his heart.
“Father, no!”
Devon dashed forward, but Rushton fired his pistol and the shot rang out before anyone could stop the earl from his useless attack.
Creighton dropped the heavy sword and crumpled to the floor.
“Father!” Rebecca flew to him and dropped to her knees beside him.
Rushton scrambled to reload his pistol, but Devon lunged at him and knocked it from his hands, sending it clattering across the shiny floor, while Blake stood back with his own pistol aimed and ready to fire.
Devon pinned Rushton down, but somehow the man swung a fist and punched Devon across the jaw. A shrill, sharp pain rang inside his skull.
“You had no right to marry her,” Rushton ground out. “She was already spoken for.”
“She was not given the chance to speak for herself,” Devon ground out in reply, landing his own punch to Rushton’s side.
They rolled into a table and knocked it over, then Rushton straddled Devon and wrapped his hands around his neck. He began to choke him. “That pistol shot was meant for you.”
In My Wildest Fantasies (Love at Pembroke Palace Book 1) Page 23