To Haveand To Hold

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To Haveand To Hold Page 9

by Patricia Gaffney


  “I’m very sorry. How terrible for you. You must . . .” She trailed off, seeing his expression, which he imagined was more amused than grief-stricken. “It must,” she amended nervously, “be very hard on your family.”

  “No, not really. We don’t care for one another much in my family.”

  She thought that over, gazing off through a patch of woods that flanked the road on her side. “I suppose you’ll return to Rye, then, after your father’s gone?”

  “Yes, for a little while. Long enough to hear the will read, at any rate.”

  “And then you mean to return to Lynton for good?”

  He laughed at that. “Lord, no. Why would I? I’ll be rich, Mrs. Wade, and I’ll be an earl. ‘Why then, the world’s mine oyster, which I with sword will open.’ Or, more aptly in my case, with purse.” She said nothing. “You’re silent,” he noted. “I think I hear disapproval in your silence.”

  “Not at all. Certainly not.”

  “Certainly not. You wouldn’t presume.”

  “No, I would not.”

  “Ah. My mistake, then. But tell me, Mrs. Wade, if you were in my place, which would you choose: a life of absolute luxury and comfort, spent anywhere you liked, Paris, Rome, Constantinople, anywhere in the world, with time and the means to explore every earthly pleasure that man in his wicked ingenuity ever devised—that’s on the one hand. Or a residence in what we might in charity term a backwater, populated by the salt of the earth, brave, honest souls who nevertheless lack a certain je ne sais quoi—sophistication, shall we say. A wholesome life, no question of that, lived close to God’s good clean earth, but—forgive me—perhaps a trifle too close. Well?” he prompted. “Come, which would you choose? You might think of it as a choice between a fast Arab stallion and a big, sturdy Clydesdale.”

  Her lips quirked. “My lord, I can hardly decide which of my two dresses to put on in the morning. I’m afraid deciding between two completely different styles of life would be quite beyond me.”

  He’d suspected from the beginning that an arid sense of humor lurked somewhere beneath all the reserve. She showed him new facets of herself every day. What might it be like to have a normal conversation with her, both of them speaking naturally, unconstrained by status, or fear, or sexual politics? Diverting, perhaps—but that wasn’t why he’d gone to the trouble of employing her. If he wanted normal conversation, there were any number of women with whom he could have it. Mrs. Wade was meant to serve an altogether different function.

  He’d noticed her looking slightly less nunlike of late, and now he tried to guess why. It wasn’t her clothes, which remained steadfastly black or brown and unrelievedly somber. It wasn’t her face, which had more color but not much more animation than on the day they’d met. She still glided rather than walked, but he’d discovered that was natural, not learned, her usual, quite graceful way of moving. The difference was partly in her posture, the way she held herself—not stooped any longer, as if she expected the sky to fall in at any moment. She walked with her shoulders back and her chin up, meeting the world head-on. It was a small shift, but it changed everything. Her slender figure looked youthful because of it, not careful and pained, almost decrepit. It pleased him to see the change, and intrigued him to speculate on what other surprises she might have in store for him.

  Oddly enough, as soon as the thought had fully formed in his mind, she changed again. Conversation on her end ceased. Her luminous eyes dimmed, and she stopped looking about her, training her gaze on the ground in front of her feet, holding onto her elbows.

  Sebastian glanced around, trying to see what could have caused this abrupt withdrawal, but there was nothing. Except that they’d entered the village. Was that it? Cottages lined both sides of the High Street, a narrow, gently climbing thoroughfare whose hard-packed surface didn’t give way to cobbles till the second bridge over the serpentine Wyck, almost at the village green. Passersby tipped their hats or bowed, hardly able to veil their surprise at seeing Lord D’Aubrey in the town, not only on foot but in the company of his infamous housekeeper. As he returned their greetings in kind, it struck him that Rachel might receive a much less hospitable welcome when she made her weekly visits to the constable’s office. Did she ever meet open hostility? He thought of what the vicar had told him about Lydia Wade, her late husband’s daughter. Did other people in Wyckerley feel the same violent antagonism toward her?

  It was a disturbing thought. To counteract it—he didn’t have time to worry about Mrs. Wade—he announced casually, “I’ve been thinking of having an entertainment at the Hall one day soon. Something for the locals, I think, a kind of open-house affair, nothing too formal, meet the new squire and all that. Does that sound like something you would care to organize for me, Mrs. Wade?”

  Her steps slowed gradually until she stopped. They were in front of the mayor’s unattractive Tudor home, two stories of half-timbers and whitewashed clay surrounded by a pretentious black iron fence. Rachel had turned pale as a sheet; she actually looked ill.

  “It won’t be much work,” he said smoothly. “I’ll give you a list of the people I wish to invite. Judelet can plan the menu, but I would want you to act as my hostess, greeting the guests and so on.” She stared at his shirtfront, her straight mouth closed, the lips pressing together in intermittent nervous spasms. “What do you say, Mrs. Wade? May I count on you for that?”

  “My lord,” she finally got out.

  “Hmm?”

  Her glance flickered over him knowingly just for a second, telling him she fully comprehended the game he was playing with her now. “My lord, I would ask for a little more time.”

  He’d expected her to cave in, agree to his unkind plan without a whimper, and suffer the consequences with her usual hopeless stoicism. Was this tentative quibble progress? That depended on what the object was—his object, not hers—and as to that he wasn’t sure; he alternated between wanting to save her and wanting to push her to her limit.

  “You would ask for a little more time,” he repeated, as if he didn’t quite understand. “For what purpose?”

  Her struggles with self-expression always fascinated him. “I’m not—I feel as if I couldn’t—I’m afraid I wouldn’t do justice to you or your friends at such an entertainment.”

  “Why not?”

  She looked around for a distraction, but no one approached them, no one came to her rescue. “It’s just—I’m not—fit . . .”

  Uncharacteristically, he took pity on her. “You’ve spent the last ten years in a small room by yourself,” he said softly. “You’ve lost the ability to converse easily with others, and you’re still nearly incapable of making choices, even simple ones. The good people of Wyckerley believe you’re a murderess, and you not unnaturally find dealing with them a trial and an embarrassment. You want to keep to yourself and attract the least amount of attention while you try to rebuild some semblance of a life. If it were up to you, you would rather not organize and play hostess at a party for a lot of hostile strangers.”

  Her astonishment—that he could have any idea of what her inner life was like—wasn’t flattering, but it was intriguing to watch. The clear, nearly achromatic eyes widened; before self-consciousness overtook them, her features grew positively animated. Girlish—she looked like the girl in the stiff family photograph, young and fresh, still capable of amazement. She put her hands together in a fervent, almost prayerful gesture. Gratitude made her smile naturally, for once. “My lord, I’m very—”

  “But, of course, it’s not up to you, is it? It’s up to me.”

  Ah, now it was dread he got to watch take over her mobile countenance, and—could it be?—a flash of righteous anger, quickly hidden before, God forbid, it could give offense. She was too easy to read, not enough of a challenge for him today. But what could account for anyone having a face that transparent? The absence of mirrors in her prison cell? Or had the ten
-year prohibition against looking at others caused her to forget that people’s faces gave away their emotions?

  “Very well,” he said solemnly, “I will grant you your wish—a little more time. But don’t make the mistake of growing complacent,” he cautioned in a lower voice, leaning toward her. “I’m not a hermit, and Lynton Hall is not a religious retreat. Sooner or later, you’ll have to help me entertain my friends. Furthermore, when I engaged you, I had more duties in mind than merely seeing to it that my house is clean.” He left it at that, not putting into words the other “duties” for which they both knew he’d engaged her. What was the need?

  “Thank you, my lord,” she said stiffly.

  He made her a slight bow. They understood each other.

  The clock in the tower of All Saints Church began to strike the noon hour. Time for his meeting with the mayor. But Rachel’s bowed head distracted him, her face invisible beneath the unattractive bonnet. He had an idea.

  “Come with me,” he said abruptly, sliding his hand into the crook of her elbow to get her moving. Startled, she let him lead her along past the village inn, the alehouse, Swan’s blacksmith shop. When he stopped and opened the door for her at Miss Carter’s Frocks and Ready to Wear, she balked for a second, looking astonished and then bemused, and finally preceded him into the shop.

  Sebastian had made Miss Carter’s acquaintance over a month ago in the company of Lili, when his erstwhile mistress had insisted on going into the village for the express purpose of laughing, not very discreetly, at what passed for fashion in the local shops. Her performance hadn’t endeared her—or him, by extension—to Miss Carter, a small, blond-haired woman whose welcoming smile didn’t reach her eyes when she heard the bell and came out of a back room to greet her customers. And when she saw that the woman accompanying him this time was the notorious Rachel Wade, even the insincere smile waned, and he suspected that all that kept her from incivility was his title.

  “Are you in mourning for anyone, Mrs. Wade?” he asked, lounging against the counter along the shop’s rear wall.

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “Anybody die on you lately for whom you feel the need to wear black?”

  “I—no, my lord.”

  “Or brown?”

  “No, my lord.”

  “Splendid.” With a flourish, he untied the ribbon bow at her throat and whipped the offending bonnet off her head. He couldn’t have said which lady was more flabbergasted, the housekeeper or the shopkeeper. “You sell hats, don’t you, Miss Carter?” he inquired of the latter. She nodded mutely. “I hope you have others besides that.” He pointed to the one displayed on the counter, an extravagant leghorn affair suitable for the May Day procession and nothing else.

  “Why, yes, my lord, I—that is, I have forms, you know, and—quite a large selection of trims to go with them, ribbons and such. Would you care to see them?”

  “Very much.”

  “I’ll only be a minute,” she promised, and disappeared into the back of the shop.

  “The poke bonnet had its heyday around 1842,” he told Rachel while he waited, fingering a cheap pair of kid gloves on the counter, “Nowadays a lady of fashion wears a very small bonnet far back on the head, or, if she’s quite dashing, a hat. With luck, that’s what we’re going to get you today, Mrs. Wade.”

  She had her head bowed, hands demurely folded; he couldn’t tell what was going through her mind. Perhaps she was wondering about the propriety of receiving a personal gift from him, especially in a place as public as Miss Carter’s. Well, she had better make peace with her scruples, because once she was his mistress—assuming she pleased him—he meant to buy her a dozen hats, and gowns to go with all of them.

  Miss Carter returned with her “forms,” which showed more promise than he’d dared to hope. “Do you fancy any of these?” he mused. “Try this one.” He started to put it on for her, but she took it from him and settled it on her head herself. Miss Carter held the glass. After a few seconds, Sebastian and the shopkeeper said, “No,” in unison, and the hat was rejected. Two others were tried and cast off just as quickly.

  The fourth was of wine-colored plush, medium size, with a brim that curved rather rakishly on the side. It was pretty and it suited her, even flattered her, but Sebastian’s attention wasn’t on the hat anymore. It was on Rachel’s face. A little while ago he’d wondered what other surprises she had in store for him, and it seemed he hadn’t had to wait long for the next one. She was staring at her reflection as if she were looking at a complete stranger. An unexpectedly attractive one, if he was interpreting her look of fascination correctly. “Do you like it?” he asked softly, unnecessarily.

  She gave a small nod, keeping her eyes on the glass.

  “It’s most becoming,” Miss Carter piped up, “one of my very best, and only eighteen and six, which leaves plenty for . . .” She halted, coloring, realizing that economy probably wasn’t high on Viscount D’Aubrey’s list of criteria for hat-buying.

  “Plenty for decorating,” he finished for her kindly. “Show us your flowers, feathers, and furbelows, Miss Carter; we’re squirming with impatience.”

  She went away again, returning in a moment with two boxes of hat-trimming possibilities. There were no ostrich feathers—too dear for the ladies of Wyckerley, apparently—and the other feathers, except for the gaudy peacocks, were dull or cheap-looking. They settled the matter of the ribbon expeditiously and unanimously—black velvet, the inch-and-a-half width. Veils and netting were rejected as too prissy for such a sleek, stylish hat, and that left only flowers. He was reaching for a handful of cloth violets when Rachel, who had been comparatively passive up to now, made a low sound of demurral and chose a bouqueted cluster of peonies.

  “Ooh, that’s cunning,” Miss Carter said approvingly, holding the glass again. Her earlier reserve was wearing off as she got more into the millinery spirit. “I’d never’ve thought that pink would go, but it does, it most certainly does. Very fetching, madam, and it shows off your color very nicely.”

  An understatement, thought Sebastian. The peonies were large—too large, he had judged, but he’d been wrong—and their coral-pink shade matched exactly the pretty color blooming in his housekeeper’s cheeks as she stared, entranced, at her own image. Again, it wasn’t the hat that arrested him, or even how pretty she looked in it, but rather the subtle metamorphosis from age to youth, from caution to near-confidence in her expressive features. She couldn’t take her eyes off herself, and neither could he.

  He broke the spell when he touched her cheek, to smooth back a lock of her dark, silver-streaked hair. Self-consciousness replaced the fledgling approval in her eyes; she stepped away, out of his reach.

  Just then the bell over the shop door tinkled and a woman came through. Tall, dark, expensively dressed, she looked vaguely familiar until she smirked at him in pleased surprise, and he remembered who she was: Honoria Vanstone, the mayor’s tiresome spinster daughter.

  “Lord D’Aubrey, what a fortuitous meeting,” she exclaimed in an affected falsetto. “How do you do? I was telling my father only yesterday that it’s been too long since we’ve seen you.” She saw Mrs. Wade for the first time, looked between them, realized they were together, and said, “Oh,” in a long, rising-and-falling intonation of delicate horror. It might have been amusing if it hadn’t ruined the mood of tentative gaiety that, against all odds, had prevailed in the shop before her arrival.

  Immediately Mrs. Wade’s face and figure took on the familiar hooded, haunted look. If she’d been on her own, he was sure she’d have bolted. Had she encountered the Vanstone woman before in some unpleasant social connection? It would explain her abrupt regression to the downcast Rachel of old.

  Impulsively he reached for her hand and drew her closer. The burgundy hat no longer suited her; the pink peonies looked garish next to her pallid complexion, and the jaunty, carefree style seem
ed to mock her. He felt her humiliation, and he was moved to help her.

  What was it, then, that made him take the hat from her head slowly, almost caressingly—as if they were alone and he were undressing her? Her dark hair had grown enough by now to curl below the collar of her dress. He slid his fingers into it, ruffling it a little where the hat had flattened it. The attentive silence egged him on; now he felt as if he were on a stage, with one other player and a rapt audience of two. He brought his palms to the sides of Rachel’s face, brushing her mouth with his thumbs. Behind him, Honoria Vanstone gasped.

  “When can you have the hat ready?” he murmured. Miss Carter made some answer, but he didn’t catch it. Rachel was holding perfectly still, eyes lowered, staring off somewhere to the side. He felt her breath flutter on his fingers, the helpless trembling of her lips. He could lean down and kiss her now if he wanted to. He could do anything. The tiny golden hairs on her cheeks beguiled him; he smoothed his fingers over them lightly, frowning at her. He wanted her to look at him, but she would not. At last he took his hands away and stepped back.

  “I didn’t hear you,” he said, not taking his eyes from Rachel’s face. “When did you say the hat would be ready?”

  Miss Carter had to clear her throat. “By tomorrow, my lord, I expect. I should think. That is, unless—”

  “Send it to the Hall with your bill, please. A pleasure, Miss Vanstone, as always,” he murmured to the mayor’s daughter, whose face had turned an unattractive shade of mauve. “Mrs. Wade?” Rachel still wouldn’t look at him, but she had no choice but to take his arm when he offered it. Behind them, the affronted muttering started before they were even through the door.

  Out on the cobbled street, he watched her jerk the ribbons of the old black bonnet under her chin in a turbulent, untidy bow. She was furious with him, but she would never say it. “You’ll find your way home alone all right, will you?” he inquired facetiously.

  Her eyes shot fire, but her mumbled, “Yes, my lord,” was perfectly respectful. In her black dress, she looked alarmingly slight and somber against a riot of purple foxgloves blooming along the riverbank. He imagined her walking home through the village by herself, enduring the stares of the curious and the hostile; for all he knew, people even said things to her—insulted her. He wavered for a moment, actually considering going back with her, putting off his meeting with Vanstone on copper mine investments to another time.

 

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