Book Read Free

The Rakehell Regency Romance Collection 6

Page 12

by MacMurrough, Sorcha


  "You mean what they said I did. There's a difference," he said sharply.

  "Aye, but what they said is so horrible..."

  "The question is, what do you believe?" he asked, insinuating a couple of fingers into the plaster hole she was kneeling near, so that he almost touched her cheek. She leapt back like a scalded cat, but then found herself almost reaching out for him with her own hand.

  "What does your heart tell you? You held me in your arms, Gabrielle, and told me you wouldn't forsake me no matter what. Yet now, only a few days later, you won't even speak to me through four inches of wall?"

  "I'm sorry, I can't."

  "Oh, I don't blame you, pet. I can probably guess what it is they are accusing me of. What is it, murder, rape? I've debauched my own sister and her children or some such?"

  She hung her head. So it was true...

  "Whatever it is they've told you and your cousin the good doctor, Antony, it's all nothing more than a string of vile fabrications to ensure that no one in their right mind would want to help me.

  "But I swear to you by all I hold sacred, I've done nothing that warrants being left here to rot. If my brothers were alive they would move heaven and earth to get me out of here. But they're gone, all gone. I'm the only one left, and the war has taken me as well."

  She rose to her full height and began to pace in between the narrow cot her sister lay on, and the pockmarked wall.

  "The war has been over for years. There is no purpose being served by keeping you here any longer for whatever reason they might ever have..." She broke off, not wanting to feed his fantasy.

  Antony had said that would be most dangerous, for it was easy to get swept up in all of his ravings, thinking there was some sense in the madness.

  "Please, you must listen now, while I'm still lucid. I'll have to eat again soon, and then..."

  "I can't. I'm sorry, I just can't." She snatched up her things and fled the cell as if madness were contagious.

  And perhaps it was, for after another week of Simon reciting poetry and snippets of conversation whenever she weakened and decided she just had to speak with him for a moment, she began to think that even if he had done everything he was accused of, the man from the past who might have done what was claimed was certainly not the same as the man now.

  After all, the war brutalised and dehumanised. She had seen it with her own cousin Michael. In fact, he had cut himself off from everyone he knew except Dr. Blake Sanderson, who had been helping to heal him, because he had been so convinced he would corrupt everything he touched with the blood on his hands from the war. He had been delusional, haunted, for a very long time.

  Eventually he had married his wife Bryony and been reintegrated back into his family, but he had declined to resume his earldom even though he was the eldest of the Avenels.

  Randall as the youngest of five boys had never imagined he would become the Earl of Hazelmere, but he was doing an admirable job. As an independent with Radical leanings in the House of Lords, he was considered a political force to be reckoned with, though he has spent only a short time in the House since their father had died.

  Randall too had done things of which he was ashamed. Everyone did. Well, if they lived long enough...

  She knew Lucinda had been ashamed of her marriage to Oxnard, and she herself was ashamed of the way she had never stood up to her brother Chauncey, even though she had known him to be envious and vindictive, hell bent on taking whatever he could from his more prosperous cousins the Avenels and the Drakes.

  He had tormented Randall, and Isolde Drake and her family, she knew. When Randall and Isolde had married, Chauncey had very nearly ended up ruining them with scandal. Only for their hasty marriage, who knew what would have happened to poor Isolde.

  Her own ruin did not seem so terrible now, for she had never had such high expectations of her life and role in Society as Chauncey had. She was happy with the clinic, and Antony was certainly most dedicated to the poor rather than the pleasures of the Ton, as were most of his Rakehell friends.

  She sighed as she reflected on the choices people made, and how one simple act, or course of inaction, could lead to the most dire consequences. For instance, if she had dared to speak her mind to try to set Chauncey on a better course, perhaps she and her sister might not be in their present predicament now.

  If she helped Simon, she might certainly bring a world of trouble down on her head. But equally unsure would be the result of doing nothing. In fact, she was certain he would take his own life if she did not.

  She might well be in peril if she helped him. But how could she ever live with herself if she did not?

  Chapter Ten

  After another week of conversing with Simon through the wall, Gabrielle's course of action became more clear. He never deviated from his tale so far as he was able to recount it through his seizures and pain.

  He was either the best actor and liar in the world, she decided, or a man truly telling the truth. His story was the same no matter how much she tried to trip him up by asking probing questions about subjects that did not set him writhing in agony from the pain in his head.

  Her cousin Michael had told her he had endured mental as well as physical torment due to the war. Sarah Deveril's husband, known as Alexander, had also suffered an impairment of his memory as a result of what he had endured. She did not know the particulars, but it was clear that the long years these men had spent doing battle with Napoleon had left them with an enduring legacy of pain and suffering which might take years to be alleviated, if ever.

  But that was not to say she was not willing to try to help him....

  As they spoke, plans began to formulate in her mind, ideas so daring, she even shocked herself. Yet if she had ever imagined even two years ago that she would be working at a clinic for fallen women while she aided her beloved sister, an inmate in Bedlam, she would have deemed it impossible.

  So while they conversed, she set about with a will to try to lay the foundations of her plan. They both worked from either side of the wall to enlarge the hole between the two cells that so she could smuggle some untainted food in.

  They had communicated well enough the first few days through the crack in the wall Simon had desperately rammed his fingers into in an effort to get her to pay attention to him. Since then, they had found another more promising hole in the nearest corner to the door, less visible from it when they were working, and easily covered with the bedstead once they were done for the day.

  He scraped diligently every day with a metal spoon she had given him, and together they worked feverishly to get the opening large enough to fit more than pieces and fruit and small parcels of bread, meat and cheese.

  "The opium is only making my condition worse. Please, if I could be free of the addiction, the seizures wouldn't be so bad. I've been a wreck since the day we met, trying to hold out until you found me again, but getting weaker by the day as a result."

  "But if you're already locked in, why bother to go to such lengths as to drug you so heavily?" she asked again.

  "They give it to me to keep me docile, suppress my memories, but they don't understand what it does to the body. I've been like this for five years now, and my seizures and tremors are getting worse."

  "I know," she admitted at last, and began to dig on her side in real earnest now. For the more he tried to wean himself from the medicine and remember his past life, the more excruciating his agony became.

  "Thank you, thank you so much," he gasped when he saw her spoon thrust in straight through to his side, and back out again, taking a goodly hunk of plaster with it.

  She gathered it up quickly and stuffed it into her basket to dump it outside in the courtyard under his window once she was safely outside so no one would suspect anything if they came in to look at either cell. If they ever moved the beds to discover the hole, she could claim no knowledge of it.

  He said after a time, "You are a most remarkable woman. Incredibly resourceful. I hat
e to put you and your sister in even the remotest peril like this, but you're my last hope, Gabrielle. I know you have no reason to trust or even like me, but I'm begging you, this is a medical condition, not a character weakness, and ..."

  "It's all right. I'll do it, I'm going to help you somehow," she agreed, her last doubts not fully assuaged, but unable to bear his suffering any longer. There was only one way to arrive at the truth, and that was to not just take anyone's word for it, but actively seek it for herself.

  "What did you say?" he gasped.

  She touched the plaster, cold and chill, and tried to recall the heart of his hard muscular body the night they had lain in each other's arms in the asylum bathing chamber below.

  "I said I'm going to help you, Simon. I believe in you. I'm sorry I doubted you. That I let my cousin try to dissuade me from doing the right thing. I apologise for being weak, and allowing myself to grow frightened of you when I had no reason to be.

  "I'm sorry, truly I am, for the suffering you've endured because I turned a cold shoulder to you, Simon. My only excuse is I'm young and foolish. Truth to tell, I'm not quite sure how I can manage what you're asking me to do, though I'm doing my best. I'm starting to gather the seeds of a plan together. It's just that, well, I'm going to need help from some of my colleagues at the clinic, and I'm concerned they might try to talk me out of it. Or worse still, that Antony will get wind of it and try to stop me."

  "Oh, you don't know how relieved I am to hear your voice not sounding so cool and angry any longer. No, not angry, mistrustful. But I don't want you to take any risks on my..."

  "I think I know a way without risking any of us, but I just need to think it through and check on a few things. So I promise, it will be soon enough once I have all my facts. In the meantime, keep scraping at the stone work."

  Their fingers touched for a brief moment, and clung. It was madness, but it felt so perfect, sheer heaven...

  Reluctantly, they let go, and continued scraping in silence, each lost in their own thoughts. As Gabrielle had said, she had to set the whole scheme in motion, and carry on to the end. She needed a few more pieces in place, and then she was going to have to overcome an even larger obstacle than the ones she had already admitted...that of Simon himself, and his addiction.

  She had a good plan. The question was, did she dare take such a leap of faith when she literally had no idea what that end would be?

  She paused for a brief moment, then looking over at her slumbering sister, set to with both the spoon and now the fork as well. She worked for another two hours widening the hole, until she was able to reach both arms through. She felt the familiar jolt of electricity as he touched her hand and kissed it.

  "I'm sorry I am so filthy and disreputable, but I just can't help it. I think of that night in the bathing chamber downstairs and..."

  "Never mind that now. Can you promise me to keep widening the hole, and move the bed in front to conceal it."

  "Aye, it works fine from in here. And if I pull it away from the wall I can lay down on my side and keep working."

  "All right. I want you to try to prepare yourself for Friday. I'll get my friends to help, and we will see what we can do for you."

  "Bless you, darling. I know what a huge sacrifice this is, and an enormous risk, but I swear to you, you won't regret it."

  She tried to smile at him through the whole, and nodded. "No, no regrets. We stay the course come what may."

  Once she returned to the clinic, she drew Clarissa off to one side and asked if she could speak with her privately.

  It didn't take her long to outline her plan. "What do you think? Can we do it?" she asked the reformed prostitute.

  She nodded. "It'll cost you. But yes."

  "And will you help me with Lucinda?"

  Clarissa gave her a long, assessing look. "This bloke really means a lot to ye, dunn't he?"

  Gabrielle nodded. "I think he does. I know Antony will say I'm mad for even thinking it, but I need to try. I really do think he's telling me the truth. That he served in the war as, well, a spy I suppose. With his impeccable English and French, it stands to reason."

  "So why lock him away?" the older woman wondered aloud.

  "He was tortured too. It's bound to have affected his mind. Maybe he really can't cope with the outside world. And he is strange, I have to admit. Unique."

  "How?" Clarissa asked, looking mildly alarmed.

  "Well, for example, for the past three weeks, he's never recited the same poem twice in all the time that I've been in Lucinda's cell, and yet he doesn't have a single book in his chamber. He's reciting them all from memory."

  "Sounds a strange ‘un all right, but not dangerous. Only thing is, how are you going to get away from Dr. Herriot to help him?"

  Gabrielle had worked that out as well. "I'll say I'm going to Somerset to stay with my cousins, and will give you letters to deliver to him once each week which appear to support that story."

  "And you want me to tend to Lucinda twice a day and bring you hot water and food every day and night?"

  "Yes."

  "But what if they start to wonder why you never leave the asylum?"

  Gabrielle shrugged one shoulder. "Bribes of one sort or another will usually work well enough. We just need to keep Spence and his colleague busy enough for them to not care. And besides, I don't think there's a rule about visitors going in and out except at certain times. Do you have anyone you know willing to, well..."

  Clarissa nodded. "Sure, for that kind of money."

  She thought for a moment, then nodded to her colleague. "Very well, we'll go through with it Friday evening, at six. Please make sure everyone is ready by then."

  "Aye, I will. So long as you are, Miss Howell."

  Gabrielle chewed her lower lip. "I shall have to be. And please, Clarissa, call me Gabrielle."

  She gave her one more long, assessing look, and nodded. Then she resumed her duties with a pensive air.

  Gabrielle watched her work for a time, and then pushed her heavy fall of auburn hair out of her eyes with a sigh. She prayed she would prove to be as sincere an ally as she appeared to be, and never tell Antony about her audacious plan. For if Clarissa did, there would be no telling how she would ever be able to help Simon and free him from his living hell.

  Chapter Eleven

  At six on Friday evening, a gaggle of harlots arrived at the front gate to Bedlam as usual. Normally the gate keeper didn't pay much mind to any of them, but there was one girl with the most remarkable red hair...

  She gave a winning smile and stepped straight passed him, intent upon her night's work, no doubt.

  One of her companions, a raven-haired harlot names Angela, had the stickiest fingers in London in more ways than one. As soon as they got to the third floor corridor and the girls began to distract the guard positioned outside Simon's door, she went to work, lifting his keys and palming them to Gabrielle, who was standing back a bit from the others, lurking in the shadows just in case he recognised her.

  Spence's jaw dropped. "Well, girls, to what do I owe..."

  "Bloke here's come into some money from a relative. He gets treated, you get treated. Come here, handsome," Angela rasped, pulling her to him. "Let's find a quiet corner somewhere, eh?"

  One of the other women took his left arm and led him down the corridor to a shadowy alcove they often used for their assignations.

  As soon as he was gone, Clarissa dropped all the supplies she had concealed in her voluminous skirts and the small valise she was carrying with her, and helped Gabrielle get the door open and the things inside.

  "The others will be along in a minute," she reassured Gabrielle.

  Simon, lying on his bed in his usual state of torpor, leapt up at the intrusion of the floozies. He didn't recognise Gabrielle at first, but merely gaped at the most magnificent pair of breasts he had ever seen swell a bodice.

  "Excuse me, ladies, but can I help you?" he said at last, causing her to smile. He might as we
ll have been in a Ton drawing room.

  "We're here to help you, mon ami."

  Gabrielle smiled at him, and he sat back down on the bed with a gasp.

  The other two helpers whom Clarissa had let in on the plan had dropped the rest of the supplies in the corridor before accosting Spence, so they hurried down the hall and dragged them in as well.

  Clarissa paused in her work long enough to stare at Simon for a moment, then nodded to Gabrielle. "Tomorrow morning at six."

  She knew Clarissa was giving her her blessing and approval of the perilous course she was about to undertake. "Thank you," she said earnestly.

  "Good luck. You're going to need it."

 

‹ Prev