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The Rakehell Regency Romance Series Boxed Set 6

Page 29

by Sorcha MacMurrough


  She bared it to see if he would try to eat, and he promptly latched on, sucked so heartily for a moment that Lucinda gasped in shock, and then feathered down his long lashes and began to drowse.

  "Oh, he's so lovely," she wept.

  "Like his mother, and auntie," Simon said with a proud smile.

  "Have you got a name for him?" Gabrielle asked with a loving smile.

  "Christopher Simon Randall Howell. I want nothing from that bastard Oxnard, not even his last name."

  Simon and Gabrielle looked at each other.

  "Christopher it is then. And thank you, Lucinda. I'm really touched and deeply grateful," Simon said, bending to give her a kiss on the brow.

  "Thank you, thank you both."

  Gabrielle tidied up the last of the dirty linens and made sure Lucinda was as clean and comfortable as could be, and joined Simon at the head of the makeshift bed, where they looked down at Lucinda as she nursed the infant. She was as tender with it as she had been with her little kitten in Bedlam. It seemed a lifetime ago.

  Gabrielle shivered for a moment, and prayed for the souls of Spence and Kit. She hoped this new Christopher would have a much better ending than the last poor baby.

  "We really are a little family now," Simon said, beaming as proudly as if the child were his own.

  "So you have no regrets about not finding your rightful family?" Gabrielle asked softly.

  Simon smiled at her, and she noted there wasn't a single shadow in his golden gaze. "I have found them. They're all right here with me, or waiting back for us at Barkston House. You told me yesterday that I was more than enough for you, that I filled your life. Don't ever doubt that you do the same for me, my lovely Gabrielle. It's all been so new and sudden and, well, wildly passionate. But this is love, pure, solid and simple." He looped his arm around her waist and held her close in the way she loved, one that made her feel as if they fit perfectly together. And as if nothing could ever separate them, not even death.

  "Thank you for helping. Like Antony said the first time we ever met, you're always a useful man to have in a crisis."

  He drew her into the circle of his embrace fully now with his other arm. "You know there isn't anything I wouldn't do for you or your sister. There may come a time when I shall have to prove that to you..."

  She shook her head. "You never have to prove anything to me, darling. And yet you've proven your love time and time again."

  Lucinda cuddled the baby to her and sighed. "Tired now. Why don't the two of you get some rest as well?"

  "You don't mind?"

  "Not at all, Sister. Go on, off you get behind the screen, and give him a big kiss for me."

  Simon laughed. "You can do it yourself. I won't be offended."

  "One for me and one for baby." She smacked her hand twice, and blew. "Good night, Simon."

  She rolled onto her side, with the baby slumbering happily beside her, and closed her own eyes.

  Gabrielle and Simon did their best to scrub themselves, Lucinda and the baby, and the whole area clean, lest the owners of the house come home and find their lovely drawing room looking like a hospital.

  When they were satisfied that all was as orderly as they could manage in the circumstances, she checked her sister one more time, and then joined Simon on their pallet bed behind the screen.

  He curled his body into hers and sighed as they relaxed at last after all the stress of the day.

  A moment later he whispered, "I know we really ought not to make love with your sister and baby so close, just on the other side of the screen, but well, can I sleep inside you?"

  "Do you think we can..."

  "I'm willing to try if you are."

  He lifted the hem of her chemise, pulled her tightly to face him, and glided into her with all of the thrilling glow of love their joining always produced.

  She gasped and rotated her hips, but he shook his head. He rolled her partly onto her back so that she was pinned to the pallet by his hard body. He wrapped one of his legs around the calves of both of hers.

  "There, perfect."

  She began to clamp her muscles down onto him, just as she had read about in the book Eswara had given her. He gasped in surprise.

  "Oh, no, we shouldn't. I didn't mean..."

  "Just let it happen," she urged throatily.

  A few more tight clenches from her ring of muscles had him flowing like a river, and she right along with him, the sensations only ebbing when Simon felt as though he had been drained dry.

  "Thank you, my love. That was Heaven," he rasped against her ear. "But now, we really need to sleep."

  They both peered around the screen, but Lucinda was breathing evenly, as was the baby.

  Simon was almost sure the infant was making a sound like a cat purring. Or was it his own pleasure humming through his body? He mentioned the thought to Gabrielle.

  "It's both," she said with a loving smile. "it's all we could ever have hoped for. A wonderful, healthy baby, and Lucinda purging her demons from the past so she can really get well."

  "Aye, that bast--"

  She sushed him with a kiss, and then began to trace his handsome mouth with her fingers. "It's over now, my love. What he did was terrible, but hate breeds hate. Out of all that dark hell, a bright new life has come into the world. Let's just take it as the gift it is, without trying to be agents of revenge."

  "Aye, you're right, of course." He kissed her on the cheek, and then asked, "How did you ever get to be so wise?"

  She smiled up at him, her eyes glowing. "From the wisest man I ever met, who gave me the gift of knowing what it is to truly love and be loved. Thank you, Simon, for everything. For tonight, and all our past nights."

  "And for all the nights to come," he said with a grin.

  "Indeed. I can't wait. But for now, we need to rest. So good night, darling."

  "Aye, sweet dreams, my dearest love."

  He settled his weight a bit better, still pressed deeply within her. He wrapped his whole body around hers like a blanket once more, and let sleep finally overtake them.

  Chapter Twenty-nine

  Dr. Blake Sanderson arrived at Ferncliffe Castle just as dawn began to peep over the horizon. He stared at the building and shook his head.

  He shivered with dread at the thought of what he might find inside. Of all the places to end up...

  When he tramped into the house, he was shocked to discover the little family in what passed for the front room, sleeping as soundly as if they were in their own feather beds back home.

  He looked around and shook his head. Well, he supposed it could have been worse. Jesus had been born in a stable, after all....

  "Good morning, all. Well, I can see I'm too late," he said loudly enough to wake them, "and I am sure you did an excellent job, Gabrielle, and were a credit to Antony and Eswara's training, but let me just have a look at mother and baby to be on the safe side."

  Simon and Gabrielle started at the sound of the doctor's voice. She instinctively grabbed for their blanket and pulled it right over their heads as they tried to disengage their bodies from one another gently without getting too excited.

  They began to adjust their clothing quickly, and smoothed their tousled hair from each other's faces as their lips met for a tender kiss.

  Blake talked soothingly to Lucinda, who remained silent. Then he cleared his throat.

  "You did remarkably well considering this place is the most appalling vision of Hell I've ever encountered. It's a wonder you didn't all didn't drown or catch pneumonia."

  "What?" Simon said, trying to open one bleary eye. His lids felt as though they were stuck together. While he had slept well, he was now feeling a bit stiff and sore.

  Gabrielle succeeded in getting her eyes unglued at last, drew the blanket off their heads, and gasped. She stared at their surroundings and shivered.

  "But, but..." Her mouth worked up and down wordlessly for a moment. "I don't understand."

  She had no idea what she w
ould have said next, for Simon now distracted her shocked thoughts by having a sudden fit.

  "I'm not mad. I've never been mad. They know I know things. They've left me here to rot. Couldn't kill me in case they needed me. Please, I have to-" He clutched his head in agony now, and began to gurgle and choke.

  "God, Simon!" Gabrielle gasped, rolling up onto her knees to grip him by the shoulders as he flailed and thrashed on the filthy floor. He hadn't had a fit in so long....

  Blake fumbled for his bag and found a spoon.

  "Stay with me, Simon, stay with me. It's all right. Blake's here, we're all safe," she sought to reassure him as he struggled and thrashed amid the roof debris and rubble scattered all around them.

  At last the golden-eyed man calmed, and looked around at the dilapidated castle and then at Gabrielle in silent inquiry. His expression said it all: The castle was naught more than a ruin. Yet last night.....

  She shook her head, warning him not to pursue the subject further in front of Blake.

  She looked over at her sister, but to her dismay, saw at once that Lucinda was in her usual state of torpor. For once Gabrielle was glad she could not say anything and make their friend think they were insane.

  Blake said. "Come. The sooner we get out of here, the better. This place makes me nervous."

  "Why?" she dared to ask, shivering with dread herself.

  "Ah, well, it was a bit before I cane down here, actually, but a particularly nasty man, the Earl of Ferncliffe, lived here and gave Jonathan Deveril's wife and brother-in-law a hard time."

  "Oh?"

  "I don't recall all the particulars, just that he tried to trick Pamela into helping him restore this Gothic horror, the better to try to seduce her and steal her family's property."

  "And his brother-in-law?"

  "Yes, Alexander was supposed to be the true heir to his place. But it was a long time ago now, and he and Sarah are happy as they are."

  Simon came over to them with an armful of things he had been gathering and said, "I can't understand in how anyone could let a charming old building like this fall into such disrepair."

  "True. I think it's got, er, potential," Gabrielle said with a look around the room.

  Blake shook his head at the holes in the ceiling and the smashed windows, the rodent droppings, nest debris and guano everywhere. "You can evidently see something I can't. But never mind that now. At least it gave you enough shelter so that Lucinda and baby are safe." He looked up at the sagging roof with a shake of his head.

  "There have been trees down all over the district, roads washed out, livestock drowned. It took me hours to get here. I would just as soon hurry back before the rain starts again, if you don't mind. He began gathering everything he could lay hands on back into the main pile on a not too dirty section of the stone floor.

  "Randall would have come, but the children were terrified and worried about you. He didn't dare leave them."

  "It's all right. We've managed. We're all fine, as you can see," Gabrielle replied.

  He looked up from his work to peer at Simon more closely. "Are you feeling better?"

  "Mmm, yes." He rose from the floor slowly but steadily, and when he saw that he was able to manage on his own, he began to fold the blankets, and then helped Gabrielle gather the rest of their supplies.

  "Are you better now, dearest?" she asked Simon after a time.

  "Aye."

  "What do you think happened?"

  He shrugged. "I thought I had been here before. But it was probably just a trick of the light, the flashes in the storm."

  But he didn't meet her eyes as he said this.

  Gabrielle looked around again, and shivered once more, with unease more than fear.

  Clutching each other's hands tightly for a brief moment, they bustled about gathering their things, and then Lucinda and the baby into Blake's carriage, eager to leave the mysterious old medieval ruins as soon as possible to get back to the brightness of Barkston House.

  "But I saw it," Gabrielle said later in the privacy of their room, once Lucinda and little Christopher were safely asleep in their room. "I saw it with my own two eyes, felt it. Fenton did too. All of us. It wasn't my imagination. I don't want you to think for a minute that you're mad."

  He shook his head. "If we are, then all four of us are together."

  "I can't make sense of it all, but it was quite clearly a sign. Of what I'm not sure."

  "Maybe that there's a benevolent deity?"

  She looked at him for a time, considering his words carefully. At length she said, "You told me the house looked familiar."

  "Yes, though don't ask me why. It's something from my childhood I'm afraid to try to recollect for fear of having a seizure."

  "There's only one thing wrong with that theory."

  "Hmm?" Simon said, evidently very uncomfortable with the topic.

  "If I was something from your childhood, well, that would be twenty or thirty years ago even, wouldn't it?"

  Simon did some quick calculations. "Yes. I don't recall my precise date of birth, but I would say that's a good guess."

  "Except that all those fabrics and furnishings in the castle, in the rooms we saw, well, they were the latest styles and fashions. Remember? We even saw some of them in the shops around Bath yesterday."

  He paused to consider that for a moment, then nodded. "So what do you think happened? That our wishful thinking made us, what, create a house for ourselves? That we all conjured up the ideal home out of thin air, and that it looked the same to all of us?"

  "What did you see?"

  He described the room in burgundy and blue, and then consulted with Lucinda when the baby woke a short time later demanding to be fed.

  She agreed with them. "The sofas were just like the samples we saw in Lawrence Howard's new shop window. The Peking Drouguet with the navy background, burgundy flowers and thin gold stripe," she confirmed, before turning her undivided attention to the baby once more.

  Gabrielle frowned. "What was it, a fantasy, a vision of the future?"

  "I don't know. But it was lovely and it felt, well, like home."

  "And this doesn't?" she asked quietly.

  He looked around. "It does too, but I think that felt like our future home for our new family. Christopher is a sign of that future. And I would love it if you would fall pregnant, my love, I have to admit."

  She gave him a loving kiss, running her fingers through his raven locks. "I don't mind trying if you don't. We can leave off using Eswara's sponges."

  "Not now, pet. But sometime soon?"

  "And the castle?" she asked softly.

  "We can make discreet inquiries, and see what turns up."

  Gabrielle sighed, and tried to pull them out of the fantasy and back to practicalities. "But it would be a huge undertaking, and more money than we could ever hope..."

  "It might be something to aspire to," he suggested. "I suppose it's pretty odd, though. I mean, I never imagined in any of my wildest flights of fancy that I would have a home one-tenth as fine as this, let alone that. Not when I was locked in Bedlam."

  "I can just imagine. Even thinking of a little bedsitting room of your own was probably a vision of Heaven."

  He nodded.

  "But then ever since we met, all our wishes have come true. We've made them together as we've built our life with each other."

  He stroked her cheek tenderly. "And you made the children's dreams come true too, Gabrielle, for we came home with half the goods in Bath, and a new baby brother."

  She grinned at him. "You have to take at least half the credit for that."

  "Gladly, my love."

  "Thank you again." She kissed him soundly. "Anyway, just try to put the whole affair out of your mind. It's over now."

  "What was the place called again?"

  Gabrielle frowned. "Blake said Fern- something. I know. Ferncliffe. Ferncliffe Castle."

  Simon's expression at once changed and he fell to the floor with a shrie
k. The back of his head cracked against the corner of the bedstead, and blood began to spurt from his nose.

  "Oh God, no, no!" Gabrielle ran for the bell pull and yanked on it furiously.

  The little maid who appeared squealed in horror at the sight of so much blood.

 

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