The Notorious Lord

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The Notorious Lord Page 12

by Nicola Cornick

Cory shrugged. ‘It could have been. I only caught a glimpse, and it was impossible to tell. It could not be Miss Odell, though,’ he added on an afterthought.

  Richard looked quizzical. ‘Why not?’

  Cory laughed. ‘Because she would not have missed me,’ he said. ‘I taught her to shoot myself.’

  Richard sat back on the seat and stretched his long legs out in front of him. In the light of the carriage lamps his expression had turned calculating. ‘I will get Justin to ask around,’ he said. ‘He has the right contacts. Someone may know something. They always do if the price is right.’

  ‘It could have been a poacher or a footpad,’ Cory conceded, ‘but I do not think it likely.’

  ‘Neither do I,’ Richard said. ‘But how convenient that you injured your quarry, Cory.’ His tone hardened. ‘The reading group meets tomorrow afternoon. Lady Sally told me so herself at the dinner this evening. I think we might pay an impromptu call at Saltires.’

  ‘It would be courteous,’ Cory said, his lips twitching.

  ‘And we shall see,’ Richard added, ‘which of the ladies is indisposed-or nursing some sort of injury. It should be most enlightening.’

  Chapter Eight

  The mood of the reading group had felt somewhat prickly that afternoon. Rachel’s sleep had been broken by disturbing dreams after her meeting with Cory in the stables, and she was nursing a headache that not even Mrs Goodfellow’s tincture of valerian had been able to banish. The other ladies all seemed a little out of temper and it was difficult to concentrate on The Enchantress under the circumstances. Helena Lang was absent with an indisposition that Lady Benedict unkindly referred to as over-indulgence at dinner the night before, Lady Benedict herself had her arm in a sling from a tumble down the stairs and Lady Sally Saltire had her hand bandaged and could barely turn the pages of the book. She explained that she had been tending her precious roses that morning when a thorn had driven into the palm of her hand. All in all, the ladies were subdued and a little sharp.

  When Bentley, the butler, announced the arrival of visitors, they greeted the news with some relief. Lady Sally put her book aside and raised her brows enquiringly.

  ‘Is it anyone to whom we wish to be at home, Bentley?’

  ‘It is Lord Richard Kestrel and Lord Newlyn, ma’am,’ Bentley said woodenly. ‘Lord Richard said that he was certain that you would be at home, ma’am.’

  A small smile twitched Lady Sally lips. ‘Very well, then,’ she said, rising from the sofa in an elegant flurry of silk. ‘If Lord Richard is so certain that we are receiving guests, then who are we to disappoint him? Tea on the terrace, please, Bentley. I am sure that Lord Richard and Lord Newlyn are both most partial to a cup of tea.’

  Rachel had dropped her book when Cory’s name was mentioned and had to grope around on the floor to retrieve it. She felt her colour rise as everyone turned to look at her. Lady Benedict was staring at her in a speculative fashion, a malicious smile on her lips. Rachel, all fingers and thumbs, put the book on a side table and tried to breathe calmly.

  By the time Cory was announced she was flushed and flustered and annoyed to find that her heart was beating a tattoo as she watched the door like a cat at a mouse hole. It was inexplicable; she had seen Cory many times before and his entry into a room had never caused this constriction in her throat before. She felt as though she wanted to turn and run, and it was all to do with the previous night…

  As soon as Cory came in, he looked directly at her. Rachel’s heart jumped. In that moment she knew that Cory wanted to come across to her straight away. He hesitated visibly, but after a moment walked over to Lily Benedict instead. Rachel saw him gesture to the sling, a look of concern on his face, and saw Lady Benedict tilt her face towards him, smiling like a flower reaching to the sun. Rachel felt cross and disappointed and obscurely angry with Cory. She was forced to remind herself rather strongly that she might be Cory’s friend but it was of no consequence to her whom he chose to flirt with. Even so, she felt annoyed that last night his choice had fallen on her, but now he was happy to trifle with another lady’s feelings. It branded him insincere and proved that he had only been entertaining himself at her expense in the stables. A tiny part of her, the part that had wanted it not to be a game, felt shrivelled at the thought.

  Lord Richard Kestrel was chatting to Lady Sally, and Olivia and Deborah had wandered out on to the terrace to take tea, so Rachel took the opportunity to slip outside. She could feel her headache worsening and hoped that the fresher air might make it better.

  The gardens at Saltires were small but beautifully tended, for Lady Sally, in company with her friend Olivia Marney, was a keen amateur gardener. Rachel wandered towards the small ornamental lake, but swiftly retraced her steps when she realised that Mr Caspar Lang was sitting by the gazebo, having his portrait painted for the watercolour book. Rachel had no wish to be caught watching. Mr Lang had quite a good enough opinion of himself as it was, without her adding to it.

  It was as she was coming back through the rose arch that Cory stepped directly on to the path in front of her. Rachel had thought herself quite composed by now and was intending to take her place at the tea table in a cool and rational manner, but now such thoughts flew from her head. Perhaps it was the suddenness of Cory’s appearance, or perhaps the fact that she had been thinking about him on and off-with rather more on than off-for the past fourteen hours. Whatever the reason, she gasped and coloured up like the most impressionable of débutantes. Cory eyed her blush with interest, which just seemed to make it worse.

  ‘Whatever is the matter with you, Rae?’ he remarked softly. ‘You look rather guilty. What were you doing-running away?’

  Rachel, unforgivably, vented her irritation by snapping one of Lady Sally’s prize roses off the arch.

  ‘Of course I was not running away! Why should I wish to do that?’

  ‘I have no notion,’ Cory said, driving his hands into his pockets. ‘I merely thought that you had been acting strangely, dashing off before I could speak to you.’

  ‘I was not aware that you had noticed,’ Rachel said, before she could stop herself. ‘You were far too occupied.’

  She saw the humour deepen in Cory’s eyes and was vexed with herself.

  ‘I see,’ he said.

  ‘I doubt that you do,’ Rachel said. ‘If you choose to flirt with Lady Benedict, then it is no concern of mine.’

  ‘Of course not,’ Cory said soothingly.

  ‘I don’t care!’ Rachel said childishly.

  ‘I know that you don’t,’ Cory agreed.

  Rachel stared at him, frowning. She was not quite sure why this unsatisfactory exchange made her feel worse, but it did. It reminded her strongly of childhood squabbles, but with an added element of adult friction that she could not quite explain.

  ‘Why are you agreeing with me?’ she demanded.

  ‘Because I thought it would put you in a better temper,’ Cory responded.

  Rachel repressed the urge to stamp her foot. ‘Well, don’t!’

  ‘You are very cross today,’ Cory observed.

  ‘Congratulations on your perspicacity. Of course I am cross.’ Rachel pulled the head off the rosebud and tossed it aside, wincing as the thorn caught her thumb. ‘I have the headache and you are deliberately setting out to provoke me, just as you did last night.’

  There was a pause that suddenly seemed heavy with unspoken meaning. The whole tone of the encounter changed in an instant.

  ‘I do not suppose,’ Cory said, moving closer, ‘that you slept very well last night, Rae.’

  Rachel looked up and met the question in his eyes. Her heart skipped a beat. Last night they had been playing games, but she had no intention of doing so again. It had been far too disturbing. What had set out as a plan to teach Cory a lesson had almost ended in her own downfall. She had nearly succumbed to his skilful seduction.

  She deliberately moved away. ‘Why should you think that?’ she asked coolly.

 
Cory followed her. ‘Because I did not,’ he said.

  ‘So?’ Rachel raised her brows. ‘I cannot see the connection.’

  Cory gave her a keen glance. ‘Then let me construe for you. I did not sleep well because I was thinking of you. And you, I suspect, did not sleep well because you were thinking of me.’

  Rachel turned her shoulder. Her heart was beating with quick, light strokes. ‘You are quite mistaken. And odiously arrogant! My inability to sleep last night had nothing to do with you. I was scarcely lying awake troubled by dreams of you!’

  ‘Really?’ Cory drawled. ‘Then why mention it?’

  ‘Mention what?’

  Cory smiled infuriatingly. ‘Those troublesome dreams, Rae.’

  Rachel thinned her lips. ‘Take a grip on yourself, Cory! We are not all of us fainting at your feet. As for your own insomnia, I cannot be held responsible for that either.’

  ‘I hold you directly responsible,’ Cory said, still smiling.

  There was another loaded silence.

  ‘You should take a cold dip in the river,’ Rachel said. ‘That would cure your difficulties-and your pretensions.’

  ‘Thank you for the suggestion,’ Cory said calmly. ‘I cannot but remember what happened the last time that I went for a swim.’

  Rachel could remember too, in vivid detail. She struggled against the memory. ‘Then if cold water does not work, perhaps I could administer a knock on the head,’ she said sweetly. ‘It would be my pleasure. You will sleep like a baby after that.’

  Cory started to laugh. ‘You are fighting hard, Rae.’

  ‘Against your conceit!’ Rachel spun away through the arch. ‘It is a difficult job, but someone has to undertake it.’

  She could hear his footsteps following her along the gravel path. ‘I do not believe that you were so indifferent to me last night in the stables,’ Cory said, ‘whatever you claimed.’

  Rachel swung around to confront him. ‘You were playing games last night, so I thought that I would do too,’ she said coolly. ‘But I am tired of that now. Go away and play with Lady Benedict instead. She appreciates these things far more than I do.’

  There was a pause and then Cory laughed. ‘Very well, I concede-for now,’ he said. ‘Friends?’

  ‘Just that,’ Rachel said. She held her hand out to shake on it. It was a mistake. The moment his hand touched hers, something akin to a shiver ran all the way along her nerves. She saw Cory’s eyes narrow on her face, as though he were reading her mind. He rubbed his thumb over the palm of her hand, making the shivers worse.

  ‘You have cut yourself,’ he remarked, moving the lace edge of her cuff to one side and exposing the pale skin of her inner arm. ‘How did that happen?’

  ‘It is nothing.’ Rachel pulled her hand away from his and tugged her sleeve down a little self-consciously. His gesture had made her feel naked. ‘I cut myself on the jagged edge of a pot when I was helping Mama wash the artefacts this morning.’

  Cory was looking thoughtfully at the scratch. ‘You should be more careful.’

  ‘I am not careless.’ Rachel frowned. ‘Though I thank you for your concern.’ She glanced towards the terrace. ‘We should go back before anyone comments on our absence. I do not want to give Lady Benedict the chance to make another of her cattish remarks. Do you join us for tea, Cory?’

  ‘No, thank you,’ Cory said, ‘I cannot bear so insipid a beverage.’

  ‘Then I will leave you to take your dip in the river,’ Rachel said. ‘Pray take care that no one sees you, though. Not everyone has as strong a constitution as I. The shock might be too much for them.’

  ‘Will you be walking home that way?’ Cory enquired with a grin.

  ‘Certainly not,’ Rachel said. ‘I shall take the other footpath. I would not like to repeat that experience.’

  Cory put his hand on her arm. ‘Should you not?’ he challenged.

  ‘It seems to me,’ Rachel said, ‘that you are so entirely in love with yourself that you need no one else’s admiration, Cory.’

  Cory did not say anything but he let his gaze rest on her in a manner that contradicted her most effectively, and Rachel, who had sworn that she had put the matter to rest, found herself coming out with the one thing to which she required an answer.

  ‘Last night,’ she said in a rush, ‘I asked you if you were pretending with me and you did not answer. You were pretending, weren’t you, Cory?’

  Cory smiled. ‘You should ask yourself why that matters so much to you, Rachel,’ he said. He sketched a bow and walked away.

  Rachel watched him go, eyes narrowed. She was cross with herself for lowering her guard and asking a question that would have been better left unsaid. And yet…He had not answered her the previous night and now he had declined to do it again. He might merely be teasing her, but…She walked slowly towards the terrace, but in the back of her own mind the question still echoed: ‘You were pretending, weren’t you…?’

  And she knew that she should be asking herself the same thing.

  ‘Who would have thought it?’ Richard Kestrel said heavily. ‘One might almost imagine that they are all in on it!’

  ‘It is the most confounded piece of bad luck,’ Cory agreed. ‘I could scarce believe it.’

  They were back in the drawing room at Kestrel Court and were capably demolishing the latest bottle of brandy that Justin had left behind on his return to London. They were also playing a desultory game of chess.

  ‘Lady Marney claimed to be uninjured,’ Richard said, with a smile. ‘And Miss Lang was genuinely sick according to her brother. I sent Bradshaw to find out more from the Langs’ housemaid. The girl said that Miss Lang had taken so much wine at Lady Marney’s dinner that she had to be put to bed, and had not stirred since.’

  ‘It could be an act,’ Cory pointed out. He moved a pawn and sat back to watch Richard’s strategy.

  ‘True-’ Richard sighed ‘-although I cannot see Miss Lang as a cool-headed traitor. Besides, we have more likely candidates. There was Lady Benedict and her apparent tumble down the stairs-’

  ‘And Lady Sally and her gardening injury-’

  ‘And Mrs Stratton, who was sporting a nasty slash on her hand that she claimed was from a bramble that caught her as she was out riding this morning,’ Richard finished. He grinned. ‘What about Miss Odell, Cory?’

  ‘Cut herself cleaning a pot her mother had dug out this morning,’ Cory confirmed gloomily. ‘I do not think that she is the one we are looking for. Acquit me of partiality,’ he added hastily, seeing the wry gleam in Richard’s eye, ‘and I shall do the same for you with Mrs Stratton!’

  Richard laughed. ‘I can make no special case for Mrs Stratton other than to say that I do not think she is the guilty party.’

  ‘Instinct?’ Cory asked drily.

  Richard shrugged. ‘My instincts towards Mrs Stratton are best not discussed,’ he said, with a sardonic smile. He sat forward and moved his castle to take the pawn.

  ‘Lady Sally Saltire is certainly cool enough to pull it off,’ Cory said.

  ‘And Lady Benedict likewise,’ Richard finished thoughtfully. ‘She left the dinner early last night, but could have waited to ambush you on the road.’ He frowned. ‘ You are more than usual preoccupied tonight, old chap. Swear you are throwing this game away.’

  Cory shrugged. ‘I’ll admit to a certain distraction.’

  ‘Miss Odell?’

  Cory groaned. ‘How does one make love to one’s oldest friend, Richard?’

  Richard looked amused. ‘Thought I was your oldest friend, Cory. I’m not sure if I should be concerned or offended!’

  Cory moved his knight directly into the path of Richard’s queen. Richard scooped the piece from the board.

  ‘You could try the direct approach,’ he suggested. ‘Tell her exactly how you feel about her-or show her!’

  Cory grimaced. ‘That is a little too direct, much as it might accord with my own feelings. Rachel thinks that I am playing games if I t
ry to kiss her. She has yet to accept the idea that we could be more than friends. I do not wish to frighten her by declaring my feelings and risk losing her before I have even started to court her properly.’

  ‘Then you need to be slow and subtle,’ Richard said. He grinned. ‘Think you can do that?’

  Cory laughed. ‘It is hardly my modus operandi,’ he admitted. ‘I suppose if one wants a thing enough…’

  ‘Absolutely,’ Richard said. ‘Checkmate.’

  Cory sighed. ‘At least my chess might improve if I make some progress.’

  ‘I doubt it,’ Richard said. ‘The greater the physical frustration, the poorer one’s concentration and the more one’s game is shot to pieces.’ He passed the brandy bottle. ‘Oh, and the greater amount of brandy one consumes. Trust me. I should know.’

  Cory filled his glass. ‘So where does that leave us?’ he asked.

  ‘No further on,’ Richard said. He raised his glass in ironic toast. ‘To the ladies of the Midwinter reading group! One way or another, they are running rings around us!’

  Chapter Nine

  ‘How delightful this is,’ Deborah Stratton declared, sliding into a seat opposite to Rachel in the teashop in Angel Hill in Woodbridge, and placing a large quantity of brown paper parcels on the table. ‘You have no idea, Rachel, how I have longed for different company. Oh, Olivia is the best sister imaginable,’ she added hastily. ‘No one could be more fortunate than I in their relatives, but sometimes it is pleasant to extend one’s circle of friends.’

  Rachel smiled. She moved Deborah’s tottering pile of purchases carefully to one side, where they would not get splashed from the teapot or fall on the floor, and poured her a cup of tea.

  They had spent an enjoyable morning in the town. First they had watched the volunteers being drilled on the green, although the Suffolk Rifles were not amongst the regiments drawn up for inspection. The riflemen practised out on the marshes where there was less danger of them injuring any innocent spectators. Deb had grumbled that this was a pity since the riflemen in their green uniforms looked the most handsome of all the volunteers. Rachel had pointed out that their appearance was immaterial if they could not shoot straight. There was a febrile air in the town, with gossip and rumour of French invasion rife. It felt a little odd to be shopping for ribbons and books and ordinary things when all about them there was the suppressed nervousness engendered by war. Rachel had found it a little inhibiting and her pile of purchases could not rival Deborah’s, for Mrs Stratton seemed to spend money with the same profligate cheerfulness with which she dealt with the rest of her life. Rachel found her excellent company, even though they could not have been more dissimilar.

 

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