Читать книгу No Conventional Miss - Eleanor Webster, Eleanor Webster - Страница 13
ОглавлениеThe lake lapped at her feet. Rain stung her cheeks. She shivered, her clothing wet and clammy against her skin. Water dripped from the men’s clothes and boots as they waded to shore. A few held torches, the yellow light flickered, illuminating their grim faces, their sodden clothes and the thick trunks of their legs.
‘Miss Gibson.’
The voice came as from a great distance. She heard it but was still trapped, caught in this wet blackness broken only by the torches’ weak light.
‘Are you all right?’ She felt a touch on her shoulder.
And then the black lake disappeared and she was again in Lady Wyburn’s library, thank goodness.
‘Are you ill?’
Wyburn. She recognised the voice.
Panicked fear ballooned in her gut. Wyburn was here. He had seen her like this. He must not suspect.
‘I—am—fine,’ she said, slowly and carefully.
‘You look white. What happened?’ Worry clouded his face and a lock of hair fell across his forehead, making him appear younger and more vulnerable.
‘I—’
She’d touched the portrait.
She’d touched the miniature that he now held. She looked away. ‘I had a headache.’
‘You have been gone an hour.’
‘An hour? That is not possible—’ Her gaze went to the mantel clock. It had been five after eleven and now read midnight. ‘I must have dropped off.’
Except she hadn’t slept. Where had the last hour gone? Where had she gone? She shivered.
‘You’re cold.’
She watched as he took the shawl she had discarded, putting it about her shoulders. His fingers grazed her arm. They felt warm with a tingling roughness at the tips.
For a foolish, impulsive moment she wanted to touch them, to hold on to them.
‘I hope you’re not sickening for something?’ he said. ‘You did not look entirely well at dinner.’
‘Is that why you came looking for me?’
‘I feared your absence would cause comment.’
She nodded, her mind working again, but with pedestrian movement. ‘I suppose I should thank you.’
‘That would set a precedent.’ His lips curved just a little.
‘Absent at my own party. Hardly a forgivable offence.’
‘Particularly as not everyone may have assumed any indisposition.’ His tone hardened.
‘Pardon?’
He shrugged. ‘Lord Alfred was also absent from the room.’
‘And that is not permitted?’
‘Not if it could be presumed that you were “unwell” together.’
Rilla blinked. Anger pushed past her distress, a welcome revitalising heat. ‘And did you think that, my lord?’
‘It seemed a logical conclusion.’
The man could say the most obnoxious things without batting so much as a hooded lid. ‘Logical?’
‘I know Lord Alfred admires you. I thought his feelings might be reciprocated.’
The rage grew, pushing past the heavy-limbed lethargy, speeding her thoughts and pumping her blood. The anger was not just at Wyburn, but at herself. At this unnatural aspect of her being that came from God or the devil. She balled her hands, digging her nails into her palm with almost welcome pain.
‘I sought solitude, but not with Lord Alfred. I am no fool.’ The words came easier now.
‘I did not think you were. But I know you to be impetuous.’
‘Impetuous, not immoral.’
His face remained impassive. ‘Women do strange things for love.’
‘I do not love Lord Alfred, or anyone else for that matter.’
‘For your sake, I hope it will remain so.’ His gaze fell on the miniature. She noted shadows under his eyes and a weariness in his demeanour.
‘You do not believe in the sentiment?’
‘No.’
‘Why?’ Even as she spoke, she knew she shouldn’t, that she was stepping over a boundary.
‘Love destroys.’ He spoke flatly and sat heavily in the chair opposite, without his usual elegance.
The clock above the mantel ticked and the fire gave a sudden crackle. She twisted the fabric of her shawl about her fingers.
‘Not always,’ she said softly. ‘Our most noble deeds are done for love. It gives us the capacity for good as well as evil. One must believe that. Otherwise the world becomes hopeless...’ She stopped, biting her lip.
A thread had pulled loose and she wound it around her finger, so tight it left fine white lines across her skin.
He flashed a cynical smile. ‘I doubt the Trojan warriors would share that view.’
‘Shakespeare might. “Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove”.’
‘He also wrote Romeo and Juliet.’
‘Which was a tragedy because of the impediments to love, not because of love itself.’
He smiled, his expression more sad than cynical. ‘You are a romantic. But do you base these beliefs purely on the work of poets or have you real-life experience?’
The room felt still, a stillness that was tangible. Self-preservation urged her to laugh, to mock, to say something careless and witty or even foolish. Yet she could not. It was suddenly important to her that he regain hope.
‘I base them on my parents, because they were truthful and loving,’ she said at last.
‘Mine weren’t.’
The words sounded unwilling, as though drawn from him.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said, at once hating the triteness of the phrase.
She glanced at him. Candlelight flickered across the harsh planes of his face. He looked so sad that she reached to touch his cheek, the movement involuntary.
He jerked at her caress. She dropped her hand.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said again.
‘Don’t be.’ He spoke so softly that she wondered if she’d dreamed the words.
As though handling fine porcelain, he took her hand. Her skin tingled. All thoughts, all feelings seemed centred on their two hands as he rubbed his thumb against her open palm, a feathered touch. ‘You have a quality, Miss Gibson, which makes me want to believe the impossible. That water can churn butter.’
Slowly, he lifted her hand and kissed it.
Her heart thundered and her breath quickened.
Letting go of her hand, he raised his forefinger and touched the tip of her chin, tracing the smooth line of her cheek up to her temple.
She felt the touch into the very core of her being. His fingers slid down to her throat, tracing her collarbone and touching the sleeve of her dress. The fabric shifted. His fingers pushed under it, edging it from her shoulder.
‘Paul.’ It was a whisper.
She was filled with sensations different from anything she had experienced—a warmth, a need, an exhilarating recklessness. She met his gaze. His eyes were no longer cold but smouldering as his gaze roamed over her face, her neck, her shoulders and the décolleté of her gown.
A log crackled.
With the sound, his mood shifted. He dropped his hand, jerking it away as though stung. ‘I don’t know what I was thinking. I’m sorry.’
‘I wanted—’
‘I know.’ He stood abruptly. The chair grated on the hardwood. He walked to the fireplace, his back rigid. ‘You must go back.’
‘Yes,’ she said, still dazed.
‘Miss Gibson,’ he spoke with sudden force. ‘I apologise for my behaviour. It was unpardonable.’
‘It’s no matter.’
‘Miss Gibson?’ He turned to her.
‘Yes.’
‘This will not happen again, you have my word.’
He left the room swiftly, closing the door behind him with a muted click.
Slowly, as though needing to orchestrate the movement of her limbs, Rilla rose and walked to the hearth. She felt the warmth of the fire on her legs. She gripped the mantel, glad of the feel of solid wood against her hands. In front of her, she could see her own reflection in the huge mirror which hung over the hearth.
How could she look so outwardly unchanged? And yet she was immeasurably altered. She’d wanted to kiss the viscount. She’d never wanted to kiss anyone before...ever...
Now she did.
And her body was a stranger to her, demanding things she didn’t understand and knew she could not...must not...have.
She’d known since she was a child that she should not love or marry.
This was truer now than ever, particularly with this man. Despite herself, her gaze slid to the miniature as it lay face down on the side table.
But for the first time, she had an inkling of what she must forgo.
And if she couldn’t?
If this heat...this feeling...proved too strong.
With a jerk of sudden energy, she pushed herself away from the mantel. She had to get away from here; from the miniature and from her own scared, wide-eyed reflection.
Almost violently, she pushed open the door, half running into the corridor.
‘Evening.’
The voice was cool. She jerked about, half stumbling. Jack St John lolled against a wall adjacent, smiling.
‘What are you doing here?’ she questioned.
‘I am,’ he said, taking out both handkerchief and silver snuffbox, ‘on my way to the card game.’
‘Oh—I...I wish you luck.’
‘Indeed.’ He smiled. ‘I am feeling lucky tonight.’
She watched as he took a pinch of snuff and sniffed, before carefully dabbing his nostrils with his handkerchief. ‘Prodigiously lucky, in fact.’
* * *
Rilla flung herself down beside her churn. She kicked off her slippers and pulled out the ribbons Heloise had so painstakingly twisted into her unruly hair.
The whole evening had been a nightmare from start to finish. Instinctively, she reached for the solid wood of her churn like a sailor for a life ring. She rubbed her fingers along the grain, moving the wheel so that it made a comforting thump...thump...thump.
Surely if she stayed focused on force and momentum and mathematical calculations she would be safe. Such activities had helped her in the days after Sophie’s disappearance and rescue, during her mother’s illness and her father’s gambling.
Yes, if she occupied her mind with force, gravity and momentum, her skin would no longer tingle from his touch.
Besides, she was being highly illogical to still feel that tingle. The touch had occurred hours past. It was scientifically impossible that she could retain any sensation of his fingers brushing her palm, trailing across her cheek or pushing the cloth down from her shoulder—
‘Rilla!’ Imogene’s voice came from outside of the bedchamber.
Rilla lowered the trough with a clunk.
‘Gracious! It is three a.m. Whatever are you doing—?’ Imogene stopped on the threshold.
‘Adjusting the angle of my trough.’
‘Well, stop. I have news. Did you hear that Myra Kelly and Anthony Soames are engaged?’
‘Do we know Myra Kelly or Anthony Soames?’
‘No, but—’
‘Then why would I care?’
‘Because there were rumours that Lord Alfred was dangling after her and now she is off the market.’ Stepping into the room, Imogene sat elegantly on Rilla’s white-ruffled bed.
‘Oh...’ Rilla paused, frowning at her churn. She had not known that Imogene had so much interest in Lord Alfred although he visited frequently. ‘Then that is well, I suppose.’
‘Indeed, and he said he would call tomorrow and we could all go to the park if the weather improves.’
Perhaps if he asked for Imogene’s hand, they could leave London. Yes, that would be best, although the idea left her strangely flat.