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Authors: Stephanie Laurens

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Chapter Thirteen

L
ate the next morning, Antonia descended the stairs, Henrietta in her wake. Both she and her aunt were ready to depart for Ticehurst Place; they had both elected to breakfast in their bedchambers, Henrietta due to her slow preparations, Antonia due to a sudden conviction that facing Philip over the breakfast table with only Geoffrey for protection was not a sensible undertaking.

There’d been something in his demeanour, a certain intentness in his manner during their previous evening’s parade through the ballrooms that had set her senses on edge. She had no real idea what it was she detected—she was not about to hazard a guess.

As they started down the last flight, Antonia keeping a watchful eye on Henrietta’s ponderous progress, the front door opened. Geoffrey strode in, his tall form enveloped in a white drab driving coat sporting quite as many capes as Philip’s.

Antonia halted on the last step. “Where on earth did you get that?”

Geoffrey grinned. “Philip introduced me to his tailor. Quite a dab hand at his trade, don’t you think?” He whirled, setting the capes fluttering.

When he stopped and looked pointedly at her, Antonia
nodded. “It’s certainly…” She hesitated, then, beguiled by Geoffrey’s obvious delight, smiled. “Something like.”

Geoffrey glowed with pride. “Philip suggested arriving at Oxford in such togs wouldn’t hurt. And, of course, it’s the perfect garb for today.”

Joining them, Henrietta humphed. “The sun’s decided to remember us—you’ll be too hot in the carriage in that.”

“Indeed.”

Antonia quickly turned as Philip strolled into the hall. His gaze met hers fleetingly, then he glanced down, lips firming as he pulled on his driving gloves. “So it’s as well he’s not travelling in the carriage.”

“Oh?” Henrietta asked the question, much to Antonia’s relief, allowing her to keep her lips shut and her expression satisfyingly distant.

“I’m taking my phaeton.” Philip glanced at Antonia. “Geoffrey may as well come with me.”

It was an effort not to meet his gaze. Determinedly cool, Antonia nodded. “An exceedingly good notion.” Tilting her chin, she added, “It will leave us more space in which to be comfortable.”

For an instant, Philip’s gaze rested on her face, then he smiled—a slow predatory smile. “It would, perhaps, be wise to gain what rest you might. I suspect you’ll discover this houseparty unexpectedly exhausting.”

Antonia flicked him a suspicious glance but his expression as he moved forward to help Henrietta down the last steps was bland and uninformative.

The front door bell pealed; Carring came hurrying from the nether regions. He looked out, then set the front door wide. “Your phaeton and the carriage, my lord.”

Between them, Philip and Geoffrey helped Henrietta down the front steps. Marshalling his footmen, Carring saw to the stowing of the luggage, assisted by acid comments from both Trant and Nell. Resembling a pair of black crows, the maids between them got Henrietta settled against the
padded cushions, protected by a veritable mountain of shawls. Left on the pavement, Antonia glanced about. Geoffrey was already on the box-seat of the phaeton, the reins in his hands as he helped restrain the restive horses.

The sight stiffened her spine. Unbidden, her memory replayed the three, separate excuses she had spent the small hours devising, one for every possible tack Philip might have taken to inveigle her into sharing the phaeton’s box-seat on the long drive to Ticehurst Place.

Excuses she had not needed.

Suppressing a disaffected sniff, Antonia turned, one hand raising her skirts to climb the carriage steps. Philip’s hand appeared before her. For an instant, she regarded it, the long strong fingers and narrow palm. Reminding herself of her role, she lifted her chin and placed her hand in his.

Philip smoothly raised her fingers to his lips, artfully, lingeringly, caressing her fingertips.

Antonia froze, her breathing suspended. She glanced up through her lashes; Philip trapped her gaze in his.

“Enjoy the drive. I’ll be waiting at the other end—to greet you.”

Eyes widening, Antonia took in the hard planes of his face, the subtle aggression in the line of his jaw—and the clear intent that stared at her from the depths of his grey eyes. A skittering sensation shivered over her skin. Ignoring it, she set one foot on the carriage step. “I dare say there’ll be many distractions at Ticehurst Place.”

She’d intended the comment as a dismissal of his avowed intention; she expected it to be the conclusion of their exchange. Instead, as he handed her up, Philip’s voice reached her, wickedly low. “You may count on that, my dear.”

The promise in his words distracted her all the way to Ticehurst Place.

Although her gaze remained fixed on the scenery, she did not notice the sunshine beaming down from between fluffy
clouds, did not feel the soft touch of the unexpectedly mild breeze. Summer’s last stand had enveloped the country, a final burst of golden weather that had set the doves to cooing again in the trees along the way.

Lulled by the sound, Antonia found her mind treading a circuitous path, forever leaving her facing one, unanswerable question: Just what was her prospective husband about?

She had reached no conclusion when the carriage rocked to a stop on the gravel sweep before Ticehurst Place. As soon as the door was opened and the steps let down, Trant and Nell descended. Two footmen came hurrying down the long flight of steps leading up to the front door; together with the maids, they endeavoured to ease Henrietta from the carriage.

Antonia glanced out of the window—and saw Philip descending the steps, his pace relaxed and leisurely, his expression mild and urbane. Longing to escape the close confines of the carriage, aware of the dull headache its stuffiness had evoked, she gave vent to a disgusted sniff—and struggled to keep her mind from dwelling on how pleasant the drive in his phaeton must have been.

“Heh-me!” Henrietta exclaimed as her feet touched the ground. “My old bones are cramping my style.” Grimacing, she leant heavily on the footmen’s arms and slowly started up the steps.

Her head haughtily high, Antonia shifted along the seat, then moved to the carriage door.

As he had promised, Philip was there to assist her to the gravel. Alighting, her hand in his, Antonia glanced up—only to see him grimace.

“Much as it goes against the grain, I fear I must plead Miss Dalling’s cause. Her situation is more serious than I’d imagined.”

Antonia looked her question.

Drawing her hand through his arm, Philip turned her to
wards the steps. “To use Geoffrey’s description, it appears the gorgon has entirely fallen off her perch. On arrival, we were treated to what I can only describe as a supremely distasteful scene in which her ladyship endeavoured to impress upon me that her niece has all but accepted the Marquess.”

Outwardly nonchalant, they climbed the broad steps. Philip lifted his gaze to the small knot of people waiting on the porch. “It appears that dramatic flights are a Dalling family trait. The upshot was that Miss Dalling, for whom I must reluctantly concede a certain sympathy, has implored our help in avoiding a marriage by
force majeure.

“Great heavens!” Antonia followed Philip’s lead in schooling her features to the semblance of polite conversation. “Is Catriona in a fury?”

“Worse. She’s in a blue funk.”

“Catriona?” Antonia looked up at him, her gaze direct. “You’re bamming me.”

Philip’s brows rose. “Not at all—but see for yourself.” With a nod, he indicated the reception party now a short way before them.

Antonia followed his gaze. A moment later, they reached the porch—and she discovered he’d spoken no less than the truth. The Catriona who stood mute by her aunt’s side was a far cry from the defiantly confident young girl who had first come on the town. Eyes still huge but now filled with die-away despair fastened upon her. As she turned from acknowledging the Countess’s somewhat strident greeting, Catriona stepped forward to clasp her hand.

“I’m so glad you’ve come.” Her accents were hushed, fervent. “Come—I’ll show you to your room.” A quick glance revealed that Henrietta was the focus of the Countess’s attention. “I have to unburden myself to someone who understands—I do not know
what
I would have done if you hadn’t taken pity and travelled thus, into the lion’s den.”

Stifling an impulse to suggest that that last should be the
“gorgon’s den”, Antonia allowed herself to be drawn inside. Only to have her nonsensical vision take on real shape. The hall was dark and gloomy; its ceiling was so high it could only be described as cavernous. Panelled in dark wood, the walls were hung with old wooden shields and dark-hued tapestries. A fire smoked and smouldered in a huge stone fireplace; a heavy wooden table stood on the dark flags. The chamber exuded a pervading sense of being the anteroom of some dangerous animal’s lair.

Pulling back against Catriona’s tug, Antonia halted in the centre of the room to stare at the huge, ornately carved staircase filling the end of the hall. Its wide treads led upward into the shadows of what she assumed was a gallery.

“Welcome to the delights of Ticehurst Place.”

The deep, softly menacing words, uttered from just behind her ear, made her jump. Antonia threw a frowning glance over her shoulder; Philip had followed them in; he stood close behind her, his gaze roving the shadowed walls.

“It possesses a certain cachet, don’t you think?” His eyes lowered to meet hers.

Catriona, apparently inured to the décor, gently tugged Antonia forward. Antonia did not move, anchored by Philip’s hand at her waist.

“Don’t leave her,” he murmured, his eyes holding hers. “Not even when you’re dressing.”

Fleetingly, Antonia searched his eyes, then nodded and yielded to Catriona’s insistent urging. Drawing closer, she tucked her arm in Catriona’s. Together, they climbed the stairs, ascending into the shadows.

Philip watched them go, a frown gathering in his eyes.

With no attempt at her usual chatter, Catriona led Antonia to a large chamber, roomy but somehow oppressive. Nell was there, unpacking Antonia’s bags. Eyeing the maid warily, Catriona towed Antonia to the window seat, pressing her to sit. “My room’s just along the corridor,” she said,
her voice close to a whisper. Sinking onto the brocaded cushion beside Antonia, she grimaced. “So is Ambrose’s.”

Antonia blinked. “Ah.” That was not, to her understanding, the habit when accommodating young people. “I see.”

“I haven’t told you the half of it yet.” In suitably dramatic style, Catriona proceeded to do so, inevitably embellishing her account.

But no amount of dramatic description could detract from the impact of the basic facts; appraised of the full story of how Ambrose, on arriving late the previous evening, had been shown to Catriona’s room, ostensibly by mistake, Antonia had no doubt of the appropriateness of her sympathies.

“If it hadn’t been for the fact that I’d asked for more coal and the girl was late bringing it up, Ambrose and I could have been…” Catriona’s eyes glazed. “Why—we could have ended sharing a bed.” Her voice faded; Antonia did not think her undisguised horror owed much to her histrionic tendencies.

“Luckily,” she said, leaning forward to pat Catriona’s hand bracingly, “that eventuality was averted. I take it you had not yet gone to sleep and as the girl was there, Ambrose got no further than the threshold?”

Catriona nodded. “But you can see, can’t you, how hopeless it all is? Unless Henry can find some way to rescue me from my aunt’s talons, I’ll be
forced
to the altar.”

“Along with Ambrose.” Antonia frowned. “What does he say to this?”

Catriona sighed. “He was horrified, of course. But his mother is truly overpowering—she has him well under her thumb. He simply cannot stand up to her, no matter how hard he tries.”

“Hmm.” Recalling Philip’s words, Antonia stood and shook out her skirts. “Come—help me choose what to wear. Once I’ve changed, we must see what we can do to brighten you up a trifle.” When this projected endeavour raised no gleam of response, Antonia added, “I should warn
you that Ruthven is something of an authority on the subject of feminine attire. If I were you and wished to retain my standing in his eyes, I would not appear at dinner less than well presented.”

Catriona frowned. “He does seem well disposed.”

“Indeed. And if anyone can assist you and Henry, it is he.” As she sailed across the chamber, Antonia added, somewhat acidly, “I can attest that his experience in arranging clandestine meetings is beyond compare.”

As it transpired, that was to be her one and only allusion to what lay between herself and Philip. Absorbed in reinflating Catriona’s confidence while simultaneously considering all possible avenues the Countess might attempt to gain her ends, she had no time to dwell on her husband-to-be’s unfortunate tendencies.

When she met him in the drawing-room two hours later, she made not the slightest demur when he possessed himself of her hand, kissed it, then settled it on his sleeve. The drawing-room was a cold and sombre chamber, designed on the same grandiose scale as the hall, its walls hung with a dark, heavily embossed paper, the ornately carved furniture upholstered in thick black-brown velvet. A small fire in an enormous grate struggled unsuccessfully to dispel the gloom.

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