Read Brotherhood 02 - Broken Promise Online
Authors: Laura Landon
The expression on Lord Etherington’s face told her he suspected she’d come directly from Bedlam and that he was about ready to ask her to leave his home.
“Austin, perhaps you’d care to explain,” Etherington growled as he slowly sat.
Sarah looked at Austin and dared him to contradict what she thought. She was tired. She was angry. Her head throbbed as badly as her shoulder. Why could no one see what she did?
She clutched the edge of the settee to hold herself steady and glared at him.
“There have been two attempts on Fledgemont’s son. The first attacker tried to smother the babe while he slept. The second attacker tried to shoot the infant. Miss Bentley fought the first attacker off. Thankfully, at the second attempt, she saw the gunman aim at the babe and threw herself in front of the child when the gunman fired. That is how she was shot.”
“And you think the assassins were hired by Penderly?” he asked, turning his attention to her?
“I do. Lady Fledgemont warned me that if the earl found out about the babe, he’d do everything in his power to kill him. He’d said as much when he discovered that his son wanted to marry an actress.”
“He actually said he would kill the child?”
“Well, not…in so many words. But that was his meaning.”
“Where’s the babe now?”
“With Gabe and Liddy,” Austin said. “We couldn’t risk bringing him to London until we knew for sure who wanted him dead.”
“Wise decision,” Etherington added. “So, what are your plans?”
“I want Miss Bentley to meet Penderly. I want her to hear him explain why he hired me to find his son’s widow. Then, she alone will decide the babe’s future.”
Etherington looked shocked. “But the babe is Penderly’s heir. Surely you aren’t considering keeping the child from him?”
Sarah couldn’t take more fruitless arguing. She couldn’t stand having one more person look at her as if keeping the infant alive wasn’t more important than claiming an almighty title that would get him killed. Something inside her snapped and she lost control of her temper.
“What would you have me do, Lord Etherington? Keep Jonathan hidden from Lord Penderly so he’d be able to survive to reach adulthood? Or hand him over to someone who wants him dead and know he won’t live to see his first birthday?”
They didn’t understand how desperate she was to protect the babe. And they couldn’t know how much she wanted to keep him with her always. To have someone to love, someone who would love her in return.
Sarah readied herself to fire more angry words at the two brothers, but a pain shot through her shoulder and she swallowed hard to keep from crying out. She tried to conceal her agony, but Austin read her eyes.
“We’ve talked long enough,” Austin said, rising to his feet. “You need to rest now. We can discuss this again later.”
She nodded. She didn’t think she could suffer through any more arguments right now.
Austin held out his hand and helped her stand, but once she was on her feet she couldn’t gain her balance.
She was exhausted. She wanted to lie down and rest until the world seemed a sane place in which to live.
Austin wrapped his arm around her waist and she leaned into him.
“I need to see Miss Bentley to her room. I’ll return shortly,” he said to his brother.
Before they reached the other side of the room, the earl was there to open the door. “Rest well, Miss Bentley,” he said. “I apologize for causing you distress. You have my promise that dinner will be much more pleasant.”
“Thank you,” she said, then walked away with Austin’s arms still supporting her.
They made their way across the foyer and up the stairs at a slow pace. She knew he was being careful with her and his concern warmed her. But it didn’t change anything. She’d never felt so alone, so abandoned, a lone warrior fighting the world single-handedly. And she didn’t feel strong enough.
Suddenly, she felt as though she carried the weight of the world on her shoulders and the burden was too heavy. She struggled to remain strong but her emotions were stretched to the breaking point. Without warning, the first tear rolled down her cheek and a sob escaped from deep inside her.
“Ah, Sarah,” Austin said, turning her into his arms. “You’re not fighting the battle by yourself. I’m here. I won’t let anything happen to you.”
Somehow he knew how she felt. He understood her fears. She felt closer to him than she had before. He cradled her in his arms and gave her his strength. The steady beating of his heart beneath her ear soothed her more than she wanted to admit.
How could she be so attracted to someone who wanted the opposite of what she wanted? Even if Penderly convinced her he wasn’t behind the attempts, how could she give Jonathan up? He was hers now, he’d always been hers. From the moment he was born she’d claimed him as her own. Only a force beyond her control could make her give the babe up and not keep him as her own.
She wrapped one arm around his waist and leaned in closer. This was where she felt safest. This was where she could almost make herself believe she belonged—with him. But she didn’t. She belonged with Jonathan. Jonathan belonged with her. She’d promised Lady Fledgemont she’d always take care of the babe.
And it was a promise she’d keep.
Sarah rested for an hour
,
and when she awoke, she felt much better. Her head no longer throbbed and her shoulder didn’t ache as furiously as it had after the long journey.
Before she went downstairs, she took a warm bath and Bertie combed and fixed her hair. She put on one of Lady Lydia’s fashionable gowns and when she looked in the mirror, she felt prettier than she’d ever felt in her life.
The earlier tension seemed to have lifted by the time she joined the brothers, so strikingly handsome in their evening attire as they laughed over some bit of conversation. Sarah was gratified beyond words at Austin’s lingering, appreciative gaze.
As Etherington had promised, dinner was much more pleasant. Not once was Penderly’s name mentioned. Not once did they talk about why she was in London. Instead, they enjoyed an excellent meal and the two brothers talked about happier times before the war. During dessert, however, Lord Etherington brought up the time when Austin and Gabe had gone to the Crimea.
At the mention of the war, Sarah noticed a distinct change in the atmosphere in the room. She shifted her gaze to Austin who sat across from her, unable to miss his pursed lips, the knotting of the muscles at either side of his jaw. Something happened during the war that he wasn’t comfortable thinking about. A small voice warned her to let the subject pass, but she couldn’t.
“Did your position in Her Majesty’s service train you for what you do now, Captain Landwell?”
The expression on his face was partly disbelief, partly shock.
“What makes you think that?”
She shrugged her shoulders as if she needed to think about her answer. “I’m not an expert on the nobility, sir, but my guess is that there aren’t too many younger brothers of an earl who choose to devote their lives to finding thieves and murderers in the most unsavory parts of London.”
He placed his hands on either side of his plate. “Liddy again. Remind me to throttle her the next time I see her.”
“Austin was a captain in Her Majesty’s army,” Lord Etherington interjected. “He and Gabe fought in the Crimea. After the war, Austin went to France. He was imprisoned while he was there, and—“
“That’s enough, Harrison.”
Austin’s voice held a harshness she’d only heard a few times. Now that she remembered, those times were always when they talked about the reasons she should give Jonathan over to Penderly.
Sarah shifted her gaze to Austin’s brother. “How did he get free?”
“Our brother-in-law, Major Talbot, and our sister, Liddy, went to France and freed him.”
“How?”
“The details aren’t important,” Austin interrupted. “They foolishly risked their lives when they should have left me there. I would have escaped somehow.”
“Not according to Gabe and Liddy. Thankfully, they found you and brought you home alive.”
“You wouldn’t say that if Gabe’s plan had failed, if Liddy hadn’t survived.”
“But she did, and I have my whole family with me.” Etherington lifted his wine glass to his mouth and took a drink. “I pray the day comes when you realize how much I appreciate what Gabe and Liddy did and how important you are to us.” He set his glass back on the table with an eyebrow raised toward his brother.
“I’ll have to make sure that no one ever has to take such risks for me again,” Austin said, then rose. “Are you finished, Miss Bentley?”
Sarah lifted her gaze and recognized a hint of desperation in his eyes. He needed to escape. “Yes, I’m finished.” She thanked Austin’s brother for the excellent dinner, then bid him a good night.
Austin extended his arm and she took it. “Would you care to take a stroll outside before you retire?” he asked.
“That would be lovely,” she answered.
“Very well, but only if you promise you won’t ask about the war.”
“It is that painful?”
“It’s simply a subject I don’t enjoy talking about.”
“Very well. We’ll only talk of pleasant subjects.”
Something that resembled a smile changed the shape of his mouth. He placed his hand over hers at the crook of his elbow and escorted her out of the room and to the veranda.
The evening was beautiful. A full moon lighted the way, a gentle breeze blew from the east carrying the scent of roses and lilacs with it, and flickering lamplight spilled out from the room inside the double, multi-paned doors. Sarah had never been anywhere more enchanting.
“This is a beautiful home,” she whispered, looking out
into the gardens beyond. She wanted to see them in the daylight. Perhaps she’d ask him to show them to her tomorrow or the next day—if she stayed here that long.
As if he realized how interested she was in the gardens, he took her arm and led her down three steps and along the path.
“Did you have a happy childhood here?” she asked when they’d gone a little way. She suddenly wanted to know as much as she could about him. Wanted to take with her ever memory she could for the long empty nights when she was away from him.
He smiled. “Yes, very. Until my mother died and father spent every pound his predecessors had saved. We nearly lost everything.”
“Is that why Lord Etherington works so hard to make the estate and businesses profitable?”
He nodded. “Hopefully, some day Harrison will realize that adding huge amounts to the Etherington coffers isn’t that important.”
“And you?”
His gait slowed.
She shouldn’t pry, but there were so many things about him she wanted to know. “Other than what Lord Etherington said he hoped you would one day realize, what would people say they hoped you would some day know?”
They reached a division in the walk and he took the path to her right. “Has anyone ever told you that your thoughts might some day get you into trouble?”
“My thoughts, Captain Landwell? Or the fact that I
have
thoughts?”
“I would wager that at times you were a trial to your father.”
“That is a bet you would easily win. Father forever tried to understand how I could possibly be so different from Mother. She was quiet and submissive—the perfect vicar’s wife.”
“What was your answer?”
“I told him the fault was his, of course.”
His laughter echoed in the darkness. “What did he say to that?”
“He wanted to know how I came to that conclusion. So, I explained that he should have encouraged me to help Mother more with the housework and cooking and mending instead of keeping me with him. He took extreme pleasure in educating me, in encouraging me to have a mind of my own, and demanding that I use it.”
“And for that he lived to rue the day.”
She halted on the walk and he stopped with her. “Do you think he made such an error?” she asked.
“Not at all. I’m extremely thankful he was progressive in his thinking. Jonathan would more than likely not be alive without the courage and independence your father instilled in you.”
A lump formed in her throat. “Thank you. Growing up, I always felt different from other girls my age. Knowledge wasn’t important to them. Marriage and babies and homes and husbands were all that mattered.”
He was facing her now. Their gazes locked for several long moments, then he lifted his hand and brushed the back of his fingers down her cheek. She thought perhaps he might kiss her, and hoped he would, but he turned and they continued their walk.
He kept her closer to him than before, held her more securely. The connection between them seemed stronger somehow, more firmly clasped. She felt as one with him. For the first time in her life she felt comfortable with someone, as if she belonged to him. As if she belonged
with
him. As if he understood her even though no one else ever had.
They walked a little farther in companionable conversation. They shared stories from their youth, their favorite foods, the special things they did to relax. They talked about everything that was important to them. But they didn’t mention Jonathan or the Earl of Penderly, and they didn’t talk about the war.
They reached the end of the walk sooner than Sarah wanted and turned around. When they reached the veranda again, Austin escorted her to a shadowed corner. “Thank you,” he said. “I had a wonderful evening.”
“So did I,” she answered.
Sarah’s gaze caught his and held it. A riot of emotion washed over her. For several long, magnificent moments they stood in the shadows, absorbing everything about the other. Then, he stepped closer to her.
He lowered his head and her breathing altered. She wished he wasn’t so close to her, and at the same time wished he’d step closer.
Without speaking, he placed his finger beneath her chin and lifted her face. When she looked up, he brought his mouth down to hers. The feel of his lips against hers sent an ache of desire tumbling through her. The profusion of sensations was new to her, foreign to anything she’d felt before. There was something magical in the way he made her feel.
She leaned into him because she didn’t want there to be any space separating them. The moment she moved, his arms twined around her and he gathered her closer. His mouth opened atop hers, his tongue demanding admittance.
She opened for him as she had the first time he’d kissed her, but this time was different. Blood rushed through her head, pounding against her ears, thundering with the steady thrumming of a hundred wings. Her chest filled with a need that consumed her. Her fingers tingled with longing while a maelstrom of converging desires plummeted within her.
She needed this connection to him, craved the emotions that rushed through her. Never had she imagined that another human’s touch could ignite such feverish desire, such raw passion.
He deepened his kiss, and a barrage of raw, erotic sensations flared inside her. Her legs weakened beneath her and her fingers grasped his shoulders, somehow needing to touch him as deeply and as fervently as he gripped her.
Their ragged breaths whispered in the silence, the sound of their passion jagged and filled with desperation. He seemed to be a part of her. It was as if she needed him in order to breathe, needed him in order to exist.
And then he pulled his lips from hers, roughly, unexpectedly, as if he’d found what they shared unpleasant. Even though he didn’t say the words, she sensed regret in the moan that shattered the nighttime calm.
Her body still yearned for him, and she reeled with shock that she was so weak where he was concerned. She hated that she was so desperate to have what they’d just shared, what he found so distasteful. And she was suddenly angry—with herself. With him.
A painful ache clawed inside her chest where her heart beat. She’d dreamed of an experience just like tonight’s had been. Dinner with charming company, a stroll in the garden, passionate kisses in a lover’s arms. She’d wanted a memory exactly like what he’d given her to hold on to, to cherish. To store away in a secret place where she could bring it out when she needed to remember that someone magnificently handsome had made her feel special. But now the wanting of it seemed so petty as she stood there, radiating with the very fire of it. And he’d ruined it. He’d spoiled this one memory of being wanted, with his humiliating regret.
She turned her head and hoped he couldn’t see the expression on her face. “I should go inside.” She needed to be away from him before she said something she couldn’t take back.
“Don’t leave yet, Sarah. I need to explain. I need to apologize.”
She lifted her chin. “Apologize?”
“Yes. I had no right to kiss you like I did.”
She stepped back. “Would you like me to feel guilty as well, for what just happened?”
He looked surprised. “No, you have nothing to feel guilty about.”
“I do if you feel the need to apologize. That means you did something you regret, something you consider was wrong.”
“Not wrong. Just beyond what I had the right to do.”
She steadied her gaze on the guilt she saw in his eyes and her anger built until her spine prickled with it. “Have you ever kissed a woman before?”
His loud bark of laughter surprised her. “Yes, Miss Bentley. I’ve kissed a woman before. Several, in fact.”
“Did you apologize to each of them after you kissed them?”
His smile faded. “No.”
“But you feel you must apologize to me?” Her heart thundered in her chest. “Is it because of my age? Because I am nearing thirty years?”
“What?”
“Did kissing someone so…old repulse you?”
“Did it
seem
like I was repulsed when I kissed you?”
Sarah’s cheeks warmed and she lowered her gaze. She’d never had such a discussion with a man before.
“I wasn’t repulsed, Sarah. Far from it.”
“Then why do you feel the need to apologize?”
“Because I seem to forget myself when I am with you.”
“Is that bad?”
He laughed. The sound was deep and rich, and it sent warm wave after wave seeping through her body.
“No, it’s not bad. It’s…” He brushed his fingers down her cheek. “…special.”
She brought her hand to her mouth to stifle the cry that wanted to escape. The kiss they’d shared had been special to him, too.
The flowers and bushes in the garden swam before her and she quickly blinked back the tears. Her heart leapt in her breast when he wrapped his arms around her and pulled her close to him.
Sarah pressed her cheek against his chest and listened to the solid beating of his heart. She knew it would take days to sort through the emotions raging inside her. Perhaps years. But one thing was already clear. His nearness was just part of what she craved. As if a bolt of lightning struck her, she realized what she hadn’t been brave enough to face before—that she didn’t want to live a life that didn’t include Austin in it.
“Sarah, we need to discuss what’s going to happen tomorrow.”
A painful pressure settled against her chest. She was about to take the biggest gamble of her life. There was still time. She had until tomorrow. After that, it would be too late.
She stepped out of Austin’s arms and looked at him. “Why does anything have to happen tomorrow? You can meet with Penderly alone. I don’t have to be there. You can tell him you found Collette Flemming and she’s dead. You can tell him where she’s buried, and that will be the end of it. He doesn’t need to know more. He doesn’t need to know—”