Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2) (28 page)

Read Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2) Online

Authors: Lisa T. Bergren

Tags: #Europe, #Kidnapping, #Italy, #Travel, #Grand Tour, #France, #Romance

BOOK: Grave Consequences (Grand Tour Series #2)
4.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He nodded and, without asking, swept me up into his arms.

“Will, really, I think I can walk. I just need a few minutes.”

He turned, and I saw Andrew examining Vivian’s bleeding head. And then Hugh, emerging from the circle of glad embraces. “Typical,” he said, waving toward us. “I save the girl, but who ends up with her in his arms? William McCabe.”

The others turned to smile at us, but their eyes went back and forth between me and Will, as if seeing us for the first time as Hugh had always seen us.…

Together.

CHAPTER TWENTY

~William~

“Put me down, Will,” Cora whispered urgently as the rest of the group watched them. But at that moment, he didn’t care who saw them. He wanted her in his arms, to kiss her and touch her, to reassure himself that she was here. Whole. Well.

He carried her to a boulder that emerged from the ice and set her upon it. He kneeled by Cora’s feet and carefully lifted her boot in one hand, watching her face. She winced, and he immediately paused. “That hurts?”

“Only because it’s starting to get some feeling back. In the form of a thousand needles.”

“But you don’t think it’s seriously injured? Not even a sprain?”

“No. I don’t believe so.”

Will gently set it down. “I almost lost you today,” he said quietly, so only she could hear, touching her knee and casually lifting her foot again as if continuing to test it. “And I don’t ever intend to do that again.” He looked up at her. “Having you down there…so far from me…” He turned his head and gave it a little shake, fighting an embarrassing tear.

“Will,” Cora said, gesturing toward her foot as if they were discussing it, rather than something else. The rest of their group did not need any more cause to guess that something was happening between the two of them. “I sent Pierre that letter.”

Will looked over his shoulder at the group and then back to her. “And he received it?”

“No. There hadn’t been time. But I told him, Will. Told him I didn’t think we belonged together.”

“And he said?”

She sighed. “He thinks he can convince me to reconsider. He’s already spoken to my father about his intentions. And Will…I’m afraid. For you. That if we try to pursue this thing between us…”

The others were making their way to them now, so Will hurriedly searched her face. “Cora, listen. I was a fool for walking away from you the other night in the gazebo. A fool for not telling Richelieu that you are
mine
.” He squeezed her hand, but she only looked alarmed.

“It would’ve been unwise,” she whispered. “For some mad reason my father’s decided to hear Pierre’s request to court me. I think it might be a means to secure a deal. But Will, if you get in the way of that, my father will likely blame us and do everything he can to stand between us….”

With the others upon them, Will rose to his feet, and she tentatively did the same. She grimaced, still feeling some pain, even as the guides wrapped a new rope around her waist, then Will’s. They were singing, clearly rejoicing that they were bringing all seven of their clients back to the inn.

“I assume residual pain is good,” Will said. “It must mean the circulation is returning.”

“Which is far better than the alternative,” she said. “Even if it is a form of torture.”

“Would you like me to carry you this time?” Hugh asked, stepping up beside her.

“No,” Will said. “I shall see to her. I think you’ve done enough.” He offered him his hand. “If it wasn’t for your skills with the ropes, we might not all be standing here. I’m grateful, Hugh.”

“Yes, well,” Hugh returned, “if our guide hadn’t been as talented as he was with the pick, some of us would likely
still
be down there.”

Will turned to shake the guide’s hand, and then the others, thanking each of them. The group circled together.

“Are you all right, Vivian?” he asked.

“Fine, fine,” she said, characteristically brusque and strong. “Head wounds always bleed a lot, as I understand it.”

“Impressive, Miss Vivian,” Art said, finding her in his Kodak and taking a photograph.

“Arthur Stapleton!” she said, touching her disheveled head in alarm.

“Rest assured,” Will said, “this is, by far, our most adventurous outing. After this, your greatest risk shall be avoiding a dirty motorcar or an unsavory partner on the dance floor.”

“I hope you jest,” Felix said, bending to frame his own photograph of a pointed mountain peak above them. “This has been the most grand day of the trip, in my book! What an adventure!”

“Well, I can look into some other touring options,” Will said to him. “For you. Without endangering the women.”

Felix smiled and clapped him on the shoulder.

“So the women are to be held in an ivory tower?” Cora asked as they fell into line again, trudging back toward the inn. “While the men venture out? That sounds rather dull.”

“Really, Cora?” Vivian huffed. “After what we’ve just been through?”

“I didn’t come all the way to Europe to sit in my room. I came for just this sort of experience.” She bit her lip. “I would not choose our harrowing fall again, of course. But coming here? To see all of this?” She glanced outward. “I wouldn’t have missed it.”

~Cora~

Two days later, we arrived in Vienna via the blue Danube River, steaming past quaint villages that climbed the hillsides and castles that once controlled trade upon the waters. I paced for hours along the wooden deck, anxious about what was ahead of me from both Pierre and my father. And try as we might, Will and I could never seem to steal a moment to ourselves. When I was alone, someone was with him. And when he was alone, I was invariably accompanied. It was enough to drive me mad, looking for an opportunity around every corner.

I had to see through what was ahead of me without further word from him, I decided, watching as the paddlewheel turned, water churning down below as the sun set to the west of us. It sent golden shafts of light through the mountain passes, which made the water a deeper shade of blue, the hills a richer shade of green. I heard a footstep behind me, and my heart quickened. I hoped it was Will, at last.

I looked up and over my shoulder, then away, not wanting him to see my swift disappointment. Hugh. Not Will.
Hugh
.

“So I take it, given that cold reaction, you were expecting someone else,” he said, leaning his elbows on the rail. He raked his fingers through his brown hair, pushing it from his eyes.

“Not at all,” I said, forcing cheer to my voice as I stared at the rotating wheel. “Have you fully recovered from our mountain adventure?”

“I have. And you, my Lady of the Crevasse? I would’ve been sorely dismayed, had we lost you.”

“Oh?” I mused. “In some ways, I think you all would be far better off without me here. I simply make things more complex.”

“Which is exactly why we need you. Who else will entertain us? Make us wonder whom you shall choose—young Will, The Penniless, or young Pierre, The Prince. Of course, there’s always a third option.
Moi
.”

I narrowed my eyes at him and sighed. “Really, Hugh. Don’t you grow tired of trying to bait me?” I gestured about us. “Is this not enough to keep you entertained? The luxury? The excursions? The new people, new lands? Why must you come after me?”

He shrugged again. “You’re close at hand.” He turned partway to me, leaning his side against the rail and sweeping his hair from his eyes again. “Your cross to bear, and all that—having to cope with me. I simply find it entertaining. The rags-to-riches girl, suddenly drawing the attention of every rich bachelor we pass, as well as our junior bear, still in rags. Before you give your heart to him, you ought to think long and hard.”

I hesitated, shocked at how plainly he spoke. “Why? Do you hope that I might cast you a new glance?” I couldn’t believe my audacity, my forward manner. But I had to know what drove him. And how to stop it.

He shook his head, and in that moment, there was such sorrow in his movement, such hopelessness in the cavalier tilt of his shoulders, my heart lurched. “Me? No,” he scoffed. “You and I would clearly be a mismatch. And I’m naught but the second son, a playboy, a misfit. My father looks down his nose at me. Why should you not do the same?”

I frowned a little at the pain that shadowed his tone. “Hugh, I…I don’t look down my nose at you. But you…you’ve hardly
invited
respect from me. Yes, you saved me in that crevasse—for that I’ll be eternally grateful—but you have not been a
friend
to me. Not truly.”

“I know,” he said, turning to face the water wheel, both forearms on the railing now. “I’m sorry,” he said, looking at me from the side. “I’m a creature of impulse, I fear.”

“Impulses can be curbed, controlled,” I said.

“Perhaps,” he said. “Maybe if I had a drink…”

I shot him a quick look of dismay, and he smiled. “I’m joking! Goodness, Cora, perhaps it’s you who needs a drink.”

“Hugh…”

He stood up and lifted his hands in surrender. “I understand. I’ve pushed too far. Anyway…friends? Might we be friends?” He offered a hand, as if to shake mine as men did.

I straightened and faced him too. “No more manipulation? Taunting?”

“No more,” he said earnestly.

And so I shook his hand. “Friends,” I said, but even as I said it, I wondered if it would ever be true.

~William~

Will felt as if he were crawling the walls of the river steamer. He’d been unable to find a moment to speak to Cora, and he was desperate for a word from her, to find out what she was thinking, feeling, before they reached her father. And Pierre de Richelieu again.

But now it was too late. He’d walked the decks and even considered knocking on her cabin door—but he could not come up with any plausible reason for disturbing her, especially if Vivian answered. They’d reach the docks within the hour. He paced back and forth in his small cabin, squeezing his hands together. What was done was done.

A knock sounded on his door, and he opened it.

Antonio looked at him in surprise, probably due to how quickly he’d opened it. “Will? We’ll gather for the lecture on Vienna’s history, up on deck?”

“Of course,” he said, pretending that he’d remembered all along that was the plan. “Let me finish my packing and get my coat.”

“Good. I shall go and collect the others.”

Will forced a smile and nodded, closing the door and leaning his head against it. How could he keep up the facade? Even if it all didn’t come to a head here in Vienna? How could he pretend he felt anything less than he did for Cora?

Part III

~V
IENNA
~

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

~Cora~

The summer season was at its height when we reached Vienna, the city of music, with outdoor concerts for the public and private concerts every night. She was a grand old city, full of baroque buildings. But despite Emperor Franz Josef’s best efforts, more modern, sleek buildings were making their appearances, inspired by architects subscribing to the “form follows function” philosophy. This city, too, we learned, had Roman foundations, with both illustrious and scandalous stories. Later, Richard the Lionheart was kidnapped here en route home from the Third Crusade and ransomed for enough to build the newer southern walls.

“Those walls stood for quite some time,” Will lectured, frowning a bit, which I thought made him look rather distinguished and thoughtful. “But then the emperor thought it best to give way to expansion, so he decided the era of needing a wall for protection was over. Vienna became the seat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and was ruled by the Habsburg dynasty from 1273 onward. It’s been an astonishing run, really. That long, for any royal family. They’ve weathered much, but from what I can see, the emperor is losing touch with his people, and it cannot last much longer.”

I stared out the motorcar window as the big trees of the Ringstrasse swept by me, and thought about old men of power and meeting up with my father again. And Pierre, the son of so many generations of power…

Other books

Bloodborn by Kathryn Fox
Bad Boy Christmas: Box Set by Cheyenne McCray
Tarnished Steel by Carmen Faye
Do Anything by Wendy Owens
A Song Called Youth by John Shirley
Silver by Talia Vance