Read Rainbird's Revenge Online
Authors: M.C. Beaton
âBut since I came to London, everyone seems to be telling me I ought to be like you,' said Jenny. âAll talk of the openness and charm of your manner.'
âNothing compared to beauty,' said Mary sadly. âI have never before seen Mr Parry look so relaxed or happy as he was this evening in your company.'
âYou widgeon!' cried Jenny. âI know the way to that young man's heart. I talked about you!'
âMe?'
âYes,
you
, silly. I knew poor Mr Parry was deeply interested in you, but I thought that you were not interested in him.'
Mary seized Jenny's hands and held them in a tight clasp. âYou are not funning?'
âNot I. I talked about you and asked questions about you, and any time I looked like changing the subject, he lost interest.'
When they were joined by the gentlemen, Jenny had the joy of seeing Mary's happiness as she sat and talked to Toby Parry. It was a wonderful feeling to have been instrumental in bringing happiness into someone else's life. During the dinner, Jenny had half made up her mind not to go to Holborn.
But now she was more determined than ever.
A man that studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green.
FRANCIS BACON
Jenny had been very pleased with her appearance before she slipped out of the house after Lady Letitia had gone to sleep. She had wrenched all the feathers and ornaments from a straw bonnet and reduced it to a modest shape. She was wearing a simple morning gown and she had wrapped an old shawl of her late mother's around her shoulders. Looking in the glass before she left, she was reassured by her dowdy appearance. Rich clothes would have attracted too much attention.
But the Jehu on the box of the hackney carriage which she hailed in Piccadilly looked down doubtfully at the drabness of her dress and demanded his fare in advance.
âVery well,' said Jenny crossly, handing him a shilling. âBut you must wait for me.'
The coachman grunted by way of reply, and Jenny climbed into the malodorous interior of the carriage. She jerked the carriage window down, but the air that poured in was far from fresh. London smelled appallingly of bad drains and horse manure.
The rattling of the old carriage prevented her from hearing the approaching storm.
So she was surprised by a tremendous crack of thunder almost overhead when she alighted in Holborn. The horses reared and plunged. âYou will wait?' she called up to the coachman.
âYou ain't paid the way back, miss,' he called down, âand I'm gettin' out of here afore the storm breaks.'
To Jenny's great irritation, he drove off.
Well, really, she thought crossly.
Now I shall just have to find another when my business is done
.
The door from the street into the building was unlocked. She twisted the knob and let herself in and mounted the worn shallow stone steps, feeling her way upwards. Why had she not brought a lantern or a candle? But such an important person as the duke's agent would not lodge in the attics. She waited on the first-floor landing until a great flash of lightning struck a brass plate beside a mahogany door.
PELHAM ESTATES
leapt out at her in a sudden glare of gold before the stairwell was plunged into darkness again.
Here I am
, thought Jenny, now terrified out of her wits. She began to wonder whether madness ran in the Sutherland family. What on earth was she doing, standing on a Holborn staircase in the middle of a thunderstorm? But there was no one around, and she could not possibly leave until the storm had abated. She squared her shoulders, took a deep breath, and tried the door handle. The door was tightly locked.
Jenny had never really worked out how she was going to get into the agent's office. She stood and looked at the door in a baffled sort of way. Then she remembered reading a romance where the heroine had picked the lock of her dank dungeon with a hairpin. She fished in her reticule and brought out a bone pin and set to work.
Above her the storm increased in fury, and the very building seemed to rock beneath the onslaught. Her fiddlings and probings had no effect whatsoever. But the heroine of the book had taken half an hour over the business. Jenny bent her head and tried harder than ever. Between her intense concentration and the noise of the storm, she did not hear footsteps behind her as someone mounted the stairs.
The Duke of Pelham saw the small, dark, anonymous figure stooped over the lock. He mounted the last stairs in a bound and seized Jenny roughly and turned her about.
âWho are you? What the deuce do you think you're doing?' he grated.
Jenny screamed and punched at the white blur of the face above her own. Another great flash of lightning lit up the stairwell.
The duke dropped his arms to his sides. âMiss Sutherland!' he cried. âWhat on earth are you doing here?'
âPelham. Oh dear,' said Jenny. âMust I tell you?'
âOf course.'
âI came to aid your servants. I cannot tell you who told me, but they believe your agent is cheating you and feel sure if they found the accounts books, they could prove the matter.'
âAm I such a monster that they cannot come to me in mine own house and voice their doubts?'
âBut don't you see,' said Jenny eagerly, âit might turn out that you are the skinflint and not this Palmer.'
âI am tired of all this nonsense. Return to your carriage and maid, Miss Sutherland, and do not interfere again in my affairs.'
âBut I cannot,' wailed Jenny. âI did not bring my maid, and the hackney carriage would not wait for me.'
âThen come along and I shall take you back.'
âAre you not going to open the door?'
âI intended to shoot open the lock. I cannot do that with you fainting and screaming.'
âI shall not faint and scream,' said Jenny, anger at the duke bringing all her courage back.
âAll ladies faint and scream at the sound of shots. Oh, very well. Stand back. I shall wait for the next crack of thunder. I do not want the neighbours to call the watch.'
Jenny retreated a little. There was a brilliant stab of lightning, then silence. Then a preparatory rumble and a tremendous explosion as the duke shot the lock in the middle of the noise of the next thunderclap.
âThe deuce,' she heard him mutter. âStay clear, Miss Sutherland. That was only one lock. I have to shoot the other.'
Again they waited. Far above them, rain drummed down on the roof.
Then came the lightning again. Jenny put her fingers in her ears this time.
The duke's timing was wrong and the shot rang out before the thunderclap came.
He stood for a moment listening, and then he kicked open the door.
Jenny went in after him. She heard the rasp of a tinder-box and then an oil lamp on Palmer's desk bloomed into yellow light.
The duke raised the lamp and looked at Jenny. Despite the drabness of her dress, she made a romantic figure with her dark curls rioting from beneath her bonnet. Her large eyes looked black in the whiteness of her face.
âSit down,' said the duke, âand bend your head down towards the floor. I have enough to do without having to trouble myself restoring you from a faint.'
âYou are rude and pompous, as I told you before,' said Jenny, stamping her foot. âI am not going to faint.'
âThen find a chair, sit down, and keep quiet. How convenient. My agent has already been at his books.'
The duke sat down at the agent's desk, pulled the lamp close, and began to read.
Jenny studied him. He was very handsome. Such a pity he was a churlish brute, she told herself huffily. She waited and waited, and yawned and yawned. âYou might at least tell me,' she said at last, âwhether your agent is an honest man or not.'
âFar from honest,' said the duke. âThose servants at Clarges Street must have been living on their wits, else they would be skin and bone now on what he paid them. But why did not Rainbird tell me? Why cavort around the public stage?'
âRainbird the butler? What do you mean?'
âI went to the Spa Theatre at Islington tonight with Lady Bellisle. To my amazement, my butler was acting the part of harlequin. He also acted the part of Palmer and did a mime of trying to keep the books from his master. That is why I came straight here when the performance was over.'
âAre you going to marry Lady Bellisle?' asked Jenny.
âMiss Sutherland. We have broken into a London office in the middle of the night. You are unchaperoned. And yet you find time to ask trivial questions to satisfy your idle curiosity!'
Jenny blushed and looked away. Her eye fell on a loose floorboard in the corner. She rose to her feet.
âWhere are you going?' asked the duke.
âThere is a loose floorboard over there,' said Jenny. âPerhaps Palmer has sacks and sacks of gold underneath it.'
âIf you ladies would stop addling your heads with Mrs Radcliffe's romances, it might . . . Leave that floorboard alone. It is a loose floorboard, nothing more.'
But Jenny had slipped her fingers under the end and lifted it up.
Then she bent down and pulled out a wash leather bag and opened it.
âHere you are!' she cried triumphantly. âAll your money. Perhaps if you addled your own brains a little, your grace, you might not be so stuffy and narrow-minded.'
The duke crossed over and knelt down on the floor and began to take bags of gold out, one after the other.
âApologize!' cried Jenny.
He knelt silently looking at the gold.
âApologize,' said Jenny again, and she gave his shoulder a shake.
He twisted round and looked up at her. Her eyes were full of mocking laughter, her shawl had slipped from her shoulders, and as she bent over him, he could see the shadowy swell of her breasts revealed by the low neckline of her gown.
He gazed at her, his eyes suddenly serious and intent. A huge burst of thunder cascaded down over their heads.
He reached up and took her by the shoulders and pulled her down until she was kneeling in front of him.
âI am very stupid,' he said. âI never notice what is under my nose.'
âYou mean Palmer?' asked Jenny, her eyes wide and wondering.
âNo,' he said softly. âI mean you.'
His hands slid to her waist. âJenny,' he said softly.
âOh, no,' said Jenny. âNot you. You, of all people.'
He frowned. âAnd what do you mean by that?'
âI thought you would be too formal and stuffy to take advantage of me. I know my behaviour this evening has been disgraceful, but it does not mean my morals have been in the slightest damaged.'
âStop talking. I want to kiss you.'
âYou cannot kiss me. You have not asked Aunt Letitia leave to pay your addresses to me.'
âI' faith, I did not say I wanted to marry you, only to kiss you.'
âThen you cannot have kisses without marriage, and I don't want to marry you.'
The fact that Lady Bellisle had not wanted to marry him had wounded his pride and irritated him, but nothing more. But Jenny's saying she did not want to marry him caused him a stab of acute anguish. He looked at Jenny in dawning amazement â amazement that such a little chit should already have the power to inflict such pain on him.
The only way he could think to ease that pain was to kiss her.
And so he did.
And he went on kissing her, uncaring of the blows she was raining on his chest. His kisses were gentle, serious, passionate, and intent. Jenny decided wildly that if she stopped fighting him, and lay limp in his arms as if she had fainted, he would soon stop. But before he raised his mouth from hers, her body had already begun to respond in a dreadful way. The minute she found herself free, she should have leapt to her feet. But instead, her arms seemed to wind themselves about his neck of their own accord, and her lips blindly sought his.
After some time, he untied the ribbons of her bonnet and pulled it from her head, and then buried his lips in her hair.