Vice (19 page)

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Authors: Jane Feather

BOOK: Vice
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“Yes.”

“And what does he think of it?”

“He completely disapproves,” Tarquin stated flatly. “But he’ll come round. He always does.” He turned back to the armoire. “Shall we choose a gown suitable for Lady Edgecombe to wear to the play and a visit to Ranelagh?”

Why not?
The man was an avalanche, rolling over all obstacles, unstoppable. And, although it confused her to realize it, for the moment she did not want him to stop.

Chapter 11

G
eorge Ridge emerged from the Cross Keys Bagnio in midafternoon feeling very much the man-about-town. He turned on his heel, enjoying the swish of his new full-skirted coat of puce brocade. His hand rested importantly on his sword hilt as he looked along Little Russell Street, debating whether to go into the Black Lion Chop-House for his dinner or return to the Gardeners’ Arms to see if his posters had born fruit.

The ordinary table at the Gardener’s Arms offered a reasonable meal, and the fellow diners tended to be hard drinkers with a taste for crude conversation and lewd jests. In general it suited George very well, but last night, when the ordinary table had been cleared of dinner and set up for gambling, he’d discovered that his fellow diners were deep gamesters. As the bottles of port circulated and the room grew hotter, George had grown louder and merrier and very incautious, peering with bleary bonhomie at the dice and throwing guineas across the table with an insouciance that later shocked him. He hadn’t had the courage as yet to calculate his losses.

His father would have gone berserk if he’d known. But, then, Sir John had been an old prude, except in his taste for young women, and he’d been very careful with his wealth.
George had never been to London before his present visit. His father considered it a place for wastrels and idlers, inhabited by loose women and men ready to cut your throat for a groat.

George had enjoyed the loose women this afternoon in the bagnio. Three of them. Three very expensive women. His pockets were a deal lighter now than they had been when he’d left the Gardener’s Arms that morning. But it had been worth every guinea. He supposed it was usual for London whores to drink champagne. Cider was all very well for a red-cheeked, wide-hipped country doxy in the barn or behind a haystack, but painted women in lawn shifts, with fresh linen on their beds, obviously had higher expectations.

But as a consequence he found himself guiltily aware that in twenty-four hours he’d probably spent enough to cover the farrier’s bill for a twelvemonth. And if he returned to the Gardener’s Arms, he would inevitably get drawn into the dicing later. A modest dinner at the Black Lion and a visit to the playhouse would definitely be the prudent course this evening. And since the Theatre Royal was but a couple of steps from the chophouse, he could be sure of arriving before the doors opened at five o’clock so he could get a decent seat in the pit.

He examined the silver lace on his new cocked hat with pride before carefully placing it on his head, ensuring that the pigeon’s wings on his pigtail wig were not disarranged. He tapped the hilt of his sword with the heel of his hand and gazed around imperiously, as if about to issue a challenge. A shabby gentleman in a skewed bag wig hastily crossed to the other side of the street as he approached George with his belligerant stance. London was full of aggressive young men-about-town who thought it famous sport to torment vulnerable pedestrians.

George gave him a haughty stare, nicking a speck of snuff from his deep coat cuff. He didn’t wear a sword in the country, but he’d realized immediately that in town it was the mark of a gentleman. He had purchased his present
weapon from an armorer in Ebury Street, having been assured by that craftsman that it was not a mere decoration—that in the hands of a skilled swordsman, such as His Honor must be, it would be a most deadly weapon, and a powerful protection.

With a little nod of satisfaction George strolled toward the Black Lion. Having experienced the pleasures of London, he was determined that he would spend some weeks of every year in town—in the winter, of course, when the land needed less attention.

Juliana would make him a more than satisfactory consort. She’d grown up in a gentleman’s establishment, educated in all the areas necessary for a lady. She knew how to behave in the best society … better than he, himself, George was obliged to admit. George was his father’s son. The son of a blunt, poorly educated landowner, who was more interested in his crops and his woods, his sport, his dinner and the bottle, than in books or music, or polite conversation. But Juliana was a lady.

But where in the name of Lucifer was she? George’s self-satisfaction and pleasure in the day suddenly evaporated. It was all very well making these happy plans, but they were castles in the air without the flesh-and-blood girl to make them real. He
had
to have her as his wife. He wanted her in his bed. He wanted to see the superiority and contempt chased from her eyes as she acknowledged him as her husband and master.

Juliana, with her eyes that could be as cold and green as the deepest ocean; Juliana, with her full mouth that could curl into a derisive smile that shriveled a man; Juliana, with that swirling forest fire of hair and the long limbs, and the full, proudly upstanding breasts.

He would have that Juliana, obedient and docile in his house and in his bed. Or he would see her burn at the stake.

George turned into the Black Lion and ordered a bottle of burgundy. He
would
find her, if he had to pay a hundred guineas to do so.

•   •   •

Juliana was in a very different frame of mind, Quentin thought as the three of them sat at dinner. On the two previous occasions he’d been in her company, she’d been clearly distressed, and this morning, bitterly angry into the bargain. But now her eyes were luminescent jewels, her pale skin had a glow that seemed to come from within. She was bright and bubbly, with ready laughter and a quick wit that showed an informed mind. She threw impish challenges at Tarquin, and occasionally a darting glance that always made the duke smile.

Quentin was neither a prude nor a stranger to women, despite his calling. It didn’t take a genius to deduce that Lady Edgecombe had been enjoying some bedsport that afternoon. His brother’s indulgent amusement and the unmistakable caress of his eyes when they rested on Juliana clearly indicated that however much at odds they might be in some things, the Duke of Redmayne and his cousin’s bride were clearly well matched in the bedchamber.

Quentin supposed he should be disapproving. But he was not a hypocrite. He’d lent his countenance to Tarquin’s abominable scheme—reluctantly, it was true, but he was still a part of it. If Juliana took pleasure in the duke’s lovemaking, then it could be said that she was not really being coerced in this aspect, at least, of the arrangement.

Juliana wasn’t sure whether her feeling of heady enjoyment in this dinner was a residue of the afternoon or had to do with the novel position in which she found herself. The only woman at the table, she was the focus of attention. At Forsett Towers, she’d been relegated to a cramped corner of the table, enjoined to be silent unless spoken to, and had thus endured terminable dinners, passing some of the most tedious hours of her life. At this table, whenever she opened her mouth to speak, both the duke and his brother paid her close and nattering attention.

“What is the play we’re to see?” She reached for her
wineglass. A footman moved swiftly to catch the cascade of cutlery set in motion by her floating sleeve.

“Garrick as Macbeth” Tarquin replied with a twitch of amusement as she glared in mortification at the errant ruffles.

“There’ll be a farce, too, no doubt,” Quentin said. “And since Garrick appointed Thomas Arne as the musical director, one can be sure of lively entertainment during the musical interludes.”

“I’ve never been to the play.” Juliana held her sleeve clear of the table as she reached for a basket of pastries. “At home the mummers would come at Christmas, and occasionally during the fair, but there was never a real play.”

“I trust you’ll enjoy the experience.” Tarquin was surprised at how enchanting he found her enthusiastic chatter and ready laughter. This was a Juliana he’d only fleetingly glimpsed hitherto. She also had a healthy appetite. Either no one had told her it was considered ladylike to modify one’s enthusiasm for the table in public, or she had simply ignored the stricture. Probably the latter, he thought with an inner smile. Her conversation was both amusing and intelligent. Her guardians had clearly not neglected her education, however much they might have endeavored to stifle her personality.

“Have I a smut on my nose, my lord duke?” Juliana inquired, brushing her nose with a fingertip.

“I don’t see one.”

“You seemed to be looking at me with particular intensity,” she said. “I made sure something was amiss with my appearance.”

“Not that I can see.” He pushed back his chair. “If you’ve finished, my dear, I suggest we adjourn to the drawing room for tea.”

“Oh, yes.” Juliana flushed and jumped to her feet, sending her chair skidding across the polished floor. “I should have thought, I beg your pardon. I’ll leave you to your port.”

“No need,” Tarquin said, steadying the chair so she
could move easily around it. “Quentin and I are not overly fond of sitting long at the table. Isn’t that so, brother?”

“Absolutely,” Quentin agreed. “I see no reason why Juliana should sit in solitary state in the drawing room while we sozzle ourselves on port.”

“Lucien, of course, would have a different view,” Tarquin observed.

Juliana glanced quickly over her shoulder at him, but his expression was as dispassionate as his tone. What difference to the atmosphere would her husband’s presence make? A significant one, she reckoned.

But she didn’t allow such thoughts to interfere with her pleasure in the evening. She had fallen into this situation, and she might as well enjoy its benefits.

They drove to Covent Garden in the duke’s town chaise, Juliana gazing out of the window, intrigued as London moved onto its nightly revels. It was the first time she’d been out in the evening since she had stepped off the coach at the Bell, and when they turned into Covent Garden, she saw it had a very different aspect from the daytime scene. The costermongers and barrow boys had gone, the produce stalls packed up for the day. The center of the Garden was now thronged with ladies accompanied by footmen, soliciting custom, and boys darting through the crowd crying the delights to be enjoyed in the specialized brothels masquerading as coffeehouses and chocolate shops.

Beneath the columns of the Piazza strolled fashionable people, quizzing the scene as they made their way to the Theatre Royal, whose doors stood open. It was now just before six o’clock, and the crowd at the doors was a seething mass of humanity, fighting and squabbling as they pushed their way inside to find a last-minute seat.

Juliana looked askance at the melee and wondered how she was to get through there with her wide hoop. She was bound to tear something in the process. “Doesn’t the play begin at six?”

“It does.” Tarquin handed her down to the cobbles before the theater.

“But if we have no seats—”

“We do, my dear,” Quentin reassured with a smile. “Tarquin’s footman arrived at the doors at four o’clock in plenty of time to secure us a box.”

So that was how the privileged managed such things. Juliana raised an eyebrow and decided she Eked being one of their number. She had the duke and Lord Quentin on either side of her as they approached the massed doorway. How it happened she couldn’t tell, but a path materialized through the crowd and she was suddenly inside the theater, her gown in one piece, not even a ruffle torn, both shoes still on her feet, and her hoop behaving itself impeccably. She had a vague impression that her two escorts had touched a shoulder here and there, uttered a few words in low voices, edged an impeding body to one side. However it had been done, they were inside.

The orchestra was playing but could barely be heard above the buzz and chatter as people strolled between the seats, pausing to chat to friends or calling across heads to attract attention in other parts of the pit. Above the racket the cries of the orange sellers were pitched shrill and imperative.

“This way.” Juliana was deftly ushered to a box overlooking the stage, where a footman in Redmayne Every stood bowing as they entered. Tarquin didn’t release Juliana’s elbow until she was seated at the front of the box. “Now, if you don’t try to explore, you’ll be safe and sound,” he said, sitting beside her.

“I shan’t go short of entertainment.” Juliana leaned over the edge of the box. “If the play is half as absorbing as the crowd, I shall be very well satisfied. Why do they have those iron spikes along the stage?”

“To stop the audience jumping onto the stage.” Tarquin smiled at her rapt expression. “You see the rather burly men behind? They’re an added deterrent.”

Juliana laughed. “I am so glad I came to London.” Then she flushed, a shadow dimming the vibrancy of her expression. “Or I would be in different circumstances.”

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