Authors: Jane Feather
He would find out what he could about the two men; then he would wait his moment. Then he would surprise her.
G
ood morning, my lady.”
Juliana disentangled herself from the strands of a warm and fuzzy dream as bright sunlight poured over the bed. She blinked and hitched herself onto an elbow.
A small woman, round as a currant bun, with faded blue eyes and gray hair beneath a neat white cap, stood by the bed where she’d just pulled back the curtains to let in the daylight. She bobbed a curtsy.
“Good morning,” said Juliana. “You must be …”
“Mistress Henley, m’lady. But the family call me Henny, so if ye’d care to do the same, we’ll do very well together.”
“Very well, Henny.” Juliana sat up and gazed around the handsome bedchamber, memory of the evening returning. She blushed as her eye fell on the heap of carelessly discarded clothes by the window. The duke had insisted on playing lady’s maid when they’d come back from Ranelagh and had shown little regard for the fine silks and delicate lawn of her undergarments. “I beg your pardon for leaving my clothes in such a mess,” she said.
“Good heavens, my lady, what am I here for?” Henny responded cheerfully. “I’ll have them picked up in no rime while you take your morning chocolate.” She turned to
pick up a tray and placed it on Juliana’s knees. Steam curled fragrantly from the spout of a silver chocolate pot.
Juliana’s eyes widened at this unheard-of luxury. The routine at Forsett Towers had had her dressed and breakfasting by seven o’clock every morning. Lady Forsett had been a firm believer in the evils of the soft life on the young, and on winter mornings Juliana had had to crack the ice in the ewer before she could wash.
Carefully she poured the chocolate into the wide, shallow cup. The china was gold-rimmed and paper thin, alarmingly fragile. She leaned back against the pillows and took a cautious sip, then, emboldened, took a biscuit from the matching plate and dunked it into the chocolate. A soggy morsel splashed back into the cup when she carried the biscuit to her lips, and drops of chocolate splattered the coverlet.
“Is something the matter, my lady?” Henny, shaking out the folds of the lavender silk dress, turned at Juliana’s mortified exclamation.
“I’ve spilled chocolate all over the bed,” she said, biting her lip as she rubbed at the splashes. “I’m certain it’ll stain.”
“The laundress won’t be defeated by a little chocolate.” Henny bustled over to examine the damage. “Dearie me, it’s hardly anything.”
“It looks like a lot to me,” Juliana said disgustedly. “Perhaps I’d better drink it sitting in a chair.” She handed the tray to Henny and jumped out of bed.
“I give you good day, madam wife.”
Juliana whirled to the door that had opened without warning. Lucien came into the room. He was fully dressed but looking very disheveled, as if he’d slept in his clothes. He carried a glass of cognac and regarded his wife with a satirical gleam in his bloodshot, hollowed eyes.
“My lord.” She took a hasty step backward, catching the hem of her nightgown under her heel.
“Lud, but you seem surprised to see me, my lady. I made sure it was customary for a husband to visit his bride
on the morning after their wedding night.” He sipped brandy, his eyes mocking her over the rim of his glass. But there was more than mockery in his gaze. There was a touch of repulsion as he examined the shape of her body beneath the fine lawn of her nightgown.
Juliana decided abruptly to return to bed. “You startled me, my lord,” she said with as much dignity as she could muster. She climbed back into bed, pulling the covers up to her neck. “Henny, I’ll take my chocolate again.”
The woman gave her the tray back and curtsied to the viscount. “Should I leave, my lord?”
“No,” Juliana said swiftly. “No, there’s no need for you to go.”
Lucien merely smiled and shrugged. He lounged over to the bed and perched on the end. “So you passed a pleasant evening, I trust.” He took a gulp of cognac.
It seemed best to play this straight … behave as if it were a perfectly ordinary conversation with a man who had every right to be where he was. “Yes, thank you, sir. We went to the play and after to Ranelagh.” She dunked another biscuit into her cup with what she hoped was an air of insouciance and successfully conveyed it, intact, to her mouth.
“Insipid entertainment!” Lucien’s hp curled. “If you really wished to see the town, madam, you should put yourself in my hands.”
“I doubt His Grace would approve of such a scheme,” she responded, leaning back against the pillows, her eyes suddenly narrowed.
Lucien gave a shout of laughter that disintegrated into another of his violent coughing spasms. He doubled over on the bed, the emaciated body racked as his chest convulsed and he grabbed for air.
“There, there, my lord. Take it easy, now.” Henny took the cognac from his hands and stood waiting until the spasms diminished. “Drink it down, sir.” She handed it back with the air of one who knew the remedy. Presumably, as an old family retainer, she knew their skeletons.
Lucien drained the glass in one gulp and sighed with relief. “Forgive me, m’dear. An unpleasant habit for a bridegroom.” He grinned, and Juliana noticed for the first time that he was missing four of his front teeth. It was hard to pinpoint his age, but even at her most generous estimate, he was too young to be losing teeth to decay.
“Now, what was it you said that made me laugh … ? Oh, yes … Tarquin most certainly wouldn’t look kindly on my acting as your guide to London life.” He chuckled, but carefully this time.
Juliana nodded thoughtfully. It was not difficult to imagine the Duke of Redmayne gnashing his teeth in such a case. Not difficult … indeed, positively delicious … an utterly delectable prospect …
“Good morning, Lady Edgecombe…. Ah, Lucien. I see you’re paying your bride a morning visit.” The Duke of Redmayne materialized from her thoughts. Juliana, startled, turned to the doorway. Tarquin, in a brocade chamber robe, lounged against the doorjamb, but his indolent air was belied by the harsh light in his eyes.
For some reason no one in this household thought it appropriate to knock upon her door, Juliana reflected. “I give you good day, Your Grace.” She took another sip of chocolate, trying to appear as if she were perfectly accustomed to entertaining gentlemen in bed in her nightgown. Of course, it was a perfectly appropriate venue for both husbands and lovers, and she had one of each. A bubble of laughter threatened. Hastily she put down her cup and pushed the tray to safety on the far edge of the bed.
“You seem mighty free with my lady’s bedchamber, Tarquin,” Lucien sneered. “Should I play the outraged husband, I wonder?”
“Don’t be a fool.” Tarquin looked merely bored by his cousin’s barb as he strolled into the room. “I suppose you haven’t been to bed as yet?”
“You suppose right, dear boy.” Lucien held his empty glass to the light. “Dear me, empty again. I swear the glass
must have a leak. D’you still keep a decanter in your room, Redmayne?”
“Go to your own chamber, Lucien,” Tarquin instructed in the same bored tone. “Your man is waiting for you, and I’m certain you’ll find everything necessary for your comfort.”
Lucien yawned profoundly and stood up. “Well, perhaps you’re right. Desolated to bring this enchanting little chat to a close, my dear bride.”
“I consider it merely postponed, sir.”
Tarquin’s air of indolent boredom vanished. “I beg your pardon, Juliana?”
Juliana’s smile was all innocence. “I merely said I look forward to continuing the discussion with my husband, sir. Is something wrong?”
Tarquin looked so dumbfounded, she was hard-pressed to keep a straight face.
“Can’t keep a wife from her lawful husband, y’know, Tarquin,” Lucien stated, fumbling with his snuffbox. He had no idea why Juliana should be intent on needling the duke, but he was more than willing to join in the mischief.
Tarquin walked to the door and opened it. “Good day, Lucien.”
Lucien looked hurt. “Throwing me out of my own wife’s bedchamber, cousin? Seems I have the right to throw
you
out, not the other way round.”
“Get out.” The duke’s voice was very soft, but the pulse in his temple was throbbing and his nostrils were pinched and white.
Lucien glanced toward Juliana, who, having decided prudently to withdraw from the confrontation, avoided eye contact. She didn’t care for the look of the Duke of Redmayne at the moment and was not prepared to provoke him further by obviously aligning herself with the viscount. At least not until she’d formulated a coherent plan.
Lucien shrugged and made for the door, knowing that without an ally he couldn’t hold his ground. He wasn’t too sure what the issue was anyway, but, surprisingly, it seemed
that young Juliana was not a completely compliant participant in the duke’s schemes. He offered his cousin a mocking bow as he went past him into the corridor.
“Lady Edgecombe will ring when she needs you, Henny,” the duke said curtly, still holding the door.
The abigail bobbed a curtsy, picked up Juliana’s neglected chocolate tray, and bustled out.
“Now, just what was all that about?” The duke came over to the bed.
“All what?” Juliana’s smile was as innocent as ever. “My husband came to visit me. We were talking.”
“I see.” Tarquin’s eyes searched hers. “Are you throwing down the glove, Juliana?”
“Why ever should I do such a thing?”
“I don’t know. But if you are, I should warn you that I will pick it up.”
“There would be little point in throwing it, my lord, if you did not…. Not,” she added sweetly, “that I am, of course.”
Tarquin stood frowning at her. She was radiating mischief, vibrating with a current of energy that seemed to make her hair crackle. But he couldn’t begin to think what pleasure or point there might be for her in cultivating Lucien, unless it was to annoy Tarquin himself. Deciding not to encourage her by pursuing the subject further, he changed the topic with an amiable smile. “I forgot to tell you last night that you’ll probably receive a bridal visit this morning from Lady Lydia Melton and her mother.”
“Oh? Your betrothed is very kind,” she said distantly.
“It’s hardly kindess to pay a duty visit to her fiancé’s newly acquired relative, who also happens to be living under his roof.”
“No, I suppose not,” Juliana mused. “Is she aware, I wonder, that this newly acquired relative is also installed in the duchess’s apartments?”
“Don’t be absurd.”
Juliana plaited the coverlet with busy fingers. “I presume I’ll be moved elsewhere once your marriage is celebrated
… or will this arrangement be terminated when I conceive your child?”
“You seem determined to quarrel with me this morning,” Tarquin observed. “I woke up half an hour ago feeling as if I’d been touched by magic.” His voice deepened, his eyes glowed, and his mouth curved in a smile of rich sensual pleasure. “The memory of you was on my skin, running in my blood.”
Leaning over her, he planted his hands on the pillow on either side of her head. Juliana couldn’t tear her eyes from his, so close to her now, compelling her response. His breath was warm on her cheek, his mouth poised above hers … poised for an eternity until, with a little moan of defeat, she grasped his face with her hands and pulled his mouth to hers. She kissed him hungrily, pushing her tongue into his mouth, tasting him, drawing his own special scent into her lungs. He kept himself still for her exploration, leaving her with the initiative, until, breathless, she released his face and moved her mouth from his.
“A much more pleasing greeting,” Tarquin said, smiling. “Are you always bad-tempered in the morning? Or did you not get enough sleep last night?”
“My questions were perfectly reasonable,” Juliana replied, but her voice was low and sweet, her mouth soft, her eyes aglow.
He sat down on the bed beside her. “Maybe I should have mentioned before that I was to be married, but I really didn’t think it important. No matter what our arrangements are my dear, I must be married at some point. And no matter what I might prefer,” he added a trifle ruefully, “I have a family duty.”
“Would you rather not marry Lady Lydia?” Juliana forgot her own concerns in this much more intriguing question.
“It’s a marriage of convenience,” he explained evenly. “In my position one does not wed for anything else. For amusement, passion—love, even—one keeps a mistress. Surely that doesn’t come as a surprise?”
“No, I suppose not. Do you have other mistresses? Someone … someone you love, perhaps?” Her fingers were busier than ever with the counterpane, and she couldn’t look up at him.
All expression died out of Tarquin’s eyes; his face became blank, featureless. “Love, my dear, is a luxury a man in my position must learn to do without.”
She looked up now, startled at the bitterness she sensed beneath his flat tone. “Why must you learn to do without it?”
“What an inquisitive child you are.” He looked at her for a moment in silence as she gazed back at him with frank curiosity. “If a man has power and wealth, he can never really trust the sincerity of those around him. Perhaps it takes a certain amount of trust to be able to love,” he said simply.