Devil's Cub (Alastair-Audley Tetralogy 2)
Page 36
‘You have a remarkably pretty notion of my character, ma’am,’ he said ironically.
Miss Challoner rose from her chair, and curtsied. ‘You are extremely obliging, my lord, but I must humbly decline the honour of becoming your wife.’
‘You will marry me,’ said his lordship, ‘if I have to force you to the altar.’
She blinked at him. ‘Are you mad, sir? You cannot possibly wish to marry me.’
‘Of course I don’t wish to marry you!’ he said impatiently. ‘I scarcely know you. But I play my cards in accordance with the rules. I have a number of vices, but abducti
ng innocent damsels and casting them adrift on the world is not one of them. Pray have a little sense, ma’am! You eloped with me, leaving word of it with your mother; if I let you go you could not reach your home again until tomorrow night at the earliest. By that time – if I know your mother and sister at all – the whole of your acquaintance will be apprised of your conduct. Your reputation will be so smirched not a soul will receive you. And this, ma’am, is to go down to my account! I tell you plainly, I’ve no mind to become an object of infamy.’
Miss Challoner pressed a hand to her forehead. ‘Am I to marry you to save my face, or yours?’ she demanded.
‘Both,’ replied his lordship.
She looked doubtfully at him for a moment. ‘My lord, I fear I am too tired to think very clearly,’ she sighed.
‘You’d best go to bed,’ he said. He put his hand on her shoulder, and held her away from him, looking down at her. She met his gaze frankly, wondering what he would say next. He surprised her yet again. ‘Don’t look so worn, my dear; it’s the devil of a coil, but I won’t let it harm you. Good night.’
Unaccountable tears stung her eyelids. She stepped back, and dropped a curtsey. ‘Thank you,’ she said shakily. ‘Good night, my lord.’
Eight
Miss Challoner had pleaded fatigue, but it was long before she slept. Her desperate problem leered at her half through the night, and it was not until she had reached some sort of decision that she could achieve slumber.
She was so shocked to realise that for a few breathless moments she had forgotten Sophia in a brief vision of herself wedded to his lordship. ‘So that’s the truth, is it?’ said Miss Challoner severely to herself. ‘You are in love with him, and you’ve known it for weeks.’
But it was not a notorious Marquis with whom she had fallen in love; it was with the wild, sulky, unmanageable boy that she saw behind the rake.
‘I could manage him,’ she sighed. ‘Oh, but I could!’
She did not permit herself to indulge in this dream for long. Marriage, on all counts, was out of the question. He did not give the snap of his fingers for her; he must marry, when the time came, some demure damsel of his own degree; and – the greatest bar of all – she could not steal a bridegroom from under Sophia’s nose.
Having disposed thus of his lordship, Miss Challoner set herself resolutely to think of her own future. Vidal had shown her the impossibility of a return to Bloomsbury; it would be equally impossible to seek shelter with her grandfather. After pondering somewhat drearily upon this sudden isolation, she dried her eyes, and tried to think of an asylum. At the end of two hours, being a female of considerable strength of mind, she decided that her wisest course would be to remain in France, to assume a new name, and to try to obtain a post as governess in a respectable French household.
She began, eventually, to compose a letter to her mother, and in the middle of a phrase which had become strangely involved, she fell asleep.
She partook of chocolate and a roll in bed next morning, and when she at length came downstairs to the private parlour, she was met by the discreet Fletcher, who informed her, not without a note of severity in his voice, that his lordship’s arm had broken out bleeding again in the night, and looked this morning uncommon nasty. His lordship was still abed, but meant to travel.
‘Has a surgeon been sent for?’ inquired Miss Challoner, feeling like a murderess.
‘His lordship will not have a surgeon, madam,’ said Fletcher. ‘It is the opinion of Mr Timms, his lordship’s valet, and myself, that he should see one.’
‘Then pray go and fetch one,’ said Miss Challoner briskly.
Fletcher shook his head. ‘I daren’t take it upon myself, ma’am.’
‘I don’t ask you to,’ Miss Challoner replied. ‘Have the goodness to do as I bid you.’
‘I beg pardon, madam, but in the event of his lordship desiring to know who sent for the surgeon – ?’
‘You will tell the truth, of course,’ said Miss Challoner. ‘Where is his lordship’s bedchamber?’
Fletcher eyed her with dawning respect. ‘If you will allow me to show you, madam,’ he said, and led the way upstairs.
He went ahead of her into the room. Miss Challoner heard Vidal say: ‘Oh, let her come in!’ and awaited no further invitation. She went in, and when the door had shut behind Fletcher, walked up to the big four-poster bed and said contritely: ‘I did hurt you. Indeed, I am sorry, my lord.’
Vidal was sitting up in bed, propped by pillows; his eyes looked a little feverish, and his cheeks were flushed.