Don't Tempt Me (Georgian 4)
Once the water was flowing steadily into the house, Simon risked a glance toward the lawn and saw Lysette standing with two other women, watching him from behind the crimson mask. Relief filled him at the sight of her safe and unharmed, her white gown glimmering like a pearl in the moonlight. Then his relief was replaced by fear.
Her presence goaded him like a painful spur in his flank. There was danger here and he could not fight it while concerned for her safety.
He abandoned his post without thought, striding toward her with a clenched jaw.
“I need you to go home,” he said when he reached her, sparing a brief nod of acknowledgment to her two companions—one wigged, the other a brunette.
The wigged woman grabbed Lysette’s elbow. “I was just saying the same to her.”
Lysette opened her mouth to reply, but the set of her shoulders forewarned him of her intention to argue.
“Now,” he ordered brusquely. “I cannot think while you are here.”
Simon led the way along the side of the manse, his gait so long and rapid that the three women had to scamper to keep up with him.
They reached the drive and Simon whistled sharply, drawing the eye of every coachman. The brunette took the lead then, hurrying to a well-appointed equipage and herding the other two inside.
Lysette reached out to him. “Come with us,” she begged.
Simon caught her gloved hand and kissed the back. “I am needed here.” He retreated and closed the door, glancing at the coachman with a silent order to set off. “Godspeed.”
With a crack of the whip, the carriage rolled forward. The other coaches moved to open a pathway and within a few moments it was out of sight.
The knots of tension in Simon’s shoulders loosened appreciably. Now he could focus on the grim task ahead.
He pivoted on his heel and headed back.
“Mon Dieu!” Marguerite gasped, staring out the window at the smoke rising from the Orlinda manse. “Who was that?”
“Simon Quinn,” Lynette and Solange answered in unison.
Lynette glanced at Solange with raised brows.
“I would be remiss if I did not know the name of so handsome a man.” Solange smiled lightly, and Lynette was pricked by jealousy.
It was obvious from the conversations she’d overheard that Mr. Quinn was the object of an inordinate amount of female lust, but now that she had held him intimately, she had no desire to share even a small piece of him. His passion was addicting and she wanted the whole of it for herself.
Marguerite’s gaze moved from the window. “What is he?”
“No one knows for a certainty.” Solange shrugged. “However, I had a paramour who had the ear of Talleyrand and he was convinced the man is an English spy.”
“He is Irish!” Lynette protested.
“He is a mercenary,” Solange corrected. “His loyalty is for sale.”
Perhaps that should have mitigated Lynette’s fascination. It did not.
“Why did he act as if he knew you?” Marguerite queried with an accusatory note in her tone.
Lynette leaned forward. “It is not me he knows. It is Lysette.”
Her mother’s face paled. “What are you saying?”
“He called me Lysette, Maman, and acted as if we knew each other well.”
“That is impossible.”
“Is it?” Lynette removed her mask. “He looked at me directly and called me Lysette. How can that be a coincidence?”
“You removed your mask for him?” Marguerite whispered, her eyes wide.
“Well . . .” Lynette’s face heated. “He removed it.”
“Lynette!” her mother cried, her spine straightening with indignation. “How could you? I should have dragged you with me to the kitchen when that oaf spilled wine on my gown. I trusted you to behave in my absence.”
“Marguerite . . .” Solange began soothingly.
“And you!” Marguerite glared at her dearest friend. “This evening was your idea. You should have kept a better eye on her.”
“Mon amie.” Solange laughed softly. “Nothing can deter true determination.”
“That is a poor excuse for lack of supervision.”
“Did supervision deter you? Seems to me the daughter has the same taste in men as her mother.”
Marguerite’s mouth opened, then closed. A flush spread across her cheekbones.
Lynette’s gaze darted back and forth between the two women, uncomprehending. Her father was nothing like Simon Quinn.
“About Lysette . . .” she began tentatively.
“How would he know her?” her mother snapped, her foul mood escalating.
“That is the question I intend to ask him,” Lynette replied.
“No.” The word was uttered with such finality it took Lynette aback. “You will stay away from him.”
“We have to know!” Lynette protested. “I must know!”
“I said no, Lynette. There will be no further discussion on the matter. Your sister is gone.”
“But wasn’t Quinn dashing when he spirited us away?” Solange murmured.
Marguerite glared at her.
Lynette knew when it was time to hold her tongue and she did so, but the uncommonly vehement refusal created a deep-seated unease.
She would seek out Mr.
Quinn.
Nothing could stop her from discovering if there was something about her twin that she did not know.
Especially if the secret kept was Simon Quinn.
Edward reached the gate leading to the front drive and paused with the unconscious Corinne tucked securely in his arms. Impatience and concern rode him hard as he waited for the struggling Desjardins to overtake him and release the catch.
Just as the comte gained the distance between them, the portal swung open of its own accord. A tall, dark-haired man stood on the threshold, coming to a halt at the sight of them.
“My lord,” the gentleman greeted in a hoarse voice.
“Quinn,” Desjardins returned.
Edward sensed a wary tension emanating from the man called Quinn. It caused him to hold Corinne more securely, her face turned in toward his chest.
Quinn glanced at the back of Corinne’s disheveled head, then rested a moment on the shredded skirts of her once-bright yellow gown.
“Do you require assistance?”
“At this point, only a physician can help her.”
With a nod, Quinn stepped aside, facilitating their departure.
The comte hurried forward, waving madly for his carriage, which waited with a dozen others clogging the drive. The various drivers spotted Edward’s burden, and they began the arduous task of clearing a path for their departure.
As they approached, Desjardins’s footman opened the door and Edward used the last of his waning strength to carry both himself and Corinne into the interior. He laid her carefully along the leather squab and turned to exit, only to find the comte blocking the doorway.
Saying nothing, Edward sat, grateful for the ride and the opportunity to remain with Corinne a little longer.
The equipage lurched into motion, and Edward closed his eyes and rested his head wearily against the back of the squab. The shallow, rapid wheezing that afflicted all of them echoed within the small confines. He thought of the day and how he had awakened that morning in completely different circumstances. Unencumbered. Focused.