“Upon my word,” said a lyrical voice behind her. “Is it truly Miss Amber Sterlington my eyes are seeing?”
Chapter 46
Amber turned and smiled at the man dressed in gold pantaloons and a salmon-colored coat with gold trim upon the lapels. “Lord Fenton,” she said, allowing him to bow over her hand, which he exaggerated, of course, though he was careful not to spill the glass of white wine he held in one hand. “I did not know you were attending this evening.”
While Amber was acquainted with Lord Fenton from her time in London, his family was not so connected to hers that she would have expected him to attend Darra’s ball. Perhaps it was an association to Lord Sunther’s family that warranted him an invitation.
“I hope you are not disappointed to see me, then.”
“Not at all,” Amber said, smiling. Fenton was a flirt but his insincerity was comforting; his affections were a game for him rather than true intention. “It has been an age, has it not? How have you filled these months since last we saw one another?”
He waved his free hand through the air with aplomb. “Oh, I stay quite busy with all manner of dissipation, I assure you.” He shrugged and leaned toward her, which prompted her to fix her gaze to the floor as though listening intently so as to keep him from looking directly into her face. “Should I tell you the half of it you would be quite scandalized.”
“Well then, you must tell me the whole of it,” Amber said, glancing up enough to catch his eye and give a sincere smile. “For then I shall only believe half, which will likely still be far above the truth. You only
wish
to appear the rake, Lord Fenton, but your true nature is not so well concealed.”
Lord Fenton threw back his head and laughed loudly, causing Amber embarrassment as several guests turned to look their direction. When he met her gaze again she noticed a rather sincere look in his eye. “Would you join me for the next set, Miss Sterlington? I believe it is a cotillion.”
“Certainly, Lord Fenton, but I hope you will not abandon me before it begins. Tell me of your family. What travels have you had this winter?”
Fenton raised his eyebrows in surprise. “My family?” he repeated. “For what should you have interest in so boring a topic? Would you not prefer an accounting of London, perhaps some
on-dit
concerning a few of the more
nefarious
characters of our society?”
“Those things hold little interest for me,” Amber said, then watched his eyebrows rise a second time. She faced the dance floor, avoiding his scrutiny.
“A girl spends a few months recuperating in Yorkshire and suddenly cares nothing for the society of her peers?”
Amber snapped her head back to look at him. “You know I was in Yorkshire?”
He took a seemingly contemplative sip of his wine before answering her question. “I do believe it has changed you, Miss Sterlington,” he said when he lowered his glass, all the while looking at her closely. Too closely.
“How did you know I was in Yorkshire?” she asked again while looking away from his piercing gaze. It was only after she she’d spoken that she realized if she’d been more coy in her questioning, she would not have confirmed the truth. Her family had assured her no one knew the humble nature of her retreat. They wanted the impression that she was in a grand place, waited upon and coddled for her recovery, not hidden away.
“Did you like it there, Miss Sterlington?”
Amber turned her head to find him looking even more strongly into her face. His voice had lost its flippant quality, and she was quite speechless with surprise. She took a step away but he moved with her, causing her heart rate to increase.
“Did you, Miss Sterlington?” He sounded very intent, which unnerved her. “Was Yorkshire to your liking?”
“What are you about, Lord Fenton?” Amber said, casting her eyes about as though someone might rescue her. Of course no one would. They were all keeping their distance.
“I am asking you a simple question, Miss Sterlington,” he said. “I would like to know how you feel about your time spent in Yorkshire. I can explain my intention once I know your mind, but I fear I
must
know what you thought of it. I have heard it to be quite savage.”
“It is not savage,” she said, unsure what her course should be even while she looked about the room for some means of escape. His attention was most discomfiting. “Wild, perhaps, in land and weather, but it was peaceful and . . . generous and comfortable, too.”
“And the people?”
“Were good and kind,” she said easily, thinking of the Dariloos—and Mr. Richards. They were the only people she had actually met from Yorkshire. “Among the best I have ever known.”
“One might wonder, then, why you left a place toward which you feel such warmth.”
Amber looked away from him as a volley of memories washed over her, the final one being the expression on Mr. Richards face when he’d promised her a visit the following week—a day now long past.
“One might wonder that, yes,” she said in almost a whisper, then looked at Lord Fenton again. Why did he speak as though she were not returning to Yorkshire? How would he know she had been there at all? “I’m surely unable to explain adequately my reasons for leaving, Lord Fenton, but it was for the best, and I would ask that you not press me further.”
“And where shall you go now? Shall you remain at Hampton Grove? Will you return to London in time for the season?”
“I shall set about my own household,” she said, content to make her intentions known. Lord Fenton would certainly share her plans with everyone of their acquaintance, preventing her from having to do so herself. “My father has agreed to settle my inheritance upon me, and I shall live a quiet life, which I have come to prefer. I am to be an independent woman.”
“In Yorkshire?”
“Not in Yorkshire,” Amber said, wishing she did not feel a stab of disappointment at the admission. “Why are you asking such—”
“Why not in Yorkshire? If you were so very happy there and found the people and way of life so pleasing, why would you not return to it for your life of independence?”
Amber did not answer him and wondered if he had been sent for information—perhaps from her parents, though she did not know why they would be interested or why they would not ask her directly if they were. There was obviously a purpose behind his questions, however. She backed up another step and dropped into a curtsy.
“Upon greater thought I am feeling rather . . . drawn at the moment and shall not be able to stand up with you for the next dance. Please excuse me, my lord.”
“Do not go,” Fenton said, sounding alarmed. He reached for her arm, but she moved out of his grasp and then met his eye and lifted her chin in defiance. What was he about? “I am sorry to have been impertinent.”
“I do not feel well and insist you let me leave,” Amber said strongly, prepared to make a scene if necessary.
He seemed to sense her determination, and she thought she might have seen regret regarding his behavior already. “I would not prevent you from leaving, of course. Will you return when you have recovered?” Lord Fenton asked. “Perhaps you would give me the chance to explain myself.”
“Certainly,” she said, but only so he would allow her to leave. She had no intention of returning.
He did not detain her any longer as she slipped from the ballroom and then to the drawing room next door. It was not lit for the evening, and she closed the door, more comfortable in the darkness and the solitude. She shivered slightly—the fire from earlier in the day had died out—and moved to the French doors that led to the same veranda connected to the ballroom.
The veranda was lit with torches, and a number of guests stood about the stone balustrade conversing and sipping wine despite the cold, or perhaps preferring it to the heat of the ballroom. She crossed her arms over her chest and rubbed the exposed skin between her long glove and puffed sleeve. Had she appeared long enough to fulfill the curiosity of the gossips and satisfy her parents’ need for the appearance that all was well with their family?
She was considering how she might best make her excuses when a flash of a salmon-colored coat on the veranda drew her attention to the view from the window. There were not many men who would wear such a coat, and upon closer inspection, she verified that it was indeed Lord Fenton heading toward the garden stairs, though his steps were longer and his movement more masculine than she had ever seen before. He still held a glass of wine in his hand, but hurried as though unencumbered.
The garden was not lit for the assembly tonight—it was too cold to be inviting to the guests—but Lord Fenton was intent upon it nonetheless. Amber watched him hurry down the steps, then continue toward an arrangement of benches beneath a trellis that would be heavy with wisteria in a month’s time. A movement from beneath the trellis caught her eye, and she leaned closer to the glass as a man stepped out of the shadows.
Lord Fenton’s step slowed as he reached the unknown man, and if not for having seen him leave the ballroom, she would not have been able to identify Lord Fenton now for how dark the gardens were. He had fled the ballroom just as she had. Had he been intent on a conference with this man hiding in the gardens?
Amber thought back to Fenton’s strange questions and the even stranger intensity behind them and felt her breath catch in her throat. Her nose hit against the glass as she tried for as clear a view as possible. The man Lord Fenton conversed with had broad shoulders. Long legs. Conservative dress. Dark hair.
“It cannot be,” she whispered to herself, then fumbled for the doorknob. She could not stop herself from exiting through the French doors once she pushed them open. She lifted her skirts as she fairly flew down the steps, along the garden path, and then came to a stop as the two men turned to face her.
Her eyes, however, were on only one of them.
“Mr. Richards?”
Chapter 47
For a moment Mr. Richards’s expression showed only shock—likely the very same she had on her own face—but then he smiled, and her heart fairly melted until her mind caught up with the understanding that he was
here
, at her family estate in Somerset. That meant he knew who she was—who she
truly
was. He knew she’d deceived him.
And then she remembered the fabric wound about her head to hide the further truth she was determined he never see. She took a step backward.
His smile fell. “Amber,” he said as he moved toward her.
The sound of her name on his lips should have been honey to her ears, but instead it burned within her a sharp point of shame, pain, and regret. She had sent that letter to avoid this—all of this.
“You should not have come,” she said, taking another step away from him. Would he follow her when she ran away? Why did some traitorous part of her hope that he would when she knew it would make everything worse?
“I
had
to come,” he said.
Tears filled her eyes, overflowing immediately as she shook her head. She turned to the ironic refuge of the ballroom and lifted her skirts. She
needed
the last memory of him to be that kiss—that beautiful and encompassing kiss full of enough passion and goodness to last her a lifetime.
Mr. Richards grabbed her arm, but she wrenched it from his grasp and took another step only to have him grab both of her arms to further restrain her.
“Wait,” he said, his mouth close enough to her ear to make her shiver despite her panic. “Let me explain.”
She could not spare the hope sparked by finding him here. She could not risk a different parting memory even as she realized she would never forget
this
. Already her memories of him would include
this
. She lunged forward, twisting in an attempt to pull out of his grasp. She was not a blushing debutante playing a game of refusing advances she wanted him to accelerate. She could not stand for him to know—
She choked on a scream when she felt a pull upon her turban. She tried to lift her hands to her head, but Mr. Richards’s grip on her arms prevented her, which meant someone else had hold of the turban.
Not again.
“Fenton!” she heard Mr. Richards yell.
“You wanted her to stay,” Lord Fenton said as the fabric slid off her smooth head.
Mr. Richards released her as her chest caught fire and her knees gave out. She crumpled to the gravel path, and the rocks cut through the thin fabric of her gown as she crossed her arms over her head and clenched her eyes closed.
“Go away!” she pleaded, curling into herself as a firestorm of fear and emotion erupted within her. They had seen her; they
knew
. The horror of the moment swirled together with her memories of Mama and Darra seeing her for the first time and the looks upon the faces staring down at her when she dared lift her head at Carlton House. Those reactions had haunted her all these months, and she pulled even further within herself, desperate to hide.
She should never have let Mr. Richards use the library at the cottage. She should never written him that thank you letter or joined him for tea. She should never have believed that a little bit of happiness was worth this risk. Great sobs broke from her chest. If they would leave her now, if they would just go, she could at least be spared
seeing
their reaction.
Mr. Richards’s voice—so close to her huddled body—broke through her sobbing. “Amber, this isn’t how the evening was supposed to go. Please don’t cry. Let me explain.”
She only pulled herself into a tighter ball. “Go,” she sobbed with her head nearly between her knees. How repulsive and indecent she must look. Why would they not go? “Leave me. You owe me nothing. Please go.”
“This is not as I planned.”
She could hear the pleading in his voice, but she recoiled from it. A hand reached beyond the fortress of her arms to touch her face, and she pulled away, wishing she dared throw the skirts of her dress over her bare head, wishing she could disappear completely.
Suddenly, strong arms gripped her waist and she was lifted from the ground. She did not fight, only tried to protect her head as she was carried to a bench where she was deposited. She bent over at the waist, her arms protecting her head in a position that surely looked as though she were fearful of being struck.