Burning Bright (Brambridge Novel 2) (33 page)

Read Burning Bright (Brambridge Novel 2) Online

Authors: Pearl Darling

Tags: #Historical, #Romance, #Fiction, #Romantic Suspense, #Regency, #Victorian, #London Society, #England, #Britain, #19th Century, #Adult, #Forever Love, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Hearts Desire, #Series, #Brambridge, #War Office, #Last Mission, #Military, #School Mistress, #British Government

BOOK: Burning Bright (Brambridge Novel 2)
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“Hell,” James said tautly. “Hell. Grandfather’s red hair. Why didn’t I see it?”

“Indeed,” Edgar said, nodding, his oiled auburn hair glinting in the carriage light. “Do you know what it has been like watching one’s own brother take no interest in his birthright?” Edgar stabbed his cane on the floor. “The birthright that should have been mine? I am the eldest after all.”

James could feel the bile rushing to his throat.
This
was what it was about.

“Your father flogged him,” Harriet said frowning at James. “The painting—”

“My dear, that is not all,” Edgar said with a sneer. “Not only did he whip the both of us, when he flogged James in his study, he brought me in to watch.”

Harriet gasped. James hung his head. He hadn’t wanted Harriet to find out like this.

Edgar tapped the ball end of his cane against his knee. “I watched your beloved scream like a pig for his mama, for Cecilia. I think he even once called for the butler. None of them came. They didn’t love him enough to protect him.”

“That’s not true, Edgar.” James glared at him, but Edgar hadn’t finished.

“Our father brought me in to watch because he knew I was the firstborn and that I would enjoy seeing you whipped. He always intended to give me the estate. I know it. He told me so after you left.”

The bile lodged in James’ throat and then flooded into his mouth. He choked and swallowed, the bitter taste falling back down into his stomach. So it was not only he that had fixated on the house after his father had died. His
brother
had done exactly the same. Except that he had done so with murder in his heart.

“Father…” James began.

“He didn’t think he was your father,” Edgar broke in sneering. “You were nothing like us Stantons. Looking at the stars, compassionate, pah.” Edgar spat on the floor. “Your mama had someone else before dear Papa. He’s been in the cemetery a long time now. Your mother would have been too if she hadn’t sworn that you were father’s. The timing was fortunate too. Dear old Papa killed the man at least nine months before your birth.”

The Killer Lord. James looked down at his feet. Was that why he and Edgar were so able to hurt and maim and feel little? Because it was all in the blood? He would never be able to escape from it.

“I’m sorry you’ll never have the estate, Edgar,” James said, shaking his head. “You would have been welcome to it.”

Harriet gasped. “James, but I thought that was all you wanted?”

James looked directly into Harriet’s eyes. “It was, Harriet. But not anymore. I only wanted it in order to destroy the memory of my father. To take what was his and turn it into something else.” He could not hide the pain in his voice. “I was assuredly his son, and he accused me of murder.”

“Why don’t you want it anymore?” Harriet said softly.

“Because I need something else more. God, Harry, don’t you see? I love you. I don’t care about the estate anymore. The thought of it kept me going through two years of bloody war, but it won’t keep me going through another thirty years. You must believe.”

“Yes, yes, very touching.” Edgar said sarcastically, laying his cane on James’ knee. “That’s enough. We don’t need to hear any more. After all, I’ll give you what you want, although your thirty years might have to be a little shortened.” He laughed. “Put the gag back on Eliza, my love. I’ll do James. I’ve had enough of their cooing voices. Any more and I think I would need to plant my cane in one of them.”

 

CHAPTER 33

 

Harriet jolted awake and blinked as the window of the carriage filled with the orange glow of the rising sun. The land sloped down from the high road to reveal rolling hills and glints of sea behind. She shivered; they were back in Devon already.

Throughout the night she had tried not to fall asleep, pinching the backs of her wrists each time her eyelids drooped. Every time she had opened her eyes, James was looking at her, his head laid back against the padded walls of the carriage. The edge of his lips would quirk upwards, and she could close her eyes again.

Was it that he had always rescued her before that gave her the feeling of security? Harriet blinked and looked into the shadows of the carriage. James was still awake. Kean had been right. Women were fools to fall for pretty words and dark looks. But it wasn’t Harriet that was the fool. It was Kean. For she
had
found a man whose actions had spoken louder than all of the words he had spoken.

As soon as James had known that Harriet was Marie Mompesson he could have hounded her into marrying him, offered to split the estate in half, trapped her into marriage. He had done none of those. He had kept his distance, refused to see her.

And of course she could understand his need to keep the estate. Hadn’t she after all obsessed on the thought of her romantic hero for two years—only to realize that in fact the reality was very much different to what she thought? That what she needed was more physical and real, than spiritual and romantic?

Harriet shivered and shifted lightly in her seat. Edgar snored opposite her. Putting out her foot, she tried to tap James to get his attention. Edgar’s cane fell heavily with a crack on her knee. Flinging back her head in agony, Harriet screamed into her gag.

“I thought you two might try something. I’ve been waiting for you to make a move. Making eyes at each other. Just give me an opportunity,” Edgar snarled, wide awake.

“Don’t be too hasty, Edgar,” Mrs. Sumner said, reaching over to pat him on the knee. “Remember what we need to do first.”

“That’s merely a formality.”

“But necessary.”

“After this I shall treat you to a warm holiday in Italy, darling Mrs. Standish.”

“Mmmm Sssttanndnd?” Harriet shouted through her gag.

James shook his head blearily. “O coursh,” he mumbled.

Edgar sniggered. “Married her six months ago. She and I share an interest in gambling. She’s a fine player, the best I’ve ever seen. Why else do you think I’ve bled the estate dry?”

“We’ve arrived,” Mrs. Sumner said in a subdued voice.

Harriet looked out of the carriage window in shock. Whilst Edgar had been speaking, they had passed unnoticed through the outskirts of Brambridge, and pulled up at the door of the church itself.

Edgar pulled a pocket watch from his waistcoat and flipped the casement open. “Six thirty of the morning. Good timing for a wedding I would say.” Pushing out the carriage door, he motioned to Harriet to step out.

Harriet jerked her head to look at him. Wedding? What wedding? She felt her heart slow. Edgar had told her at the house party. He had laid it out for her. James had to marry Marie Mompesson to get the estate. And then in the carriage… the estate was Edgar’s by right. That Harriet would get what she wanted but that it would be inevitably shortened.

It was their wedding. James and Harriet’s. And after that, very probably their funeral.

Harriet shook her head. She wasn’t going to get out of the carriage. Not if it sealed their death. Edgar narrowed his eyes and pulled his cane apart. The lethal looking dagger slid out of the frame.

“You only have to be a little alive in order to marry. I can still make it hurt,” he said, polishing the blade on his leg. “I said that to the mining overseer when he refused to give me my money, but he didn’t take it like a man. I had to finish him off. He was making too much noise.”

Harriet shivered. But Edgar wasn’t looking at her; he was watching James as he ran the shiny blade up and down his breeches.

“You asked me why the mine was failing, James. It wasn’t. Of course it wasn’t. I just supplied a few pieces of defective stone to Exeter cathedral and then offered to supply them with stone from another adjacent mine that didn’t exist.” Edgar paused in his honing of the sword stick. A sickly smile spread across his face. “And all those servants? How could the estate recover without them? I laid them off and pocketed the wages. All the money has gone into lining my pockets.”
      “And the gambling tables, my dear,” Mrs. Sumner said sweetly.

“Be quiet, Eliza.”

“Ain’t that why we’re doing this though, love? To get back the money we’ve lost? The share we would have received from the Friendly Society was too small…”

Edgar sighed and stopped polishing the sword stick. He pointed the tip slowly at his new wife, who shrank back into the carriage. With deliberate movements, he swung the tip towards Harriet.

Harriet swallowed and moved her tongue around in her mouth as the gag stuck to her lips. She glanced at James. He jerked his head at the door. With shaking legs, she pushed herself unsteadily to her feet, and, bowing her head, carefully descended the steps.

As soon as she reached the ground, Edgar took her elbow and pulled her towards the church door. Reluctantly she moved with her, her shoes dragging across the ground. She limped slightly where Edgar had hit her across the knee.

She stopped just inside the old arched doorway of the church, blinking into the gloom. Mrs. Sumner had already overtaken them and stood at the front of the church with Mr. Madely and Mrs. Madely.

Edgar whispered into her ear. “Mrs. Madely has been a very naughty lady. Wasn’t Mr. Madely surprised when he found that his wife had been buying expensive clothes from London on a credit line supplied by myself that recently became overdue? Poor Mr. Madely, the money that Mrs. Madely spent on clothes was more than twenty times the living that he has ever earned as the Brambridge vicar. Of course he was delighted when I said that I would close the account, provided of course he did me one
small
favor. After all. He does love his wife.”

Harriet looked at the floor and slumped. She couldn’t look forward. Mr. Madely had been a kindly, quiet man, despite his wife’s harridan-like tendencies.

“Ah, here comes the happy groom escorted by his two best men.” Edgar pulled Harriet upright. “Stand up straight, girl. I’ll take the place of your father.”

Harriet glanced behind her. Samuel and his father were carrying James across the churchyard to the church. He had obviously not made it easy for them. Samuel sported an angry bruise to one eye, whilst his father held a free arm to his stomach. Good. They deserved it.

“And so it begins,” laughed Edgar.

At the head of the aisle, Edgar and Harriet stopped. Pushing Harriet in front of the vicar, Edgar took a step back and folded his arms, tucking his cane under his coat. The Grangers deposited James in a heap on the floor by Harriet’s feet and stood quietly behind Edgar. Harriet looked down at James. She knew he would be in enormous pain, having dressed his shoulder only eight weeks before. And yet he didn’t show it. With a quirk of his lips, he smiled at Harriet through his gag and labored to a standing position. He turned to face the vicar, his elbow touching hers. Harriet took in a large breath and let it out again. Tipping her head back, she closed her eyes and let the words wash over her.

“Dearly beloved…” Mr. Madely began. “We are gathered here…”

It was strange; the wedding was almost as she had dreamed, to the man that she had always wanted, in the church where she had planned. As the vicar droned on, she could almost imagine the pews filled with her friends, Janey, Bill, Aunt Agatha, the flowers on the altar, her sparkling dress. Opening her eyes slowly, she looked downwards at the stained ball gown, crushed from the ride in the carriage, ripped by Samuel’s rough handling.

“Do you Harriet Beauregard take Lord James Stanton to be your lawful wedded husband? To have and to…”

Oh good grief. This was no dream.

“Get on with it, vicar,” Edgar said, pulling his cane out from under his coat.

Mr. Madely started and put a finger back into his psalm book. “I was giving you time to take their gags off so that they could answer,” he said plaintively.

Edgar sighed and gestured to Samuel. “Go on then,” he said, shaking his cane.

Samuel lumbered to Harriet and undid her gag first and then James’.

James immediately turned to Harriet. “I don’t want the estate, Harriet,” he said quickly. “I just want you. We don’t need to get married. Please don’t say yes.” James gulped silently and fell to his knees.

Edgar pulled his dagger out from James’ side and wiped it on his breeches. “There’s too much damn talking in this wedding,” he said, slipping the dagger back into his cane.

Harriet stood frozen. How could James not have screamed? It didn’t really matter what either of them did or said. Harriet had already made up her mind what her answer would be.

“I do,” she said through clenched teeth. Getting to her knees, she put her head close to where James had bowed his down to the carpet. “James, I was going to say yes anyway,” she whispered. “I know you don’t want me for the estate. I don’t want you for it, or your title either. But I do want you. And I want you to live.”

James turned his face towards hers, closed his eyes and inhaled. “I love you, Harry. Always will,” he murmured. He rested his head against hers.

Mr. Madely coughed. “Do you, Lord James Stanton…”

“I do,” James said in a loud voice. It was as steady as Harriet had ever heard it.

Mr. Madely closed his book with a snap. “I now pronounce you man and wife.”

“Hooray,” Edgar said sarcastically. He stepped forward and put a piece of paper down in front of James. “Now sign this document.”

James shook his head, his hair brushing against hers.

“What is it, James?” she said.

“It’s my last will and testament.” James said dully. “Leaving everything to Edgar Stanton, my closest relative should I die.”

“This,” Edgar said, stabbing his finger at the paper, “you will sign. I couldn’t get bloody father to sign his new will before he went gaga and died so you will definitely do as I say. I knew I shouldn’t have given him so much cyanide in his laudanum. I learnt from that and reduced your dose accordingly.” He curled his hand into a fist. ”I should have made it stronger.”

Harriet gasped. Edgar had already tried to kill James? She breathed out as James rocked back on his heels, a hand clenching at his side.

“You killed… our father?” James took in a heavy breath. “You tried to kill me before?”

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