Authors: Wendy LaCapra
Tags: #Vice, #Decadence, #Murder, #Brothels, #The British East India Company, #Historical Romance, #Georgian Romance, #Romance, #scandal, #The Furies, #Vauxhall Gardens, #Criminal Conversations, #Historical, #Scandalous, #Entangled
“You…pah!” She spit out the half-spoken falsehood. “I can’t, Max. Oh God, I
can’t
.” Whatever her pain, whatever the protection she’d built, she could not lie to Max. She could see and feel the pain he carried.
“Heal me, Vinia,” he asked. Then, softer, “
You
know you can.
I
know you can.”
His mouth captured hers. Shock, at first, though her muscles did not harden. His kiss elicited her surrender. He was fervor and softness, rage and need. She clung to his shoulders, slipping on wet, uneven ground toward a spreading, hungry abyss.
His fingers tightened in her tresses as he tilted her head toward his—up, up. Straining. Gasping. Reaching. His kiss grew urgent and deep, passionate and possessive. Her belly quivered. She grew wet with sensual invitation.
Max.
Her body staked a claim.
My Max.
Where Vaile was separation, debasement, and darkness; Max was union, devotion, and light. His presence was life, and the shivering absence where she lived was death.
Could they learn to trust each other once again? Could Max free her of Vaile’s expertly forged shackles? Could she, in turn, heal Max’s lingering hurt? Would love be enough to carry them both through society’s condemnation?
She made fists in his hair. For one mad moment, she was suspended beyond time and betrayal, floating above chaos in a place where neither of them had been sullied or broken.
She ceased struggling. Fight drained from the cracked vessel of her body, and she offered up the pieces of her resistance through softly yielding lips.
Abruptly, he pulled away. He growled through his breath like a sorcerer casting a curse. He did not need to speak coherent words for his self-condemnation to rend her gut.
Abandoned by passion and with all anger spent, desolation flooded her emptiness—exactly the emotion she had been trying so desperately to avoid.
She slammed a fist into his chest.
Chapter Ten
“This,” she hissed, “is why I cannot trust you. You want me and then you war against your need. You ask for my trust, but you refuse to trust me. I knew you would pull away the moment I surrendered.”
“I am here. Feel my heart beat.” He held her hand to his chest. “I want to trust you. How hard is that to believe?”
His heart’s thud—so steady after such a savage kiss—unnerved. She yanked back her hand, but he tightened his hold.
“Yes, I had you followed—for your protection. Yes, jealousy overtook my reason. But, I have done nothing but risk my own reputation since I heard of the murder. I have done everything I can to stay by your side. Does that count for nothing?”
She chilled, thinking of Vaile, enslaved by his devotion to perfect, changeless statues.
“Have you stayed by
my
side, Max? Or by the side of some fantasy girl, some younger, innocent version of me that no longer exists?”
“You, Lavinia.
You.
I am not holding the hand of a fantasy. I did not just kiss a figment.”
A terrible spasm of pain exploded in her chest. “You believed the worst of me when I broke our understanding—”
“Engagement,” he said. “Not understanding.
Engagement.
”
“You see? I knew you had not forgiven me. No papers were signed.”
“First you accuse me of living in the past, and then you throw the past in my face. Damn you, Lavinia.”
“Stop cursing at me. Never curse at me,” she said, slashing imaginary lines in a barrier around her heart. “I will not allow it.”
“Why must every conversation disintegrate into accusation and argument?” He sighed with rough frustration. “If it means you will finally
hear
me, I promise not to curse at you again.”
“Let. Go. Of. Me.” Her breath cut the words into small, thin slices.
His eyes grew hard and he dropped her hand. “I do not know what you want.” His voice lowered. “But how can I love you when you care so little for yourself?”
Unfair!
She took a step back and drew herself to full height. “I care little for
you
.” The lie tasted bitter, like tears. Trembling, she replaced her hood.
“Very well, then.” His voice could have chipped rubies. “I would fight the world for you, but I will not fight you. If you decide to confide in me, you must come to me. I will not trouble you with my presence again.”
She opened her mouth to protest but, in the distance, the three-quarter-hour bell chimed. Her time had run out. Only fifteen minutes remained for her to reach the spot where Iphigenia would be waiting.
“Goodbye then, Mr. Harrison.” She turned away, lifted her skirts, and ran.
The evening breeze whispered against her face, cooling her heated skin. If she could have, she would have torn away her cloak and calmed her fever by bathing in the chilly night. Her heart beat thunderous and hurting, but she ripped Max from her thoughts.
She reached the designated spot and glanced behind to make sure Max had not followed. Perspiration dampened her underclothes. Her slippers were covered in mud and her cloak, full of snag. She stepped into the sheltered grove, feeling truly a mess.
Inside and out.
Believe in a second chance, should she? What an awful, terrible lie. Trust him? Why? Heal him? How? When she hadn’t the strength to heal herself?
His sweet kiss had left a savory aftertaste. His words of love itched like a burning rash.
Was he right? Had she pushed him away because she “cared so little for herself?”
She closed her eyes. What did Max understand? What could he know?
Love, peace, and refuge—
lies
.
She was ruined because of false duty to reputation and to marriage. She would not allow herself to be destroyed by false hope.
She did not need him. She would not go to him. She would find another way. She had the Furies, after all. She slammed together the broken pieces of her heart’s fortification.
The grass rustled near the walk. Tentatively, Lavinia pulled aside her veil and caught the madam’s eye. She stepped back into the darkness and waited.
…
Max stalked through the brush, each footfall fueled with fury. She had surrendered and then he’d frozen. But not—as she had accused—because he had had second thoughts. He had frozen because they’d melded with a far-too-perfect symmetry, and he’d mistrusted the sensation. Nothing on this earth could proffer such a consummate sense of belonging. The moment she had yielded, dread—stronger than an open-sea gale—had seized his limbs.
When she’d kissed him with unrestrained passion, his compass had spun and the last of his tethers had snapped. At the center of the relentless storm, Lavinia had emerged as his home. He may have traveled countless miles, but without her he would be forever adrift.
She had always been his anchor.
The revelation had astonished him. He’d pulled back, meaning only to catch his breath and ground himself in the familiar lines of her face. But she’d grown so hateful and angry; he’d told her he’d had enough.
Hell.
He should have known better, should have been stronger than her doubt. Trust, once broken, grew at the painstaking pace of summit-top lichen—if ever it grew again.
He had returned from India with remembered horrors rendering him skittish as an injured colt. No one had understood until Lavinia’s father, hat in hand, had called. Wiggins had realized his challenge had cast a green young man off to the wilds of a foreign land the same way he himself had been sent to face a brutal war in the Canadian wild, and so had offered Max his help.
Without Lavinia’s father’s patience and understanding, Max would never have recovered enough to work with the duke. Her father had, with calm purpose, set about restoring Max’s sense of dignity, his trust in a world of order and honor.
Max thought he’d repaid the kindness when he’d saved the brewery, and again, when he’d taken charge of the widow Wiggin’s affairs, but Lavinia had been his true charge all along.
Perhaps her father had expected Vaile would come to a bad end, and Lavinia would need his help.
Her absence stung. He loved Lavinia. He had loved her for as long as he could remember. But, never before had he understood that his feeling was so much more than infatuation.
Now, he knew. He knew she was a part of him the way the mountains and lakes were part of Cumbria. He knew she was a part of him the way the moors were part of Yorkshire. Impossible to separate. Utterly united.
Until she healed, her injury would be his burden.
How could she have told him she did not care and then walk away? Lunacy, to have given her an ultimatum…
Whatever the end of this endeavor, be it bliss or torment, their destiny would be shared. He had accepted it. Why could she not?
She had come to Vauxhall for a reason, damn the garden’s cursed, dark lanes. And he had come to learn the truth. He would discover her reason, if not by her confession, then by witness to her action.
Once again, he set out in search. He knew better than to think he’d spot her by sight. Luck had smiled on him earlier. They’d spoken by the Thames last night. He had thought she might again seek the river’s comfort. She had, which meant he’d been on her mind. A small consolation—he didn’t want to imagine what could have happened if those dandies had recovered their wits. He was not sure if he should thank Maggie-the-Former-Prostitute.
Few ladies would have employed someone with Maggie’s past as an abigail. That alone proved Lavinia believed in second chances, did it not? What would make her believe they were ready for one of their own?
He stalked through the godforsaken maze of pathways. Sweat curled his hair even as cold air gnawed his ears. He checked the height and shape of every woman alone. His heart surged on a few false starts. Lovers, apparently, used the spectacle of the nine o’clock cascade to cover assignations.
He approached Grand Cross without a sign of his lady.
Yes,
his.
Or, she would be as soon as she saw sense.
A woman sauntered off the main walkway humming an off-key bawdy-house tune. His neck tingled. His reaction could mean nothing, but he trusted his senses when all else failed. He slowed, careful to keep his steps soundless.
The woman paused and examined a flowering bush with overly feigned nonchalance. From the flamboyant shape of the woman’s skirts and the indecent plunge of her neckline, he guessed the woman numbered among the demimonde. While she appeared entranced by the flower, Max concealed himself, sliding out of the light.
His eyes adjusted to the almost complete darkness. The doxy glanced in both directions before stepping into the brush. Two female shapes moved like spirits, deep into the cluster of trees. Through leaves and shadow, he discerned the vaguest outline. Instinct proved correct: the second was Lavinia.
“Madam,” Lavinia said, her voice layered with irony.
“Cease your sneer,” the doxy snorted. “My profession is as good as any and don’t shame me. Life’s the give and take of coin just like what we’re doin’ ’ere.”
“I doubt you capable of shame.”
“Comin’ from you, that’s a laugh.” The madam cackled with breath but no voice. She made a hideous, heaving sort of sound. “Do ye have my gold?”
“Twenty guineas, as promised,” Lavinia replied. “You smell like pipe.”
“What’s it to you?”
Max tried to see through the shadows, but his gaze was blocked by trees and brush. The muffled clink of coins echoed through the darkness.
“The gold I promised is all there,” Lavinia said.
“Patience, dearie, let me count,” the doxy replied.
What the devil was going on? Max closed his eyes, willing the swerving sensation in his gut to pass. Lavinia could not have paid someone to kill her husband. But why else would she be paying a woman of this person’s character?
“Hurry, Iphigenia,” Lavinia prodded. “Someone could be looking for me.”
“Hush!” the madam snapped. “There could be ears all about, fer all ye know. I will not use yer name, and I will be expectin’ the same. Now I have to start again!”
Fabric rustled, coins clinked—both sounds were blanketed by Lavinia’s heavy, panting breath.
“The money’s all here—” Iphigenia said.
“And then some. If the court officer comes asking about Vaile, you never met him and you have certainly never met me, is that clear?”
“As soon as me girls brought me word about poor Vaile, the price of my silence went up.”
“No,” Lavinia said firmly. “This was a one-time increase.”
“Never you mind, then. I will just take me information to the papers.”
“No!”
“Oh yes. The bloodsuckers will eat up all the tasty bits about your ladyship’s secret life. And the good folks of the
ton
will say it ain’t natural what ye’ve done.”
Max placed his palm on a tree and leaned forward.
“I warn you…” Lavinia said.
“What, you will shoot me as ye did him?”
Lavinia’s gasp ripped through Max as if they shared lungs.
“You
know
I did not shoot him. I was here waiting for you. And, by the way, where were
you
last evening? Perhaps it was you who murdered Vaile.”
“Please! Why would I kill me best customer? Don’t be tellin’ those tales. Ye accuse me, ye fool, and I bring yer secrets to light.” The madam snorted again. “More gold. Next month, regular-like.”
“I haven’t any.”
“I hear there’s a jury at the Red Lion. Maybe I will stop in.”
“You would not dare.”
“Don’t think ye can threaten me,” the madam growled low. “I know all about yer parties, and I know yer bringin’ in far more gold than twenty guineas.”
“I am in mourning. I cannot host any more parties.”
“Ask yer little friends—what do the Grub Street gents call ’em? Decadence and Scandal? They will give ye a cut.” Iphigenia leaned in. “Then there’s the little matter of yer trust.”
“How do you know about my trust?”
Iphigenia laughed again; this time the sound popped like an unpleasant cough. “I ain’t at Magdalene Hospital, I never got charity and I don’t give charity. I keep yer secrets ’cause ye pay me. If ye stop, they’re out. Bring twenty more in a fortnight, if ye know what’s good for ye. It is the best offer ye’ll get from me, now.”
“Twenty more next month but, after that, we are finished. I haven’t access to my own funds.”
“I have plenty of rooms. If yer so short of coin, maybe ye’d like to give a few gents a go? Vaile bragged about yer talents, but he lacked imagination, did he not? No matter, me customers will make up yer education. And so many of my customers already seen what ye got to give, masked or not.”
A vile taste suffused Max’s mouth. He stifled the urge to spit.
“Hush,” Lavinia whispered.
“Get yerself off yer high horse. Twenty more in a fortnight.” A twig cracked beneath her feet as Iphigenia turned to leave.
“I can try.”
“Ye’ll do more than try, me lady.” Iphigenia leaned over in a fit of hacking coughs. “Just think of the looks on the faces of all those lords and ladies when they discover how you played the lady by day while puttin’ on performances in my place at night. All those protestations…but yer an actress, I know. I ain’t so sure others don’t know, too. One look in those eyes of yers and I can see plain as day what yer hiding. You think yer foolin’ people?”
“Be silent.” Lavinia’s voice hissed through clenched teeth.
“Yer no better than I am. I whore for money, you whored for what?” Iphigenia paused. “Love? Takin’ coin makes me the smarter one, methinks.” She delivered her parting shot and tramped back out into the lane with her prize.
Max’s blood rushed in his ears. He remembered the whispers about Vaile.
A watcher
. But even a man like Vaile would not have sunk so low as to sully an unwilling wife with his appetites! Would he? Had he?
Max swallowed the nasty truth.
Yes, Vaile would. Yes, Vaile had.
Since Max had first met Lavinia’s shadowed eyes last night, he’d known something had snuffed her light. He’d asked if Vaile had beaten her, but never imagined that the man had violated his own wife.