Authors: Laura Kinsale
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General, #Regency
"Hmmm," Callie said. "Perhaps I will subjugate him and marry him after all, and keep
him enslaved to my smallest wish for years."
"Yes! Exactly like Sir Thomas," Hermey agreed.
"I daresay it would annoy Dolly to have him call on me."
Hermey's eyes widened. "Oh
yes
!" She caught Callie's arm. "Oh, you must. For that
alone."
Callie looked down at the letter. She blinked. "Yes," she said resolutely. "Yes, I think I
must."
The London physician did nothing to allay Trev's worst apprehensions. He had ordered
Jock to bring back the finest professional man he could locate, and the valet had gone
right to the top, it seemed. Dr. Turner came with excellent credentials, chief ly that he
was an esteemed friend of Sir Henry Halford, president of the Royal College and
physician in ordinary to the sovereign. According to Sir Henry's letter, Trev could repose
his full confidence in Dr. Turner, to whom Halford preferred to delegate his regular
practice while he was in attendance on the king.
With that strong a recommendation, there seemed little hope that Turner's discouraging
opinion could be dismissed as quackery. He didn't even try to replace the medicines with
his own concoctions, as every other doctor Trev had ever known had done. After the
examination, he sat with Trev in the parlor, writing instructions in a businesslike manner,
before he finally looked up and said in an even voice that the duke would be wise to help
his mother to put her affairs in order.
His meaning struck Trev like a blind-side blow in a sparring match. He had thought
tentatively of future concerns, of course. He'd even sent his letter just yesterday to the
French Chapel Royal in Little George Street, to request the attention of a priest to his
mother's illness. Merely as a comfort, because he knew she must have been unable to
attend any mass herself for some time. Certainly not for any idea of immediate danger.
But to have it said so frankly, by a medical man… Trev found he could not seem to grasp
the news. He only sat motionless, gazing at the physician's pen as it scratched across the
page.
When he finally composed himself far enough to protest that she had been improving
since he arrived, Dr. Turner merely nodded. That was characteristic of such cases, the
doctor said; the patient underwent a sudden burst of energy and activity just before the
final crisis, caused by migration of blood from the lungs to the heart. The winded speech
and high color in his mother's cheeks were a sign of this phase. It might last a few days or
a month, but she was much debilitated, and the doctor did not think she had a great deal
of strength to spare.
Dr. Turner had brought with him a nurse, and a surgeon to assist with bloodletting.
Trev was not fond of surgeons. He recalled too well the sensation of faintness and nausea
that had accompanied the bleeding treatments his grandfather had insisted upon until
Trev was old enough to bodily rebel. He had not let a knife or lancet touch him since the
age of eight, and he didn't intend to allow it again, however imprudent and eccentric that
might be. He didn't think his health had suffered a jot from keeping his ill humors shut up
inside, though he was willing to admit it might have contributed to his dubious character.
He imagined trying to speak to his mother about putting her affairs in order and felt a
familiar and potent urge come over him—the strong desire to be elsewhere. London. Or
Paris. Or better yet, Peking. He hardly realized that Dr. Turner was rising to depart, or
even felt the sleet on the back of his own neck as he escorted the physician under an
umbrella to lodging at the Antlers. He woodenly expressed his gratitude for the doctor's
forethought in making a professional nurse available for as long as his mother might
require it, and promised to convey all instructions to the local surgeon. When he stood in
the street again, he could think only that he needed fortification before he could face his
maman. Not to put a fine point on it, he needed to be deeply, blessedly, besottedly drunk.
Not at the Antlers, of course. Nowhere in Shelford. Feral instinct pointed him toward a
small alehouse that he recalled having passed on the Bromyard road. He was not a
habitual tippler; he liked to keep his wits about him too much for that, but barring Peking,
drink seemed the only recourse. He began to walk, holding the umbrella until the wind
threatened to collapse it, and then put his face down and strode into the stinging drops.
At the pace he set, it was hardly more than a quarter hour before he saw the low
thatched roof and cheerful smoke rising up through the sleet. As he pushed open the door,
the scent of damp, sweaty wool and home brew engulfed him, carried outside on the
rumble of laughter and talk.
He shoved his way in among the crowd of laborers and idle sportsmen. The Bluebell
was clearly one of those places deplored by moralists in lecture and print, where all levels
of society mingled on free terms. A convivial gathering to escape the weather,
relentlessly masculine but for a barmaid who could give back as good as she got—it was
just the situation Trev preferred at the moment. He used his smile to ruthless advantage,
obtaining a tankard from the barmaid and a jeer from the table she ignored on his behalf,
but he bought them all a round and dragged up a stool, downing his ale in one long
draught. He knew well enough how to purchase a welcome here.
The crowd was in the middle stages of alcoholic mirth, singing bawdy songs and
wagering on whether a carter could lift a table on his back with five men atop it, when a
pair of gentlemen joined the company. They stood near the door, peeling out of wet
overcoats and checking the oilskin covers on the locks of their rifles.
Trev left off watching the carter's losing struggle and glanced at the newcomers as they
hiked their guns into a rack. It took him a moment to recognize Major Sturgeon, dressed
as he was for shooting and wet to his skin. The two men seemed in excellent humor in
spite of the weather, hanging a bulging game-bag beside their guns. Sturgeon's
companion appeared to be some respected local squire. Men touched their forelocks and
vacated the inglenook by the fireplace, leaving the best seats open for the new arrivals.
Trev set his stool back on two legs, his elbows propped behind him on a table. The
others were laughing and yelling at the carter now, goading him for his defeat, while he
shouted back, red-faced, demanding another try and making himself look a fool on top of
a failure. He was clearly not the sort to take a ribbing.
Trev lifted his mug in the air and began to sing "The British Grenadiers." He raised his
voice over the carter's hot complaints. "Whenever we're commanded to storm the
palisades," he bellowed in good John Bull style, "our leaders march with firelocks, and
we with hand grenades!" By the time he got to
"tow, row, row, row, for the British
Grenadiers!
" he had his own table singing along at the top of their drunken lungs. He
finished off his ale and saw Sturgeon looking at him with a cold gaze. The rest of the
tavern had taken up the song in loud chorus, forgetting the carter in their new enthusiasm.
A familiar sense of waywardness possessed Trev, a moody antagonism riding on the lift
of ale and latent violence that he could always find in a place such as this. He f lipped an
insolent salute to Sturgeon. The officer only stared back. His good humor seemed to have
evaporated.
Trev wondered if the major had realized what basis they had for acquaintance beyond
their meeting at the Antlers. From his scornful expression, Sturgeon appeared to bear
Trev a marked dislike, considering only their brief contact the day before. So Trev
followed up the grenadiers with more songs in a military mode, offering a few British
camp tunes he'd learned from the wounded Light Bobs who'd hobbled alongside him in
the baggage train. None of those tattered infantrymen had been in a patriotic mood, and
the lyrics were all highly disrespectful, in addition to being lewd, taking cheerful and
deadly aim at worthless officers and lack of pay. As he'd expected, there were enough
worn-out soldiers in the Bluebell to approve this theme. They took it up with fervor.
Trev could see Sturgeon's face growing ever more rigid. As the major's lips curved in
disgust, Trev sat back, gulping ale, abandoning the thin skin of gentility. He knew this
wild temper in himself—he'd regret it later, but at the moment it was amusing. Sturgeon
deserved an insult, by God, for crying off on Callie.
With a wink and a lift of his mug toward his prey, Trev plunged into a song about a
deserter, singing merrily in celebration of cowardice. It was a lampoon of "The British
Grenadiers," set to the same melody, but the words turned upside down. Instead of
storming the palisades, this grenadier hero repaired to town a little too early in the verses,
and found a girl who cried "Hurrah, boys," and fondled his grenades. The twist in the
usual words had the men at Trev's table laughing so hard that they were spitting.
Trev could see the furious color rise in Sturgeon's face. Still he grinned and plowed into
the next stanza, where the craven grenadier turned tail, stuck branches in his
unmentionables to impersonate a bush, and ended up with a promotion. In the original
ditty, he'd been made into a grenadier sergeant, but Trev slotted "major of
dragoons
" into
the verse instead, which fit the cadence better anyway. His tablemates were almost
prostrate with hilarity. The man next to Trev gripped his shoulder as they all leaned
together and howled,
"Tow, row, row, row, row, row, row, for the British Grenadiers!"
He was well into the third round when the voices round him died away to a sudden
quiet. Trev recovered his balance as his neighbor let him go. His chair legs hit the f loor,
an audible thud in the new silence.
Sturgeon stood over him, white and stiff. "You puling French bastard."
Trev rose from his seat. "
Oui,
Monsieur?" he said politely and made an unsteady bow.
He had not expected to draw blood so soon.
"Shut up, you fool."
Trev gave him a sweet smile. "But what have I said to offend you?"
Someone giggled drunkenly behind him. Sturgeon's lip curled. "It's enough to know
what you are."
"Indeed." They were of a height, with Sturgeon at an advantage in weight. Trev drew a
breath to clear the ale fumes from his brain. "But explain further, my friend. What am I?"
"
Blackmail,
" Sturgeon hissed through his teeth, almost a whisper, so low that Trev
wasn't sure if he'd caught the word or if the major had called him a blackguard. He
wondered if he was more inebriated than he had thought.
"I fear you must speak more plainly," he said, "if you wish for everyone to hear."
The major drew his lips back over clenched teeth. He reached out and gripped Trev's
lapel, but said nothing.
Trev pried his fist loose, thrusting it away. "You may unhand me," he said coolly. "And
be sure that I know what
you
are. We've just been singing about it, eh?"
The major seemed to swell, the blood beating in his temple. "
Shut up
! You nauseating
bloodsucker, shut up."
"I'll tell you what's nauseating," Trev said in a conversational voice. "A man who
insults a lady and then comes skulking back and bleating for her favor. Keep your
distance, Sturgeon; she doesn't wish to see you."
"You dare!
You
!"
"Of course I dare. Do you suppose she has no friends to take her part?"
Sturgeon was dead white with rage. "By God, I ought to kill you, you slimy little
French worm."
"You son of a whore," Trev said calmly. And then he repeated it in French, for good
measure.
Sturgeon stood so still that Trev could see the faint tremor in his fingers as he yanked
off his glove. In the slow instant, Trev felt his own blood rise with a mad pleasure. A
decade of rage pressed in his chest, lost years, impotent shame that he had stood and
taken that blow from Callie's father and left her to be slighted by a man like this. With a
sense of fascinated doom, he watched Sturgeon fold his glove over his fingers and lift his
arm.
A duel, it was to be. He was that much an English gentleman.
The major slapped him across the face, the glove a brisk snap against his skin. "Name
your weapons."
Trev hauled back and struck with a right cross before Sturgeon's mouth was even
closed. He put his full weight and five years of ringside training and all his hatred for
arrogant English gentlemen behind it, smashing Sturgeon's jaw with an impact that he felt
all the way to his heart, deep down in his chest.
He caught the officer utterly off guard. Sturgeon went down backwards, sprawling
against a table. Men leaped up to stay clear. Someone grabbed Trev's arm, restraining
him. He turned round and threw another punch, hard to the gut of the major's esteemed
comrade. The man doubled over. Trev jerked free of some eager bystanders and saw his
tablemate hurl a blow at Sturgeon before the major could launch himself at Trev.