Mrs. Mercer opened her fan. “We shall, my lord. You may rely upon it.”
“Sophie,” he said, “I'm sure you will let Mrs. Mercer know if anything has been left behind?”
“Yes, I will. Thank you, Mrs. Mercer.” She licked her lips. “There are a few things I'd like to fetch immediately.”
Mercer stood up. “While your wife attends to that,” he said, “might we have a word in private, my lord?”
He followed Mercer to his office. He didn't wait for the other man to come to the point. “I am happy to show you the contracts drawn up when I first made my intentions known to Sophie's brother. I see no need to change them, though I invite you to offer your opinion and suggestions if you feel she is not adequately protected.”
“That would be good of you, my lord. She is our relative, after all, and I am obliged to look out for her interests, despite that you have taken my wife and me quite by surprise with this news.”
“I understand.”
“You will also understand when I ask you to please make provisions for her in your will without delay. Her brother was remiss.”
“That, sir, has been done.”
Mercer clasped his hands behind his back, and for a moment Banallt was strongly reminded of John. “Her sensibilities are delicate, my lord. You never saw a woman so utterly shattered as was Mrs. Evans when we arrived at Havenwood.”
“I was at her brother's funeral.”
“I understand you were present when he was killed.”
“I was.”
Mercer pinned him with his gaze. He nodded. “Mrs. EvansâI beg your pardon, Lady Banalltâand my wife have not been bosom companions. They are, I fear, two different sorts of women, and one's wife... Ah, but you have been married before. As has she. So perhaps you both understand that marriage is not without its moments of imperfection.” He poured a brandy for them both. “I'm curious, my lord, whether you intend to seek a judicial review of Mr. Mercer's bequests.”
Banallt drank half his brandy before he answered. “Is that why you kept her here? I wondered.”
“I'm sure I don't know what you mean.”
“Why, to prevent her from pursuing the legacy her brother intended her to have.” He put down the snifter with a thunk. “The late John Mercer's solicitor could hardly advise her to seek counsel on the outcome. That would have been a dereliction of his duties. Though she would eventually have thought of it herself.”
“He never executed the documents.”
“You ought to have seen his wishes carried out. A gentleman would have.”
“To the tune of fifty thousand pounds? Or more?” Mercer's expression hardened. “I should think not. What would a woman do with such a sum of money?”
The Mercers and Havenwood were no longer his affair. He clasped his hands behind his back. “If my wife wishes to know you in future, I will not forbid her. She is free to make her own connections. But be assured, Mr. Mercer, that
I
do not wish to know you or your wife.”
“But the moneyâ”
“May you choke on it, sir.”
Banallt turned on his heel and went to fetch his bride.
Thirty
WHEN CASTLE DARMEAD CAME INTO VIEW, SOPHIE'S stomach somersaulted. The sight was familiar to her, though she'd usually approached by the field and not the long, curving drive. She felt a pang of recognition when the phaeton passed the spot where, as a girl, she'd left the field for the graveled drive, just before the outer wall that circled the castle proper and marked the boundary of the estate. Someone had begun to clear the vines clinging to the wall. They passed between the huge black double gates that hadn't been closed in years. Smoke came from one of the chimneys in the guard tower.
When Banallt came to a stop at the top of the drive, a groom ran to the phaeton and held the horses while Banallt got down. He came around for her, but before he did, he instructed the servant that the trunk in the boot was to be brought inside to the room adjoining his. “Shall we, madam?”
She clutched Banallt's arm as they walked to the entrance. The gray stone exterior was familiar. Little had changed since she'd last been here, more than ten years ago now. She knew the structure almost as well as she did Havenwood. The front door had a fresh coat of black paint. The iron filigree that extended from the hinges across the door had been scrubbed. Her husband opened the door.
Sophie's breath hitched when he caught her in his arms and carried her into Darmead. She laughed because he tickled her. As they went in, the butler appeared from a pantry to the left. King's eyes widened when he saw her in Banallt's arms. Other than that, he was impassive. As if he saw his employer do such things every day. Inside, Banallt slowly put her down. “I promised I'd have you home before supper, Lady Banallt,” he whispered.
“Ma'am,” King said. Sophie slipped off her coat, and Banallt handed over his, too, along with his hat and gloves. “My lord. I trust you had a pleasant outing?”
“Yes, we had. Very pleasant indeed. And now, King,” Banallt said, “you shall be the first here at Castle Darmead to know our news.”
The butler tugged on his damaged ear. “Speak to my good side, then, milord.” He smoothed the lay of Banallt's coat over his arm.
“Mrs. Evans is Mrs. Evans no more. I have married her.” Banallt's smile lit the room, and seeing it sent Sophie's heart flying right toward him. “From this moment forward, you will address her as Lady Banallt.”
King's eyes fixed on Sophie, and she felt a shock at the intensity of his assessment of her. “Married, my lord?” he said in even tones. He didn't sound the least surprised. “To this slip of a girl?”
“Yes, King,” Banallt said.
King's grin broke open. “Why, then, congratulations, my lord!” King grabbed Sophie's hand in both of his and pressed hard. “Lady Banallt. I hope you know you've gone and married yourself to the best man in all of England, that's all.”
She drew back her hand. The ring Banallt had put onto her fourth finger was an unaccustomed weight. She'd taken off Tommy's ring the night she saw him with Mrs. Peters, and she had believed she'd never again wear such a symbol of pain and futility. Now, her finger was once more encircled by a band of gold. Lord Banallt was her husband. The idea refused to strike her as anything but impossible. “Thank you, King,” she said. Inside, she shook, and she was astonished at how normal her voice sounded. “I'm glad you think so.”
Banallt put a hand on her waist and drew her close. “Gather the staff, King, so I may introduce my countess in, say, half an hour? Her things are being sent on from Havenwood. When they arrive, they're to be put in the north tower wing.”
“Milord.” King bowed.
His countess. My heavens. When Banallt said that, he meant her. And King would eventually turn his dark eyes on her and see she was an imposter and that her marriage was a fraud, that she didn't love him and deserved not congratulations, but contempt.
Sophie felt her life rushing headlong to the end of the world, and there wasn't anything she could do to stop it. She wished she were still at Havenwood, or anywhere but at Castle Darmead, where her past, present, and future had collided. The thought of living the rest of her days with Banallt was terrifying and electrifying at the same time. But, of course, he wouldn't stay, would he? She wasn't really going to live with Banallt. And if he was sent to Wellington ... She refused to think what might happen.
Banallt led her inside, and Sophie's sense of unreality increased tenfold. In a blink, she traveled back in time to the Darmead of her girlhood. For the first time since she'd married Tommy she was someplace she belonged, someplace that wanted her, where she wanted to be. A shiver went down her spine. As a girl she'd confidently told anyone who would listen that one day she would marry the Earl of Banallt and come to live at Darmead.
And somehow she had.
She was Lord Banallt's wife. Her body felt as light as air, and her hand trembled in her husband's as he led her inside.
Long uninhabited except by a caretaking staff, Darmead retained much of its medieval character, which was why Sophie had so loved to visit as a girl. She'd been mad about history even then, always making up stories set in years long past. Visiting Castle Darmead had, for her, been like stepping hundreds of years back in time. How many dozens of stories had Darmead inspired in her girlish head? Knights in armor, dragons, Viking hordes, reivers from Scotland; in her imagination Castle Darmead had withstood innumerable assaults from villains of all kind.
Almost everything was as she recalled. The arched windows she so loved and the crossed swords hanging on the walls waiting for a warrior's hand were still there. The gray brick seemed the loveliest color in the world, and the passageway to the butler's pantry as deliciously mysterious as ever. Her head swivelled to take in the vaulted ceiling overhead and the carved wooden minstrel gallery. Darmead had always made her feel like she'd been plunked in the middle of a story she just had to tell. Well. She had been. Only this time, the story wasn't one she'd made up.
Banallt took her upstairs. Naturally, she'd been in every room in the castle multiple times, including the dungeon. Once the caretakers had gotten used to her visits and her begging for more stories about the castle and its history, they'd given her free reign. She knew, therefore, that originally and today, the rooms in this wing were reserved for family and were made up of a series of connecting rooms: the great chamber, the presence chamber, the guard chamber, a withdrawing chamber, and the privy chamber. When the first earl lived here in 1651, he'd converted the chambers to something reasonably more modern. The lord's room she assumed must be Banallt's room and was the original privy chamber. That room led to a withdrawing room, which in turn opened onto what was to be her room.
“Freshen up, Sophie,” Banallt said. He squeezed her hand. “Then we'll go downstairs and meet the staff.”
When she was here as a girl, all but a few of the rooms had been closed up. The rest were barely furnished, with bed hangings long gone, rugs rolled up, the furniture covered, fireplaces empty for hundreds of years. She remembered the black larch paneling that covered the walls floor to ceiling, carved with interlocking squares. The marble mantel was precisely as she recalled, columned on either side, with lozenges and the original viscount's crest carved above. The ceiling, too, was carved with the same interlocking pattern as the walls.
But she'd never seen the room furnished; her imagination had once supplied the details now before her. An azure and cream carpet, blue velvet curtains tied back with tasseled silk ropes, shuttered windows open to a view of Duke's Head, miles distant. The furniture was old-fashioned and rather dark. But there were modern touches here and there. A series of still lifes hung on the wall: fruit, flowers, a desk with sheet music. The four-poster bed was hung with brilliant blue silk and covered with a black silk coverlet embroidered with gold garlands. She would sleep in that bed tonight.
She removed her gloves to wash her face in the basin. A soft towel had been laid by. She tidied her hair and sank onto a chair by the fireplace, trying to get herself firmly grounded in what had happened. She wasn't certain she could. Her old life and her present one collided and left her not knowing whether to be giddy at being at Darmead, glad to be away from Havenwood with its unhappy memories, or questioning her sanity for having married the Earl of Banallt. She held up her hands and watched them shake. A wedding band was on her finger. Banallt had put it there himself. She managed herself and walked through the withdrawing room. There was a door directly across from the one she'd entered through. Banallt was on the other side. She didn't knock on the door as she'd intended.
Instead, she went downstairs, where she met the housekeeper. “Welcome to Castle Darmead, Lady Banallt,” the housekeeper said with the same Scottish burr Sophie recalled. Her dark curls were tinged with gray now. “Or should I say, welcome back, young lady.” She clasped her hands over her apron. “I never did imagine you'd be marrying the master, Miss Sophie, yet here you are. Every inch of you Lady Banallt.” She smiled. “How many times did you beg for a tour when you were still young Miss Mercer of Havenwood?”
“At least a thousand,” Sophie said. She was hollow inside. She had no substance, she was empty, and if King hadn't seen her for a fraud, Mrs. Layton would. Her clear blue eyes missed nothing.
“Yes, it must have been at least a thousand.” Mrs. Layton threw her arms around Sophie. “We heard about your brother,” she whispered, hugging Sophie close. “I said a prayer for you both.”
“Thank you.”
Holding on to Sophie's shoulders, she took a step back and looked her up and down. “And now look at you. Grown up and mistress of the castle, exactly as you said.”
“I never forgot the stories you told me, Mrs. Layton. I never forgot you.”
“My dear. Lady Banallt. You're the same lovely girl you always were, aren't you?”
Sophie lifted her arms. “It still quite takes my breath,” she said. “All of this. It doesn't seem real. None of it does.”
“Ah,” said a voice from above them.
Banallt walked to the front of the minstrel gallery and looked down, fiercely handsome and disreputable, what with his too-long hair and his coat unbuttoned to reveal his silver waistcoat. He put his hands on the top rail. “Lady Banallt.” His eyes lingered on Sophie. “Welcome to Castle Darmead.”
Sophie knew a narrow spiral staircase led from the great hall to the first tower, with landings for the minstrel gallery and then the bedchambers and on the other side, a large parlor with an enormous fireplace. More bedchambers were on the third floor, and if you climbed to the very top of the tower, you found not an observatory or an office, but a storage room full of broken furniture and bits of armor.