The Bride Hunt (26 page)

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Authors: Jane Feather

BOOK: The Bride Hunt
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Prudence took a sip of tea. It was impossible to have a conversation with someone so absolutely blind to another point of view. “I wasn’t running from anything, Gideon. I was leaving you to your own business. I assume it’s not every day that your ex-wife drops in on you?” Her eyebrows lifted. “I seem to remember you’d said she’d been absent for six years. Tell me, was Sarah pleased to see her mother after such a time?”

Gideon frowned at her tone. “I told you last night, it’s no concern of yours. I have my own business well in hand.” He passed a hand across his jaw, aware of her angry eyes, the set of her mouth. This was not going the way he’d intended, but she had to see reason. He made an effort to moderate his tone. “Sarah seemed puzzled by her mother’s arrival more than anything,” he said. “I would have preferred to have given her some warning. Harriet, however, doesn’t think of other people when she’s acting on impulse.”

“How long is she going to stay with you?” Her voice was clipped, her expression unwavering.

He shrugged. “Until she finds somewhere else, I suppose. She’s left her horse trainer and has nowhere to go at present.”

She watched him over the rim of her cup. “You’re not obligated to shelter an ex-wife, are you?”

“No, not legally. But ethically I think I am,” he said. “Harriet isn’t very good at taking care of herself. She doesn’t have a practical bone in her body. But there’s no reason why that should affect us, Prudence.”

“Of course it affects us!” she exclaimed. “Either you’re divorced or you’re not, Gideon. I’m not having an affair with a man who’s living with another woman, whatever the circumstances. How is Sarah going to make sense of it? Her mother has taken up residence again, but her father is seeing another woman?” She shook her head and set down her empty cup.

“Sarah’s a sensible girl. She’ll accept what I tell her.”

“It’s her
mother,
” Prudence stated. “That’s a relationship you clearly know nothing about. She’s going to have a loyalty towards her just by the very fact of Harriet’s being her mother.” She held up her hands in an almost defensive gesture. “I’m not going anywhere near that, Gideon. It’s not my business. It seems to me you have more than enough on your plate right now without complicating matters with a love affair. Let’s just walk away from it,
now.

“I’m not going to allow Harriet to interfere with my life,” he said tautly, his mouth thinned. “Any more than she already has done. You are in my life, Prudence, and you’re going to stay in it.”

“Not at your say-so.” She threw aside the covers and sprang to her feet, her nightgown swirling around her ankles. “I have had enough of your ultimatums, Gideon. I make my own choices, and I do not choose to be involved in your life at this moment. Or possibly at any moment,” she added. “We’re so different. You can’t even begin to see my point of view.” She shook her head, setting her hair swirling in a copper cloud against the white of her nightgown. “You’re not even entertaining the possibility that I might be right . . . that I might know more about daughters and their mothers than you do.”

He stood up, caught her shoulder, his fingers pressing through the thin cotton, feeling the sharp bone beneath. “If you insist, I’ll send Harriet away.”

“You’re not listening to me,” she cried, jerking away from his hold. “I don’t insist on anything. Do you really imagine I would encourage you to throw a dependent woman onto the streets? Who do you think I am?”

She stalked to the window, unconsciously rubbing her shoulder where the warmth of his fingers lingered. She stood with her back to him, staring out at the dim light of dawn. “I am not involved in your life. I cannot be. As you so rightly said, it is not my concern. Only not the way you mean, it’s the way I mean. I want no part of it . . . and no part of a man who thinks a simple statement that there’s nothing to worry about is all that’s needed to keep a nice little love affair humming smoothly.”

She spun around to face him. “I am not a nice little love affair to be kept on the sidelines.”

“Oh, for God’s sake,” Gideon said, his own anger now riding high. “You’re not making any sense to me.”

“No, I’m sure I’m not,” she said bitterly. “That’s exactly the point I’m making.”

“I have to go to work.” He grabbed up his attaché case. “We’ll talk about this later.”

“There’s nothing to talk about,” Prudence said. “Are you still prepared to be our barrister?”

He had his hand on the door. He turned and stared at her, a white shade around his mouth, a little muscle twitching in his cheek. “Are you suggesting I would allow my personal feelings to interfere in my professional life?”

Big mistake, Prudence realized belatedly. She’d forgotten that whatever else she chose to impugn, she should steer clear of his professionalism. “No,” she said. “I was just thinking that it might be difficult if you had hostile feelings towards your client.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. I don’t have hostile feelings towards you.” The door banged on his departure.

And that was a piece of gross self-deception, if ever she’d heard one.
Prudence flopped down on the bed again. Everything about that encounter left a sour taste. She had not expressed herself clearly and Gideon had in his habitual fashion tried to carry the issue on the tide of his own confidence and sense of superiority. They were not made to be lovers.

She lay back against the pillows, closing her eyes. She didn’t blame him for wanting to protect Harriet—indeed, she applauded him. But she could certainly blame him for not beginning to understand that it might be a problem for her. Oh, it was all part and parcel of what was wrong with this relationship. Two people who had such vigorous differences of opinion and character were doomed as a couple from the start. Maybe it was good to break it off before they were in too deep. But she still felt hollow and disappointed, and in a strange way rather lost.

         

“I’m so confused,” Prudence said to her sisters later that morning. “He talks about
falling
for me, about how much I’d like his daughter’s governess, he takes it perfectly for granted that I should help Sarah with her homework, he cooks dinner for me, for God’s sake, and then his ex-wife turns up and he tells me not to worry my pretty little head over it because it’s none of my business, he’ll take care of it all, and we should just carry on as before.”

She refilled her coffee cup. “How could he not see the essential contradiction in that?”

Her sisters had run out of responses to a question that had been repeated in various forms throughout the morning. “I think from now until the case is over you have to see him only when it relates to the libel suit,” Constance said, as she had done before. “It’ll clear the way to keep things professional. Let him sort out his own domestic affairs, and when the case is over and his situation has been resolved, then you can decide how you feel.”

“However it’s resolved,” Chastity said rather gloomily, “we can forget about finding him a bride. He’s not going to be open to the hunt if he’s got an ex-wife living in his house. I suppose we’ll have to settle for the eighty-twenty split.”

“Twenty percent is better than bankruptcy,” Prudence pointed out. “Anyway, for all we know there may be no damages. We might just count ourselves lucky to manage a successful defense with no damages awarded.”

“That is dismally true,” Constance said. “But at least the barrister will get paid by the other side if that happens, so I suggest we let him get on with his work and Prue should put her feelings about the whole business aside until it’s over.”

Prudence sighed and flung herself against the sofa cushions. “I know how I’ll feel,” she stated. “It was a mistake ever to get involved with him, and I knew it from the word
go
. I just didn’t listen to my rational self. We’re totally incompatible, we see the world from opposite poles. So now I’ll stop obsessing about it, it’s just that—” She broke off. “No, I’m not going to say another word. Let’s practice my French accent. Try to think up some really unpleasant questions about the publication, make them really aggressive, and see if I can hold up.”

They worked until luncheon and Prudence forced herself to concentrate, but the image of Harriet Malvern would not leave her. Such an exquisitely beautiful woman. How could any other woman hope to compete? But she wasn’t competing . . . of course she wasn’t. She had no interest in extending her brief fling with Gideon. Particularly now.

She’d brought one thing away from it, after all. She’d discovered the joys of sex.

“Prue? Prue?”

“Oh, sorry. Where were we?”

“Your eyes were closed,” Chastity told her.

“I must have been dozing.”

“Dreaming, rather,” Constance observed.

         

“Well, any luck?” Gideon asked his clerk as Thadeus came into the inner chamber.

“Oh, yes,” Thadeus said. “I could find no records anywhere of the legal existence of a company called Barclay Earl and Associates. I checked with the solicitors who drew up the lien on Ten Manchester Square. They are, of course, not the same firm the earl is employing in his suit . . . the solicitors who have briefed Sir Samuel. Their reputation is, of course, impeccable.” He coughed discreetly into his hand. “The other firm . . . from the shady side of the street, I would have said, Sir Gideon.”

Gideon nodded and lit a cigarette. “Good,” he said. “Go on.”

“They were a little reluctant to be forthcoming, but I managed to convince them that my principal in this case would take a lack of cooperation amiss, that maybe there were aspects of their practice that might not stand up to scrutiny . . . I mentioned the faint possibility of a subpoena in the case.”

“Ah. A useful stick, Thadeus.” Gideon leaned back in his chair and blew a careful smoke ring. “Any holes in the document?”

Thadeus shook his head a little sadly. “Not exactly, sir. But if the company that holds the lien is not a legal entity, then . . .”

Gideon nodded. “Then the document is a fraud. Anything else?”

“I did discover that this particular firm had been involved in several previous dealings for Barclay Earl and Associates. They did have documents showing the establishment of the company, but, as I said, nothing to indicate that the company was legally registered.” He laid a folder on the table in front of the barrister. “In fact, they as good as admitted that they had failed to register the company as a legal entity.”

Gideon glanced down at them. “So, these papers were merely a blind to fool the unwary, or the unaware.”

“That is my conclusion, Sir Gideon.”

Gideon sat forward abruptly. “All right. That’s good, Thadeus. It gives us what we need. Thank you.” He opened the folder as the clerk backed discreetly from the chamber.

Gideon flipped through the documents, then he pushed the folder away from him with an impatient gesture.
Of all the intransigent, stubborn women.

Maybe she did know more than he did about mothers and daughters, but from the mess the Duncan sisters were in at the moment, they all appeared to know remarkably little about what constituted a good relationship between fathers and daughters. Trust came to mind.

Of course Harriet’s reappearance was a nuisance, but the fact that he both saw it and treated it as no more than that was no reason for Prudence to start prattling about the care and feeding of dependent women.

She had to be one of the most exasperating, opinionated women he’d ever met. Harriet seemed almost restful in comparison. One couldn’t possibly contemplate living with a woman whom one disliked most of the time. Except that the rest of the time . . . and maybe it wasn’t
most
of the time. And anyway, where had the idea about living with her come from?

With a muttered oath, he pulled paper and pen towards him. He was her barrister and at this moment that was
all
he was. And all he wanted to be.

         

“What does he say?” Chastity asked somewhat tentatively after her sister seemed to have been spending an inordinate length of time reading a one-page script. “It’s from Gideon, isn’t it?”

Prudence scrunched up the envelope and tossed it onto the hall table. “Yes,” she said. “Just details about the trial.”

“In that case, may we see?” Constance asked, turning from the mirror, where she’d been putting on her hat before leaving for home.

“Certainly,” her sister said with a shrug. “There’s nothing personal in it. He does stop short of calling me Miss Duncan and signing himself Malvern, but that’s as personal as it gets.” She held out the letter.

“That’s good, isn’t it?” Chastity asked, as tentatively as before.

“Yes, of course it is,” Prudence said on a rather testy note. “It’s business only, as we agreed.”

Constance refrained from glancing at Chastity. Prudence would be bound to intercept the look and she was as sensitive at the moment as if she’d lost a layer of skin. Indeed, if Constance had been asked for her opinion, she would have said her younger sister was frightened out of her mind. And not about the court case. But then, she hadn’t been asked for her opinion.

She perused the contents of the letter. “It looks promising, if you can decipher the legalese,” she said. “Barclay’s so-called company had no legal standing, and therefore had no legal basis for demanding payments from Father. Gideon seems to be saying that he’s fairly confident he can go after Barclay on the stand and rattle him enough to get some kind of an admission.” She passed the letter over to Chastity.

“Yes, that was my impression,” Prudence agreed.

Chastity looked up from the letter. “He doesn’t suggest seeing us again until the actual morning of the trial. Don’t you need more preparation, Prue?” She looked anxiously at her sister.

Prudence shook her head. “I know what he wants, he made it very clear. A warmhearted, sympathetic woman who will appeal to the hearts and minds of twelve jurymen, and will absolutely refrain from offending them in any way. I’ll have to bat my eyelashes and mutter of lot of
oo-la-la
s and
oui, monsieur
s.”

“They won’t see you batting anything under the veil,” Chastity pointed out.

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