Authors: Patricia Veryan
He proffered an instrument resembling a small flute.
Taking it, her hand slightly trembling, Rebecca said in a faraway voice, “How kind in you, sir. He will be pleased.”
“One can but hope you also will be pleased.” He grinned faintly in response to her startled look. “It makes bird calls. I thought 'twould be a pity if he failed to benefit from all theâah, instruction he has received.”
“I most appreciate your kindness to my family,” Snowden imparted with frigid formality. “Although my sister is far from home, she is far from being unprotected, though I am sure I need not point that out, de Villars.”
Rebecca's heart skipped a beat. Snowden's partiality for this man had obviously undergone an abrupt change when he caught him on the doorstep. De Villars' eyes were gleaming with mockery, and Snow's temper was so quick.⦠She could have wept with relief when Anthony erupted into the room, closely followed by a rosy-cheeked Patience. The little girl went at once to fasten her chubby fingers on de Villars' spotless coat, and with a joyous whoop, Anthony flung himself at his uncle. For a moment all was happy confusion, then Mrs. Boothe came in with George Melton behind her, and more greetings were exchanged.
Almost, Rebecca forgot the menace constituted by Trevelyan de Villars. Glancing to him, she was surprised. His expression was sombre as he watched them; for a moment she almost fancied to see sadness there. Then, he winked, blew her a kiss, and having removed Patience's clasp from the skirts of his coat, slipped quietly outside.
Rebecca drew a breath of relief. The danger was averted. At least, for this time.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
“Not kept my eye on her?” His face flushed with indignation, Lord Graham Fortescue faced Boothe across the dining table in his cosy flat and flung his fork ringingly onto the plate of roast beef recently set before him. “If that ain't the outside of enough!” he protested. “You come bursting in here in the middle of m'dinner, snorting, and smoking at the ears, with not a thought for what your mischievous sister has put me through these past two weeks!”
“Dashitall, Forty,” Boothe intervened, his face dark with anger. “You know blasted well I'd no choice in having to leave in such a flurry! I asked you, as a friend, to guard her during my absence, and I come back, purely to see if Johnnyâ Well, never mind that. I come back and find Becky cavorting on Ward's preserves, withâ”
“Cavorting on hisâwhat?” Fortescue interrupted, leaning forward curiously.
“His
preserves,
damn you!”
“Oh. No need to be so starchy. I thought you meant she wasâ”
“Well, I didn't. No thanks to you!”
The butler came in, and conversation languished as Boothe was provided with a plate and various comestibles. His guest satisfied, my lord motioned the butler from the room. “I'll tell you what it is, Snow,” he said soberly. “That girl is a veritable will-o'-the-wisp! There ain't no keeping a check-rein on her, for she's gone before you know she's even thinking on it! And if you cared to ask, you would learn I've spent the past week galloping the length and breadth of the south country, trying to find her! She told her housekeeper she was gone to visit a friend. When she didn't come back after a day or so, I tried to get more out of the woman, and she threw her apron over her head and went into a blubbering that was enough to make any man of sensitivity run for his life!” Fortescue raised a forkful of beef, eyed his friend aggrievedly over it, reiterated his belief that Snowden should have taken Mrs. Rebecca with him, and conveyed meat to mouth.
“Taken her
with
me?” echoed Boothe, his own fork suspended. “Forty, you're wits to let! How the deuce could I have taken her with me? She don't have the wisp of a suspicion why I went trotting up there.” A grim look came into his tired eyes. “And what's more, she ain't going to have, can I help it!”
The indignation faded from his friend's mild features. Boothe, his lordship recollected, was in the devil of a dilemma. Not envying him it, he said a soothing, “Well, now she's safe back in Town again. No damage done.”
“Oh, no. None. Onlyâshe ain't.”
Lord Fortescue goggled at him. “You never
left
her there?”
“Why not?” Boothe evaded his eyes. “Anthony is in alt in the wilderness, and Becky and my aunt reside in a jolly nice little house some distance from the main pile.” He sank his teeth into a roast potato and said rather indistinctly, “'Sides, old Ward's a good fellow, as you said. No problem there.”
Fortescue mulled over the several warnings that came to mind and, with rare shrewdness, decided there was nothing to be gained by providing fuel for a potentially disastrous fire. Therefore, he replied with only a trace of uncertainty, “No. Well, I'm for Brooks' and some cards. You're more than welcome to stay here tonight, dear old boy.”
Snowden thanked him, but declined, saying with a somewhat heightened colour that he had an assignation for the evening and that he was staying in John Street while Rebecca was away. “Never can tell who might break in whilst the knocker's off the door.”
They exchanged sober glances. His lordship broke the short silence, exclaiming, “The devil's in it if you're after that titian-haired witchery again! Jove, but I understood she'd set her cap forâ”
“Why, that's just it,” Boothe interposed with a knowing wink. “So long as her cap ain't set for
me,
there's no danger, eh? And she's a toothsome morsel, Forty. A very toothsome morsel indeed.”
His lordship waved his fork and intoned broodingly, “Is a morsel I'd not dare crave. Have a care, Snow!”
Boothe laughed merrily, finished a most excellent supper, and, feeling much restored, parted from his friend in high good humour.
An hour later, seated on a secluded bench in Vauxhall Gardens, the “toothsome morsel” fast clasped in his arms, he claimed a kiss, and chuckled when his lady reached up to straighten the glittering mask she wore, and glanced uneasily along the moonlit path. “Snow,” said Mrs. Monahan, pushing him away, “
anyone
might come down here! But no! Behave, you naughty boy!”
“I
am
behaving,” he said, pulling her closer. “I'll wager you do not treat de Villars so!”
She stiffened. “Do not mention that creature and his silly wagers! I vowâ” She broke off. Behind the mask, her lovely green eyes widened. In some confusion, she urged that they return to the masquerade before they were missed. Boothe, however, was predictably intrigued by both words and attitude. “What wagers?” he asked. “Come on, Rosemary! You cannot dangle the carrot and then back away! What mischief is de Villars about? Something smoky, I warrant. Concerns a lady, eh?”
Affecting agitation, Mrs. Monahan pulled free of his embrace and got to her feet. “I am a total ninny,” she confessed, busily straightening her pink domino. “But that I should have let anything slip to you, of allâ” And, again, with an irked little exclamation, she broke off and started along the path.
Coming up with her, Boothe caught her arm and drew her to a halt. The laughter was gone from his fine eyes, and a blue glare transfixed her. He said in a harsh voice, “I'm not the quickest brain, ma'am, but I'm more than seven! This concerns my sister Parrishâno?”
The lady uttered a moan of dismay and strove (not very hard) to break free.
Tightening his grip, Boothe grated, “I'll know the whole of it, if you please. Rebecca's far from being up to every move on the board, but she's a good chit, and I'll not have her name bruited about by such a one as Trevelyan de Villars. He engaged in a wager, I take it? With you, ma'am?”
“Of course not! It was with Ward, andâ Oh,
now
see what you have made me say! I think you are very clever to take me off stride in that cunning way, but I shall not say another word. However you may seek to trick me.” Despite this brave speech, her voice was unsure and a convincing alarm lurked in the green eyes.
Snowden Boothe smiled a grim smile. And blundered deeper into the silken web.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
At midnight Brooks' Club was crowded. The card tables were well patronized; a large bet had just been recorded as to whether or not it would rain on Midsummer's Eve, and a noisy discussion was under way in front of the lounge fireplace anent the possibilities of Bonnie Prince Charlie's rallying his followers and essaying another strike against the Crown. In the south corner of the large room, Lord Graham Fortescue smoothed a wrinkle from his silk-clad arm, even as the wrinkles in his brow deepened. Beside him, his usually placid features reflecting anxiety, George Melton muttered, “I fear it is but a matter of time before Boothe hears of it. And when he doesâGad!”
“Of all the caper-witted starts! Who the deuce put it about? De Villars?”
Mr. Melton pursed his lips. “I cannot allow that to be the case. Whatever one may say of him, he is a gentleman and of unquestionable honour. To put about a rumour such as this is in very poor taste, andâ”
“And I'd best come at the root of it before Snow does, or we shall have aâ Ah! Here is our man now!” Fortescue waved his handkerchief to a new arrival.
De Villars, elegant as always in a splendid bottle-green coat embroidered in shades of lime and olive, his small clothes impeccable, a great emerald winking amongst the Dresden lace at his throat, turned his quizzing glass upon them, then wandered over. “Hello, Forty,” he said with his bored smile. “If you mean to persuade me in the matter of my Arabian, I warn you I'll not sell.”
“No, it's a deal more serious thanâ” His lordship's glance shifted and became dismayed. “No! Now, Snowâ” he began, anxiously.
De Villars was seized by the arm and wrenched around. His face distorted with rage, Snowden Boothe snarled, “I mislike your wagers, sir!” And with one well-placed fist, he knocked de Villars down.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The morning air was warm and fragrant, the birds sang blithely, the bees buzzed about their eternal collecting, and Rebecca hummed as she wandered among the rose bushes, basket on arm and a fair-sized bouquet already cut. Two days had passed since Snowden had come and gone. Two quiet, balmy days. A little dull, but Anthony, bless him, was having the time of his life and already looked less frail, and Patience, whom he privately stigmatized as being a millstone around his neck, trotted after him with total adoration, as sweetly enduring his superior attitude as her name might imply, and perhaps sensing that the boy secretly enjoyed her companionship. Her devotion was not without peril. She had twice fallen into the pond and only yesterday had become petrified with fear, having clambered up a tree after him, so that a groom had been summoned to climb up and retrieve her. Neither of the ladies was greatly alarmed by such escapades. Any small girl growing up with older children was subjected to such risks, and seldom the worse for them. Rebecca could not but wonder, however, what Sir Peter might have said had he seen the little girl stranded in the tree. He was such a decorous person. De Villars, now ⦠She smiled. That Wretched Rake would shrug a disinterested shoulder and drawl that it would do the brat good; and then keep an eagle eye on her to ensure she did not fall! Andâgood heavensâwhy should she ascribe such kindly impulses to the man? Her smile faded, and the hand outstretched to the red rose paused. Her feelings for de Villars were changing. Why that should be so was more thanâ
“Rebecca! Oh, thank heaven I have found you!”
Letitia ran to her across the lawns. Rebecca had never seen her other than calm, poised, and fully in command of herself. Now, the breath was hurried, the gentle voice agitated, and tears glinted on the long lashes. “I came ⦠just as quickly as I could.” Miss Boudreaux's lips trembled pitifully. “Yourâyour brotherâ” But she could not continue and gripped Rebecca's outstretched hand, while her tears overflowed.
Rebecca felt chilled. “Snow?” she said in a breathless voice. “Has there been an accident?”
“No. But ⦠I am so frightened! I tried and tried to stop them, but it is useless. Andâand if they meet⦔ Again, her words were suspended by a choked sobbing.
Trying to control her own terrors, Rebecca put an arm about this unexpected visitor and led her to a stone bench. “Sit down for a minute, and then I shall take you to the cottage for a nice cup of tea. My poor dear, you are white as a sheet. Thereâthat is better. I fear I can guess what has happened. Snowden hasâhas got himself involved in a duel with ⦠someone?” Letitia nodded, teardrops scattering. Dreading the answer, Rebecca asked, “Is itâwith your cousin, de Villars?” Again, that convulsive nod. Rebecca closed her eyes, fear gripping her heart with fingers of ice.
“I am so sorry,” gulped Letitia. “I never thought I would ⦠would give way like this.” She dried her eyes with a hand that shook. “I was all right, driving up here. Butâoh! If I should ⦠lose ⦠both of them!” She began to tear at the fine cambric and lace of her handkerchief.
Rebecca thought in a numb, detached fashion, “So she does love Snow. Poor girl. She has no least chance with him!” Impatient with such digressions, she said, “I'll admit I had feared that. Do you know how it happened? But I suppose you could notâgentlemen are so ridiculously secretive about their savageries.”
Letitia gripped her hands tightly, as though striving to overcome her emotions. “I was not meant to know,” she quavered. “Indeed, I discovered it quite by accident. I chanced to encounter my brother when I was leaving a dinner party last night. He was coming out of Brooks' Club, and detached me from my friends, saying he had something to discuss with me. He walked home beside my chair, but said nothing other than the merest commonplaces. I was never more astonished than when he took me to the front door and said his goodnights. When I asked him what it was he had wished to speak about, he gave me some nonsensical answer about having a lot of work to do.” The troubled grey eyes lifted; Miss Boudreaux said earnestly, “Fitz is Chaplain to the Duchess of Waterbury. She is the dearest old thing and has never made the least demand of him that would cause him to work late at night.”