Valentine (49 page)

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Authors: Jane Feather

BOOK: Valentine
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“Eat?” Theo spun round, astonishment and a touch of indignation in her eyes. “Now?”

“Now.” He handed her a glass of wine, his own eyes filled with sensual amusement. “No,” he said when she bent to pick up the discarded wrapper. “Stay just as you are. I want to enjoy you with my eyes for a while.”

“I’m to eat naked?”

“Just so.” He pulled out a chair for her. “You’ll not be cold by the fire.” He bent to kiss the nape of her neck as she sat down, and Theo shuddered with pleasure and anticipation.

This was something they had never done before. It felt most peculiar to sit naked in the room while he was fully clothed. Peculiar but most arousing. The fire lapped against her right thigh, and the embroidered seat of the chair was slightly scratchy under her bottom and thighs. She gave a little experimental wriggle.

Sylvester sipped his wine, watching her. “Open your thighs a little,” he instructed softly.

Theo’s eyes widened and her tongue touched her lips. She shifted again on the seat and bit her lip suddenly. “How can I eat?”

“You’ll manage.” He took another sip of wine and deliberately carved a slice from the breast of a cold chicken, placing it on her plate. “Pickled mushrooms?”

Theo nodded silently and he passed her the dish. She took a spoonful, her breasts brushing against the edge of the table as she leaned forward. Her nipples burned, and she sat back with a little gasp. “I can’t do this, Sylvester.”

“Yes, you can.” He began to eat, watching her as he did so. “Tell me what you feel.”

Theo took a mouthful of chicken, then gave up. This game had chased away all vestige of ordinary appetite. She leaned back in her chair, her breasts lifting on her rib cage. “Everything?” Her voice was low, her eyes a swirling riot of arousal.

“Everything.”

“S
O YOU SEE
, Edward, it won’t be at all dangerous for either of us.” Theo sat back in the swaying darkness of the carriage, bearing them to the Vanbrughs’ rout party that evening.

Edward shook his head. “You are suggesting that you’ll lead Neil Gerard into the maze at Hampton Court and get him to talk at gun point about Vimiera, while I hide behind a goddamned box hedge listening, so if he says anything incriminating, there’ll be a witness? Theo, you have windmills in your head.”

“It’ll work,” she said stubbornly. “He was at Vimiera, and he’s behind these attacks on Sylvester. Now we just have to find out what really happened. Then we can tell Sylvester what we’ve discovered, and he can do what he wants with it. If it’s enough to reopen the court-martial, then he can clear his name once and for all.”

“But just why hasn’t Stoneridge hit upon such a brilliant plan himself, if, as you’re so certain, he knows that Neil Gerard is the man who’s been trying to kill him?” Edward inquired with naked sarcasm.

“I don’t know,” Theo said as stubbornly as before. “I don’t know because he won’t tell me anything. But this
will
work—only there has to be an objective witness.”

Edward sighed. “You’re playing with fire, Theo. As badly as you were on Dock Street. And if Stoneridge sends you to live with his mother, I wouldn’t blame him,” he declared unequivocally.

“Oh, you’re so infuriatingly priggish these days.” Theo sat forward urgently, laying her hand on his satin-clad knee. “Nothing could be simpler. He wishes to drive to Hampton Court, and it’s a perfect place. You be waiting on Curzon Street and simply follow us. Gerard will never notice a curricle behind him. And he won’t notice anyone following in the general press of people at Hampton Court. My wanting to go into the maze will be the most natural thing in the world. There’s no way he could harm me in such a place, and anyway, I’ll be the one with the pistol.”

“And what makes you think he won’t be armed himself?”

Theo detected the beginning of a waver in her friend’s opposition. “Why would he be? Besides, I don’t think he’s too clever.”

“What makes you think that?” Edward asked glumly.

“If he had been, he’d have succeeded in killing Sylvester by now. He strikes me as thoroughly clumsy.”

Edward couldn’t find any argument to this terse rejoinder. However, he felt obliged to point out that even the not so bright and clumsy could be extremely dangerous. In fact, possibly more so, since they could be unpredictable.

“Yes, but we won’t be in the least danger,” Theo said impatiently. “How could we be, in such a circumstance?”

The carriage arrived at their destination, and Edward took advantage of the opportunity to delay his response. “I’ll tell you at the end of the evening,” he said, jumping down and reaching up his hand to help her alight. “But if you mention it again before we’re in the carriage on the way home, I won’t entertain the idea. Is that understood?”

“Yes, Edward,” Theo said meekly, laying her hand on his arm, wondering why the men in her life had become such high sticklers.

Link boys were running up and down the street directing the press of carriages, and lights blazed from the open door at the head of a red carpet rolled over the pavement.

“Oh, dear,” Theo said, “I do so hate these parties.”

But Edward didn’t seem to hear. He was trying to catch the eye of a tall gentleman in naval uniform some yards ahead of them under the awning as they proceeded to the entrance.

“Who is it?” Theo asked curiously, standing on tiptoe.

“I’m certain it’s Hugo Lattimer,” Edward said. “He was first lieutenant on the ship that brought me from Spain. Without his aid I’m sure I would have died. He gave me his cabin and slung his own hammock in the gun room. He was the soul of kindness, always ready to talk when I was really hipped, and his man Samuel nursed me as if I were a baby.”

“Then I owe him my thanks,” Theo declared. Cupping her hands around her mouth, she called, “Lieutenant Lattimer, sir?”

The tall young man turned, piercing green eyes raking the startled throng. Theo, blushing as she realized the attention she’d drawn to herself, waggled her fingers at him.

“Theo! How could you?” Edward exclaimed in a fierce whisper, but the naval officer had stepped aside from the column and was waiting for them to reach him.

“Fairfax,” he said warmly, extending his hand. “It’s good to see you looking so well, man.”

“Oh, I’m doing well enough, Lattimer. May I introduce the Countess of Stoneridge. Theo, this is Lieutenant … oh, no I beg your pardon,
Captain
Lattimer. I didn’t notice the epaulets, Hugo. Congratulations.”

“I do beg your pardon for shouting in that indecorous way, sir,” Theo said. “But I was so infected with Edward’s enthusiasm that I became carried away. He was saying how good you
were to him on the voyage, and since he is my very best friend, I couldn’t wait to meet you and thank you.”

“Your very best friend?” drawled a pleasant, slightly husky voice. “Fairfax is indeed a lucky man.”

“Well, there is my husband, of course,” Theo said cheerfully. “But we are friends in a rather different fashion, you should understand, sir.”

“Oh, I believe I do.” The naval officer’s slightly startled eyes shot toward Edward.

“Theo and I have known each other since nursery days, Hugo,” he said.

“That would explain it,” Hugo Lattimer said. “Are you recently arrived in London, ma’am?”

“It seems we’ve been here forever,” Theo said, finding something very comfortable about this man. It wasn’t just that Edward spoke highly of him, although that would have been enough, but there was a humorous spark in his eyes and a twist to his mouth, and when he laughed, as he did now, it was a rich, merry sound. He would be about twenty-five, she decided, a couple of years older than Edward.

“That tedious, eh?”

“Precisely, sir.” Laughing with him, Theo entered the house and moved to the stairs to greet Lady Georgiana Vanbrugh.

She’d hoped to spend some more time with Edward’s savior, hoped even for a dance, but to her disappointment Hugo Lattimer disappeared as soon as they’d reached the ballroom. She glimpsed him once or twice throughout the evening, standing against the wall, a glass in his hand, and his expression had lost the cheerful spontaneity that had so appealed to her. In fact, he looked morose, and there were shadows in the green eyes.

She thought of approaching him herself, but there was now something strangely forbidding about him, as if he were constructing a thicket around himself.

“Captain Lattimer doesn’t seem to be enjoying himself,”
she observed to Edward when they’d met up with Elinor and her sisters and were sitting in the supper room.

“I’ve never yet met a naval officer who’s content when he’s waiting for a new command,” Edward said. “They exist on half pay and haunt the Admiralty, and twiddle their thumbs the rest of the time.”

“Mmm.” Theo didn’t sound convinced.

“He drinks a great deal,” Edward said somewhat reluctantly. “Not while he’s sailing, but as soon as he’s in port. I was with him at Southampton, when we landed. There’s something that troubles him. He calls them painted devils.”

“Oh,” Theo said. “Invite him to join us, Edward.”

“I don’t think that’s wise, Theo,” Elinor said, glancing at her older daughters. “If the gentleman chooses to keep himself to himself, then we should respect that.”

Her mother meant that she didn’t want any inebriated visitors at her table, Theo knew, but she said no more.

As they were leaving, however, Hugo Lattimer came over to them. There was brandy sweetness on his breath and just the faintest fog in his eyes, but his voice was perfectly steady, and he was entirely coherent as he told Edward that he had a new command, a frigate on the stocks at Portsmouth. He was going down to see to her fitting in the morning, so it was farewell to Society for what he hoped was a very long spell.

He took his leave of the Countess of Stoneridge with the same easy humor of before, declined a ride in their carriage, and walked off into the night.

“You’ll see Theo home, Edward,” Elinor said, stepping into her own carriage.

“There’s no need,” Theo said. “Tom Coachman can convey me home perfectly safely. I’m sure Edward would prefer to see Emily home. There’s room for him in your carriage if you all squeeze up.”

Elinor looked doubtful but, since neither of her elder daughters or their swains offered any objection, decided it would have to be.

“Edward can see me to my carriage, however,” Theo said. He had an answer to give her.

Edward handed her into the town chaise with the Stoneridge arms emblazoned on the panels.

“Well?” When he didn’t immediately respond, she said blandly, “I’ll have to go without you if you won’t come.”

“And I’ll tell Stoneridge what you’re up to,” he fired back.

“You don’t seriously expect me to believe that, do you?”

Edward sighed. It was, of course, inconceivable he should do such a thing. “Very well,” he said with obvious reluctance. “I’ll wait at the corner of Curzon Street in the morning.”

“Bless you. I knew you hadn’t changed that much.” Theo kissed him soundly. Edward closed the door, and the coachman set his horses in motion.

While his wife was busily plotting at the Vanbrughs’ rout party, the Earl of Stoneridge was at White’s, playing faro at the same table as Neil Gerard. The bottles of burgundy circulated as the groom porters intoned the odds at the hazard tables, and voices rose and fell in various degrees of inebriation as the evening moved into the early hours.

Neil was playing with a degree of flamboyance, but like the earl’s, his glass was always full but rarely enriched by the circulating bottles.

The earl was talking to Gerard about his imprisonment in Toulouse. His plan was a simple one, but what he knew of Neil Gerard made it certain to succeed. The man had no strength of character or will, and he was already panicked. Sylvester was going to drive him to the breaking point. He was going to corner him and goad him until he spilled his guts to whoever happened to be around.

Sylvester’s tone made light of his prison experience, as the rules of masculine society dictated, and he gave the appearance of a man chatting with an old friend about something they both understood. Now and again he would muse aloud about what could have happened before he surrendered. His
tone was low enough to be heard only by Neil Gerard, but it was also clear to the captain that he wasn’t unduly bothered by the subject’s being aired in public.

Once or twice a curious look was cast in their direction when a word or two was overheard, and Sylvester would immediately include the man in his conversation, which again he made sound as if it were perfectly innocuous.

It became clear to Gerard that this was not the man at the court-martial—a man confused and shamed by an implicit accusation against which he had no defense. And Gerard began to feel like the hunted. Only by reminding himself of his plan could he keep the panicky flutters from obscuring cool thought.

Sylvester finally rose from the table, several hundred guineas ahead of himself. “A better night next time,” he commiserated with Gerard, who had been scrawling IOUs to the bank for the last half hour.

“Oh, I’ll come about yet,” Neil said, remaining in his seat. “The night is young.”

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