Read His Christmas Pleasure Online

Authors: Cathy Maxwell

His Christmas Pleasure (11 page)

BOOK: His Christmas Pleasure
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“Well, we must be going as well,” Lady Gilbertson said. Her daughters hopped up from their chairs.

Lady Edgars and Lady Mortimer joined the exodus. Abby smiled her farewell, knowing they would probably put their heads together and have a thorough discussing of the afternoon.

Too soon, it was just she and her mother alone.

The maid took away the tray of empty glasses and cups. Abby was conscious that her mother watched her every move while the servant was in the room.

The silence between them grew oppressive.

Her mother broke it. “Should I be worried?”

“About what?” Abby asked.

Her mother’s gaze narrowed on her. “Your father wants this marriage between you and Lord Villier.”

“And I don’t understand why you can’t let me choose for myself.”

“Your father has been very clear—”

“That he doesn’t like Freddie Sherwin and he is afraid I’ll end up on the shelf, a dried-up spinster of no good to anyone. Yes, yes, yes, I know what he thinks.”

Her mother’s expression softened. “Abigail, that is not true—”

“It is, Mother. You and Father had a grand passion. You gave up so much for him.”

“And I have no regrets,” her mother agreed.

“I don’t want regrets either,” Abby answered.

“You would have regrets if you married Lord Villier?”

“Wouldn’t you?”

Her mother grimaced. “You are right. I’ll speak to your father.”

“Thank you,” Abby said, meaning the words.

“But as to that Spaniard,” her mother continued. “I don’t have a good feeling about him.”

Of everything Abby had heard women say about the barón, suspicion was not part of it.

“Why does he make you feel that way?”

Her mother gave a little shrug. “I was at the theater the night he declared his love for Lady Wright. It was not that long ago. And her rejection was very public.”

Now she had Abby’s interest. He had been in love before, and just recently?

Funny that with all her talk of Freddie, he’d not mentioned it. “Who is Lady Wright?”

“Another married woman. The barón seems to make a habit of chasing married women.” Disapproval colored her voice.

“Or is it that they chase him?” Abby said in his defense.

“Does it matter? A woman married to another man is not fair game. I know there are those who ignore their vows—”

“Usually in arranged matches,” Abby had to point out.

Her mother ignored her comment. “I would not want my daughter to be caught up with a fickle man. He’s handsome, Abby, I’ll give you that. Those dark looks and his silver eyes make even me a bit dizzy when I look at him.

But handsome is as handsome does. There were those who said your father was not handsome, but he’s been a wonderful husband, and when I look at him, even at the age we are, there is no man more attractive to me.”

“I haven’t met a man like Father,” Abby confessed. “He would fight dragons for you.”

Her mother smiled. “He would, wouldn’t he? Just like St. George.”

“Yes … but I doubt if Lord Villier would bother to show up by my bedside as I birthed his fourteenth child.”

The smile vanished from her mother’s face. “I said I’d speak to your father, and I will.”

Abby crossed the room and gave her mother a hug. It was an impulsive action, spurred by no small measure of guilt. “I know you will, Mother.

Thank you.”

She pulled away, but her mother grabbed hold and hugged her closer. “Please trust us,” she whispered.

And Abby wanted to. In fact, her mother’s plea sat heavy on her shoulders the rest of the day … until dinner.

Her father was in good spirits. “Abby, Lord Villier likes you. He likes you very much.”

Abby sent a glance in her mother’s direction.

Her mother didn’t meet her eye. She knew then that her mother had talked to her father and his answer was to continue his support of Lord Villier.

Consequently the dinner conversation contained many references to his lordship.

As Abby pushed her food around her plate, she realized that her father’s stubbornness was a gift. She was free of any doubts she harbored about running away. She could make her own choices. Her grandmother’s money had seen to that.

But she was deliberately flouting his authority and thwarting his plans, and he was not a man who took such insult lightly, even from his daughter. Still, carrying such a secret without telling anyone was unbearable—almost impossible. Sooner or later, her absence would be noticed. She needed someone in the household to help hide the fact that she was gone, for she had no doubt her father would chase her down. Abby didn’t know how fast the barón planned to travel, but she assumed they could be a good three days on the road. The more time she could buy them, the better.

Her mother would not support her, and she didn’t know if she dared trust a servant. They would be given the sack if their help was discovered.

Finally, after a fitful night during which she slept little, Abby decided she must carry out her plan all by herself. In the hour before dawn, not wanting to cause her parents unneeded anguish, she wrote a letter letting them know she had eloped with the barón and begging their forgiveness.

However, she stressed that she would not marry Lord Villier. She’d chosen instead to “seek her Fate.” She liked the sound of the word the barón had used so often in persuading her. She finished by saying she loved and respected her parents and hoped they would accept the barón into their family. She then hid the letter in the top drawer of her dressing table to be discovered once they found her missing and started searching for her.

Midmorning, a message arrived from the barón. He regretted that he needed to change their meeting from one until two that afternoon. Abby studied his handwriting. Freddie’s writing was indecipherable. The barón’s was clear, strong, direct. Much like the man himself. A wave of apprehension tightened in her stomach. She didn’t know this man, and yet she was entrusting him with her future. There would be no turning back once she left the library with him.

And of course, when they gathered an hour later for lunch, everything was good with her family. Almost too good.

Pleased that he’d done his best for his daughter, her father was in excellent spirits. Over the luncheon table he said, “Abigail, you haven’t been shopping lately. You and your mother should go out and enjoy yourselves. Go to the Royal Academy, see what exhibitions are there, and do a spot of spending on yourselves.”

“That sounds entertaining, doesn’t it?” her mother said with an enthusiasm that touched Abby’s heart. “The weather is lovely for shopping. It’s been so damp.”

And how to beg off?

Abby decided to do so with a good pout. “I’m sorry,” she said, affecting a wounded sensibility. “I don’t feel up to shopping.” She made herself sound deliberately ill-tempered.

Her tone had the desired effect. Her parents immediately assumed her manner was because of Lord Villier. Her father became decidedly grumpy, and her mother’s manner grew distressed.

Abby felt a terrible person to behave this way. And she knew her running away would not make them happier.

But what recourse did she have?

The air for the rest of the meal was chilly.

After lunch, Abby escaped to her room. Her maid Tabitha was not there, which gave Abby the freedom to prepare for her elopement. She couldn’t very well dance out the front door with a valise.

Instead, she dressed herself in several layers. First, she hurriedly put on her night dress, then a day dress, and then her largest walking dress. She didn’t bother with petticoats. With so many clothes on, they were unnecessary.

She tucked a change of small clothing and stockings into the bottom of an embroidered bag she often used to carry books when visiting the circulating library. As an afterthought, she scooped up her jewelry. She would return someday, but it was best to take what she could now.

Her father had been generous to her and had given her some very fine rings and necklaces, including a perfectly matched pearl necklace in its own pouch that he claimed had cost a king’s ransom. One of Abby’s favorite pieces was a garnet brooch that had belonged to her grandmother, the one who had bequeathed her the money. She was just pinning the brooch to her walking dress, deciding to wear it for luck, when Tabitha entered the room carrying folded, clean laundry.

“I’m sorry, Miss Abby. I didn’t anticipate you being here.”

“I won’t be long,” Abby said. Tabitha was relatively new to the household.

Abby’s previous maid, Mary, had been with her for six years until she’d left their service to marry a butcher. Many a time Mary had served as lookout when Abby had met Freddie at the circulating library. Mary had also carried notes between Abby and Freddie.

Tabitha was Mary’s cousin, but Abby had not confided in her, and she didn’t think it wise to start doing so now. In fact, the less Tabitha knew about the elopement, the safer her position in the household would be after Abby was gone.

Still, Abby needed an escort to go out this afternoon. To not ask for one would invite suspicion. “Tabitha, I’m going out in half an hour. Please be ready to accompany me.”

“Yes, Miss Abby,” she answered. She set the laundry on the dresser and tucked the clothes neatly in the drawers where they belonged. When she finished, she made things right on the dresser and, in the course of things, moved Abby’s bag for carrying books.

While she pretended to be working at her desk on some correspondence, Abby watched Tabitha out of the corner of her eye. She wondered if the maid had noticed the bit of weight in the bag when there should not have been any.

And she was not pleased when Tabitha walked over to the dressing table and started to clear it by putting the hairbrush into the same drawer where the letter was—

“That will be all,” Abby said, hoping to divert the maid’s attention before she noticed the envelope.

Tabitha glanced up in surprise at the abrupt dismissal. “Yes, miss,” she said, shutting the drawer and bobbing a curtsey. She hurried toward the door.

“I’ll meet you in the front hall,” Abby said, feeling guilty and wanting to soften her brusqueness.

“Yes, miss,” Tabitha said dutifully, bobbing another curtsey and leaving the room.

Abby released her breath in exasperation. Her nerves would be on edge until she and the barón were on the road. After this elopement, she vowed to never again involve herself in anything scandalous—especially if it had an impact on those she loved.

She chose a book from the stack waiting to be read on her bedside table.

Even now that she and Freddie didn’t have clandestine meetings, she was a frequent visitor to the Duke Street Circulating Library. She slipped the book into her bag and donned her coat and its matching hat, a pretty confection made of green and cream velvet bands that should keep her ears warm for traveling. She also threw on a a wool scarf and her heaviest gloves. She gave herself a good look over in the mirror.

Her body appeared bulky, but the coat could be used as an excuse if anyone noticed. Probably no one would, especially if she moved quickly and with purpose.

Abby looked around at her room and felt a pang of remorse that she was leaving—yet part of her was alive with excitement.

A footman knocked on the door to inform her the carriage she’d ordered earlier through Harrison was waiting outside the front door. As she came down the stairs, Abby looked about for her mother. She would have liked to have spoken to her one last time before she left, but Catherine was nowhere to be seen.

Tabitha was still a bit standoffish. Abby chalked it up to her own kindness.

She rarely raised her voice with the servants and Tabitha had probably taken offense. Sometimes servants could be extremely sensitive.

The maid sat next to Abby in the coach, her hands folded in her lap, her eyes downcast.

Abby didn’t care. She was deep in thought as well. Now that Freddie was promised to her cousin, there was no hope for them. Like a heroine in a tragic novel, she would go to Northumberland with the barón and put Freddie from her life forever. She was making a sacrifice for all concerned—

Freddie, Corinne, her family, and herself.

The vision made her feel noble and less guilty about leaving her parents.

The coach rolled to a halt. A footman opened the door to help Abby out. She reached for her embroidered bag just as Tabitha took it.

Their eyes met. The maid’s slid away. “I’m sorry, miss. Did you wish for me to carry it?”

“I wish for you to wait for me here,” Abby said, suddenly distrustful, though she didn’t know why. The maid was only being helpful, and yet something didn’t seem quite right.

Or it could have been Abby’s own fears and doubts. She forced a smile. “I’m just returning this book and should be out as soon as I choose another.” She took hold of the bag and climbed out of the coach. After telling the coachman to return for her in a half hour, she went into the library, the bell over the door jangling to announce her entrance.

The Duke Street Circulating Library boasted not one but two bow front windows overlooking the street. Inside, counters were placed in front of the book-lined walls. Clerks bustled back and forth behind the counters, fetching books for patrons to peruse and possibly check out.

As a rich man’s daughter, Abby could buy any book she wished, but her father’s nature was frugal, as was her own, and books were expensive. She’d grown up taking trips with her mother to this circulating library, and it felt like a second home.

Of course, once she and Freddie had started meeting here, the circulating library had come to have a much deeper meaning.

She was well known to the clerks. Although they were busy with other patrons, they looked up and gave her a smile, nodding a greeting.

Abby placed the book she wished to return in its proper place, noticing that her coach had not left yet to circle the square until she was ready for it.

Tabitha was boldly staring out the coach window at the library, and the footman still stood on the walk. They both appeared very concerned.

When Tabitha caught sight of Abby staring back at her through one of the bow front windows, she quickly ducked back into the coach’s interior. The footman climbed up into the box beside the coachman, but the coach did not move.

BOOK: His Christmas Pleasure
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