Innocent Courtesan to Adventurer's Bride (8 page)

BOOK: Innocent Courtesan to Adventurer's Bride
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‘Of course.' Quinn handed it across and went back to his gammon and eggs.

The front page was all advertisements as usual. She made a show of skimming past notices about artificial teeth, anatomical stays, the Benevolent Society of St Patrick's annual general meeting, Essence of Coltsfoot for coughs and several notices of lotteries. The inside two pages were without notices, but a glance showed her it was
all international and court news. The back page, however, was full of snippets. Fire at Kentish Town…protest against threshing machines…bizarre accident to a pedestrian in Newcastle…the Tolhurst Sapphire.

There was only an inch, but to Lina's eyes it seemed to be printed in red ink.
Sir George Tolhurst, lately succeeded as baronet after the tragic death of his father, Sir Humphrey Tolhurst, has offered a reward of one hundred guineas for information leading to the capture of Miss Celina Shelley, a young woman of dubious character, who removed the famous Tolhurst Sapphire from the finger of the expiring baronet after inveigling herself into his Duke Street house. Miss Shelley, a well-favoured and genteel-seeming young female, is of middling stature with long straight yellow hair and blue eyes.

She laid the
Chronicle
down beside her plate, the blood loud in her ears as she fought down the panicky instinct to grab the paper and flee.

‘More coffee?' She picked up the pot, newly refilled by Michael, and moved it towards Quinn's cup. ‘Oh! Ouch!' She jerked, the coffee splashed out and on to the folded paper. ‘I am sorry.' Quinn reached out and took the pot from her hands. ‘It was so heavy and my arm is still sore from falling the other day. Oh, dear, your newspaper!' Lina took her napkin and dabbed fiercely at the coffee stain, the soft newsprint disintegrating under the assault. ‘Now I've made it worse!'

‘Allow me, Miss Haddon.' Trimble removed the paper and held it up. ‘It will dry by the range, my lord. There is now a hole, but it can be made readable, at least.'

‘Have you scalded yourself?' Quinn sounded more concerned about her welfare than the state of his newspaper. He certainly did not seem suspicious. But why should he
be? It was only her own awareness of danger that made the item seem to leap from the paper at her. ‘No? But those bruises are still bad? Gregor, you must lend Celina your pot of bear fat. A sovereign remedy, I understand.'

‘Thank you, but arnica is perfectly adequate.' She smiled at Gregor, not wanting to offend, although she suspected he had probably killed the animal in question himself with his bare hands. The restrained elegance of formal morning wear made him look, if anything, larger and more forbidding than usual. ‘We should be going soon,' she added with a glance at the clock. ‘The carriage will be at the door.'

Jenks had sent round the barouche with the top down so they could enjoy the sunny weather. With the betraying newspaper announcement safely illegible her mood lifted and Lina wished she had a parasol to twirl. Instead, she allowed herself to be handed into the forward-facing seat opposite the two men and prepared to enjoy the treat of a drive through the park to Upper Cleybourne church.

The bells were ringing, the cracked tenor that had so annoyed Simon spoiling the joyous peel. ‘Listen,' she said, ‘that's the bell the legacy will replace.' They came out of the gates and pulled up on the little green outside the church. It was already thronged with parishioners chatting in the sunshine and heads turned as the Dreycott barouche came to a halt.

Lina descended, preoccupied with sorting out reticule and prayer book and smoothing down her skirts. Then the change in the sound penetrated and she looked up. All around the little groups were falling silent as they stared and the faces that watched them were set and unwelcoming.

So, the gossip mills have been working to grind out
all the old history and they've made up their minds, have they?
she thought. There were people with whom she had thought herself on cordial terms, with whom she expected to exchange smiles and greetings and village news, who were staring now. They froze her with the same disapproval they directed at the men—it was much worse than she had feared.

We'll see about that
, Lina thought. Inside she quailed—disapproval had always shrivelled her soul—but now she lifted her chin, set her shoulders back and made herself walk up to Mr and Mrs Willets and their family.

Mrs Willets had been amiable when Lina stepped off the stagecoach in Sheringham, tired and confused. Lina had fallen into conversation with the Willets's new governess, who was being met by Mrs Willets in their carriage, and, after a whispered word from Miss Greggs, the matron had been happy to take up Lord Dreycott's guest. Now the squire managed an uneasy smile of greeting, his wife looked daggers and their daughters edged behind their father.

‘Good morning,' Lina said brightly. ‘Have you met Lord Dreycott yet? He is most anxious that his late uncle's legacy to restore the cracked bell is dealt with urgently. Won't it be a joy to have a musical peal?'

‘Er, no.' Mr Willets looked harassed. ‘I mean, yes, it will. Good morning, my lord.' He bowed and Quinn inclined his head in response.

‘Mr Willets. Madam. May I introduce Mr Vasiliev?'

Gregor bowed, Mrs Willets glared at Lina, the girls giggled. Lina gritted her teeth into a smile and swept on to the next group with much the same result: wary politeness from the men, thinly veiled hostility from the women and no attempt to introduce daughters.

By the time she reached the church door she was seething and her nervousness had become lost in her anger for Quinn. How could they be so rude and unwelcoming to a man they had never met, just on the basis of ancient gossip?

Perhaps he hasn't noticed
, she thought.
Perhaps he thinks this is just typical English village society.
Then as she reached the porch she turned and saw Quinn's face. He was smiling, but his eyes were like chips of green ice.

Chapter Seven

W
ell, no-one has actually spat on my boots yet
, Quinn conceded as he walked up the path in Celina's wake. It was like following a small, very fierce frigate, wheeling to turn its guns on any enemy shipping it passed. He was touched by her anger on his behalf but he had expected, and to an extent merited, this reception.
She
did not deserve to be treated like this by those sanctimonious prigs who had shunned his uncle. He certainly did not want to have her fall out with her acquaintance over him and he was not happy about it.

He caught up with her in the porch and bent to murmur in her ear, ‘Not so fierce!'

‘I had not expected them to be like this,' she whispered back. ‘I am so sorry. They are decent people—I thought.' She was not normally so confrontational, he sensed. If asked, he would have said her instinct was to avoid trouble, not face it. It was touching that she was so strong in his defence, like a kitten defending a mastiff, tiny claws out, tail bristling.

‘And they think I am
not
decent. Most perceptive of
them,' he said and was taken aback by the look of reproof she flashed him.

‘Do not say that! They must respect you, even if they do not like you. You have responsibilities here—these are your people now.'

‘Not for long,' he retorted. ‘I'll be as pleased to get rid of them as they will be to get shot of me.' He showed his teeth in what should have been a smile and the verger who was hastening forward to escort them to their pew flinched visibly.

‘Good morning, Mr Bavin,' Lina said. She stepped towards the man and Quinn saw him relax. ‘How is the rheumatism this morning? You look very sprightly, if I may say so.'

She is good with people
, Quinn thought as the verger positively beamed.

‘Much better, thanks to the tincture you sent down, Miss Haddon. Done me the world of good, it has.' He preceded them down the aisle and stood to one side while they filed into the front right-hand pew. Quinn could feel the tingle in the back of his neck that told him he was being watched as the congregation came in behind them. Let them stare if it amused them.

Celina was on her knees, head bent, hands folded. He watched her from the corner of his eye; so, she had taken on the duties of the lady of the house, looking after the local sick. Her aunt had been pious, she said. Was that where she had acquired her instinct for parish works?

He sat back in the hard pew, Gregor silent beside him, and thought about the incident at breakfast with the newspaper and the coffee. An accident? But Celina was not clumsy; he watched her more closely than he hoped she realised and she moved with a natural grace. Nor had she
been favouring that arm and he did not believe it hurt her so much she could not control a coffee pot.

The organ wheezed into life and the congregation rose, searching their books for the first hymn. Quinn had no intention of singing, but he realised Celina was fumbling with her hymnal. Her hands were unsteady.
Damn it
, he thought, it was nerves about coming to church that had made her shaky at breakfast and now, with her fears about their reception confirmed, she was trembling.

Quinn reached out, removed the hymn book from her unresisting fingers, glanced up at the board hanging on the pillar and turned to the right number. ‘There you are.'

She shot him a grateful smile and began to sing in a clear contralto while Quinn tried to recall the last time he had stood in an English church finding hymns for a lady. It must have been that Sunday when Angela Hunton, the Earl of Sheringham's eldest daughter, the young lady with whom he had believed himself deeply in love, proposed that they anticipate the marriage bed by making love in the summer house.

It was probably the first—and last—time that innocence and romantic idealism had saved his skin. If he had not refused, shocked to the core at the very suggestion that he sully the purity of the lady he worshipped, then he would now be married to a promiscuous little liar and bringing up another man's child.

Beside him Gregor, having heard the first verse through, was joining in with the singing, his rumbling bass putting up a good fight with the organ. Celina glanced across in surprise, caught Quinn's eye and bit her lip to suppress a smile. He smiled back and bent to pick up her prayer book to find the place in that for her.

That kiss in the gazebo had been a mistake in timing,
if nothing else, he concluded. An armful of Miss Haddon had been delightful and the taste of those lips gave him moments of pleasurable recollection even days later, but he had handled it badly. He had not understood her, and, he was all too aware, he still did not.

In his experience women fell into four categories, so far as carnal pleasure went: the professionals; married women and widows who were more than willing to be persuaded to share their beds; respectable married women and widows who needed more subtle persuasion; servants and innocent young ladies who were most certainly neither fair game nor satisfying flirts.

The hymn ended and they sat. Celina took the prayer book from him with a murmured, ‘Thank you.' Their fingers tangled for a moment and Quinn made no effort to remove his hand, enjoying the feeling of Celina's slim fingers enmeshed with his. She retrieved hand and prayer book and faced the front, her cheeks pink. She had stopped shaking, he noticed.

Which of his categories did Celina Haddon fit into? Was she a fallen woman making a very good attempt at an appearance of virtue? A married woman or widow—virtuous or otherwise—in hiding for some reason? He found he was suspicious of this aunt who was so vaguely unable to look after her. Or perhaps she was exactly what she purported to be, a respectable innocent. But if an innocent, she was certainly an unusual one who knew slang terms for brothels, who melted into his arms, who had so many of the little tricks of an accomplished flirt.

The Reverend Perrin's sermon was, as Celina had promised, intelligent and even mildly witty in a dry kind of way. But their reception as they emerged into the sunlight again was not noticeably improved by the congregation's
spiritual experience. Shoulders were turned, people they had not met on their way in walked away as though to ensure they did not have to speak.

Gregor, as he always did when he thought Quinn was threatened in some way, moved in very close behind them, making Celina glance over her shoulder. If you were not used to him, it must be like being followed by a large bear, Quinn thought. He was even growling, although Quinn doubted he realised it.

‘It is all right, Gregor,' he said. ‘The peasants are not about to rise up and attempt to slaughter us with pitchforks and pruning knives.'

The Russian said something and Celina whispered, ‘What was that?'

‘An unrepeatable slur on the parentage of everyone here, involving an unnatural act and a donkey.' He watched to see if he had shocked her, but she only bit her lip again and ducked her head to hide the smile.

 

‘That was dreadful,' Celina declared once the carriage was moving again. ‘You would think that on a Sunday at least basic good manners would prevail!'

‘The Earl of Sheringham is a notable local aristocrat,' Quinn said mildly. ‘They would take his side.' Ten years ago social ostracism, the unfairness of the accusations, the shame of his inability to force a duel, had burned into his soul like acid. Now he had become the man they had accused him of being and he had the strength and the will to face down his accusers and make them eat their lies. But it made him angry that Celina was upset. He should not have attended church, he thought, then she would not have been exposed to that.

The fact that he cared about her feelings struck him as
novel. What did it matter if this woman with her secrets, this intruder into his life, had her feathers ruffled? A week ago he would have shrugged and forgotten it. But Celina—

‘Gregor, why do you guard Lord Dreycott's back so closely?' she asked, cutting across his thoughts. ‘And when you came to the Park, you checked all the locks, the windows. Trimble told me.'

No!
He did not want to talk about that. Or to think about it. Quinn's elbow in his ribs came too late to stop Gregor. ‘Quinn saved my life when he bought me,' he said simply. ‘Now I guard his.'

‘Bought you?' Lina stared at Gregor, aghast. ‘You mean you are a
slave
? But that is dreadful—and illegal! How could you?' she demanded, turning on Quinn. ‘That is barbaric!'

‘I could have left him to die, I suppose,' Quinn drawled. ‘Would that have shocked you less? Gregor was a Christian slave of the Ottomans, captured in battle. He does not take well to…orders.' To her amazement the Russian grinned at Quinn. ‘So they beat him almost to the point of death, which was the only way to subdue him, and then sold him. I saw him and bought him.' He shrugged as though he was speaking of taking on a new farm worker at a hiring fair.

‘Me and a girl who had been hurt. And he freed me,' said Gregor. ‘So I pay him by looking after his life that he is so careless of, seeing that he will not take my money now I have it.'

‘You were very cheap,' Quinn said, sounding bored. ‘It would be an insult to ask for repayment. And you have saved my life half-a-dozen times over.'

‘And you mine. I am still in debt.'

It was one of the mysterious manifestations of male honour, Lina realised. They were as close as brothers,
closer perhaps, and yet they had to feign indifference to those feelings, keep count of who had saved whose life.

She felt a little ill, looking at the rock-solid bulk of Gregor. What had they done to reduce him to near death? And what sort of man bought such pitiful wreckage and nursed it back to life?
A good man
, she thought.
But he would not thank me for saying so. And a man who saves another man's life may still be a danger to women. But what did he do with the woman who was hurt? The one neither of them seem to want to speak of.

‘Well, it is a relief to hear that we are not breaking the law by harbouring a slave,' Lina said prosaically. ‘What happened to the woman?'

‘She is free now,' Quinn said flatly, then showed no inclination to continue.

Lina could not think of a single coherent thing to say on the subject of Gregor's story, not without becoming embarrassingly emotional. ‘I hope you will not mind a very simple luncheon. The late Lord Dreycott always gave the servants the day off from after breakfast until dinner time on Sundays, so there is just a cold buffet laid out.'

‘No, I do not mind.' The carriage pulled up in front of the house and Gregor jumped down as Quinn answered. ‘Would you take a turn around the garden with me?'

The small jerk of the head directed at the other man was not lost on Lina. So, what did Lord Dreycott wish to talk to her alone about?

‘Of course, my lord,' she said, still preoccupied with the parishioners' hostility and Gregor's dreadful story. She followed him through the little gate and into the pleasure grounds. ‘The gardens have been very neglected.' They stood and look at the roughly scythed grass and unpruned shrubs. ‘His lordship was not much interested, I am afraid.'

‘Do you know anything about gardening?' Quinn asked, taking her elbow in a light grip and steering her towards a dilapidated summer house. ‘I suppose I should get this put into order before I sell it, but although I can recite you reams of Persian poetry on the subject of gardens, that is of no practical use when confronted with the wind-blown north Norfolk coast. I doubt we could ever recline under a palm tree here while I peeled you grapes.'

He brushed off the seat inside the summer house and gestured to her to sit.

‘Gardening? No, not really.' Lina tried to dismiss the picture Quinn had conjured up; it was too close to her fantasies about harems. Would he like her in fluttering, diaphanous silks? ‘But I can talk to the gardener, if you like, and see what can be done to make it look more cared for. There is just the one man, you see.'

‘Tell him to hire some help,' Quinn said. He sat down, careless of his beautiful tailcoat on the lichen-covered seat. ‘Celina, thank you.'

‘Whatever for? It is no trouble to speak to the man. It will be quite interesting, in fact. I told you, I would like to be useful.'

‘That is not what I meant.' He leaned forwards, his forearms on his thighs, and stared down at his clasped hands. ‘Thank you for coming so fiercely to my defence at the church. I am sorry if my presence embarrassed you with your friends.'

‘They are not my friends.'
My friends are all in a London brothel, my beloved sisters are lost.
‘They are acquaintances, that is all. And I am ashamed for their behaviour.' He was very still, sitting so close beside her, and gradually the indignation subsided, leaving her with
the realisation that she was alone in a secluded spot with the dangerous rake who had kissed her.

But now that she had begun to know Quinn Ashley a little she could see that there was more to him than a shocking reputation that he seemed more than willing to live up to. It was confusing. If she did not like him, admire him for his restraint at the church and his rescue of Gregor, she could be afraid of him, which was obviously the safe thing to be. As it was, the best she could manage was to be wary.

She was still furious with herself for even letting him provoke her into revealing she knew the other, disreputable, meaning of
nun
. He had said nothing more about it, but, on the other hand, neither had he done anything more to alarm her. Perhaps her flight from the gazebo had convinced him that she was virtuous and he should not attempt kisses, or worse.

‘You have left many friends behind?' Quinn asked, making her jump. He straightened up and looked at her, the speculation in his eyes holding more than a simple question. It was the expression of a man assessing a woman and she felt it like a touch on her skin. She reminded herself that many men had an unpleasant predilection for corrupting innocence, but she could not feel the shudder of fear she hoped for, the reaction that would protect her. She simply felt the instinctive attraction of female to male.

BOOK: Innocent Courtesan to Adventurer's Bride
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