Authors: Georgette Heyer
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Historical, #Romance
"It has lemon in it, sir!" offered the maid.
"So much the worse! Take it away, and tell Limbury to send up some burgundy!
My
orders!"
"Yes, sir, b-but what will I say to Mrs Wardlow, if you p-please, sir?"
Miss Wychwood intervened. "You need say nothing to her, Lizzy. Just set the barley-water on that table, and desire Limbury to send up a bottle of burgundy for Mr Carleton. . . . And when it comes
you
will drink it," she informed her visitor, as soon as Lizzy had scurried away.
"I
don't want it!"
"You may think you don't, but it is exactly what you do want!" he retorted. "Next they will be bringing you a bowl of gruel!"
"Oh, no!" said Miss Wychwood demurely. "Dr Tidmarsh says that I may have a little chicken now that I am so much better. Or even a slice of boiled mutton."
"That ought to tempt you!" he said sardonically.
She smiled. "Well, to tell you the truth, I haven't any appetite, so it doesn't much signify what they bring me to eat!"
"Oh, how much I wish I had you under my own roof!"
"So that you could bullock me into eating my dinner, Mr Carleton? I shouldn't like that at all!" she said, shaking her head.
"If you don't stop calling me
Mr Carleton,
my girl, we shall very soon find ourselves at dagger-drawing!"
"Oh, that terrifies me into obedience—Oliver! What a shocking thing it would be if we were to fall out!"
He smiled, and raised her hand to his lips. "Shocking indeed! And so unprecedented!"
"It's all very well for you to kiss my hand," said Miss Wychwood austerely, "but what you
ought
to do is to promise that you will never quarrel with me again! But as I have known ever since I made your acquaintance that you haven't the least notion of conducting yourself with elegance or propriety, I imagine it is ridiculous of me to expect that of you!"
"Quite ridiculous! I never promise what I know I can't perform!"
"Odious
creature!"
He grinned at her. "Should I be less odious if I humbugged you with court-promises? Of course we shall quarrel, for I have a naggy temper, and you, I thank God, are not one of those meek women who say yes and amen to everything! Which reminds me that I have hit on a solution to the problem of what to do with Lucilla to which I do expect you to say yes and amen!"
"But when we are married she will naturally live with us!"
"Oh, no, she will not!" he said, "If you imagine, my loved one, that I am prepared to stand by complacently while my bride devotes herself to my niece, rid yourself of that idiotic notion! Think for a moment! Do you really wish to include a third person—and one who must be chaperoned wherever she goes!—into our household? If you do, I do not! I want a
wife,
not a chaperon for my niece!" He took her hands, and held them in a compelling grasp. "A companion, Annis! Someone who may say, if I suggest to her that we should jaunt over to Paris, that she doesn't feel inclined to go to Paris, but who won't say: 'But how can I leave Lucilla?' Do you understand what I mean?"
"Oh, my dear, of course I do! I don't wish to include a third person in our household, and I must own that fond though I am of Lucilla I do find that the task of looking after her is heavier than I had supposed it would be. But how unkind it would be to send her to live with someone else, for no fault of hers, but merely because we didn't wish to be bothered with her! If she knew, and liked, any of her paternal aunts, or cousins, the case would be different, but she doesn't, and thanks to that miserable aunt the only friends the poor child has are those she has made here, in Bath!"
"Yes, exactly so! What do you say to giving her into Mrs Stinchcombe's charge until it is time for her to make her come-out?"
Miss Wychwood sat up with a jerk. "Oliver! Of course it would be the very thing for her, and what she would like best, I am very sure. But would Mrs Stinchcombe be willing to take her?"
"Perfectly willing. In fact, it was settled between us this morning! I came here straight from Laura Place. It was Mrs Stinchcombe who told me that you had been ill, and—Oh, lord,
now
what?"
But the timid tap on the door merely heralded the reappearance of Lizzy, who came in carrying a silver salver, on which stood a decanter, two of Miss Wychwood's best Waterford wineglasses, and a wooden biscuit-tub with a silver lid. Mr Carleton, perceiving that the decanter was in imminent danger of sliding off the salver, got up quickly, and went to take the tray into his own hands, saying: "That's a good girl! Run along now!"
"Yes, sir! Thank you, sir!" said Lizzy, and slid out of the room in a manner strongly suggestive of one escaping from a tiger's cage.
Miss Wychwood, observing with some surprise her cherished Waterford glasses, said: "What in the world possessed Limbury to send up the best glasses? I only use them for parties! I collect you frightened him out of his wits, just as you frightened poor Lizzy!"
"No such thing!" said Mr Carleton, pouring burgundy into one of the best glasses. "Limbury is doing justice to this occasion. Good butlers are always awake upon every suit! Here you are, love: see if my prescription doesn't pluck you up!"
Miss Wychwood took the glass, but refused to drink the burgundy unless Mr Carleton joined her. So he poured out a glass for himself, and was just raising it to toast her when Miss Farlow burst into the room, powerfully agitated, stopped dead on the threshold, and exclaimed:
"Well!"
Miss Wychwood was startled into spilling some of the burgundy. She set her glass down, and tried to rub away the stains from the skirt of her gown with her handkerchief, saying crossly: "Really, Maria, it is too bad of you!
Look
what you have made me do! What do you want?"
"I am here, Annis, to preserve you from the consequences of your own folly!" said Miss Farlow. "How
could
you receive a member of the Male Sex in your bedchamber, and in your
dressing-gown?
Sir, I must request you to leave immediately!"
"You don't mean to tell me that's a dressing-gown?" interrupted Mr Carleton, a dangerous gleam in his eyes. "Well, it's by far the most elegant one I've ever been privileged to see, and I suppose I must have seen scores of 'em in my time—paid for them too!"
"For goodness' sake, Oliver—!" Miss Wychwood said, in an imploring whisper.
Trembling with outraged propriety, Miss Farlow uttered a terrible indictment of Mr Carleton's manners, morals, and shameless disregard of the rules of conduct governing any man venturing to call himself a
gentleman.
A shattering retort rose to his lips, but he bit it back, because he saw that Miss Wychwood was by no means enjoying this encounter, and merely said: "Well, now that you have convinced me, ma'am, that I am so far sunk in moral turpitude as to be past praying for, may I suggest that you withdraw from this scene of vice?"
"Nothing," declared Miss Farlow, "will prevail upon me to leave this room while you remain in it, sir! I do not know by what means you forced yourself into it—"
"Oh, do, pray, Maria, stop talking such fustian nonsense, and go away!" begged Miss Wychwood. "Mr Carleton did not force his way into my room! He came at my invitation, and if I have to listen to any more ranting from you I shall go into strong hysterics!"
"Sir Geoffrey entrusted you to my care, Annis, and never shall it be said of me that I betrayed the confidence he reposed in me! Since Jurby has been so unmindful of her duty—not that that surprises me, for I have always considered that you permitted her
far
too much license, so that she has grown to be so big in her own esteem that—"
"Oh, cut line, woman!" said Mr Carleton, striding to the door, and opening it. "Miss Wychwood has asked you to go away, and I have every intention of seeing to it that you do go away! Don't keep me waiting!"
"And leave my sacred charge unprotected? Never!" declared Miss Farlow heroically.
"Oh, for God's sake—!" snapped Mr Carleton, at the end of his patience. "What the devil do you suppose I'm going to do to her? Rape her? I will give you thirty seconds to leave this room, and if you are not on the other side of the door by that time I shall eject you forcibly!"
"Brute!" ejaculated Miss Farlow, bursting into tears. "Offering violence to a defenceless female! Only wait until Sir Geoffrey knows of this!"
He paid no heed, but kept his eyes on his watch. Miss Farlow hesitated between heroism and fright. He shut his watch with a snap, restored it to his pocket, and advanced purposefully towards her. Miss Farlow's courage failed. She uttered a shriek, and ran out of the room.
Mr Carleton shut the door, and applied himself to the more agreeable task of soothing Miss Wychwood's lacerated nerves, in which he succeeded so well that in a very short space of time her racing pulses had steadied to a normal rate, and she not only allowed herself to be coaxed to swallow the rest of the burgundy in her glass, but even to nibble a biscuit.
Miss Farlow's state was less happy. The intelligence, conveyed to her by Jurby, who was hovering on the landing, that Miss Wychwood had a visitor with her, and did not wish to be disturbed, had aroused all her smouldering jealousy. She had told Jurby that she had had no business to introduce a visitor into Miss Wychwood's room, and was unwise enough to say: "You should have asked leave to do so from me, or from her ladyship! Who is this visitor?"
"One that will do her more good than you ever will, miss!" had said Jurby, goaded into retort. "It is Mr Carleton!"
Miss Farlow had been at first incredulous, and then sincerely shocked. In her chaste mind, every man—except, of course, doctors, fathers, and brothers—figured as a potential menace to a maiden's virtue. Even had it been Lord Beckenham who was closeted with Miss Wychwood she would have felt it to be her duty to have pointed out to him the impropriety of his visiting a lady in her bedchamber, who was wearing nothing but a dressing-gown over her nightdress. But Lord Beckenham—such a perfect gentleman!—would never have dreamt of compromising a lady in such a scandalous fashion. As for Annis, not only tolerating, but actually
encouraging
Mr Carleton in his nefarious conduct, she could only suppose that her poor dear cousin had taken leave of her senses. Since she (a defenceless female) had been unable to prevail upon this Brute to withdraw from Miss Wychwood's room, there was only one thing to be done, and that was to pour the whole story into Sir Geoffrey's ears the instant he returned from his walk with Lady Wychwood. With this intention, she hurried downstairs, mentally rehearsing her role in the forthcoming drama, and working herself up into a hysterical state. She encountered Sir Geoffrey just as he was about to enter the drawing-room.
He and Lady Wychwood had returned to the house some minutes earlier. Fortunately for Lady Wychwood, she had gone up immediately to the nursery, to assure herself that Tom had taken no harm from his first expedition, since his illness, into the garden, so she was spared the horrid news Miss Farlow was only too anxious to recount to her.
Sir Geoffrey was not so fortunate. Having regaled himself with a glass of sherry, he mounted the stairs to the first floor, and was instantly assailed by Miss Farlow, who came stumbling down the stairs, uttering in a hysterical voice: "Cousin Geoffrey! Oh, Cousin Geoffrey! Thank God you are come!"
Sir Geoffrey eyed her with disfavour. He was unaccustomed to females who flew into distempered freaks, and he had already taken Miss Farlow in dislike. He said: "What the deuce is the matter with you, Maria?"
"Oh, nothing, nothing—except that I have never been so shocked in my life! It is Annis! You must go up to her room immediately!"
"Eh?" said Sir Geoffrey, startled. "Annis? Why, what's amiss with her?"
"I do not know how to tell you! If it were not my duty to do so, I could not bring myself to disclose to you what will curl your liver!" said Miss Farlow, extracting the last ounce of drama from the situation.
Sir Geoffrey was incensed. "For God's sake, Maria, stop talking as if you were taking part in a Cheltenham tragedy, and tell me what has put you into this taking! Curl my liver indeed! Without any more ado, answer me this!—Is there anything wrong with my sister?"
"Everything!" declared Miss Farlow, clinging to the most important role of her life.
"Balderdash!" said Sir Geoffrey. "It's my belief you're getting to be queer in your attic, Maria! Never mind my liver!
What has happened to my sister?"
"That Man," disclosed Miss Farlow, "has been closeted with her since you and dear Lady Wychwood left the house! And he is still with her! Had I known that he had forced his way into the house, and that Jurby was so lost to all sense of her duty as to admit him into Annis's bedchamber—but no doubt he bribed her to do it!—I should have summoned James to cast him out of the house! But I was with Tom, in the garden, and I knew nothing until I came in, and was just about to pop into Annis's room, when Jurby stopped me, saying that Annis was engaged. 'Engaged?' I said. 'She has a visitor with her, and she don't wish to be disturbed,' she said. You may depend upon it that I insisted on her telling me who had come to visit Annis without so much as a by your leave! And then Jurby told me that it was That Man!"
"What
man?" demanded Sir Geoffrey.
"Mr Carleton!" said Miss Farlow, shuddering.
"Carleton? What the devil is he doing in my sister's room?"