The Observations of a Curious Governess (13 page)

BOOK: The Observations of a Curious Governess
7.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

For a time after, we were both wracked with small remnant paroxysms of sparkling desire. We lay chest to chest, relishing the sensation of weight and satiation within each other.

‘I love you, Martha,’ he said, though I could scarcely hear him above the roar of blood through my body. I smiled at him, through half-lowered lids – unable to answer, just yet.

Finally, when I felt able to speak, I was about to offer reciprocal words of affection when a horrified cry began to crawl up my throat in their stead.

Chapter 7

Dearest reader, I could not have been more mortified. There is no possible circumstance that could cause a lady more distress as this. As my eyes rose, they were met by the capricious and knowing gaze of none other than Mrs Maria Reeves, the vicar’s wife.

‘Well, this is certainly not what I expected to find,’ she said curtly, her lips a grim line of disapproval.

‘Mrs Reeves,’ Jonathan gasped, pulling himself from me and dragging the sheet to cover us both. ‘What are you doing here?’ he demanded.

‘I wished to speak with you, Mr Reeves,’ she replied, a cold flicker in her eyes.

Jonathan inhaled sharply, which acted to broaden his impressive chest. ‘Then you could do so when I return to the vicarage. You need not follow me about in this most unbecoming and peculiar fashion!’

He angled his body as so to protect me from her view. From this vantage, I could see her face was growing red, though with embarrassment or fury, I couldn’t yet discern. For certain, this did not appear to be the gregariously natured lady whom Jonathan had spoken of. I understood and accepted that they possessed an unusual camaraderie, rarely seen betwixt men and women. The stories Jonathan told of Mrs Reeves’ penchant for laughter and mischief were a joy to hear, but now, seeing her thus - I couldn’t wonder about something else.

Mrs Reeves cleared her throat. ‘My manner has been neither unbecoming nor peculiar,’ she retorted. ‘I had thought to see what you two were up to. I couldn’t mistake the look in Miss Swan’s eyes when she captured sight of you at church, and when you both disappeared so mysteriously down the lane … well, I thought I ought to check upon you to ensure no vice was undertaken. I see …’ she stared at me, ‘I have come too late.’

My face bloomed with unwelcome colour, and I could feel Jonathan tense beside me.

‘I would be much obliged if you left immediately,’ he said through gritted teeth.

‘Oh, I am certain you would be, but I shall not be leaving, not just yet. I have matters most pressing which need be discussed.’

I could feel Jonathan’s seed spill from my sex as I jerked upwards in mortification at her words. The sensation brought yet another hot crushing wave of humiliation down upon me, and I meekly clutched the sheet where I could. Reader, I still burn red thinking about that moment, even as I write, after the event.

‘The time for speaking is not now. Please leave.’ Jonathan’s voice was distant.

‘I shall when I am ready, Jonathan. First, however, I wish to speak with … you both.’ Her blue eyes sparkled as they caught mine, and my cheeks burned anew.

‘If you are so damnably adamant, at least give us a moment to dress. This is highly unbefitting for us all.’

‘Oh, indeed. I must agree.’ Mrs Reeves smiled wickedly. ‘And I shall allow you a moment to dress, indeed I shall.’

With that she turned and walked from the room, the soft sweep of her skirts echoing behind as she quietly closed the dry, rotten door.

We said nothing a moment, before Jonathan broke the silence.

‘I am so very sorry, Miss Swan,’ he said, and stroked my cheek. ‘I had no notion we were followed. I had thought I was careful but …’

I sighed, trying to stem the rolling nausea in my belly. ‘We are both at fault. We should have locked the door.’

‘There are no keys. I shall have to get a locksmith to do that for another time.’

‘Indeed, if there ever is another time,’ I said.

Jonathan’s hands found mine and he gave them a firm squeeze. ‘It will be alright, dearest. I shall never allow this disgrace to mark you or your name. Trust me,’ he implored.

Looking into those dark sincere eyes, I could answer in only one way. ‘I do. Implicitly,’ I said.

‘Then come, allow me to help you dress. I sense Mrs Maria Reeves shall not wait overlong. She is many things, but patient she is not.’

I cringed. My heart seemed to be having terrified paroxysms in my chest, and I kept revisiting the terrible moment that Mrs Reeves entered.

It took a short time, and soon we were appropriately attired, if not inappropriately dishevelled. As if through some peculiar knowledge, Mrs Reeves entered immediately after. She looked at us and I fear my head fell low with my shame.

‘There, there,’ she said and took my hand, patting it comfortingly. ‘You are not the first, nor the last I fear, to fall for the charms of Jonathan Reeves.’

I looked at her, slightly startled. What could she possibly mean? I stole a glance towards Jonathan and he frowned deeply.

‘Has he promised you passion? A future?’ she asked, her eyes knowing and shrewd. I looked from her face to Jonathan’s, to find his colour turning ashen.

‘Mr Reeves?’ I asked very softly. ‘Whatever does she mean?’

Jonathan’s eyes grew guarded. ‘I cannot fathom her meaning.’

‘Can you not?’ she replied archly.

‘No, madam. I cannot,’ he retorted, the first indications of anger making their appearance in his tone.

‘Well, for that I am wounded,’ Mrs Reeves said, then turned to address me. ‘Miss Swan, has this gentleman – though I hesitate to use the word – promised you his hand?’ she asked.

I said nothing, but my silence was taken for assent.

‘So he did me, many years ago, before I married his cousin.’

I couldn’t abstain from a sharp inhalation of breath at her words. This was indeed news to me!

‘He promised me that he would save money for our future. He made me think we had one.’

My heart renewed its wild tattoo. I couldn’t look at Jonathan. I couldn’t.

‘Maria …’ he said, softly, warningly.

‘Allow me to finish, Jonathan,’ she snapped. ‘You have taken your ruse further with Miss Swan than you ever did with I – still, this is my Christian duty. She ought to know your true intentions do not involve matrimony at all.’

‘That is untrue,’ he growled, fists clenching by his sides. ‘I love Miss Swan. I will marry her as soon as I can finance a good home for her.’

‘You loved me once,’ Mrs Reeves spoke softly. ‘You told me so.’

I started at this. I had known Mr Reeves verily all my life and could never recall him in love with
any
young lady. I hesitated at this thought. No, I was wrong, there had been another lady, a Miss Stanley if I was correct. When I was at Mrs Cadwell’s Academy, there had been a hint of trouble, and I had not seen Mr Reeves for some time after. I was, of course, resigned by that stage to my lot and did not think much on it. Besides, I made a concerted effort to be far too busy with my books and learning to worry over the goings-on of my neighbours. Yet, I couldn’t recall the lady’s first name…

‘Maria,’ he said softly. ‘We were terribly young.’

Miss Maria Stanley
! How could I have forgotten?

‘Yet you promised me a future,’ she retorted.

‘Your father refused my offer, and my father forbade me. There was naught else I could do.’

‘We could have gone to Gretna Green,’ she whispered.

Good Lord in Heaven! I felt utterly wretched at these words. Had she truly loved Mr Reeves enough to flee and shame her family at Gretna Green? How could she bear to have him under her roof now, when married to another man? Had she wept, pined and touched herself for the man she’d lost as he slept under her marital roof? Did all this happen whilst I lay in my bed at Stanton and did the same?

‘We could have eloped, to be sure - but as I recall, you swiftly left and married my cousin instead.’

She gasped, and an expression of utter outrage coloured her pretty face.

It was, I confess, too much for me to take. I felt so sickened, so terribly ashamed.

‘Enough,’ I gasped, looking wildly around for my bonnet. ‘I have simply heard enough!’

I espied my bonnet upon the floor and I lurched to grab it.

Mr Reeves’ face contorted with some indefinable emotion as I did so.

‘Excuse me,’ I whispered, and moved to leave. I needed space, I needed to think, to consider these things I had heard.

‘Martha, please, don’t go. We ought to discuss this,’ Mr Reeves implored and grasped my hand tightly, forbidding escape. I looked at him longingly. How I wished that the circumstances were different! I wished that devilish Mrs Maria Reeves were not there, and had not made her terrible confession to me. How I wished I could have lain longer in ignorance.

But I am not ignorant, and I am no fool.

I stared down at his hand capturing mine. ‘Release me at once, sir!’ I said, and tugged my arm. He released me as if stung.

I did not wait to hear what was said next. I fled, through the woodlands and back to my rooms at Stanton, to exhaust myself with tears.

****

I fear I was in something of a state that evening, my low spirits obvious and impossible to raise. My inability to feign enjoyment in my meal aroused great curiosity in my employers and my young charge, who seemed genuinely perturbed by my lack of humour.

Nanny came to take young Master Alexander not long after the sweet course, which left me with the Lord and Ladyship. I fear my eyes were reddened from my weeping.

‘Miss Swan, do you fare ill? I should have asked earlier, but did not want to do so in front of Alexander,’ Lady Stanton asked.

I looked down at my untouched plate of pudding. ‘Why, thank you, Lady Stanton. I am … under the weather, perhaps,’ I suggested. ‘The sun was too strong on my stroll from church this morning.’

Lady Stanton nodded sagely. ‘I do not know how anyone can bear the summer sun.’ She looked towards her husband with eyes as unreadable as an ancient text.

Lord Stanton’s glittering eyes met mine, as if he were trying to decipher some peculiar meaning. ‘I trust you will be well, then?’ Or ought I call for the physician?’ he added. There was, perhaps, a minute expression of amusement that glittered in his eyes. The rogue – what did he mean by it?

‘Indeed, no. An early night and I shall be well by morning. Thank you.’

I did not tarry long after the meal, but returned to my room and prayed for a good night of sleep – which, unsurprisingly, evaded me. I am very sorry to write it, dear reader, but for a week after that terribly humiliating incident with Mrs Reeves I was lost – lost in my own maudlin musings and heartbreak.

Naturally, Mr Reeves continued to come to Stanton to conduct his business with His Lordship, but I avoided him. Thus, I refused to take my morning constitutionals and spent long – interminably long – hours in the library, throwing myself into lesson development for my charges. If anything positive came from that dismal week, it was the high quality of my charges’ learning. They thrived under my fastidious attention and care. I slept fitfully, and when I did I was confronted by dreams of a most carnal and obscene nature. Inevitably, I would wake more exhausted than before.

****

Sunday 25th July 1813

Lord Stanton’s birthday party came and went yesterday, and I found benefit in the timely chaos that it created. The activity surrounding the occasion was a most welcome distraction. The house veritably rang with the sounds of extra staff; at times there was so much noise I forgot I was not in London. This activity kept my mind from straying to those subjects my heart bled to reflect upon. My charges understandably were wild for disruptions, and suffered from an overabundance of energy which left me with very little by the end of a day. I believe I was not alone in finding the party a blessed interruption from our standard lives. For afterwards, I noticed a most significant shift in the cordiality betwixt His Lordship and Her Ladyship – a most pleasing turn of events.

Despite their having the party within Stanton’s grounds, I naturally did not attend. Instead, I attempted to give lessons in the nursery of the house, so that the children were suitably entertained and did not disturb the guests in the revelry. The party was surprisingly quiet and refined. I had expected something rowdier perhaps, yet those friends and acquaintances of the Stantons who I observed from the nursery window seemed very proper and gentile – not at all as I would have imagined Lord Stanton’s acquaintances to be.

Of Lord and Lady Stanton that day I saw naught – not even at supper. I heard some sort of a ruckus downstairs, when a young lady appeared to faint after observing the paintings on the landing, but I do not know the particulars and nothing has been spoken of it since.

This morning, however, with cleaning and tidying to be done, no one from the Stanton household seemed moved to attend Sunday services. For myself, however, I personally had no excuse, having not overindulged the day before – but I did not wish go, lest I see the unwelcome spectre of Mrs Maria Reeves, and her peculiar style of gloating. I am certain the good Lord will forgive me on this occasion, the sorry sinner that I am. My melancholia at Mrs Maria Reeves’ revelations has not abated.

****

26
th
July 1813

It is Monday, two days after the party, and I woke earlier than usual. I thought to go to Stanton House’s chapel, and make my apologies to God. You see what a bigoted fool I am – striving for age-old piety and righteousness but succumbing to lust and avarice as soon as it presents itself. What more can I say but that I am a weak woman?

My slumber has been poor, and I felt restless. The chapel is but a short walk from the main house, but I was concerned that I may see Mr Reeves if I were to go. Nearly two weeks have passed since I had seen the gentleman, and although my heart ached recalling my wounded departure and his hurt gaze as I went I was still unready to face him. For you must understand, I did not know what to expect should I come across him. Sometimes I thought I had overreacted, and ought to apologise; at other times, I remained stung and angered by his neglecting to mention his past attachment to Mrs Maria Reeves, and that the plans he shared with me were those he’d once shared
and discarded
with her.

Other books

Dead Man's Chest by Kerry Greenwood
The Trouble With Emma by Katie Oliver
The Shifter's Choice by Jenna Kernan
Divas and Dead Rebels by Virginia Brown
Man-Kzin Wars XIII-ARC by Larry Niven
The Last Aerie by Brian Lumley
Charity Girl by Georgette Heyer
Shattered Edge by Hargrove, A. M.
Diamond Star by Catherine Asaro