Aurora (4 page)

Read Aurora Online

Authors: Joan Smith

Tags: #Regency Romance

“Remember the gypsies are in the forest,” Marnie reminded her.

“They are at the far end, where the stream widens. I might just go in a little and pick some wild flowers. There are some lovely bluebells there.”

She did as she had mentioned, walking slowly through the grass that was already hip-high, soaking up the sun. She picked a few random flowers as she went, and when she got to the edge of the forest, she stopped, undecided. The gypsy camp was three miles away. She would enter just a little. The gray walls of the Dower House were still visible behind her. The gypsies would not be brazen enough to come this close, and wouldn’t harm her, one of the ladies of the place, in any case. Yet as she glanced down at her plain blue dimity gown, she realized she didn’t look so very like a lady. Malone was supervising a washing that afternoon, and had commanded her into this old frock.

Peering in at the edge of the forest, there was no sound but the cooing of a pair of doves and the soft stirring of the leaves. She saw the patch of bluebells in the near distance and walked quickly toward them. It was cool and sweet-smelling in here, with the slippery bed of fallen pine needles under her feet. A black squirrel sat on his haunches nibbling at a nut. He was tame enough that he didn’t dart off at her approach. She hoped she might be allowed to touch him, but at the last minute he took fright and scampered to a branch to guard his dropped nut jealously. She went on toward the flowers growing in profusion by the stream’s edge, and suddenly heard some noise—the rattle of a harness and the soft thud of horse hooves in the distance. She was a little alarmed, but thought it was very likely the game warden. Clare would have him out today to keep an eye on the gypsies. As a precaution, she ducked behind a tree to determine who the intruder was before showing herself.

She was glad she had taken the precaution, for it was no game warden, but one of the gypsies. He sat on a sleek black horse, which seemed the proper mount for him. He too was dark and sleek. He stopped at the edge of the stream and stood up in the saddle, throwing both arms out wide. Aurora became alarmed. She thought he was about to go into some gypsy ritual, possibly religious or mystical, but he only yawned, then hopped down from his mount and advanced to the stream. He walked with a soft, silent stride, like a red Indian. There was something furtive, almost feral, about him. He looked about on all sides before he bent down to the stream and lifted a handful of water. He wasn’t drinking it. Malone was right about that. He smelled it, it seemed, then let it out of his hand.

Before Aurora could move, he began to strip off his shirt. He wore a dark shirt and no jacket, nor any hat either. He soon stood revealed before her, naked to the waist, with a broad tanned chest, and golden shoulders, well muscled. A black shock of hair fell across his forehead as he knelt down to splash water on his face, arms and chest. The horse, untethered, came forward and began drinking from the stream.

“Do you mind, Baron?” the man said, and shooed the animal away. “What do you think this is, the Ganges?”

She was surprised he was so well-spoken. A gypsy, she thought he would have a strange accent. Her impulse was to run, but her exit would not be silent, and what if he should chase her? No, best to stay concealed and make not a sound.

The horse nuzzled forward again, apparently thirsty. “You have neither manners nor breeding, commoner,” the gypsy said, looking at the horse askance. “Can’t you let a gentleman bathe in peace? And as to drinking my bathwater, don’t think to impress me with that self-abasement.”

Undismayed, the horse drank on. The man leaned forward and immersed his whole head in the cool water. For a minute it seemed he had run mad and was drowning himself. Aurora stared, wondering what to do, but then he raised his head suddenly and shook it like a dog coming out of the water. He brushed the excess from his face with his hands, then turned swiftly to look behind him. His ears must have been excellent, for Aurora heard nothing, but in a few seconds a girl came forward through the trees. She too was gypsy—black hair held in a red kerchief, with golden earrings and a blouse that didn’t seem much to care whether it stayed on or not, but kept shucking off one shoulder. She was young, strikingly attractive in a jungle sort of way. She said some words to the man, while her bold black eyes wandered over his bare torso. She spoke in low tones, her words indistinguishable, but the sound of them not so English as the man’s.

Soon she was running her fingers over his chest, looking up at him through her lashes with her head tossed back.
Hussy!
Aurora thought. What a brazen hussy. But perhaps he was her husband. It would take a marriage between them at least to account for such forward behaviour in the young lady’s opinion. When the man put his two bare arms around the girl’s waist and began embracing her quite passionately, Aurora felt sure they were man and wife, and was petrified lest they begin further intimacies. He was muttering softly in her ears, kissing her shoulders, his hands caressing her sides and, oh dear! She turned her head quickly and calculated the distance to the meadow and safety.

When she looked back, the man had stopped and was telling the girl to go. She pulled off her kerchief and tossed her black tangle of curls back, running her fingers through them while regarding him with a challenging smile.

“Go on, before I forget I’m a gentleman,” he said, and gave her a pat on the derrière.

Gentleman! Some gentleman! The girl tossed her shoulders, shaking the blouse loose over one, and left, her hips swaying provocatively. The man looked after her with open admiration at her performance. One last inviting glance was cast over the retreating shoulder. The man took a single pace after her, then stopped and returned to his toilette, shaking his head and muttering something. He fumbled in his pocket for a comb, combed his hair, put on his shirt and began stuffing the shirttails into his trousers. He then grabbed the reins of his mount, and Aurora breathed a great sigh of relief. He was going. Her relief was short-lived. A dog, a mutt of no discernible breed, came trotting from the woods, barking strenuously.

“Shut up, Rags. Do you want to announce to the world we’re here?” the man said.

It seemed rather a game the mutt had in mind. He picked up a stick and presented it, tail wagging, to his master. The man took it and tossed it across the stream, where it landed not three yards from Aurora’s feet. The mutt bounded joyfully into the water, out the other side, and retrieved the stick. Then his keen sense of smell sent his ears perking up. He sniffed the ground and spotted her, cowering behind the tree.

The man on the other side of the stream whistled. “Come on, Rags,” he said.

The dog stayed where he was, the stick forgotten, his tail wagging wildly. He emitted a sharp yap in the direction of his quarry, dropping his stick in his excitement.

“What is it? Cornered a rabbit? Too bad I don’t have my guns with me.” This was at least a relief. She wouldn’t have been a bit surprised if death was to be her fate. Her heart was in her throat, and she risked a peep from behind the tree. The gypsy was staring hard at her, and in a flash he was bounding across the stream.

“Well, well. What have we here?” he asked in a playful way, while his black eyes raked her from head to toe. “My lucky day. Girls popping out at me from all sides.” She didn’t say a word, but stood frozen while the dog yapped delightedly at his find.

“Lucky I just made my toilette,” he continued, rather enjoying her fright, she thought. He looked around carefully and shushed the dog. Privacy, concealment, was his wish, and she trembled to consider why this should be. In her dismay the flowers fell on the ground in a heap.

The gypsy looked at them and laughed. “All your labour wasted. But then you had a free show, so your afternoon was not entirely in vain. I usually charge a fee for performing, you know,” he said, and put his fingers on her chin. “What’s the matter? Cat got your tongue? She couldn’t get a single syllable out of her constricted throat.

“Before you succumb to an apoplexy, my girl, let me tell you I have just passed up a more appetizing armful than you will ever be, and am not about to ravish you. Where do you come from?”

She pointed to the west, unable to speak.

“Where? The Dower House?”

She nodded. “Do you work there?” he asked.

“No,” she squeaked out.

He regarded her dimity frock. “Not Lady Raiker, by any chance?” he asked ironically.

“Yes!” she said, knowing, or feeling at least, that he would not dare molest Lady Raiker.

“Isn’t that a coincidence, for I am Lord Raiker,” he said, and threw back his head and laughed. “I was going to let you go free, but for that plumper you will pay a forfeit.” He then pulled her into his arms and kissed her soundly on the lips. She was too stunned to speak, too frightened to move. She was like a stone statue in his arms.

After a brief moment he let her go. “I strongly recommend you never take up lovemaking as a profession, miss. You haven’t the knack for it,” he said bluntly, and released her. “Now, tell me who you really are, and never mind pretending to be Lady Raiker. Do you live at the Dower House?” It was suddenly business, no more, no less, and her terror lessened.

“Yes.”

“Who lives there now?”

“Lady Raiker.”

‘‘Which one?’’

“The younger one.

“And Clare, the dowager?” he asked, with a strange smile.

“At Raiker Hall.”

“I thought so! Her son—he lives with her?”

“Yes.”

“How do they get on?”

“What do you mean?”

“Do they live in a high style? Has she availed herself of the baron’s income?”

“Certainly. She is the baron’s mother.”

“I see. You can go now, but I don’t suggest you go gathering flowers while we gypsies are about. They are not all so well behaved as I am.”

She checked his face for signs of irony, and decided he meant to let her off this easily. She took one step, then he reached out and grabbed her arm. “Before you dash off, who are you? What do you do at the Dower House?”

“I’m Miss Falkner, Lady Raiker’s sister. I keep her company.”

“Good God!” he said, and dropped her arm as though it had burned him. “You can’t be! Though there is a resemblance. . . .” He looked at her face closely, examining it, and appeared to be convinced

“I beg your pardon, ma’am. I mistook you for one of the house girls. So you are Marnie’s sister.”

“Who are you?” she was emboldened enough to ask, but in a shaking voice.

“You’ll learn soon enough. I shall be seeing you again. And Miss Falkner—now how shall I phrase it? I would appreciate it if our little meeting could be forgotten, if
I
could be forgotten for a few days. If you would assume a polite uninterest when next we meet.”

The dog became impatient with this conversation and began demanding attention. “All right, I’m coming,” the gypsy said.

Aurora stood staring after his broad, straight back, and was still looking in fascination as he hopped up on his mount and turned it around. With a wave, he nudged the horse with his heels and clattered off into the forest. The woods fell silent again, as man, horse and dog vanished from her view. The doves, she noticed, were still cooing.      

She didn’t wait to gather up her flowers, but dashed quickly from the forest into the broad daylight of the meadow. The whole episode seemed like a dream. She walked home slowly, pondering it all. The gypsy so well-spoken, so curious about the family, so knowledgeable, knowing Clare’s name, and that she had a son. Hadn’t he also used Marnie’s name? “So you are Marnie’s sister.”

Marnie said they came every year. It was their custom perhaps to discover what they could of the places they stopped. For the fortune-tellers, so they could make their palm reading to the point? If they knew Marnie was a widow, for instance, they might provide her with a handsome stranger, to please her. That must be it. But why had he said he would see her again? And why asked her to be silent about their meeting? She must tell, of course. Certainly the family must be warned how close the gypsies came to the house.

She ran the last part of the way home, and told her sister and Berrigan of the encounter. Told them she had seen a gypsy man and woman at the stream, but found herself unable to tell the whole tale. That he had stripped and bathed before her eyes—how could she tell it? And that he had kissed the gypsy girl was bad enough, but that he had also kissed herself was enough to put her in disgrace. That he had found her unattractive was a source of shame even to herself. How demoralizing that the first man ever to embrace her should tell her to her face she hadn’t the knack for it!

And he would know. He had the knack for it pretty well himself. She remembered vividly the manner in which he had embraced the gypsy girl, with passion and the keenest interest. Pooh—what did she care for a gypsy who had the temerity to call himself a gentleman? Yet she found him difficult to forget, with his dark eyes and broad brown shoulders.

“How would he know our names?” Marnie pondered.

“Been coming for years and years. Imagine they know all about you,” Berrigan said stolidly. “Maybe the fortuneteller overheard Rorie use the name.”

“Ah, that would account for it,” Marnie decided, and the matter was dropped.

 

Chapter Four

 

Charles’s formal tea was set for one week hence, and the interval was a busy one for the Raiker ladies. The dowager had time to get her carpets and drapes torn off and cleaned, and the younger lady had ample time to deliver the invitations and encourage a favourable response. The acceptances were all given, with various degrees of pleasure, but one could not like to offend poor Bernard’s widow, and if
she
wanted it, it would be done.

Such a degree of amicability sprang up between the two that the Wedgwood tea service found its way to the Dower House. This was achieved on the day Lord Dougall and his lady were induced to attend the party. Their acceptance was a major coup, one Clare could not have hoped to pull off by herself. The earl would have been happy enough to go to her at any time, but his wife was a high stickler. It had taken a deal of flattery to gain her acceptance. The engagement ring was still lacking, but there were tantalizing hints being let drop that even it might become unentailed if the do went well. Charles’s sole part in the preparation was to be measured for a new suit, in blue to match Mama’s eyes and look pretty beside her white gown with blue ribbons.

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