Julia London 4 Book Bundle (31 page)

Read Julia London 4 Book Bundle Online

Authors: The Rogues of Regent Street

“Bloody hell,” Lord Kealing whispered. “It
is
true.”

“Unfortunately so,” Adrian responded with a smirk.
“I don’t believe you have had the pleasure of making the acquaintance of my wife. Lady Lilliana Albright,” he said.

To Lilliana’s great surprise, Lord Kealing did not even look at her. His face reddened as he glared at Adrian. “I was given to understand that you blinded yourself by attempting to blow your fool head off!”

Lilliana gaped at him in shock, but Adrian merely chuckled. “Rather sorry I missed, are you, Father?”

“You won’t stop until you ruin everything around you!” Lord Kealing spat contemptuously. “I knew your recklessness would ruin you in the end, and I was right! Look at you now! Useless to your wife, to your
title!
Is this how you would honor your grandfather? Is this what you would do to me in the end? Heaven help me, the expense I will incur in taking your foolishness to the Court of Faculties and Dispensations—”

“Lord Kealing!” Lilliana interjected, horrified by his ignominious words and posture. But Lord Kealing did not seem to hear her. Benedict responded with a weakly imploring look that made her stomach knot in revulsion.

“The burden now falls to me,” he went on. “What more would you do to me?” he bellowed.

“Father, please,” Benedict tried lamely.

Across the room, Adrian laughed softly. Lilliana jerked her gaze to him; he was standing with his arms folded across his chest, glaring in the direction of Lord Kealing so sharply that for a moment she thought he could see his father. “Father, only you could take a tragedy such as this and make it seem willful on my part. I did not ask you to come here. I do not ask
anything
of you. Whatever scheme you may have concocted is pointless.”

“Pointless, is it?” Lord Kealing bellowed. “I will not allow my name to be scandalized, and as much as I wish it were untrue,
your
name is tied to
mine.
How many lives will you ruin before it is all said and done? One would have thought Phillip’s murder was enough—”

“Father!” Benedict cried. “Please! Be civil! Come,
sit near the fire. Lilliana, is there perhaps a bit of whiskey about?” he asked nervously, and grabbing his father’s coat sleeve, forced him to turn around and walk to the fire.

Lord Kealing went, but he was not done. “I don’t want any whiskey, Ben,” he muttered. “I don’t intend to stay a moment longer in this house than I must.”

“You already have,” Adrian said indifferently.

“Unfortunately, Albright, I have a duty to assess the damage to Longbridge. You may deserve to rot, but he was Benedict’s grandfather, too, and I will not allow you to ruin his legacy!”

“He has not ruined Longbridge!” Lilliana gasped with outrage. “He has done nothing but improve it! It was in horrible disrepair when we came, but he has—”

“Lilliana,” Adrian gently interrupted, “save your breath.”

“Lady Albright,” Lord Kealing said icily, turning his little black eyes to her, “do me the enormous courtesy of allowing me a private conversation with my son.”

Astounded, Lilliana gaped at him, unable to conceive of someone behaving in such a rude manner. And in her own house! Indignant, she deliberately planted her hands on her waist. “I beg your pardon?” she asked slowly.

“Benedict!” Adrian said sharply. “Please …” he said, motioning in the general direction of Lilliana.

Benedict seemed to know exactly what he wanted, and quickly strode across the room to grab Lilliana’s elbow. “I would that you show me your recent paintings.” He did not allow her to respond, but forced her to the door as Lord Kealing began his contemptible drivel again.

“Benedict, stop! I must—”

“You must let Adrian and Father talk,” he muttered, and pushed her out the door, almost colliding with Max and his tray of tea. “Take my advice and keep the tea for yourself, Max, unless you relish cleaning up the carnage later,” he said and proceeded to march her down
the corridor toward the terrace, then practically dragged her down the flagstone steps and into the garden.

When Lilliana tried to pry his fingers from her elbow, Benedict urged her forward. “Let him be! There is much that must be said between them just now, and it is not appropriate for you to hear,” he admonished her, and propelled her to the orangery as Lilliana struggled alongside, imagining Adrian walking unsteadily to a seat near his father, too proud to ask for help. She had met Lord Kealing on very few occasions, but she had never taken such an instant dislike to anyone in all her life. How dare he come and assail his son! Could he not
feel
Adrian’s devastation?

Benedict threw open the door to the orangery and shoved her in ahead of him, closing the door securely behind him before allowing his gaze to sweep over her. He frowned at what he saw. “Ah, love, don’t be so vexed. Their differences are long-standing.”

“That hardly gives your father the right to treat him so ill!”

Benedict shrugged and strolled into the room. “It may seem so to you, but Adrian has treated him just as ill on more than one occasion.”

That gave her pause. Suspicious, she asked, “What do you mean by that?”

“Just that Adrian has been as cruel to Father,” he said matter-of-factly, and glanced toward the wall, where several of her paintings were hung. “There were times when Father desperately needed him, and Adrian merely laughed. He despises Father, you know.” Benedict glanced at her over his shoulder. “I am quite fond of Adrian, you understand. But surely you know by now he is not the man he would have you believe. He has a dark side that is just as contemptible, if not more so, than you think my father has.”

“He would never treat anyone so harshly,” Lilliana said defensively, inwardly wincing at how false she knew that to be. The things he had said to her sounded just as vulgar as Lord Kealing’s utterances. She unconsciously
shook her head, unwilling to engage in another internal debate about Adrian. “What is the Court of Faculties and Dispensations?” she asked, quickly changing the subject.

Benedict smiled patiently. “A court where special circumstances are heard, love. Nothing you should fret about, I assure you. You finished the painting of the old chapel, I see. It’s marvelous! You should really consider selling some of your work,” Benedict said, and began strolling about her many canvases.

Lilliana kept her mouth shut. Something was terribly wrong, and whatever it was, Benedict knew it. She watched him wander about her little studio for an hour or so, chattering easily, never really giving her an opportunity to question him further. There was something uncomfortably jovial in his manner, inappropriate after what they had heard. She grew increasingly fretful, and Benedict finally gave in to it, escorting her back to the house. As they walked down the corridor to the study where they had left the men, Lilliana could not help fearing that the silence meant father and son had killed each other.

But when Max hurried down the hall to meet them with Benedict’s hat in his hands and an unusually vivid look of worry about him, Benedict grabbed her hand and squeezed it. “You see there? It is already over.”

She jerked her hand free as Max shoved the hat between him and Lilliana. “Lord Kealing is waiting for you in the chaise, my lord. He would that you come at once.”

“And Lord Albright? Where is he?” Lilliana asked.

“Upstairs, madam,” he said, and glanced anxiously at Benedict. “His lordship was quite insistent.” He turned to hurry off in the direction he had come.

Benedict’s gaze fell on her lips. “I’ll come again soon. Everything will be all right, you’ll see.” With a reassuring smile he started down the corridor—his steps, Lilliana noticed, every bit as anxious as Max’s.

Seventeen

     
I
NCOMPETENT HIS FATHER
had called him. Too infirm to manage his affairs. A blight on the fine tradition of his title. And then the bastard was off to find a barrister he could convince to prepare a case and present it to the Court of Faculties and Dispensations. Adrian had no doubt Archie would have a decent chance in gaining Longbridge in trust—all of his holdings, for that matter—until an heir came of age.

Assuming Archie didn’t find some way to keep him from that too. Not that Adrian was terribly anxious to bring into this world a child he could not even see, let alone provide for. Bloody hell, he could hardly disagree with anything Archie had said. He was a reckless fool—the moment he had killed Phillip, he had started a downward slide into hell, and had taken an innocent parish princess along with him. Even if she wanted to be free of him, she could not marry Benedict. There was no custom or law in the land that would allow her to find true happiness, not after what he had done.

Ah, but that Princess had shown him a strength of spirit he honestly envied. Her unfathomable dedication to him was exasperating, yes, but extraordinarily admirable
in light of everything. This monstrous thing he had done—ruining her life irrevocably—was just the beginning. Should Archie be successful in his suit, the scandal would be devastating. His recklessness and need for revenge had ruined her, and the irony of it all was that Archie would win after all.

When he heard the door to the master suite creak open, he waved her in, actually grateful for the intrusion for once. He was sick of himself.

“Adrian?” Her voice was small. “When you didn’t come down for supper, I wondered if … I thought perhaps …”

“I have not expired, nor lain on the counterpane and wept myself to sleep,” he said dryly.

“Oh. Well. Then I shall leave you—”

“What is this sudden reticence, Lilliana? You have so enjoyed demanding my attention,” he said, and rose carefully, turning in the direction of her voice.

“I don’t wish to disturb you if you are … you know.…”

“Please, come sit with me. I am rather eager for company tonight.” In an unusual gesture he stretched his hand in her direction, smiling at her soft intake of breath. A moment passed, then another, and at last he heard her moving across the room. When she slipped her slender hand into his, he brought it to his lips in an almost unconscious act of penitence. Another little gasp. When he released her hand, it slipped from his and he heard the soft whisper of her skirts as she sat down. He groped in the darkness for his chair, falling into it without aplomb. “You are undoubtedly wondering what transpired,” he said impassively.

“I, umm … yes. Yes, I am.”

“Well, Lillie, I hate to be the one to inform you, but the moon has, apparently, turned to cheese.” She made no response to his quip; he could sense her holding her breath. Sighing wearily, he shoved a hand through his hair. There was no sense in prolonging the inevitable. “Archie intends to take Longbridge from me. I hope that
you will at last see reason and return to the Grange before I can cause you any more harm.”

“B-but that’s impossible!”

“Not impossible … not easy, perhaps, but not impossible. He will engage the finest barrister he can afford to present his case.”

She made a small sound of disbelief. “His
case
? What case?”

“A case of incompetency, an inability to care for my holdings properly. A case that argues on behalf of future heirs. He will argue that as I blinded myself in a botched attempt to take my own life, I cannot possibly be of a mind to see to my own affairs. Therefore, my assets should be held in trust for my son. And naturally he will put forth that he should be the executor of any such trust.” Adrian paused; how strange that he could sense her deep blush.

“You … you don’t have an heir,” she said quietly.

He smiled. “That is putting a rather fine point on it. I suppose in theory I am capable, and that is all that matters. He’ll stop at nothing to gain Longbridge from me.” Funny, but he heard himself speak as if he were talking of another person, someone only remotely familiar to him. He felt no emotion at all, nothing but the numb, vague sense of emptiness he always felt when it came to Archie. In that, at least, nothing had changed.

“But why would he do such a thing? Why should he feel so … so …”

“Why should he hate me so?” Adrian chuckled derisively. How could he possibly explain? “It’s a rather long story, and one that is hardly suitable for a lady.”

“Oh, honestly,” she snapped, surprising him with her sudden impatience. “I know you think me a simpleton, but you needn’t resort to treating me like a child.”

She was glaring at him, he knew it very well, and he smiled. “I don’t think you a simpleton, Lilliana,” he said laughingly. “Far from it, actually.” He might have thought so once, but not any longer. “I think you are a Princess, a woman of great valor,” he said solemnly,
“but I have hurt you enough.” He
did
regret it, more than anything else he had ever done—and that was saying quite a lot for a rogue.

Lilliana’s skirts rustled as she shifted uncomfortably in her chair. A moment of silence passed, and he could almost see her staring into the fire, her green eyes clouded with pained confusion. “There is little you can say that will hurt me anymore,” she finally said, and cleared her throat as if gathering her courage. “Whatever it is, I am quite prepared to hear it. I don’t know how to speak any plainer, Adrian. I
want
to help you and I will do whatever is in my power. What has passed between us cannot be taken back, but …” She faltered; he almost reached for her, but there was no point in it. Any comfort he would try and give her now would seem so … 
late.
“There is nothing you can say that will change the way I feel,” she murmured softly.

Why? Dear God,
why
? What had he done to deserve this? What impossible logic of hers could perpetuate such a sentiment? All right, then, there was nothing to be done for it but to tell her everything. Every ugly aspect. She had to go for her own sake, and he knew no other way to make her see reason than to lay it all out for her, plain as day, and hope she would at last comprehend. “You leave me no choice,” he said hoarsely.

“Then you might as well say it.”

He spoke—haltingly at first—finding it difficult to voice aloud the fact that his father had despised him since birth and had thought his mother a whore. But he forced himself to speak, admitting things about his childhood that he had never told another living soul. In the background he heard the small sounds of distress she made as she listened, but he continued undaunted, his voice growing stronger. Words flowed out of him, words he had kept locked away in some remote part of his soul all his life spilled out, tumbling over one another in their haste to be set free.

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