Read Rescued from Ruin Online

Authors: Georgie Lee

Rescued from Ruin (15 page)

Her voice faded away, lost to the rushing water, and he wrapped his arms around her. She didn’t cry, but clutched his coat as she buried her face in his chest. He rubbed her back, the gesture inadequate for the depth of her suffering and he wished there was something, anything he could do to free her of this loss. He closed his eyes and laid his cheek on her hair, tightening his arms around her and trying to shield her from a soul-wrenching grief he knew too well.

They stood together, the water flowing beneath their feet, the plunk of the frog jumping from the boat into the water joining the rustle of leaves in the breeze. He held her until she relaxed against him and her arms slid around his waist beneath his coat.

‘I’m sorry if I upset you. I only want you to be happy while you’re here,’ Randall whispered, the pressure of her arms on his waist worth more than any embrace he’d ever known before.

‘Don’t be sorry. This isn’t the first time we’ve been here and shared something so private.’ Her thumb caressed the small scar on his back through his shirt, the faint movement tearing through him like a gale wind. There was a trust in her comfort, the same one he’d felt ten years ago in the boat when she’d touched his cheek.

‘Do you still struggle?’ he asked, testing the new bond between them, hoping she might share more of her secrets and troubles.

Instead her thumb stopped and she leaned back, sliding her arms out from around him. He caught her hands, refusing to let her completely pull away or to build higher the wall he was working so hard to scale. ‘We all have difficulties to face.’

‘Are yours behind you, or is there something more?’ He watched, waiting for her to confide in him so he could help her and make some small amends for all his shortcomings.

Her hand tightened in his, as if accepting his touch, but still weighing his trustworthiness.

Then the crack of twigs and the fall of footsteps drew their attention up the path. Randall turned to see Mr Robson, the miller, returning from town with a sack slung over one shoulder. He opened his hand and hers slid out, the warmth and comfort gone.

Randall waved to the man. ‘Good afternoon, Mr Robson.’

The miller stopped and laid down his sack. ‘Lord Falconbridge, I didn’t know you’d returned.’

‘Just this afternoon.’ He took Cecelia’s elbow and drew her back up the path. ‘This is Mrs Thompson—you might remember her as Miss Fields. She spent the summer here once.’

The miller’s ruddy face beamed. ‘How could I forget? I was always chasing after the boat when you two were done. How are you, Mrs Thompson?’

‘Well. And how is your son?’

The miller’s thick chest puffed out with pride. ‘Peter’s a doctor now with his own practice in York. I can’t thank you enough, Lord Falconbridge, for everything you did for him. If it hadn’t been for the money you gave him for school—’

‘Of course, it was my pleasure,’ Randall cut the man off, feeling Cecelia’s wide eyes boring into him. To his shame, the London rake in him knew Mr Robson’s slip was to his advantage. However, like his arrangement with Lord Westbrook, he preferred not to announce to everyone his generosity, not even to Cecelia. ‘Mrs Thompson is eager to see the inside of the new mill. Perhaps you might show her.’

‘You’re not joining us?’ she asked.

‘No, I have business with the estate manager and I must see to Reverend before he tracks mud inside the manor. Aunt Ella forgives a great many of my sins, but not ruined carpets. Until dinner.’

He tipped his hat to her, then headed for his horse, calling Reverend with a sharp whistle. A second whistle brought the dog running from the edge of the pond, his dark fur dripping with water.

Randall mounted his horse as Cecelia paused at the mill door, watching as he left. While he rode, he tried to think about what he needed to discuss with the estate manager, but he could think of nothing except the pain on Cecelia’s face when she’d stared into the pond, unashamed to reveal her old grief. It touched him to know she could trust him with her sorrows, all except one.

Randall flexed his fingers, missing the feel of her small hand in his. In the soft caress of her thumb, in the slight pressure of her cheek against his chest, he’d felt the faint flicker of something more than friendship. He kicked the horse into a canter, refusing to name it, afraid to bring it into the light and see it wilt like a seedling planted too early.

Chapter Twelve

C
ecelia pushed the cooked pheasant around her plate. Despite the tempting smell, she had no appetite tonight. Lady Ellington and Theresa sat across from her, deep in conversation and plans for the assembly tomorrow night. Every once in a while, Theresa tried to draw her into the conversation, but Cecelia offered only the slightest of responses, unable to share in her cousin’s excitement.

After leaving the mill, Cecelia hadn’t returned to the manor. She’d let the horse wander along a trail by the river, trying to recapture some of the peace she’d enjoyed before Randall had joined her, but it proved as elusive as the mist lying between the low rocks.

She’d struggled so hard not to cry when he’d held her, afraid of releasing even one tear for fear the heartache of the past two years would come tumbling out. He’d cared enough to comfort her, but still she wasn’t ready to be so weak in front of him.

‘Cecelia, Randall told me you saw the new mill,’ Lady Ellington said from across the table, snapping Cecelia out of her musings.

‘Yes, it’s lovely and the miller says it’s made quite a difference to the farmers and villagers.’

‘It has. They’re most grateful to Randall for rebuilding it.’

There it was again, Randall’s kindness, always hidden from her. She glanced at his empty plate rimmed with gold, wondering why he kept such things a secret, or why it embarrassed him to be so generous and considerate.

‘Cecelia, you didn’t tell me Lord Falconbridge arrived this afternoon,’ Theresa said, motioning for the footman to refill her wine.

‘I’m not sure you would have heard me even if I had.’ Cecelia laughed, waving the footman away from Theresa’s glass.

‘Oh, I wouldn’t have missed something so important.’

‘A gentleman returning to his own home is not important.’

‘It is when you’re one of the first people he sees,’ Lady Ellington countered, sliding her full glass of wine to Theresa, one ring clinking against the crystal. Theresa snatched up the glass and took a sip, shooting Cecelia a smug look that had more to do with Randall than the forbidden drink.

Apparently, Theresa’s and Mr Menton’s match wasn’t the only one occupying their minds. If Cecelia thought spending too much time with Randall was risky, she could only imagine the danger of spending so much time in this conniving couple’s presence. Lady Ellington would have the modiste here again and it would be Cecelia standing on the stool and stuck with pins.

As if his ears burned from hearing himself talked about, Randall strode into the room, Reverend trotting along beside him, and what remained of Cecelia’s appetite vanished. He wore a dark coat, the collar stiff against his angled jaw, the line of his hair curling just above it. As he approached the table, he didn’t look at the others, but focused on her, moving with all the confidence of a sturdy ship cutting through still water. Cecelia’s hands tightened on the silverware, desire gripping her like a tangled bedsheet and she took a deep breath, but it failed to calm the quiver deep inside her.

‘I apologise for being late. What have I missed?’ He took his place next to Cecelia, Reverend sitting on the floor between them, looking back and forth from one plate to another.

‘Nothing, only women’s talk,’ Lady Ellington assured him. ‘In fact, I’m afraid if it weren’t for Cecelia’s company, you might find your time here in the country incredibly dull.’

Lady Ellington shot Cecelia a telling look and Cecelia nearly dropped her fork.

If Randall noticed, he didn’t reveal it, turning to Theresa. ‘Miss Fields, you’re looking lovely tonight. It appears being in love does wonders for you.’

Theresa blushed, dipping her head in a rare moment of embarrassment.

‘Don’t tease the girl, Randall,’ Lady Ellington chided, laying her hand on the gold locket with her late husband’s miniature pinned to her dress. ‘Just because you picked up Edmund’s habit of sneering at love doesn’t mean the rest of us do.’

‘I’m being quite serious.’ Randall leaned back as the footman placed a plate of food in front of him. ‘In fact, I’m late tonight because I was in the service of love.’

Cecelia touched the pendant hidden beneath her dress, thinking of the gelding in the stable and wondering if the woman who rode it was the same one who’d kept Randall from dinner, and her.

‘I’ve just come from Hallington Hall,’ he announced.

‘Mr Menton’s estate?’ Theresa squeaked and Cecelia dropped her hand, relieved to know it was the Mentons who had made him late and not some country paramour.

‘Sir Walter and I are on very good terms,’ Randal explained, cutting into his meat. ‘He told me about a garden party Lady Menton is hosting in a few days and I’ve secured us an invitation.’

Theresa let out a squeal to shatter the crystal while Lady Ellington clapped her hands, her rings clanking against each other. Cecelia could only stare at Randall, who took a bite of pheasant, watching with satisfaction as Theresa and Lady Ellington fell into a fit of rushed words over what Theresa should wear.

‘You don’t share their enthusiasm?’ Randall asked, slicing through a stalk of asparagus.

‘I’m stunned. I’ve wouldn’t have taken you for an assistant to Cupid.’

He speared the asparagus with his fork. ‘I can’t lie to you. Securing the invitation wasn’t difficult. Sir Walter was candid enough to tell me how Lady Menton would be beside herself to have a Marquess at her little gathering. Though he suspected it had more to do with bragging to her friends than a desire to be a good neighbour.’

‘You still didn’t have to do it.’

‘Of course I did.’ He bit the vegetable, his silver fork catching the candlelight before he lowered it.

Cecelia fingered the stem of her wineglass, noting the absence of one from his setting. ‘It’s a shame you don’t let more people see this generous side of you.’

He sliced another asparagus, the knife grating across the china. ‘I prefer to keep silent about my business.’

‘The good business, you mean?’

‘I’m not the one who spreads tales of my nefarious deeds. Madame de Badeau and others are quite content to do it for me.’

Cecelia answered his frown with a challenging smile. ‘Then perhaps I’ll counter their influence and spread more illustrious stories about you.’

‘Such as my horticultural skills?’ His eyes met hers, heavy with suggestion. ‘You should see how I’ve laid out the beds in Uncle Edmund’s garden, there isn’t a flower in them unopened.’

She took up her knife and fork and carefully cut the end off a carrot. ‘Unless the heat has wilted them.’

He dropped his head, his voice sliding to her in a whisper. ‘The heat never wilts my stalk.’

‘Even when it’s wet?’ she breathed.

‘Especially when it’s wet.’

She crossed her ankles beneath the table, the low tenor of his suggestion curling through her like a vine.

‘Lord Falconbridge, you must tell me all about Mr Menton’s parents and Hallington Hall,’ Theresa begged, her voice like cold water on the fire building between them.

Over the quick tempo of her heart, Cecelia listened while Randall answered all of Theresa’s questions about the Mentons, humouring and teasing her like a favourite uncle. She took up her wineglass, willing her arm to move slowly as she raised it to her lips, the tart liquid sliding through her and easing the tension low in her stomach. She set the wineglass back on the table, Randall’s deep laugh beneath Theresa’s giggles comforting like a bell on a foggy day. More than the wine, it eroded Cecelia’s defences, the ones which had nearly come crashing down today beneath the weight of Randall’s embrace. He made it so hard to maintain her distance, especially when he’d held her tight, drawing her into a deeper intimacy she feared. Watching Theresa turn red as Randall teased her again, Cecelia knew she must be more guarded in the future in order to better protect their secret and her heart.

* * *

The last course was barely finished when Lady Ellington hustled Theresa from the table, all decorum abandoned in their eagerness to select Theresa’s gown for the garden party. Cecelia followed them to the dining-room door, then fell behind, forgotten and unnoticed as their excited chatter disappeared down the hall. Reverend trotted behind them, adding a loud yap to their discussion.

‘Theresa is so fond of Mr Menton. I hope distance hasn’t changed his feelings for her,’ she said as Randall came to join her, leaning against the jamb.

‘Mr Menton is a sensible man. If anything, the distance has only increased his affection.’ Randall pushed away from the wood. ‘Come with me to the library. I have something to show you.’

Without question, she moved with him down the hall, past Lady Ellington’s prized Italian landscapes which now adorned the walls.

‘You were very gracious with Theresa at dinner.’

‘I enjoyed her conversation.’

‘Liar.’

‘I did. It’s refreshing to see someone so innocent and in love. It’s been a long time.’

She found it hard to believe Randall possessed any admiration for love, or even innocence, but she held her tongue, enjoying the easy familiarity between them.

They stepped through the wide library door, the tall bookshelves stretching to the high ceiling exactly as Cecelia remembered. The only thing different were the paintings. A regal selection of relatives now hung where the Roman men and their lovers with arms painted too long used to frolic.

She stopped at a small table near the centre of the room, noticing a paper-wrapped parcel on the dark wood. ‘Did you buy a new book?’

‘No.’ He picked it up and held it out to her. ‘This is for you.’

She raised her hands, refusing to take it. ‘Randall, you and your aunt have already been so generous. I can’t keep accepting gifts.’

‘Then make this the last. Please.’

She took it, surprised by the weight. Laying it back on the table, she undid the string, then pulled back the paper with a gasp. ‘Daniel’s hunting book.’

‘I purchased it right after I saw you at the bookseller’s.’

‘But I told him, I told you I didn’t need it,’ she stammered, flustered by his generosity and her worry. ‘Why did you buy it?’

‘Because of how you looked when you sold it, as if you were giving away everything.’ He laid his hand on hers. ‘What’s wrong, Cecelia? Please tell me and let me help you.’

Cecelia’s composure nearly faltered under the pressure of his skin against hers. The words began to form in her mind, but the memory of his face in the conservatory so long ago kept her silent, the fear of how he might react when he realised he was paying attention to a pauper keeping her silent. Guilt racked her. He’d asked for her honesty and friendship, but she couldn’t give it, not all of it, not until everything between Theresa and Mr Menton was settled.

She slid her hand out from beneath his and gripped the book, the sharp corner biting into her skin as she forced herself to look light and cheerful.

‘Randall, you make it all seem so serious when I assure you, it’s not. I told you, I mismanaged my funds, but more will arrive from Virginia shortly and everything will be right again. In the meantime, I want you to keep this, as a thank you for all you and your aunt are doing for Theresa.’

She held the book out to him and he shook his head.

‘No, it’s yours, it means something to you.’

‘Please. I want you to have it.’ She slipped it into an empty space on a nearby shelf, the book matching the others as if they were all part of the same collection. She stepped back, thinking how lost it looked among all the other leather spines, yet giving it up tonight didn’t wrench her heart like it had at the bookseller’s. Perhaps it was because Randall would have it and not some stranger. She turned, surprised to find him still staring at the book. ‘You look perplexed.’

‘It fits.’ He stepped up to the shelf and ran his fingers along the even row of spines. ‘I couldn’t find a place for it in London. Nowhere seemed right.’

A sense of discomfort laced the comment, of trouble whispered instead of proclaimed, as if he needed to unburden himself but couldn’t, not without her drawing it from him. Tonight, she didn’t possess the courage.

The clock on the large mahogany sideboard began to chime and Cecelia yawned, covering it with her hand, eager to avoid any more intimacies with Randall. ‘I think it’s time I retired. Tomorrow will be a busy day and the night a long one—Theresa’s first encounter with Mr Menton since London.’

He glanced at the clock and she expected him to chide her about keeping early hours, but he didn’t. Instead he offered her his arm. ‘Allow me to escort you.’

She hesitated. If he teased her upstairs as he had at dinner, there was nothing to stop them from indulging except her own will and she wasn’t sure it was strong enough to resist temptation. Either way, she couldn’t leave him standing like some footman waiting for an answer.

She took his offered arm, the hard muscle beneath his coat shifting as he led her from the room.

‘How will you occupy yourself after your charge is married?’ he asked as they turned the corner into the wide hall, the sound of their shoes echoing over the marble.

‘I suppose I’ll live with the happy couple. I’m not used to living on my own.’

‘And what will you do all day while they moon about one another?’

‘I don’t know.’ She’d given so little thought to anything but the present. ‘Perhaps I’ll take on the role of grandmama, help Theresa care for all the children which are sure to arrive.’

‘You’re too young to act like a grandmother and much too pretty.’ His free hand covered hers, the heat of it nearly making her trip as they reached the top of the stairs.

‘Then maybe I’ll use my beauty to snare another husband.’ She laughed, afraid to flirt with him in a dark and empty hallway so close to her bed.

She needn’t have worried as his arm tightened beneath her fingers and his hand jerked away from hers to hang by his side. Apparently, the mere mention of marriage was enough to protect them both from an indiscretion. It seemed some things never changed.

‘What about you?’ she asked, her ego ruffled. ‘Have you a desire to take a wife and fill the nursery, or are you willing to let Falconbridge Manor go to some distant cousin?’

Other books

Dynasty of Evil by Karpyshyn, Drew
Gareth: Lord of Rakes by Grace Burrowes
The Fourth Season by Dorothy Johnston
Rewarded by Jo Davis
Void in Hearts by William G. Tapply
Dreams of Eagles by William W. Johnstone
Dreamwalkers by Kate Spofford