Sebastian blinked as a footman swung the entrance door wide and beckoned him inside. Giving his card, he said, “I believe Mrs. George is expecting me.”
The footman bowed. “Of course, my lord. If you would follow me, please.”
Instead of leading him to one of the more formal receiving rooms as he’d expected, the servant continued up the staircase to the second floor, toward the bedchambers. As they reached the landing, Sebastian could hear Leah’s voice, strong and clear, so different from Angela’s soft, dulcet speech.
“That one to charity. No, not the striped one—the footmen can look over it first. And the hat—yes, the one with the red band. My God, how many hats does one man need?”
The footman halted before what appeared to be the master’s bedchamber. “The Earl of Wriothesly, madam.”
There was a noticeable silence, and Sebastian wondered whether she’d forgotten about the message she’d sent. Then: “Oh, yes. Please come in, my lord. It will be only a moment.”
Pausing at the threshold, Sebastian peered inside. While the room might indeed have once been assigned the role of bedchamber, it now resembled little more than a storage closet. Waistcoats, jackets, top hats, trousers—every article of a gentleman’s wardrobe was separated into haphazard piles, with some thrown onto the bed, others embraced by the chairs in front of the hearth, and even more scattered on the floor. As he watched, a short line of footmen and maids exited the dressing room, each carrying another stack of clothing. These were dumped at the foot at the bed, which seemed to be the only space unoccupied in the room.
Mrs. George came at the end, her arms wrapped around a tower of bandboxes, her head peeking around the side as she walked. After tumbling them into the center of the new pile, she turned around, dusted her hands together, then curtsied. “My lord.”
He should never have told her to remove the veil. Her eyes were too bright—dear God,
sparkling
even— her cheeks flushed, her lips creased in an upward curve which appeared inclined toward permanence.
Sebastian would have preferred tears. Torrents of them, in fact.
“You’re not wearing a widow’s cap,” he said.
She grimaced. “Yes, of course you would say something.” Gesturing toward the servants sorting behind her, she said, “I’ve decided it’s unnecessary. My clothes declare me to be in mourning, and the widow’s cap was only making me feel like a mare with blinders on. Besides, I’m in my own home, with no one to see me except the servants. And, well, you.” She paused, her lips tilting upward again in that annoying little manner. “I hope I haven’t offended you.”
Of course, she wasn’t sincere. Nothing about her appearance or tone could convince him that his opinion mattered in the least.
She was so damned
happy
, a novelty in his miseryshadowed world of the past three months. His servants, his brother, the other lords at Parliament—everyone tiptoed around him, careful not to speak too loudly or laugh in his presence. Only Henry dared to smile at him, his childish innocence leaving him oblivious to the despair which had settled over the house and all of its occupants.
But Leah George wasn’t a child who didn’t know any better. And even if she’d known of the affair months ago—even if she despised Ian for it—she should at least have the decency to be miserable, too. If not for his death, then for the knowledge that she’d been betrayed. For the sudden change in the life that she knew. For not being able to wear anything other than black, for the balls and soirees and musicales it was now inappropriate for her to attend. God, for
anything
, as long as she didn’t smile like that.
Sebastian responded with an emphatic frown, dismissing her as he glanced over her shoulder. “I see you’re cleaning.”
None of his maids had been sent into Angela’s rooms; he had yet to venture into her bedchamber himself. The temptation to sit there with her fragrance surrounding him, pretending as if she would soon walk through the door, as if none of it had ever happened, was too much. It was nearly as strong as the temptation to destroy everything and set fire to her memory.
Clearly Leah, however, showed no struggle in moving on.
She followed his gaze, shrugging. “Preparations for my return to Linley Park. For the servants and then for charity—much better than indulging the moths and rats, I thought. But come,” she said, moving toward a door at the side, “I know you must be impatient to learn why I asked you here.”
Silently Sebastian followed Leah through the adjoining door into another bedchamber—
her
bedchamber, by all appearances. Except for the large canopied bed swathed in dark blue drapes in the middle of the room, the decorations were decidedly feminine. Not the rose and cream femininity Angela had favored, but a delicate palette of light blue and yellow. Comforting instead of sensuous, the textures and furniture more practical than luxurious, and yet Sebastian couldn’t help but feel awkward as he entered. This was an intimacy he didn’t welcome, a view into her private life he didn’t care to see.
His gaze fell to Leah, who had already bent over a stack of odds and ends farther in the room. No servants traipsed back and forth here; only the voices emanating through the open door kept them from complete isolation.
With a glance over his shoulder, Sebastian moved closer until he could be assured only she would hear his voice. “We had an agreement, damn you.”
Her head shot up, her hands pausing in their reach toward the pile. Her gaze narrowed, she looked him up and down—a bloody measuring of his worth, it seemed—then returned to her search. “I recall. I’ve told no one the truth.”
“No? Perhaps you believe your servants are both blind and deaf, then. That they don’t realize how unnaturally happy you are a mere three months after your husband’s death. I don’t give a damn what you wear or say or how you act when you’re alone, but at least show some degree of decorum in front of others. If not—”
“Thank you, my lord.” She cut him off without looking up. “I believe I understand your meaning.”
“If not, people will begin to wonder why you aren’t mourning your husband, then try to discover a reason. It wouldn’t take long for anyone to suspect the truth, given the circumstances of their deaths—”
“Dear Lord,” she exclaimed, rising to her feet. “Have you always been this overbearing?”
Sebastian snapped his mouth shut as she turned around, hating the fact that everything about her reminded him of Angela—not in similarities, but in contrasts. Her voice, her decorating style, and now, with only a foot between them, her scent. Rather than the warm, sultry combination of lavender and vanilla, he breathed in the artless aroma of soap: earthy, subtle, its only fragrance a slight hint of seawater.
He edged away, to the opposite side of the pile on the floor. Unclenching his jaw, he snapped, “Only to those who behave in such an obstinate and reckless manner.”
He should have felt contrite; he’d never spoken to a woman without the greatest deference. He’d certainly never cursed at one as he’d done earlier. But no guilt seeped into his conscience. Standing before Ian’s widow, this woman who served only to remind him of his loss, there was nothing but anger and frustration and an irrational desperation to flee.
Then she laughed, and there was also a great deal of annoyance.
“You think me obstinate?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“And reckless?”
He hesitated, for her smile had grown wide at his response. Above all else, he didn’t want to do anything to make her any goddamned
happier.
Yet he refused to retract the words. Slowly, warily, he nodded.
The sun could have lost some of its brilliance, for all the pleasure radiating from her face.
Sebastian scowled. “You are quite contrary.”
“Oh, come, Lord Wriothesly,” she said as she knelt once more to the floor. “Wouldn’t you agree that ‘obstinate and reckless’ is much better than being obedient and wretched?”
“Recklessness can make one wretched as well.”
She glanced at him from beneath her lashes. With Angela, the gesture would have been seductive. Leah George, however, appeared only mischievous and sly.
Sebastian cursed. “As I said before, I don’t care what you do privately, but with others I expect you to act per society’s rules, lest the truth become known.”
“And I’ve already promised not to reveal your secret.” She chose an item from the stack of odds and ends, a small leather-bound book. “I am curious, however, what you think would constitute doing something reckless in private. Embroidering upside down? Reading the Bible in the bath?”
“Are you curious, or simply looking for ideas?”
Again, that blasted smile. “Here you are, my lord,” she said as she handed the book to him.
He held it by the tips of his fingers. “I assume it’s Ian’s?”
“I’ve read only a few pages, but it seems to be a journal from when he was younger. For a while I doubted whether I should send for you, but I thought you should be the one to decide whether you’d like to have any of his things. He mentioned you in there.”
Sebastian stared blankly at the brown cover, the color faded in patches, the edge worn and frayed.
“And here’s a pin from Eton. Several newspaper clippings about legislature you’ve supported in Parliament. A rather strange-looking rock, although I don’t suppose you’d want that, would you?”
The rock appeared above the journal, a dull gray stone tipped with brown, centered in the palm of her black-gloved hand.
It had been a stupid jest at the time. They’d been drunk—thoroughly soused, in fact—and meandering through the alleys of Cambridge in celebration of leaving university. They’d stopped to piss against a wall, and when they finished Ian stumbled over the rock. After weaving back and forth and swiping air with his hand the first several tries, he eventually managed to pick it up. His headstone, he’d called it, and they both thought it hilarious, in that giddy, unfocused drunken way.
Sebastian shook his head. “No, I don’t want it. I don’t want any of it.” Shoving the journal into her hands, he turned away. Bloody hell. He didn’t want these memories, memories that had been buried and fogged with time. He swung back around. “Was this meant as some sort of amusement for you? Did you honestly believe I would want—”
“My lord,” she interrupted quietly, and inclined her head toward the open door, where her servants could still be heard sorting through Ian’s clothing and other accoutrements. “You were his closest friend,” she continued, “and I thought to at least ask before—”
“Is that all you wanted?” he asked, his voice low and controlled now. “Is this the reason you sent for me?”
She stood and smoothed her skirts. A long minute passed as she stared at him, the right side of her lower lip caught between her teeth. At last, her smile had disappeared.
“Mrs. George?” He ground out her name.
“No,” she said, “there’s something else.” Sweeping toward the other side of the bed, Leah went to a writing table and opened one of the top drawers. Her return to him was slower, almost reluctant. When she at last stood before him, she averted her eyes. “I also found these, hidden away in his bedchamber. I thought you might want them.”
Sebastian flinched as she held out a packet of letters wrapped in a pink satin ribbon. Lavender and vanilla permeated the air. Hanging from the packet, suspended by her finger, swayed a gold locket encrusted with diamonds.
“Her portrait,” Leah whispered.
Breathing became a laborious effort, a struggle to move enough oxygen through his nostrils and into his lungs. Sebastian choked. “Did you read them?”
She shook her head, her eyes lifting to meet his.
“Why not?”
“She was your wife. You should read them first, since Lady Wriothesly wrote—”
Sebastian flung out his arm. The letters and the locket went flying from Leah’s hand. They scattered across the floor, the pink ribbon loosening until the corner of only one letter lay within its satin grasp.
He stared, seconds passing as he realized what he’d done. His gaze shifted to Leah, despising her wide eyes, the guilt which finally managed to sneak its way in.
“Burn them,” he said, and left.
Chapter 4
Come to me. Sebastian’s gone to the ball and I pled illness again. Mary will let you in through the study window.
Leah knelt and gathered the letters strewn across the floor. She envied Wriothesly the ability to walk away without reading them. If only she possessed such strength. As soon as she’d found them tucked away with Ian’s pocket watches and cravat pins, they’d called to her, tempting her even though she knew the contents might shatter her heart again.
She sat on the edge of the bed, the pink ribbon and locket strung through the fingers of one hand and the letters clasped in the palm of the other. There were eleven letters. She’d counted them, over and over, reasoning with herself on why she shouldn’t read them.