Authors: Brothers in arms 9 -Love's Surrender
o’clock,” she whispered. “In six hours’ time. I must sleep, at
least a little.” Her smile was as sweet as her kiss, and Nick just
nodded.
“Why shopping?” she asked as she fussed with her hair, puling
pins out and putting them back in. Nick didn’t see a difference
when she was done, but he was no ladies’ maid.
“I want to buy you a gift. Something smal and beautiful, like you.
So you can keep it with you at al times.” He desperately needed
her to have something of him, no matter what happened after
Twelfth Night.
“And there you go again,” she whispered. She blew him a kiss.
“And there you go again,” she whispered. She blew him a kiss.
“He doesn’t waste words, does he?” Oliver asked as he kissed
Vanessa’s cheek. He winked at Nick. “I think he says those
things because he likes to shock us with how sweet he is.”
“I am not sweet,” Nick responded, offended. “I am honest.
There is a great deal of difference between the two.” He walked
over and opened the door, looking up and down the halway.
“We have to leave now if we are to return our prize before
sunrise.”
“What happened earlier today?” Vanessa asked Oliver as they
sat in the hackney taking them back to her street. “At the
orphanage?”
She took his hand and her hand was smal and elegant in his.
Oliver puled it to his lips and kissed it, wishing she hadn’t
donned her gloves. But it was too cold out not to, he supposed.
He pretended ignorance of what she was talking about. “When?”
Nick sat across from them, watching. He knew, but he wasn’t
going to reveal Oliver’s secret. It was decent of him, realy.
Oliver could tel Nick was more than halfway in love with her. It
must grate on him not to be able to tel her.
“When you couldn’t find Nick,” Vanessa said patiently. “Tel
“When you couldn’t find Nick,” Vanessa said patiently. “Tel
me.”
Oliver had been avoiding her eyes, but now he looked at her and
he couldn’t deny the truth. He was more than halfway in love
with her too. And it hurt him to keep secrets from her. There
was no censure in her gaze, no accusations. She’d accepted so
much about them already. This stupid weakness of his was surely
the least of it.
“I don’t like to be apart from him.” He sighed. “That’s not true. I
can’t be apart from him. If I can’t see him, or at least know he’s
close, I panic. I can’t breathe and I get rather…foolish. The
whole thing is foolish.” He said the last in disgust and let go of
her hand.
She reached determinedly over and took his hand again. “It’s not
foolish. Why?”
“I don’t know,” Oliver said in frustration. “That’s the damnedest
part. I mean, I know he didn’t just disappear. He’s promised not
to do that again. I know he won’t.”
“Again?” Vanessa asked, picking up on that one word.
“At Waterloo,” Nick said. “I was injured and unconscious. They
took me on one of the wagons to a private residence turned
hospital. Oliver couldn’t find me for a week.”
Oliver’s hand was fisted in his lap. He’d thought Nick was dead.
It was a helish week of trying to get permission to search for
Nick and then pawing through dead bodies piled high, expecting
to see Nick’s ravaged face at any moment. When he’d found
Nick, he’d been conscious again but his memory was addled.
He’d imagined he was in Gloucester and Oliver was his older
brother Tate. Oliver hadn’t cared. He would have gladly been
caled Tate for the rest of his life. His commanding officer had
finaly found him there with Nick and nearly beaten him black
and blue for deserting before dragging him back to his unit.
“That must have been awful for you, Oliver,” Vanessa said
quietly. She wrapped both hands around his one and cradled it
to her cheek before kissing his knuckles. “I wish I had been
there to help you.”
God, he wished she had too. When he’d had to leave Nick, the
nightmares had begun. They had gotten so bad he gave up
sleeping. Eventualy he gave up eating. Nick recovered enough
to be sent home, and Oliver was sent with him. He was less than
useless to his company, as his commanding officer had pointed
out with disgust.
They hadn’t been apart since.
“You helped me today,” he told her. He didn’t want to
remember those days. He didn’t want to reopen old wounds.
Vanessa had given him hope at the orphanage when her touch
had stopped the fear from choking him. Maybe it was that
simple. Maybe he just needed that kind of sympathetic touch to
make him realize he wasn’t alone. And maybe now Nick could
do that for him too. He’d been afraid before. They’d both been
afraid to show that side of their affection for each other. But
Vanessa had taken away the fear.
What would happen to them when Vanessa was gone?
Vanessa watched the flame of her Christmas candle as the sun
rose outside her window. Nick and Oliver had given it to her.
Tradition said it should burn throughout the holiday, until
Epiphany. But she wasn’t sure she’d let it. She didn’t want it to
burn down and disappear. She wanted to keep it, to remember
them. She was drying the rosemary and had already pressed
some of the other greenery. She would keep them forever, or at
least until they turned to dust and she was too old to remember.
They al knew they had only a few more days. Vanessa had
aluded to it, but neither of the men had acknowledged her
warning. Going shopping with them tomorrow was a mistake,
but it was one she had to make. She wanted to spend more time
with them. She might rue the day, but first she would enjoy it.
She’d wanted to weep when Nick told her he wanted to give her
a gift she could keep with her always. Didn’t he realize they’d
a gift she could keep with her always. Didn’t he realize they’d
already done that? The memories of their affair would be her
constant companions for many years to come.
They’d seen the real Vanessa and they hadn’t been disgusted or
shocked. Quite the opposite. They wanted to spend more time
with her. They wanted her, not a Carlton-Smythe. Just Vanessa.
How could she regret that? She didn’t know what tomorrow
would bring, but she was counting the hours until she saw them
again. She felt a twinge of uneasiness over her longing for them.
She mustn’t need them too much, mustn’t rely on seeing them to
get through each day. It could only end in disaster if she let
herself become too attached.
Wearily she climbed into bed. She had only a couple of hours to
sleep before they came for her.
“What a lovely day it’s been,” Vanessa sighed happily, her arm
linked with Oliver’s while Nick walked next to her, holding her
packages. Except for the very special one nestled in her reticule.
“If you like blustery, cold winter days,” Nick said wryly. “Then
yes, it’s been lovely.”
Oliver laughed. “I for one never felt a bit of the chil, warmed as I was by your company, dear lady,” he said galantly, patting her
hand. “And memories of last night, of course.” Vanessa tugged
hand. “And memories of last night, of course.” Vanessa tugged
on his arm in reproach, glancing about to make sure no one was
near to hear him. She earned no more than a lascivious look
from him for her trouble.
“I was near to melting in the heat of those reminiscences,” Nick
agreed. “We should get through this winter quite comfortably, I
think.”
“Shh,” Vanessa hissed. “What if someone hears you?”
Nick looked around incredulously at the empty street and
sidewalk. “It’s freezing out here, Vanessa. No one in his or her
right mind is walking about.”
“We are,” she declared.
“My point exactly.” Nick’s drol reply had Oliver laughing again.
“Oh, don’t be cross,” Vanessa begged. “I just wanted a little
more time with you. I didn’t make you walk me al the way home
from Bond Street, did I? I had the hackney stop just around the
corner.”
Nick stopped and so did she and Oliver. “I’m not complaining,”
Nick said with such a serious look on his face. “I’m glad you
did. I’d freeze my arse off for one more minute with you, and
that’s the truth.”
“I like it on you,” she said seriously, “so let’s try to avoid that
catastrophe.” Nick looked so shocked at her humor that she
burst out laughing. “Oh, darling, how I adore you,” she blurted
without thinking. She quickly turned away, her heart pounding at
her slip of the tongue. She mustn’t give him false hope. No
matter how much she adored him, she would never be alowed
to marry him, or Oliver either.
“I adore you too,” he said. There was nothing light in his tone,
and Vanessa took it for it was—a declaration.
“We are al agreed on it, then,” Oliver said lightly. “We are
adorable.” He paused a moment and then added, “And we do
not want Nick to lose his arse.”
Nick’s smile was reluctant but genuine. “Thank you. Your good
wishes are duly noted.”
Vanessa’s laugh was forced. “Positively adorable,” she agreed.
“Here we are.” They had arrived at her door and were halfway
up the steps before Vanessa noticed the knocker in its place.
Her feet froze on the steps as denial screamed through her head.
She was supposed to have four more days.
“What is it?” Oliver asked with an inquisitive look.
Nick was looking around with a frown, trying to find what was
wrong. But Vanessa couldn’t answer. If she didn’t say the words
wrong. But Vanessa couldn’t answer. If she didn’t say the words
she could stand here with them al day and pretend.
The door opened and Greely stood off to the side, leaving her
room to enter, but not Nick or Oliver. She started to put her
hand up, as if to tel him, no, don’t say it, but he didn’t give her
the chance. “Good afternoon, Lady Vanessa,” he said, reaching
for her packages. “Your parents have returned. Your father
asked that you see him in his study immediately upon your
return.”
“Good afternoon, sir,” Vanessa said as she entered her father’s
study. She walked around his desk and kissed his proffered
cheek. “I trust you had a pleasant journey?”
“I did not,” he replied cooly. He gestured to the chair in front of
his desk. How she hated that chair and the hours she had spent
there listening to countless lectures about her duty to her family
and her station. Deportment, charitable obligations, social
obligations, marital obligations, duty to her family, duty to her
church, the responsibility she bore them al. And she mustn’t
forget the servants and the lower classes! God forbid she set a
bad example for them. Her head ached with the weight of al
those words.
“I’m sorry to hear that,” she said politely as she took a seat. “Is
Mother wel?”
Mother wel?”
“As wel as can be expected,” he replied crypticaly, and
Vanessa’s uneasiness grew.
“Oh?” she answered, standing. “Perhaps I should go to her?”
“Sit.” Her father’s one-word reply brooked no disobedience.
She sat. “I have brought a suitor home to meet you. I find him an
excelent candidate for marriage. I expect that you shal agree.
After you have been introduced tomorrow and the formalities
have been exchanged, you wil excuse yourself and retire to your
room so that I may discuss the details of the marriage
arrangement. Do you understand?”
Vanessa’s head was spinning. She feared she might actualy
swoon, which would never do, of course. True ladies did not
swoon. “What?” she whispered.
Her father frowned at her. “News of your holiday activities
reached us in Kent. Lady Dalrymple is a cousin of Mrs. Bent,
another houseguest.” He sighed and leaned back in his chair.
“After Ashland’s rejection, I felt pity for you and did not push for another betrothal as I should have. You have clearly been given
too much freedom, and as such have gotten yourself into trouble,
which is to be expected I suppose, with only your Aunt Grace to
see to you, although it is a great disappointment.”
“Where is Aunt Grace?” Vanessa interrupted, fearing what her
“Where is Aunt Grace?” Vanessa interrupted, fearing what her
father may have done in his anger. Vanessa didn’t want the dear
lady banished to the country because of her poor judgment.
“She is packing,” her father said. “She and your mother wil be
going back to Kent tomorrow.” He sighed unhappily. “I took
you for a girl with a sense of decorum and a high degree of
gratitude for al you have been given. I see this is not the case. A
respectable marriage to a man of adequate social standing and
impeachable reputation should put any rumors to rest.”
“You’ve found another available duke, then?” Vanessa asked
sarcasticaly. It was common knowledge that she’d been raised
to marry a duke, and when the only available one rejected her,
her father was too arrogant to accept anything less. Pity for her
had nothing to do with it. She knew her anger would not be
appreciated, but at that moment she didn’t care.
“No.” Her father’s clipped response indicated he was as angry