The Jacobite's Return (The Georgian Rebel Series) (4 page)

Read The Jacobite's Return (The Georgian Rebel Series) Online

Authors: Jane Godman

Tags: #second chances, #Georgian, #secret baby, #amnesia, #romance, #ptsd, #1745 rising, #Jacobites, #Culloden, #historical

If she hoped her tone would ensure a dignified end to the conversation, she was to be disappointed. Clive grunted coarsely. “And yet, by your fetching display tonight, you effectively advertised your panting desire for him to the whole world. Rather reminiscent, my dear, of a bitch in heat. I think I should drop you a word of warning. Devilish bad form and all that.”

Stung by the allegation, Rosie drew herself up to her full height. “I can assure you, Clive, that, even if I felt the emotions you ascribe to me, I have more pride than to allow them to be known.”

He poured another glass of brandy. “Enough of your rebel lover. About our other arrangement. Two hundred should cover it for this month.”

Not for the first time, Rosie wondered what society would say if word of their unconventional marital arrangement leaked out. What if the London gossips ever learned that she paid her husband to stay out of her bed? Not that they would hear of it from her, and Clive was hardly likely to boast of the matter. But it only needed a servant to eavesdrop at the wrong moment…

She forced her mind back to the conversation. Two hundred pounds? It was a preposterous sum, and Clive’s demands were increasing every month. His debts must be greater than she had imagined. Thank God her father had left her well provided for. It was worth every penny to keep those plump, white hands away from her body.

“Very well. I will have a banker’s draft ready for you by Monday.”

He tugged at his cravat. “Cash and tomorrow morning would suit me better.”

Rosie inclined her head in acquiescence. Usually, having got what he came for, he had no desire to linger. Thankfully, as Miss Portal’s pamphlet graphically illustrated, his interests lay elsewhere. When he stayed where he was, looming over her, Rosie’s heart sank. She knew what was coming.

“Have you considered my other request?”

Although she had been anticipating this conversation, Rosie had to make a concerted effort to keep the nervous note out of her voice. “I have, Clive, but you know the terms of my father’s will—”

“Your father’s will is damnable!” He slammed a hand down hard upon the wooden surface of the table. “’Tis monstrous that I, your husband, should have no control over your brother’s fortune. Or your own.”

In contrast to Clive’s anger, not a day went by when Rosie did not bless her dear father for his foresight in leaving his estate tied up so Clive could not squander her inheritance or Harry’s. Clive’s wanton destruction of his personal legacy and proud name was shameful enough to witness.

“I receive a generous allowance from the Delacourt estate, one that is adequate for my needs.” She kept her voice calm. When he was in this mood, anything other than level-headedness inflamed him further.

Clive’s demands that she should seek to break the trust and access the capital of her own and her brother’s fortune were becoming increasingly desperate. She knew his gambling debts were crippling and dared not question him about their sum. His man of business had all but washed his hands of him. Clive’s beautiful family home, Sheridan Hall—once so lovingly maintained by his father—showed such invidious signs of neglect that it was uninhabitable. Instead of living there, they were forced to reside with Lady Drummond, dividing their time between her country house and these occasional trips to her London mansion. It was an arrangement that should have been humiliating. Strangely, for Rosie at least, it wasn’t. She found Lady Drummond a considerate hostess whose company was enjoyable. Clive appeared not to notice his surroundings. If only he could resist the lure of the gaming tables and the whorehouses, he might have been able to restore his fortune and his home. Unfortunately, as the pressure of his dire financial straits mounted, so his addiction to games of chance, his sexual depravity and his wild moods increased.

“A pittance!” Clive thrust his bottom lip out, the gesture reminding her of one of Harry’s childhood methods of expressing displeasure. “If you will not assist me by breaking the trust, you must at least send word to Delacourt Grange and ask Tom Drury for an increase in your allowance. It is another nonsensical feature of your father’s will that you do not have access to the full amount of your fortune until you reach the age of twenty-five. Even though you are married, that clause still holds true. I can only suppose your father was not in his right mind when he had the document drawn up. Am I expected to wait almost three years to get my hands on your capital?”

“Clive, we both know that Tom is the most conscientious of trustees. He fulfils his role admirably, adhering all the while to my father’s wishes. He will not sanction any attempt to have the will overthrown.” Although she would one day be a wealthy woman in her own right, it was the bigger prize of Harry’s inheritance which interested Clive most. Delacourt Grange was one of the finest estates in Derbyshire, and Clive practically salivated at the prospect of the riches it could bring him. It was a reminder of the heavy weight of her responsibility to her brother. “Besides, Tom knows that I do not need an increase in my allowance.”

It was the same, tired argument, and from the flicker of triumph in Clive’s eyes, she suspected that some of her fatigue showed in her voice. He was hoping to wear her down with his constant demands. Because Tom had bluntly denied Clive’s requests for an allowance of his own from the Delacourt estate, her husband’s latest plan was for Rosie to plead hardship on her behalf.

“I am aware of that. But Drury will show you more sympathy than he has shown to me. All you need to do is give the extra amount to me. Drury need never know. It can be our little secret.” Clive’s voice dripped cunning and Rosie eyed him in disgust.

Her only advantage over Clive was his overt fear of Tom Drury. Tom’s dislike of Clive was outweighed by his loyalty to Rosie and Harry. The day after their wedding, Rosie had objected to Clive’s suggestion that she should sell the pearls her mother had left her in order to settle his most pressing debts. During the ensuing argument, Clive had grabbed her wrist and twisted it, leaving her flesh bruised and swollen. Tom had noticed the marks, and although Rosie dismissed them with a plausible story, a dark look had appeared in the big man’s eyes. She never knew what subsequently passed between Tom and her husband. All she knew for sure was, ever since that day, Clive had regarded Tom with dread and humility. He had not laid a finger on her again.

She met Clive’s eye squarely. “I have no wish to rouse Tom’s suspicions. Let us not forget that, although Xander is your heir, Tom is already aware that I pay for his needs out of my allowance. It is not a normal arrangement.”

It was a dangerous move, and she held her breath in anticipation of his reaction. The mention of Xander’s name provoked an unpredictable variety of reactions from Clive. On this occasion his eyelids drooped while his curiously light eyes glittered briefly between them.

“How you care for your son is your affair, madam. I am sure that you will find a way to accede to my request without alerting Drury’s mistrust.”

As Clive left the room, Rosie released the breath she had been holding. For once the threat of Tom hadn’t worked. It was hardly surprising, since she had backed Clive into a corner over his greatest weakness…money. And, of course, he had an advantage over her that was far superior to anything she could possibly use against him.

Rosie spent a night without sleep, during which her mind insisted on playing a series of images of Jack’s face. Back in the ballroom, when she had pondered his feelings, it had never once occurred to her to examine her own. Simply because they would never be in doubt. She had loved Jack Lindsey before she even knew him. From the very first moment she saw him lying injured and unconscious on the floor of her father’s barn. That love had never wavered, not when he rose from the bed they had shared and walked away from her to fight at the prince’s side, not when she heard he had been felled by a redcoat hand, not now when he looked at her with coldness in his eyes.

But his return raised dozens of questions. They chased each other around in her mind and remained unanswered when the dawn arrived. How had Jack escaped the battlefield? Rosie had been at Castle Lachlan, close to Culloden, on that dreadful day. After the battle, her cousin Martha had given orders for the field to be searched and any injured Jacobites to be brought back to the castle to be cared for there. At the same time, the Duke of Cumberland’s men were ruthlessly enforcing the order to give no quarter to the rebels, which meant they were murdering the wounded as they lay and the vanquished as they surrendered. Rosie had begged the castle steward, Auld Rab, for information about Jack. His words came back to her now.

“We could’nae even find his body to bring back to you for burial, my lady.”
Auld Rab had shaken his head regretfully. “I scoured every inch of the battlefield myself in search of him. But some of the clansmen had already set fires, and many of the bodies were burned to save them from looters or Cumberland’s atrocities.”

How did you escape, Jack?
But there was another, more important question.
Why did you not send me word you were still alive? I’d have travelled to the end of the earth to join you. You must have known it.
That thought was the one keeping her awake. The course of her life over the past two years would have been so different if she had known.

The following morning, her eyes heavy and her limbs uncoordinated, Rosie remembered her letters. Tom Drury’s missive was short. He needed to speak to her about some estate business. The letter had been forwarded from Lady Drummond’s country estate. She would have to write and let him know she was in London. She would also have to tell him about Jack. The two men had become close friends in the short time they had known each other.

The letter from her cousin Martha had a very different tone. It was a brief, scribbled note, sent to warn Rosie that Jack was alive, well and once again in possession of his estates.

I wished to warn you, dearest, that he leaves here soon and is on his way to England. I know it is most unlikely you will meet him, but I thought I should let you know this astonishing news, lest you should do so unexpectedly and sustain a severe shock.

“A little late, Martha love.” Did she detect from the tone of the letter that Martha was not quite as astonished by the news Jack was alive as Rosie had been?
Or is my mind thoroughly disordered this morning?

Harry, peeping round her bedchamber door, demanded to know what news there was from Scotland and from his Derbyshire home.

“There is something you should know.” Rosie patted the bed and he came to sit beside her. “Jack did not die at Culloden as we thought.”

He sat bolt upright in surprise. “By Jove, that’s splendid news.”

Rosie smiled. An over-simplification, perhaps, but in his unique way, Harry had perfectly summed up the situation. “And he is here in London.”

The excited light in Harry’s eyes brought a lump to her throat. It was a look she had not seen for a long time. “Do you not see what this means? Jack can rid us of that blackguard Clive once and for all.”

It took some considerable time to convince Harry that the matter was not quite so straightforward. When Harry left her, his excitement had faded, to be replaced by gloom. Rosie went to the window that looked out onto the gardens at the rear of the house. Twisting the antique, crested ring that Clive had bestowed upon her to mark their marriage, she felt a wild desire to tear the hated thing off her finger and hurl it into the depths of the decorative pond below her. Resisting the impulse, she rang the bell and sent for Violet to bring Xander to her.

Chapter F
our

A man could cram a lot of soul searching into two years. If he wasn’t careful, he could end up a self-pitying wreck. That was a lesson Jack had learned the hard way.

One thing had saved him from the abyss. Or rather, one person had. It was only his adventures with the Falcon that had prevented him from succumbing to the twin miseries that afflicted him. In addition to the loss of Rosie, he had also been dealing with the trauma of what he had endured at Culloden.

Jack was a seasoned soldier. He was also one of the highest-ranking Jacobite rebels. He had never shirked his duty on the battlefield. He knew he was liked and respected by the brave highland warriors because of his willingness to fight alongside them. A fair number of injuries had come his way in the course of the prince’s campaign, but his first brush with death had come at Swarkestone Bridge.

Jack’s was a restless spirit which needed—nay, demanded—action. He and Fraser had eagerly accompanied the party of seventy highlanders sent to protect the bridge so that the prince might cross to commence his triumphant march on London. All had been quiet—unknown to them, events in Derby were already shaping the prince’s retreat—and, tired after the long ride south from Scotland, Jack had dozed in a small copse, wrapped in his cloak as he tried to ignore the freezing ground. When he woke suddenly, it was to find a young redcoat standing over him, sword in hand. Springing to his feet, Jack had been unaware that another soldier stood atop a small incline, just a few paces away. The impact of that redcoat’s shot threw him down the slope towards the riverbank.

Fraser, alerted by the gunshot, had rushed to his aid. Stealing a horse from a nearby blacksmith’s yard, he leapt upon it, supporting Jack before him, slapped the steed’s scrawny flanks, and sent it scurrying away from the skirmish.

As always, the face of a young woman intruded into Jack’s memory of that day, soothing him and causing the horrors to recede. Her hair was dark as midnight and fell in shining curls about her shoulders. Concern shone in the luminous depths of her grey eyes as she studied his face. His vision had clear, creamy skin with a light dusting of freckles across her dainty, upturned nose, and the most inviting, delectable, cherry-ripe lips he had ever seen. Together with Martha and Tom, Rosie had saved his life.

I was so busy falling in love, I didn’t have time to be traumatised by my experience at Swarkestone.
But Culloden was different, and not just because he didn’t have Rosie to take his mind off what had happened to him. Before the devastating blow that had felled him, the shock of what he saw had brought him close to breaking. A series of monumentally disastrous decisions led the Jacobites to a defeat that was little more than a wholesale massacre. Before his eyes, men he had loved, admired and grown up with—cousins, uncles, childhood friends, loyal servants and noble clansmen—had been slaughtered.

Not given to introspection before that day, Jack was not so unyielding that he couldn’t see what had happened to him over the last two years. Wounded, and suffering severe mental strain from the aftereffects of what he had witnessed at Culloden, he had no one to turn to. No home, no family, no lover.

Donning a mask, riding beside the Falcon, thumbing his nose at the king and the Duke of Cumberland…those things had given his life a purpose. It had proved to be his cure. The nightmares of blood and death remained, but they no longer ruled his life. Had the Falcon known how much his intervention was needed? Looking back, Jack suspected he had.

If only there could be a similar panacea for the loss of Rosie. Once he had believed the restless, burning ache in the middle of his chest would get easier as time went by. It hadn’t.
How could it when you loved as we loved?

But he had seen her and survived the experience, something he had convinced himself could not happen. His heart and pride had endured. He had not disgraced himself by throwing himself at her feet and pleading with her to love him once more. He had managed to keep his hands from Sheridan’s throat. Perhaps Sir William was right. Jack did not believe he would ever love again, but maybe in time he could offer his hand to another woman. Someone who would understand and make no romantic demands on him. In exchange he would provide her with a title and an undemanding husband. The thought made him grimace. It was far from how he had pictured his married life with Rosie.

In the meantime, the more he reflected on that scene in Her Grace of Rotherham’s ballroom, the more he knew Sir William was wrong about one thing. In one respect at least, Rosie hadn’t moved on. Although he had only seen her with Sheridan for minutes, Jack’s instincts told him Rosie’s marriage wasn’t happy. Anyone who didn’t know her as well as Jack did would be fooled.
Not me. Under that veneer of serenity, she loathes Sheridan as much as she ever did.
Of that Jack was absolutely sure.
So why the hell did she marry him?

Swearing to keep his distance was all very well. No matter how much he wanted to protect his own heart from further damage, when you cared for someone the way he had once cared for Rosie—still cared for Rosie— you didn’t walk away if you suspected they might be in trouble. Not if you were Jack Lindsey.

There was only one person who could provide the answers to his questions. Despite his vow to the contrary, Jack needed to speak to Rosie.

* * *

The masquerade was well attended, and New Spring Gardens provided a spectacular setting for the brilliant occasion. Illuminated by thousands of globe lamps festooned from branch to branch amongst the dense foliage of the trees, the revellers—their identities protected by masks and domino cloaks—danced and partook of supper in their booths or strolled along the avenues and walks. Lady Drummond, who had not accompanied the party that evening, had impressed upon Rosie the significance of being seen with Clive at such a public event.

“’Twill be quite delightful when the unmasking ceremony takes place at midnight and all our acquaintance are able to observe you together,” she explained, forever seeking an opportunity to promote Clive as a loving family man.

She had also lectured Rosie extensively on the importance of keeping to the main avenues at Vauxhall and never, ever allowing herself to stray into the infamous dark walks.

“For ’tis there, my love, that loose women and wild bucks engage in their assignations. Any lady seen among those walks would be considered
fast
, and that, as you know, will never do for one with a name as noble as ‘my Lady Sheridan’.” Her tone sounded hushed, scandalised and intrigued all at the same time.

Mrs. Henderson, Lady Drummond’s dearest friend, had invited a party of young people to join her and partake of wafer-thin ham shavings and heady arrack punch, a liquor made from mixing grains of the benjamin flower with rum. Their hostess was an indifferent chaperone, being far too busy eyeing the company through her lorgnette and attempting to guess the identity of various masqueraders. The booth was bustling with Mrs. Henderson’s own party and various visiting acquaintances. It was impossible to keep track of the comings and goings as groups and couples left to dance or walk, and returned later to partake of refreshments. Clive, after remaining particularly taciturn throughout dinner, promptly abandoned Rosie to her fate and went off in search of other amusement. Since she was glad to be relieved of his company, she did not enquire what form his chosen entertainment might take. She was content to remain in the booth and watch the polite world enjoy its pleasures.

Rosie noticed Perry immediately, since no mask or domino could disguise his willowy elegance or the sartorial glory of his outfit. His companion, a less eye-catching figure in a dark-grey domino, also drew her gaze, but for very different reasons. Jack could never disguise himself from her. She decided he did not look like a man who was enjoying himself.

As though aware of her eyes upon him, Jack turned his head and stared directly at her. Rosie knew that, in spite of her mask, he would recognise her instantly. An insistent pulse thudded in her throat as she gazed at him. Jack looked away first. Addressing a few quiet words to Perry, he deliberately turned his back on Rosie, walking with his friend towards the dance floor. Rosie, her cheeks burning with shame at what she could only construe as a deliberate snub, bit her lip in vexation. Any enjoyment she might have taken in the evening had now been completely destroyed.

As the revelry increased in intensity around her, Rosie had never felt more alone. Why did her mind insist upon taking her back to a happier time? A time when she had been secure in Jack’s love? As always when she thought back to their betrothal, her thoughts tried to shy away from the memory of Captain Overton’s death.
I killed a man.
She forced herself to face the truth.
I didn’t mean for him to die, but that is what happened.
At the time, she had been beyond distraught, and it had been Jack she turned to for comfort. It had been his words of reassurance, his strong arms around her, his gentle kisses that had made her torment bearable.
How times have changed. Now he cannot even bring himself to look at me.

Her restless, maudlin thoughts were interrupted by her fellow party-goers, and she allowed herself to be drawn into their conversations. It had become second nature to her to wear this mask of poise. It was the barrier behind which she retreated and hid her feelings.

Some time later, her eyes were drawn once more to Jack’s grey-domino-clad figure when he reappeared alone and purposefully entered Mrs. Henderson’s booth. Rosie, who had been chatting to a rather intoxicated young gentleman about the forthcoming firework display, tried to ignore this intrusion and the uncomfortable pounding of her heart. She was unsuccessful on both counts.

“Walk with me.” Jack unceremoniously interrupted her companion and held out his hand to Rosie.

She was torn between the desire to be alone with him and the promptings of her better judgement that told her to do so would be dangerous. She wasn’t in control of her emotions where he was concerned. Common sense lost the battle. Pausing briefly to question the wisdom of her actions, she rose and strolled with him along the lantern-strewn paths. They didn’t speak, a circumstance which gave Rosie time to master her breathing and regulate the uncomfortable rhythm of her heart. To be so close to him, to feel the strong sinews of his arm beneath her fingers once again! She remembered a time when walking with him this way was natural. When she could touch him any time she wanted to. When being held in his arms was her right. The ambitions of cruel princes had separated them, and she had been forced to make hateful decisions. There could be no return. Yet whatever his feelings might be towards her now, she felt alive in a way she had not since he’d left her that day to go and fight for the Jacobite cause. In spite of everything, having Jack in the world made it a more bearable place.

The path became less well-lit, and Rosie decided this must be one of the infamous dark walks. Jack led her unerringly to a decorative summer house in a secluded corner of the gardens. She took a moment to speculate on how many assignations he had engaged in here in the past. Jack had never pretended to be saintly before he met her. Only that he would be faithful forever after. The thought made her breath catch oddly in her throat.

Inside, a faint light was cast by one of the few lanterns on the walk outside shining in through the single window, and the furnishings consisted of a day bed and an occasional table. It could not have advertised its purpose as a place of romantic assignation more clearly.

“Why have you brought me here, Jack?” Rosie put back the hood of her domino and removed her mask. She did not believe, from the tense look on his face, that his intentions were amorous.

“I wished to speak to you and I needed to do it in private. When I saw you were here, I did not immediately come over to you. I wanted to ensure that your fine husband was otherwise occupied…and he is.” That sneer touched his lips again, and she realised it was intended for Clive, not for her. And he hadn’t snubbed her. He had merely been ensuring she really was alone. Relief flooded through her and she fought it back. She must not allow her desperate longing for him to show. “There is too much still unsaid between us.”

Rosie did her best to remain impassive. He would never know just how much was unsaid. There was so much that never
could
be said. She would risk more lives than their own if he discovered the full story. She willed her voice to remain calm. “I am listening.” It was a passable attempt.

“Before I came to London, I went to Delacourt Grange to see Tom.”

Rosie’s eyelids fluttered as she rode the brief feeling of panic that seized her. Tom knew some of the story, it was true. He might have guessed the whole, but he would not betray her. Not even to Jack.

“I went to see if I could forget you and try to understand,” Jack continued.

“And did you do either of those things?”

He shook his head. “I cannot. Oh, I understand why you married. It must have been a harrowing time for you. You believed I was dead, your father was critically ill. Grieving for me, worried for him, responsible for Harry and the estate, of course I understand why you would seek support.” She could almost hear the unasked questions and steeled herself for the most important one of all. The one that followed, while difficult to answer, was not the one she had anticipated. “There is one thing I don’t understand. I need you to explain why, of all the men in the world, you chose Sheridan?” His voice became ragged with the effort of keeping his emotions in check.

Rosie bit her lip. Before her, at last, was the one person—the
only
person—to whom she should have been able to pour out her heart. But how could she? Jack’s fury, should he suspect the truth, would lead him to take retribution so violent that there could be no pardon for him this time. King George would not show a rebel lord leniency twice. Besides, the damning evidence still existed, and she knew enough of Clive to be certain he would carry out his threat to use it. The end result would be the same: she and Harry would lose their home, their good name, their freedom and, quite probably, their lives. If she was imprisoned, transported or executed, what would happen to Xander? No, Jack must never learn the true story behind her marriage. Better that he should think badly of her than risk his life to avenge her. Better, even, that she should see hatred in those blue eyes where once there had been love.

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