Oh, Edmund. The threat to him defeated her as the threat to her father hadn’t. He was here, with her, in her care. She was responsible for him, and he was so very vulnerable. He was only five years old.
By the time she reached the top of the rise and the arched oak doors of the church, she was outwardly calm again. She grasped the heavy bronze ring and pushed inward, and the door opened with a loud creak. It was cold and damp inside, for little warmth could penetrate the thick stone walls.
The church was empty. She walked slowly up the narrow aisle, past the bare wooden benches, toward the vestry. She heard a soft scraping sound and froze. “You are the Eagle?”
A slight man, dressed in the coarse woolens of a fisherman, stepped out of the shadows. He was a young man without a sign of a beard on his smooth cheeks.
“Yes,” she said just above a whisper. “Were you following me?”
“Nay, it was my partner. He doesn’t trust women. He would have sliced your lovely throat had you not come alone.”
He was trying to frighten her, but oddly enough, his words didn’t touch her. She’d gone beyond fear for herself. She held out her hand. “Give me your packet now. I have little time to waste with you.”
He frowned at her, for she’d surprised him. Then he slowly drew a dirty envelope from the waistband of his trousers and handed it to her. Evangeline paid him no more attention. She sat down on one of the wooden benches and spread the single sheet of paper on her lap. She raised her eyes. “You’re this man Conan DeWitt?”
The man shook his head. “He’s my partner. He’s the gentleman, not I.”
“Bring him to me. I must see him.” He looked undecided. “Conan told me to meet with you.”
“Nevertheless, he must come in. If he refuses, I cannot do anything further.” Buried in the coded message from Houchard was the description of Conan DeWitt, a man tall and fair, with a mole on his left cheek near his eye.
“Very well,” he said finally, “but there better be good reason.” She shrugged. “I care not what you decide to do.” “I’ll see if he’ll come.”
He slipped out of the church and returned some minutes later accompanied by a tall man dressed in country buckskins, swinging a cane negligently in his right hand.
Conan DeWitt stared down at the girl. She had an uncommonly lovely face, despite its pallor. Jamie had called her a cold bitch, but his voice had held grudging respect. “What is it you want with me, Eagle?”
“Houchard provided your description. I have to be certain that you are the man he speaks of.”
He touched his fingertip to the large mole. “Are you satisfied?”
Evangeline nodded, and quickly wrote her initials on the lower corner of the paper. She handed it to DeWitt. “Have you a packet for me?”
DeWitt handed her a thin envelope. Evangeline stuffed it into her cloak pocket and rose.
“Jamie was right. You are a cold bitch. I told Houchard that women aren’t to be trusted, but he insisted that you were different, that he had such a hold over you that you would never dare to betray us. He believed Edgerton more than me.” He shrugged. “We will see. I’ve always found that women’s consciences are fragile. I will ask Edgerton what this hold is. He wants you, you know. And he will have you, eventually.”
She found a laugh, one that was filled with all the contempt she felt for that traitorous bastard. “Your opinions are doubtless a result of your character, Mr. DeWitt. I believe our business is concluded. I’m away.”
“Yes, a bitch,” he said quietly, gave her one more long look, a fair brow arched. She quickly gave him John Edgerton’s London address and turned to leave the church, but DeWitt’s voice stopped her. “That man, Trevlin. Be certain that he doesn’t suspect anything. If he does, he’s dead.”
She felt a leap of panic, but didn’t show anything except her impatience with him. “Don’t be a fool. The man suspects nothing. See to your own affairs and leave mine to me.”
Evangeline turned on her heel and walked deliberately away from him, out of the church and into the bright sunlight. He was a handsome man, one who would undoubtedly gain entrance anywhere he wished to go in London. The mole, though, that gave one pause. She had a lot to write in her journal about Conan DeWitt.
The duke of Portsmouth stood at the wide, bowed windows in the drawing room of his town house on York Square, staring at the rivulets of rain that streaked down the glass. He held a letter from Evangeline in his hand, one of her governess’s bloodless progress reports. It was written in the most formal of styles, impersonal, lifeless, and he wished he had her white neck between his hands, damn her. It was the fifth one he’d received from her. She could have been an utter stranger. Certainly she wasn’t the woman he’d caressed, whose breasts he’d stroked with his hands, whose mouth he’d kissed until he’d believed he’d spill his seed if he didn’t have her.
Now she was a stranger. She’d removed herself as far as she could from him. He was surprised that the pain of her final words to him still lingered, still pulsed deeply in him, making him wonder what had pushed her to say those things to him, what he had done to provoke them. And her insistence on not coming to London. None of it made any more sense to him today than it had the day before when he’d yet again chewed over it endlessly.
“Dearest, you might as well tell me what troubles you.”
He turned at the sound of his mother’s voice, and automatically shook his head. He hadn’t meant to be so obvious. It was distressing, but then again, his mother knew him nearly as well as his father had. He wouldn’t ever cause her distress. Thus he smiled and said, “There isn’t anything, Mother. It’s a dismal day, enough to drag a man’s soul to his feet. Dreary and dismal, nothing more. Don’t fret.”
The dowager duchess of Portsmouth, Marianne Clothilde by name, regarded her beautiful son. Like his father, he protected her, even when it was foolish to try. But she said only, returning his smile, “How goes Edmund?”
“Madame de la Valette reports that he will soon be penning his first novel, he is that precocious. She sends me the opening paragraph to his budding opus.” He handed his mother a single sheet of paper. Edmund’s printing was well executed. There were four sentences. She read aloud: “It was a dark and stormy night. There wasn’t a moon. There were stars. There is more to come, but patience is required.”
She began laughing. “It’s wonderful. I believe Madame de la Valette is a genius.”
“She probably told him what to write. It’s nothing at all.”
“Don’t be such a pessimist, Richard. I’ll wager that Edmund’s thoughts are behind it, and Madame simply provided a few suggestions. I must write him this very day and praise him. I will ask for the next part of the story. I will tell him that patience is difficult with such a splendid beginning as this.”
“It is good, is it?” the duke said, his voice gruff and filled with such pride that she wanted to cry.
“Yes, very good, and it’s been just three weeks. It appears that Madame de la Valette is making excellent progress. I miss the boy, you know.” She looked down at what she saw was hunger in her son’s beautiful eyes. Hunger? For his son? Yes, that must be it. But then, why didn’t he simply return to Chesleigh? That or bring Edmund here? She tested the water, saying, “I’ve been thinking, dearest. Edmund is no longer a baby. Soon he will need his father’s guiding hand. Could he not come up to London with Marissa’s cousin? I am curious to meet her as well.”
The duke eyed his mother suspiciously. Her dark eyes, so like his own, were guileless, which made him all the more wary. Like his father, his mother never missed anything. As a boy, he’d always failed whenever he’d tried to lie to either of them. “I think,” he said acidly, “that you have been talking to Bunyon. Damn the fellow for his infernal meddling.”
The dowager duchess merely smiled at her son’s show of temper. Naturally she’d spoken to Bunyon, but oddly enough, he’d said very little, which, she supposed, she admired. Loyalty was important, a
fter all. But her son had acted differently, more aloof, more thoughtful perhaps since his return from Chesleigh. She’d thought that he was still grieving for his friend Robbie Faraday, but no, she’d decided that wasn’t it. Nor had it anything to do with Sabrina Eversleigh, now Phillip Mercerault’s wife. Ah, but he was touchy. And alone, terribly alone, she thought. She didn’t know what to do, and that depressed her profoundly.
Marianne Clothilde lapsed into silence. Perhaps he wanted a new mistress, she thought, always a realist, something she refused not to be. Her son was every bit as lusty as his father before him—ah, but then his father had found her, Marianne Clothilde, daughter of an impoverished earl, and that had been when all his lust had stayed at home, with her, in their bed or wherever they happened to find themselves. She smiled at that wondrous memory. However, her son was very much his own man, despite the likeness to his father. She’d believed when he’d done as his father had wished and married Marissa that he would settle down, but he hadn’t. He’d never said a single word against his young wife. He’d never said a word against his father-in-law, who was a despicable man. And then Marissa had died.
Marianne Clothilde sighed. She was beginning to wonder if the duke would ever find a woman to suit him, a woman to complete him. What was Marissa’s cousin like?
She said to his back, for he’d turned to look out onto the rainy park opposite the house, “You know that Bunyon never tells me anything. I wish he would because you’re as closed as a clam.”
“Even now you could be lying for him. No,” he continued over his shoulder, “I’ll take the bastard, no, not that precise word exactly, at least not to my mother. I’ll take Bunyon to Gentleman Jackson’s boxing saloon and cave in his stomach.”
It was then that she realized he’d never answered her question. She smiled at his very stiff back. “You know, dearest, I’m growing bored with inactivity. Perhaps you would consider bringing Madame de la Valette and Edmund to London.” She added, with just a whiff of a whine, “I miss my only, dearest grandson. I would like to see him before I doubtless become very ill and unable to, and then die. Can’t you bring him and Madame de la Valette here? For your only, dear mother?”
The duke turned to face her, and she momentarily forgot her acting at the haggard look in his eyes. He slashed his hand in the air, saying in a harsh voice, “Madame has no desire to come to London. When I informed her that I wished it, she threatened to leave Chesleigh. When I told her she had nowhere else to go, she said it was none of my affair what she did. Then she sent me straight to hell, if I recall correctly.” Marianne Clothilde blinked. She attached herself to what was really important. “You informed her, my son? From what Bunyon has told me, she is a pleasant young woman, but also possesses great pride. Also, she is a poor relation, dependent upon you. Perhaps you were too high-handed in your treatment of her.” As his only answer was an uncompromising stare, she continued, “What is her name, dearest? I cannot keep referring to her as Madame de la Valette.”
“Evangeline,” he said, his voice low and deep. His mother, suddenly enlightened, nearly lost her bearings. But she didn’t. She wanted to know so much, but she wasn’t stupid. The duke had stepped behind a barrier even she couldn’t breach.
She said merely, “What a lovely name.” Then she rose from her chair and shook out her skirts. She was a tall woman, still possessed of a graceful, willowy figure despite her fifty years. She walked to her son, lightly kissed his cheek, and said, “I have thought so many times that you are quite the most handsome gentleman of my acquaintance.”
“I look like you, Mother, so you’re merely showing your own conceit.”
“Oh, not entirely. Your father was also a splendid-looking gentleman.” She knew that her son, just as his father had been before him, was continually plagued by hopeful young ladies, as well as by married ladies, and ladies who were not ladies at all. She wondered if he hadn’t fallen in love because women had so eagerly thrown themselves into his arms and into his bed since he’d reached the age of sixteen. Perhaps even younger, she thought. Her husband had been inordinately proud of his son’s sexual prowess. He’d loved his son more than he loved his wife, she suspected. He would curse his son’s wildness one moment, and preen like the proud papa he was the next. Ah, and then the son had bowed to his father’s wishes, married, presented the world with an heir, lost his wife, and now conducted his life in a more discreet fashion. And he was bitterly unhappy.
She said in the most indifferent voice in her repertoire, “You’ve told me that Evangeline is half English.”
“Yes,” he said, and that was all. He couldn’t begin to imagine what his mother would say if he added that he felt more lust for her than any woman he’d ever met in his life and he also wanted to strangle her, and perhaps hold her tightly against him when they slept together.
“I believe,” Marianne Clothilde said, smoothing down her lovely pale blue muslin skirts, “it’s time for Monsieur Possette to arrive. He arranges my hair most charmingly.” With that, she walked from the drawing room. She paused at the door and said in an airy voice, “Who knows? Perhaps Evangeline will come to London soon. Perhaps I will invite her myself. What do you think of that?”
He looked hunted. What was she to make of that? “Don’t, Mother,” he said. “Don’t.”
In that moment, as he stood alone as the devil staring out into the rain, he saw her arching her back against his arm as he caressed her with his mouth. “Damn you, Evangeline,” he said to no one at all.
He thought of his mistress, Morgana, but oddly, although he missed her cutting wit, her awesome skills, he didn’t want her. He only wanted one woman, curse her.
He felt violent. He thought of Bunyon and rubbed his hands together. This afternoon they’d go to Gentleman Jackson’s boxing saloon. Every punch would make him feel better, despite which one of them was hit.
Chapter 21
Evangeline was surprised to see Mrs. Raleigh very nearly running down the long corridor toward the north wing, her household keys jangling madly at her waist.
“What’s wrong, Mrs. Raleigh?” she called out as she closed her bedchamber door behind her. “May I help?”
“Oh, Madame. Good morning.” She stopped and turned to face Evangeline, her face pink from her exertion. “I’ll tell you, Madame, I’m worried about Mrs. Needle. She always eats her porridge in the servants’ hall precisely at seven o’clock in the morning. No one has seen her. It’s after eight. Something’s wrong, I know it. She is so very old, you know. I must go see.”
“I’ll come with you,” Evangeline said, falling into step beside the housekeeper. “She probably lost track of the time while making up some new potion.”
When they reached the turret room, Evangeline rapped on the door and called, “Mrs. Needle, it’s Madame de la Valette and Mrs. Raleigh. Are you all right?”
There was no answer. Evangeline called out again. Still nothing.
“I knew it,” Mrs. Raleigh said, “something is wrong. She’s ill, I know it.”
“Perhaps she’s in the home wood gathering mushrooms,” Evangeline said even as she turned the large brass doorknob. She didn’t believe that, though. She didn’t want to go into the tower room.
The smell of drying roses was strong in the air. “Mrs. Needle?”
Evangeline walked slowly about the room, Mrs. Raleigh close on her heels. She drew in her breath sharply. “Oh, dear,” she said. “Oh, dear.”
Evangeline ran to the other side of the screen, into the small alcove that was Mrs. Needle’s sleeping area. The old woman lay crumpled on her side. Evangeline knew that she was dead even before she knelt down beside her and closed her fingers over her veined wrist. There was no pulse, and her body was stiff. Mrs. Needle had been dead for many hours.
“She was an old woman,” Mrs. Raleigh said. “But still it is distressing. It must have been her heart. I pray it was quick. She never allowed any of us to remain long with her. Oh, goodness, I’m so very sorry that her
time came when she was alone.”
Evangeline sat back on her heels and closed her eyes. Unbidden, the peaceful face of her mother rose in her mind, her pale lips quirked in a smile, her sightless blue eyes staring until the doctor gently lowered her lids. She had felt only shock at first at her mother’s death; the stiff figure that had been her mother had seemed alien to her. Grief had come later. “Yes,” Evangeline said finally, looking up at Mrs. Raleigh. “She was an old woman, a very old woman. Fetch Bassick. He will know what is to be done.” Mrs. Raleigh nodded and hurried from the room, the keys at her waist making light clanging noises as she ran down the stone steps.
Evangeline looked down into Mrs. Needle’s face. All the ancient lines seemed to have been smoothed out. She didn’t look as old in death. She reached down and rested her palm for a brief moment against Mrs. Needle’s cold cheek. The poor old woman. She’d died alone, with no one to share her passing. Her eyes fell to the open neck of Mrs. Needle’s old wool gown, and she saw in the hollow of her wrinkled throat two violet bruises, each the size of a man’s thumb. She sat back on her heels, closing her eyes. Oh no, oh God no. She forced herself to look again, more closely. No, those horrible thumb marks were still there, deep, deadly. Mrs. Needle hadn’t died alone—someone had strangled her.
She covered her face with her hands. It was all her fault. She’d told John Edgerton about Mrs. Needle. She’d probably even mentioned her name, but she didn’t remember if she had or not. She’d told him that the old woman suspected that something wasn’t right with her. She’d mentioned her only because—a sob tore from her throat, and she covered her face in her hands. The truth was that she’d told Edgerton hoping to use the poor old woman to frighten him into calling a halt to his madness. But instead he’d simply removed her, as if she’d been nothing more than a flick of lint from a jacket sleeve. He’d ordered her murder. And she was the one responsible. Mrs. Needle was dead because Evangeline had come to Chesleigh castle. There was no excuse for her, none at all.