Read Dancing With A Devil Online
Authors: Julie Johnstone
Tags: #historical romance, #love, #regency romance
“
I’m glad you’re gentleman enough to agree you crossed a line.” Her father’s voice was cool and impersonal, all traces of anger seemingly gone. The foreboding she’d felt moments before raced across her skin, leaving gooseflesh in its wake.
“
For what has just occurred, I’m sure you’ll agree the only recourse is to marry,” her father said. “You may call on me tomorrow morning and we will work out the terms of the betrothal contract.”
Audrey darted out from behind Trent. He stared at her father with a hard cold-eyed smile. As if he sensed her looking he turned and met her gaze. Bitterness―or was it remorse?―swept over his face, making him appear less a man chiseled of stone and more one molded of regrets. Her heart gave a tremendous jerk.
Slowly, he turned fully toward her. His eyebrows were drawn together in a deep frown. Her breath caught and a lump formed in her chest.
No. no. no
. She wanted to run and hide. Or cover her ears. He’d said nothing, yet she knew what was about to come. Her heart cracked within her chest.
“
Audrey, I’m sorry, but I cannot marry you. I started to tell you. Or, that is, I meant to tell you.” There was a bitter, strange edge to his voice, yet the despair roaring in her ears like a funeral bell made it hard to care what could have made him so rancorous, unless he truly believed she’d tried to trap him.
She grasped the notion in desperation. If only she could make him see. Clasping his arm she said, “I vow I did not plan this.”
He carefully withdrew his arm from her hold. “I don’t think that.” His voice was low and shaking.
Behind Trent, her father sneered at her. The idea that her father was correct, and she was no more than a diversion Trent never intended to marry made her stomach turn. She inhaled a shaky breath.
Trent’s face twisted, as if he was in pain. “Your fear is groundless and not the reason I can’t marry you.”
His voice chilled her like a cold wind. Tears blurred her vision. Gathering her frayed pride, she blinked the tears away and forced a laugh, albeit a bitter one. “Well, it was amusing while it lasted.”
“
Amusing,” her father growled. He swung toward her. “You may accept that, but I’ll not.” Before she realized what was happening he barreled into Trent with a roar. Both men flew back into the balustrade. Trent jumped sideways, sending her father crashing alone into the railing, his weight and height working against him to fling him almost sideways in the air. For a horrified moment, she held her breath. He was going to topple over the barrier to his death three stories below.
“
Father!” she screamed, hoping Trent could save him. She blinked at the blur before her. Trent grasped her father by the arm and jerked him backward toward the terrace floor.
With her heart pounding in her ears, she rushed to her father and grasped his other arm to help steady him. “Let me help you.”
“
You’ve helped enough.” He snatched his arm out of her hold and shoved her away with his free hand.
Her slipper caught on the edge of a chair and caused her to stumble backward toward the ground while reaching out blindly for something to grasp. Air rushed from her lungs with a harrumph as Trent gripped her under the arms and hauled her to her feet. For a moment he held her pressed against his chest. “I’ve got you.” His warm breath whispered across the back of her neck before he gently pushed her down. She landed with a thud in a chair. Her gaze locked behind Trent on her father advancing like a madman, his face twisted and his fists raised to fight. Anther scream ripped from her throat, but this one was to warn Trent. He jerked around in time to duck the punch her father threw.
Audrey jumped up, caught the hem of her dress under her slipper and careened forward to land on her hands and knees with a jarring impact that cracked her teeth together and caused an instant headache. Pain shot through her knees and hands, but she scrambled to her feet, determined to stop her father. As she stood straight, he swung at Trent again, then his face screwed into an expression of pain. Groaning, he grabbed his chest and collapsed to the ground.
For a moment, she froze as wave after wave of shock slapped at her. When Trent dropped to his knees by her father, it was as if whatever invisible string had held her still was cut. She raced to his writhing form and knelt down. He tugged frantically at his evening coat as he struggled to breathe. “My chest,” he wheezed as drool ran down the side of his cheek and his eyes rolled back in his head.
“
Dear God, what is happening?” she cried.
“
I think it’s his heart,” Trent snapped.
Trent grasped her father’s hands and pulled them out of the way. She tugged at his shirt as he mumbled a jumble of words she couldn’t understand. “Father, what is it?” Trent shoved her hands away and with a violent yank, ripped her father’s shirt in half. His face turned a deep shade of red as his hands fluttered to his chest, then fell away. “Father, Father!”
“
Audrey,” Richard’s sharp voice called behind her. She did not bother to turn. She scooted closer to her father, her heart thudding so loudly in her ears they rang in time with each beat. The silence seemed too long. “Why is he not talking?” Desperation made her shake. “Why are his eyes not opening?” She spoke to Trent’s back as he huddled over her father. Why wasn’t he answering her? Grasping Trent’s arm, she tugged on him. “Move over. Let me see him.”
Trent gazed back at her, his eyes glazed with the same emotion she’d recognized earlier―regret. “No, no, no.” She moaned and tried to shove him out of the way to get at her father.
Trent sat up and crushed her to him. “He is gone, Audrey, I’m sorry. I’m so very sorry.”
Before she could make sense of what Trent was trying to tell her Richard knelt beside her on his knees. Audrey flung herself at her brother and buried her head against his silky coat.
“He’s dead. I’ve killed him. I’ve killed him with my disobedience. He came upon me kissing Trent on the terrace and it killed him.” Tears slid unchecked down her face. Her father hadn’t loved her, but that didn’t mean she hadn’t spent night after night wishing he had and years trying to make him see her and not through her.
Richard’s brow crinkled with obvious confusion. God, she was tired. So very tired. With a sigh, she pushed a lock of fallen hair out of her eyes. “Richard, do you understand me?”
He shook his head. How could she find the strength to explain? She swallowed and suddenly Trent was there, his hand firm and reassuring on her shoulder, his voice explaining in low tones what had happened. Then his hand was gone and Richard stood. Their voices seemed louder, but hardly compared to the noise in her ears that made it hard to think. Audrey was aware that something did not seem right with them.
Concentrate.
She had to focus. It was so hard. Her thoughts fluttered around her like rings of white smoke rising from a fire. They disappeared before she could grasp what she thought they might be saying.
Their deep voices grew louder. Angry. Snarling.
She opened her eyes and gasped. Her brother and Trent stood toe to toe, her brother’s face mottled and red, Trent’s mouth pressed tight and grim. She pressed her hands to her ears, desperate to stop the deafening ringing so she could hear what they were saying. All fell quiet then noise erupted through the silence like a blast from a pistol.
“
You leave me no choice but to challenge you to a duel if you refuse to marry my sister.”
Mortification weighed upon her almost heavier at this moment than her grief. How utterly selfish of her. Appalled with herself, she struggled to her feet and squared her shoulders while staring at Trent. She wanted to sound as if she were perfectly fine, so he would never know how he had hurt her. “You’re free to go. I don’t expect you to marry me.”
“
By God he will,” Richard roared. “He told me what Mr. Shelton said. He has ruined your chance for marriage.”
She winced as Trent blanched, which made her feel a thousand times worse, smaller than the smallest, most insignificant bug she’d ever quashed under her slippers. She was the bug. Insignificant to Trent. He’d stomped on her heart and crushed her hopes. “Please, Richard, let him leave before someone comes out here and then gossip starts. As it is we can say Father simply had a heart problem.”
“
I’ll stay and help you see to your father,” Trent said to her.
“
That will not be necessary.” It was so hard to keep the bitterness out of her voice, but she had managed, she believed. Now to deal with Richard. “Richard, please.”
“
Cease talking,” he snapped.
She bit her lip, unsure how to proceed. From where she stood, she could see a couple strolling toward the terrace. Any minute they would come out here and hear the ugly truth. But if she pressed Richard he’d likely grow angrier. Whatever transpired, she would fix it tomorrow.
He rose to his full height. “I demand satisfaction.”
Trent nodded. “You deserve it and more. But duels are foolish. There must be another way―”
“
No,” Richard interrupted with a vicious slice of his hand through the air. “My second will contact you with the details of the duel.”
Trent nodded just as the terrace door opened and the couple stepped onto the balcony. “All right,” he agreed under his breath, turned, moved without a sound toward the garden path and slipped into the dark night.
Audrey bit down hard on her lip to stop the scream that was lodged in her throat from escaping. Her brother was a worse shot than she was. She couldn’t lose him on top of Father all because she was an utter fool. It was too late now to talk sense into Richard, but tomorrow, she would beg Richard to call off the duel.
Several hours later, Audrey’s head pounded and her stomach threatened to empty its contents as she climbed the steps to their home on Mayfair with her coachman’s help. Scenes from the ball played relentlessly through her head and no matter how she tried, she could not stop them. Her father’s mottled face. His wheezing and grasping at his chest. His hateful words. Trent in the glow of the moonlight refusing to marry her. Huddling by her father’s still form as the doctor came and pronounced him officially dead. The stricken look on the faces of the guests at the Lionhursts’ ball as her father was carried out.
Ringing commenced once more in her ears. Moaning, she released Mr. Barrett’s arm and pressed her hands to either side of her head. She swayed and as she did, he gripped her elbow. “My lady, shall I try once more to get your brother to come into the house.”
Weary, Audrey turned to the carriage. In the darkness, she could not see inside the window to glimpse Richard’s face, but she suspected he wore the same scowl as he had since they had alighted into the carriage from the ball and she had tried to talk to him. He had refused to look at her or acknowledge anything she way saying. Her shoulders sagged and when she caught the look of pity on Mr. Barrett’s face, she released him and straightened her spine. She may want to crumble to the ground, but she refused to do it in public. “Go back to Richard. Watch over him if you can and see that he makes it back home eventually.”
“
Certainly, my lady.” Mr. Barrett tipped his hat, strode down the steps and clambered onto the coachman seat. With a word from him, the horses let out a neigh, the carriage wheels turned on the cobblestone street and Mr. Barrett and her brother disappeared around the corner.
As she touched her hand to the brass knob of the door it opened and her aunt flew out the door, her face creased with lines of worry. “Oh, my dear! The Lionhursts’ sent their footman round with a note to tell me what has happened. Come in, come in!”
Audrey folded into her aunt’s warm, flowery embrace and wilted against her. She clutched at her arm as her aunt brought her into the house and closed the door. “I can’t believe he is dead,” Aunt Hillie murmured while shaking her head and leading them into the parlor. “Sit, here, dearest. Your face is pasty and”―her aunt pressed a hand to Audrey’s forehead―“your forehead is damp. Let me get you some tea. You look as if you may faint.”
Audrey collapsed against the settee. “I feel as if I might faint,” she whispered, swallowing against the nausea threatening to rise. Her mouth began to water profusely and the pounding of her head grew tenfold. Suddenly she jerked upright. “I’m going to be sick.” She pressed a hand over her mouth and watched as her aunt raced to the tea tray and ran back with tea splashing over the side of the cup and falling on the faded Audubon carpet.