Folly's Reward (16 page)

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Authors: Jean R. Ewing

Tags: #Regency Romance

BOOK: Folly's Reward
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He stood staring from the window. His hair was neatly cut and curled over his head in dark waves. An immaculately tailored blue superfine jacket stretched over his broad shoulders. Beige pantaloons accentuated his long legs.

As he turned and spoke, she saw that a fashionably crisp starched collar and cravat framed his closely shaved chin.

The Hal of
The White Lady
had disappeared. This man looked every inch Harry Acton, son of one of the more powerful peers in the land.

Prudence was furious with herself for feeling intimidated.

“You cannot make me, sir,” she said stiffly. “Bobby is my charge, and I shall take him to my sister as I had planned.”

“Are your sister’s footmen up to snuff, if it comes to a fight, Miss Drake? Do you suppose that, after tracking you to the MacEwens’ and following us to Oxford, Lord Belham’s man doesn’t know that you have a sister in Wiltshire?”

“What if he also knows who you are?” she said.

“That doesn’t matter. We shall travel on the public turnpike in Lord Jervin’s coach with armed outriders. My brother Richard is the best man I know for a situation like this. He was one of Wellington’s scouts in the Peninsula. I doubt that the chap with the eye-patch, or any other of Lord Belham’s minions, would be much use against a man who fought with the Spanish partisans against Bonaparte. If you remember, I’m a moderately good shot myself. With my own pistols, I can safely guarantee that I shouldn’t miss my target.”

“Oh, gracious!”

Prudence closed her eyes. Hal was right. She knew it in her bones, as well as with her head. If Belham tried to kidnap Bobby again, she needed more powerful protection than her sister’s household could provide.

No doubt this Lord Lenwood would know what to do. He was heir to the Earl of Acton, with all those other powerful connections. But his wife was the Helena of Hal’s dreams, and now he had remembered who she was, his first thought was to go to her?

Was she to be witness to the destruction of a brother’s marriage as well as her own heart?

“And there is something else, angel,” Hal said gently.

Prudence glanced up at him. He seemed completely beyond her touch, as if the very starch of his collar represented an immovable barrier between them. Of course, the lady he loved was of his own rank. How would Lady Lenwood react when her brother-in-law turned up at her door with a governess and her runaway charge?

“What?”

He smiled, a smile of heartbreaking uncertainty with something of dread behind it.

“I asked you to marry me, you know, before we were so outrageously interrupted. I rather hoped you had considered your answer.”

“Oh, I have,” Prudence said, rising to her feet.

He loved his brother’s wife. Miss Prudence Drake was damned if she would take second place, and break her heart over him for the rest of her life. Even without that, she was no match for him, was she? A Scottish governess and the son of an English earl.

Prudence clasped her hands together and willed them to be still, but her voice broke and wavered.

“I have considered everything about my situation very carefully, Mr. Acton. I shall come to Acton Mead with you, because is it best for Bobby. But I will never, ever, marry you.”

“You deny me even hope?”

She reached deep into some cold, dark corner of her heart, which could lend implacability to her voice, and found it.

“I say
never
because I mean it. It is completely out of the question.”

Harry looked down at the carpet. His face was almost as white as his collar.

“Very well,” he said at last. “I’m sorry that my offer distresses you so very much. Please rest assured that I shan’t annoy you about it. Since the thought of spending your life with me causes you so much pain, I shan’t ask you again.”

“Thank you,” she whispered.

He glanced back at her. The harebell eyes looked as bleak as the top of Shap Fells, and seemed fathomless in his pale face.

“Let us pretend that I was never foolish enough to ask you, and put it behind us. I suppose I had better begin readying everything for our journey. If you will excuse me, Miss Drake?”

He closed the door softly behind him, leaving Prudence alone to bite back the bitter tears that threatened to spill in a torrent down her cheeks.

* * *

The carriage ride was an agony. Not physically, for Lord Jervin’s coach boasted the latest style in springs and had deeply upholstered seats, but because Prudence sat opposite the Honorable Henry Acton and made small talk. Her Prince Hal was lost to her forever.

She must henceforth think of him as Harry Acton, the earl’s son, who was about to swim as far out of her life as the silkie diving into the ocean to return to his magical home in the Skerries.

But there had been golden days in his company. For the rest of her life, whenever she was lonely and ignored, as governesses must be, she had something wonderful to remember. It was an unpalatable and harsh consolation.

Harry was polite and guarded, and Prudence could tell nothing of what he was thinking. Why had she let him beguile her? Kiss her? Make her fall in love with him, as if she were a green girl instead of a sensible governess?

They come to shore and marry real ladies, you know, and steal their hearts, but they always abandon them and their babies, and go back to the sea in the end.

If Harry had not stopped her that night on the narrow boat, there might even have been a child.

* * *

They traveled fast, stopping only to pay tolls and change horses. No one intercepted them or seemed to be following them, but Hal sat tense and alert with his primed pistols at the ready. It rained hard for the entire journey, and was bitterly cold. The warm days that had blessed the wanderings of
The White Lady
were over, as if the weather reflected the state of her heart.

By early evening they had reached the Chilterns. London was not too far ahead.

Little by little their stilted conversation tailed away. Prudence found herself watching the changing countryside in a blur of suppressed tears, while Hal—no, Harry Acton—pointed out landmarks and told enchanting stories to an excited five-year-old lord whose life was in danger.

Harry seemed untouched by her refusal of his proposal. Perhaps he was relieved. He might have found it amusing to flirt with her on the narrow boat, but now he knew who he was, he could hardly seriously consider tying himself to her for life. Thank God she had found the strength of mind to refuse him!

If only it didn’t hurt so very much.

It was already dark when they turned into a large deer park—grazed by a scattering of white sheep—and pulled up before the ivy-covered facade of a gracious country house. Everything dripped and ran with rainwater. The ivy sparkled with myriad jewels in the flare of several flambeaux.

A footman opened the door and another ran out to them with an umbrella. Harry leapt down from the carriage.

“Hello, Williams! Filthy night, isn’t it? Can someone tell Lord Lenwood that his troublesome, scapegrace, prodigal brother has come for a visit and expects him to bring forth the best robe and the ring and the shoes, and to bring hither the fatted calf and kill it?”

“Well, bless my soul! Master Harry? Good Lord! Would you take it amiss if I were to shake you by the hand, sir?”

“Not at all.” Harry laughed as the footman seized his hand and pumped it vigorously up and down. “It’s damned good to see you in such hale spirits, Williams, after what happened last Christmas.”

“Aye, wicked doings, sir. Wicked doings. But there’s no more of that at Acton Mead these days, I’m glad to say. We’re blessed with a happy household now.”

Prudence ducked under a second umbrella and ushered Bobby into the hallway after Hal. A happy household? She looked about at the lovely Jacobean ceiling and sturdy old doors. It was a building of so much simple, old-fashioned, unpretentious beauty.

So this calm, lovely place was Acton Mead.

One of the doors opened to reveal the slender figure of a woman. Her bright blond hair was dressed plainly in a knot at the back of her neck and she wore an elegantly simple gown, but her face shone like a lamp with contentment. She looked beautiful—radiating serenity and calm.

As she saw the visitors she broke into a wide smile. It could only be Helena, Lady Lenwood, for her house reflected her. No wonder Harry had lost his heart!

Prudence felt herself blush to the eyebrows. She tried with limited success to shrink back behind the footman as Helena came forward, hands outstretched.


Harry!
Oh, Richard will be so delighted to see you.
I’m
so delighted to see you. Where have you been? We thought you’d gone off to Timbuktu and we had lost you forever. How could you not have sent word?”

Helena seemed alight with pleasure.

Harry laughed and took her proffered hands. “As if I would not come back to you and my stiff-necked idiot of a brother, beloved Helena.”

He smiled gaily as Helena reached up on tiptoe to kiss him. How much pain lay beneath that gallant smile?

“And who is this?” Helena asked kindly, turning to Bobby.

“Lord Dunraven, at your service, ma’am.” Bobby offered his hand. “I’m quite hungry. Do you really have a fatted calf? I’ve always wanted to eat one.”

“We shall see what we can do,” Helena replied, shaking the small hand very seriously. “And if there’s no fatted calf then I’m sure there are scones and honey, or maybe even cake. We’ll ask Cook.”

Bobby beamed at her.

Helena smiled at Prudence as Harry introduced her. “Welcome to Acton Mead, Miss Drake. Any friend of Harry’s is always very welcome here.”

How could Helena show such a lack of curiosity or censure that her unmarried brother-in-law should turn up unannounced with an unchaperoned single lady and a child? No wonder Harry was so madly in love with her! What man wouldn’t be? Helena was everything that Prudence felt she herself was not: beautiful, graceful, and entirely self-possessed.

Prudence dropped a curtsy. “I am Lord Dunraven’s governess, my lady.”

“Well, you will be one of the family here. Acton Mead is shamefully informal. It belonged to Richard and Harry’s grandmother, you see, and they played here as boys. It’s an atmosphere that none of us wants to change. Let me help you off with your wet things. You must be exhausted. How far did you come today?”

“From Oxford,” Harry said. “Helena, my beautiful sister, where’s Richard? I have something horrendously important to discuss with him.”

“Now, isn’t that typical of men!” Helena laughed. “Harry goes off to France and returns almost three months later with no more warning than a March hare leaping from a hedgerow, and all he can think of is to discuss business with his brother.” She turned to Harry with a smile full of charm. “If it’s confidential, it’ll have to wait, sir. We have other company. Someone, in fact, who’s been looking for you.”

“Looking for me?” Harry raised a brow. “Not some old crony from Oxford dunning Richard for my gaming debts, I hope, because I didn’t leave any. Or is it an irate father demanding I offer my sorry name to his ruined daughter and the brat she would like to pass off as mine? No, no, I can see from your attempt to frown that it’s someone respectable, in which case they are pulling the wool over your eyes, dear Helena. I have no respectable connections at all.”

“Except us.” Helena slipped her hand through Harry’s arm and laid her head for a moment against his sleeve. “Richard and I have settled down to be the very picture of quiet domesticity. We think we deserve it after the outrages that took place at Christmas.”

She looked at Prudence and smiled again. “You must forgive me for so ignoring you, Miss Drake. Harry saved Richard’s life last winter, you see, so I will always love him to distraction.”

Harry turned Helena’s face up to his and kissed her soundly on the forehead. He seemed filled with happiness.

“As we all love you, Helena. Every one of us sorry Actons worships the very hem of your skirts, even my mother and, more remarkably, my father—and not only because you carry the next heir. Acton Mead is only the haven that it is because of you. You are the balm that daily heals Richard’s soul. No, don’t deny it! You’re too honest to lend weight to a lie.”

Prudence shed her hat and gloves, and helped Bobby out of his coat. Her hands felt cold and clammy. A dreadful pain lodged in her throat, as if she would never be able to swallow again.

Helena looked down and grinned as Bobby went up to her and trustingly put his small hand in hers, then she held out a welcoming arm, including Prudence in the hospitality of Acton Mead as if she were an old friend.

“Come, Miss Drake! Don’t listen to Harry’s nonsense. Acton Mead is laid out like a maze. Let me guide you in and ring for some tea. You must warm yourself, before I show you to your chamber. My husband won’t mind if he meets you in your travel clothes, and neither will our guest, I’m sure. Tea should come before everything else in my opinion.”

Helena looked down and smiled at Bobby. “Tea with scones, Lord Dunraven?”

They were ushered through a series of rooms, each brought alive by great vases of flowers. At last Helena came to a sturdy oak door and laid her hand on the knob.

“Richard entertains in this little study these days. We have a grand fire in here, and it’s close enough to the kitchen that the scones for Lord Dunraven will arrive still hot and dripping with butter. Come in!”

Helena opened the door and gestured Harry and Prudence inside.

Two gentlemen sat in earnest conversation in front of a roaring fire.

The drapes and shutters were closed to keep out the dark of the rainy evening. Warmth and security beckoned, an ideal haven for travelers arriving on a stormy night. There was nothing overpowering or grand about Acton Mead. The room felt cozy, filled with love.

A blond man stood up immediately at their entrance. Prudence saw him exchange a glance with Helena that made her heart contract with ungenerous envy. So this was Harry’s brother, Lord Lenwood!

In startling contrast to the golden sheen of his hair, Richard’s eyes were as black as night. Yet there was a strong family resemblance to Harry in the straight nose and high cheekbones. Richard seemed graver, more serious, perhaps, though contentment sat in every feature.

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