Chapter 10
D
aniel and Kirkland were greeted with rippling music when they returned to Kirkland House after a long session with lawyers on an unseasonably warm day. Wordlessly they both climbed the stairs to the music room. Laurel glanced up from the piano without interrupting the liquid grace of her dancing fingers. “You both look rather limp. Is that from the weather or your ordeal by lawyer?”
As Kirkland brushed a kiss on his wife's head, Daniel said wryly, “Both. I would have bolted if Kirkland hadn't been there to block my escape. But Mr. Hyatt seems very capable. He has the legalities for confirming me in the barony well in hand, and informed me that our eccentric cousin Romayne left a substantial estate and fortune.”
Laurel reached up and caught her husband's hand affectionately. “Since you're unable to escape the barony, it's good the finances are solid. Less work for you.”
“And all boring.” Daniel repressed a sigh. “I need to visit the Romayne seat and some smaller properties as well.”
“Here's something you'll like better,” his sister said. “Lady Julia is very enthusiastic about your request to work at the London shelter. When can you start?”
“Today!” he said promptly. “Though tomorrow would be more sensible.”
“Let's go over to Gunter's to celebrate,” Laurel suggested. “Their ices are perfect for a warm day like this one.”
Daniel's eyes narrowed. “This would be the Gunter's from which you and your maid were kidnapped?”
“It was only the one time,” Laurel said with a laugh as she rose to her feet. “And the ices are divine. I'm particularly fond of the neroli flavor.”
Kirkland offered her his arm, and the three of them headed downstairs and out into Berkeley Square. The large townhouses were built around a sizable treed park, and Gunter's was one of several shops on the other side. Daniel hadn't had time to venture into the square, but the grass and the shade cast by the tall plane trees were welcome.
As they approached the opposite side of the park, he saw that a number of fashionable carriages were parked along the street. Ladies ate inside the vehicles while their male escorts leaned casually against the railings as they ate ices from small bowls. A pair of waiters moved across the road to take and deliver orders, and several children were on the grass, eating or playing. Daniel smiled. “It looks rather like a village fair.”
“Only better dressed.” Laurel shaded her eyes with one hand as she studied the carriages. “There's an Ashton House coach, I see. I imagine they also felt the need for cool refreshments.”
Daniel went on alert. There was the carriage, and he saw that the Duchess of Ashton, Lady Julia Randall, and Lady Kelham had chosen to get out and stretch their legs rather than sit inside. “Then we must say hello.”
“Of course.” Laurel's voice was demure, but she gave him an amused glance. “We must be polite. Especially to Lady Kelham.”
“I never could fool you,” he said ruefully.
“I'm glad you've found a woman who takes your fancy,” his sister said softly. “You need to become better acquainted.”
“I'll try. I'm not sure if she's willing.” Nor was he sure that it was wise.
As he spoke, the Ashton House party noticed them approaching. The duchess waved cheerfully, and the other two women turned as well.
Lady Julia smiled a welcome, but Lady Kelham gave a cool nod before turning to follow a small girl child across the grass. The child was applying herself industriously to a bowl of ice as she walked. Daniel hadn't known that Lady Kelham had a daughter, but this girl must be hers. Though her hair was lighter, her exquisite features mirrored those of her beautiful mother.
The night before he'd heard that Lady Kelham's given name was Jessie. He found himself calling her that mentally since it suited her. Despite the lady's coolness, he'd taken heart from Laurel's information that Jessie wanted another husband. Even though his rational mind said she was not the kind of woman he needed, he wanted to know her better to be sure. Maybe they were less different than he thought. A man could hope.
He ambled toward Jessie and the little girl. Raising his voice a little, he said, “Good day, Lady Kelham. I've been brought here to experience the wonders of Gunter's ices. I gather your hostesses decided you also needed to experience them?”
She couldn't courteously ignore him, so she paused and turned to reply. “I think Mariah and Julia were using me and my daughter as an excuse to stop by.”
“May I be introduced to the young lady?”
He saw Jessie's hesitation, but it wasn't an unreasonable question. “Lord Romayne, allow me to present my daughter, Elizabeth, Lady Kelham. Beth, this is Lord Romayne.”
As the little girl turned with her bowl in one hand and spoon in the other, he saw that Jessie was waiting for him to express shock or disbelief. There was only one way the child could hold such a title, and that was as heiress to a very ancient barony. Such things were rare, but not impossible.
He bowed deeply. “It's a pleasure to meet you, your ladyship. Is it confusing to have two Lady Kelhams in the house?”
The child giggled, a smear of bright pink ice on her lower lip. “I'm really Beth,” she explained. “Are you a friend of my mama?”
“Not yet, but I hope to be.”
“Then perhaps we shall meet again.” She bobbed a very proper curtsy without dropping either bowl or spoon before her attention was caught by a yellow butterfly and she drifted after it as she took dainty little bites of her rapidly melting ice.
“I think one reason people have children is because responsible adults often need an excuse for pleasure.” His gaze followed Beth as she drifted happily along the grass. “Children are far better at accepting joy.”
“I don't ever remember being that young,” she said wistfully.
“I'm not sure I do either,” he admitted. “I see joy in children, but they don't recognize it themselves because they're busy being joyful.”
“Living in the moment. Not worrying about health or safety or grief or loss . . .”
Her voice trailed off, and he guessed she was thinking of her late husband. Wanting to turn her to happier thoughts, he said, “You have a beautiful daughter. Though her coloring is different, she looks very like you.”
“Her father had that same toffee-colored hair when he was young. By the time I met him, his hair was silver, and he was all the more handsome for it.” She smiled at her playful child, and it was the first real smile he'd seen on her face. Breathtaking.
Would she ever smile at him with unreserved happiness? She might look dangerously mysterious and beautiful, but her love for her daughter was unmistakable.
He was about to say something inane because his wit vanished when he was around her, but his attention was jerked to a thunder of hooves. Horses traveling much too fast for this part of the city.
A fashionable curricle drawn by two sleek chestnuts harnessed in tandem burst from Bruton Street and swung around the corner onto Berkeley at a dangerous speed. The young driver wore the multi-caped cloak of a professional coachman, but that was mere affectation because his driving was disastrous. As he struggled to slow his horses to avoid plowing into the crowd of Gunter's customers, he lost control and the curricle careened wildly onto the grass of the park.
The vehicle skidded onto two wheelsâand headed for little Beth Kelham like a cannonball. Jessie screamed and darted toward her daughter. Dear God, she was putting herself in harm's way with no chance of saving Beth!
Other screams sounded as people scattered out of the path of the oncoming carriage. Kirkland swept Laurel back behind a plane tree and the Ashton ladies dodged behind their heavy coach.
Without conscious thought, Daniel raced after Jessie, calculating speed and angles. His longer legs covered the ground much faster than hers and he reached Jessie just as she caught up to Beth, but the lead horse was only yards away. With his left arm he scooped up the child as his right arm locked around Jessie's waist. Using his momentum, he spun away to the left, wrenching all three of them from the path of the onrushing horses.
As he hit the ground rolling away from the road, hooves smashed down inches away and chunks of turf pelted him. He wrapped himself protectively around mother and child till he came to a sliding halt with Jessie sprawled on top of him. His right arm was still wrapped around her waist and Beth was tucked under his left arm.
The curricle swung wildly into a plane tree, sending the driver flying and jerking the horses to a panicked stop. But Daniel was barely aware of that because all his attention was on Jessie, whose shocked eyes were mere inches away. Her legs bracketed his and her soft breasts and hips pressed against him with shocking intimacy.
Time was suspended. The fear and rush to save Beth and Jessie were transmuted into a fierce, unexpected arousal that blazed through every fiber of his being. Shockingly, there was a startled response in Jessie's eyes as if her body recognized and craved his, too. He wanted to meld with her, bury himself in her irresistible femininity. . . .
The mad moment shattered when Beth began to wail with distress. Jessie shoved away from Daniel and reached for her daughter. “Beth!”
Daniel's fears for the child evaporated when she wailed, “Mama! My ice dish fell and broke! I wasn't finished!”
He extricated himself from the tangle of skirts and limbs as Jessie pulled her daughter onto her lap in a crushing embrace. They were rumpled and grass stained and they'd lost their bonnets, but Daniel didn't see obvious signs of damage or pain. He asked, “Are you both all right?”
“Nothing that matters.” Jessie ran frantic hands over her daughter's limbs. “Beth, do you hurt anywhere?”
Only seconds had passed since the accident. As Daniel got to his feet, he saw that no one seemed to have been injured other than perhaps the driver, who'd been thrown from his vehicle. A man was soothing the wild-eyed horses while most of Gunter's customers were gathering in small clumps, talking excitedly about the accident and their near miss.
Jessie was still sitting on the ground with Beth in her arms, so he asked, “Do you want me to help you up?”
“I . . . just want to sit here and shake for a while,” she said unsteadily, keeping her eyes down as she cuddled her daughter against her.
Recovering quickly, Beth turned to study the scene. “That man was a very bad driver,” she said disapprovingly.
“Very true,” Daniel agreed. He wondered if the blasted young fool had broken his neck when he was thrown from the curricle. Though Daniel wasn't feeling very charitable toward the fellow, he'd better take a look at him.
The Ashton ladies appeared, a little ruffled but undamaged. “Do you want me to take Beth?” Lady Julia asked.
Jessie drew a deep breath. “Not yet, thank you, but could you get another ice for her? The bowl dropped when . . .” She swallowed hard, then glanced up at Daniel, her aquamarine eyes stark. “When Lord Romayne pulled us to safety. I haven't thanked you yet, my lord. When I think of what almost happened. . .” She shuddered.
“If you had been a little slower, all three of you would have been gravely injured or worse,” Lady Julia said quietly. “Well done, sir.”
He gave her a twisted smile. “I'm just glad I was fast enough. Now to see if the driver has survived his idiocy.”
“I'll stay with Jessie and Beth and leave him to you,” Lady Julia replied. “He rolled softly, like a drunk, so he might not be badly hurt.”
“I'll get Beth her ice,” the duchess said. “Would you like one, Jessie?”
Jessie managed a smile. “No, but I would dearly love a cup of tea!”
“It shall be done.” The duchess moved toward the shop, and in one swift gesture collected a waiter and gave the order.
Daniel was reluctant to leave Jessie, but duty called. He crossed the stretch of grass to where the curricle driver lay in a muddy lump. The fellow was moaning and blood was dripping into his face, but at least he wasn't dead. Lady Julia had been right about both the soft landing and the drinking; the boy smelled like a bottle of brandy had been poured over him.
Daniel knelt beside him and started a swift examination. “Congratulations,” he said dryly as he used a handkerchief to wipe the blood from what turned out to be a messy but shallow laceration of the skull. “You're not as dead as you should be. Does anything seem broken?”
The driver blinked. “Don-don't think so.”
“Mr. Shelton,” said a disgusted voice. It was Kirkland, who'd turned the horses over to another man and come to investigate. “You are not only a fool, but a dangerous fool. I shall suggest to your father that he take your horses away. By the mercy of the god of horses, it appears that they won't need to be put down, but your curricle is fit for nothing but firewood.” He continued with a tongue-lashing that surely peeled the fellow down to raw, twitching nerves.
Daniel listened admiringly as he finished his examination and used his handkerchief to put a crude bandage on Shelton's head. An older man joined them. “I'll take you home, lad, and my footman will lead the horses after us. You were lucky.”
Shelton pushed himself to a sitting position dizzily. “Luckier than I deserved,” he muttered, his voice shaking. He glanced toward Beth and shuddered. Daniel suspected that the young man wouldn't drive so recklessly anytime soon.
Having done what was necessary, he rose and looked over to Jessie. She was on her feet now, her composure restored and looking quite achingly beautiful as she sipped a steaming cup of tea. Beside her, a grass-stained Beth was happily digging into another ice. Daniel gave silent thanks that the accident had caused no serious injuries.