Sweet Madness: A Veiled Seduction Novel (12 page)

BOOK: Sweet Madness: A Veiled Seduction Novel
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“As you are here, will you join us for tea this afternoon?” Gabriel asked Miss Creevey.

“Perhaps I shouldn’t,” the woman said, ducking her head, “being as you have a visitor yourself.”

“I’m sure Lady Manton wouldn’t mind,” Gabriel assured the woman.

“Of course not,” she agreed quickly. Anything to bring this tête-à-tête to an end.

“All right,” Miss Creevey said. “I shall join you later, then.” With a nod, the woman led her sister past them in the opposite direction while Penelope tugged Gabriel toward the old pleasure path.

As they turned onto it, she sped her steps. Gabriel followed suit, whereas Carter did not. His crunching footfalls fell increasingly behind them, just as she’d hoped. He kept them in eyesight, but not exactly earshot—much as he had the last time they’d gone this way. With any luck, he’d decide to rest on the same stump he had before as well, expecting they would walk on a bit and then turn around as they had before. She’d hate to have to resort to her alternative strategy.

“Out with it, Pen,” Gabriel said, startling her from her thoughts. “What exactly is it you have in mind?”

She blinked at him, wondering if she was that obvious. The shrewd look in Gabriel’s eyes suggested she was.

Dash it all. Did Carter suspect? She glanced over her shoulder. The attendant was shuffling along, falling farther behind, so probably not. If he had, perhaps Gabriel’s invitation to Miss Creevey for tea this afternoon had put the attendant off any ideas that something was afoot.

Should she tell Gabriel now? No. Something told her she’d have a better time getting his cooperation if she didn’t give him much time to think about it.

So she asked a question of her own as diversion. “How do you know Miss Creevey? I don’t expect you invite every patient’s family up for tea.”

It was Gabriel’s turn to blink at her. Then his eyes shuttered. Penelope’s curiosity kicked. She’d asked the question as a delaying tactic, but now she found she really wanted to know the answer.

“Miss Creevey visits her sister every week that she’s able, as I’m sure you’ve surmised,” he said finally. “Mrs. Boyd lost her husband at Waterloo. He—” He hesitated, closing his mouth. “Lieutenant Boyd served in my company, actually, which is how I came to know both sisters. Miss Creevey is kind enough to visit
me
now, as well, when she comes to see Ann.”

“Oh,” Penelope said. She had an odd sense that there was more to the story, but she didn’t have time to delve into it now. They’d just passed Carter’s stump, which meant it wasn’t far to where the hired carriage should be waiting.

She started walking faster.

Finally, she saw it—the scarf she’d tied to a tree three days ago to let her know where they would need to cross into the woods. She hurried to it and tugged it free.

“What’s this?” Gabriel asked as he gained her side.

Penelope looked behind them, squinting her eyes for any sign of Carter, but the attendant was not in sight. Her heart pounded in her chest. Almost there.

She turned to Gabriel and took his hand. “Do you trust me?”

His brow furrowed as he stared at their joined hands. “Do I—” His golden brown eyes flicked to hers. “Of course.”

His immediate affirmation warmed something deep within her that she didn’t have time to analyze right now. Instead, she tugged at him and started into the woods. “Good. Then come on.”

“Pen—” he said, but he followed. The undergrowth was thick now. She had to trample over knotted vines and wiry branches as brambles tore at her skirts. But she kept moving forward, pulling Gabriel along behind her as quickly as she could. If Carter hadn’t sat down upon his stump, he very well may have reached the edge of the woods and realized where they’d gone—could even now be either in pursuit of them or rushing back to Vickering Place to sound the alarm.

She was breathing hard by the time they broke free of the woods and came out onto a narrow country lane. Her chest eased a bit when she saw the waiting carriage, right where she’d expected it to be.

She let go of Gabriel’s hand to yank another scarf free from a skinny young tree, which she’d tied there earlier this morning to let the driver know where to meet her.

“What the hell?” Gabriel burst out.

She turned to him then and winced at the gathering storm clouding on his face. Dash it all, they had no time to dither about this.

“You said you trust me,” she reminded him. “Now prove it. Into the carriage with you.”

Chapter Nine

“A
re you mad?”

Gabriel glanced incredulously between the normally sensible Penelope—who looked worse for the wear after their flight through the forest, with sticklers dotting her cloak and skirts and a stray twig sticking from her falling coiffure—and an old black carriage waiting at the side of the road. Did she think to kidnap him? That must be what was happening here. “Christ, Pen. One week at Vickering Place and you are crazier than I am.”

“Neither one of us is crazy,” she said, “but, Gabriel, we
must
leave here now.”

He felt three steps behind in the conversation. Indeed, he was still looking back and forth between her and the terribly small conveyance. Its driver was perched on the box with a bored look on his face, as if it was an everyday occurrence to pick up passengers on a back road who’d just burst out of the woods behind a sanatorium.

“Mr. Allen intends to toss me out. Today, if he has his way.”

“What?” He fixed his gaze on her solely now.

“He knows we spent the night in your bedchamber together, and he assumed the worst. He made horrible accusations when I confronted him the other day about how he’s been thwarting us. I tried to explain, but he’s been threatening me ever since.”

Shock gave way swiftly to outrage. “The blackguard—”

“The
only
reason he didn’t lock me out then was because I have the blessing of your family. But he’s written to your brother. I can only imagine the awful things he said, and if your family sides with him against me, I won’t be allowed to see you again.”

Anger fisted in his sternum. How dare Allen upset Penelope so much that she was willing to do something this foolhardy?

And yet would it be such a bad thing if Allen did banish her from Vickering Place? It would solve the problem he’d been struggling with. Surely Pen wouldn’t be able to blame herself for anything that happened to him then, if she didn’t have a choice about staying.

He took one look at the fiercely determined set of her chin and realized he was fooling himself if he thought that. She would worry, she would plot—she wouldn’t let it go.

Still . . . “Then I will write my brother myself and explain the truth. You’d be allowed back after a few days.”

“Maybe, but I’m not willing to take that chance. All it would take would be for Mr. Allen to convince him that I am a danger to you, or even simply incompetent, and it would be easy for your brother to justify the wisdom of staying with the status quo.”

A quiver of unease slipped down his spine. He hated to even think it of Edward, but last time Mother had visited, she’d groused that he and particularly his wife, Amelia, had become
very
accustomed to spending the family’s money in Gabriel’s absence. She’d gone so far as to say that if he didn’t get himself well and take back the reins of the family posthaste, they would all end up in the workhouse by year’s end.

Money, and the power it provided, could be terribly addictive. It mightn’t take much justification for Edward to decide Gabriel should stay at Vickering Place indefinitely.

And he’d become convinced he would never get better here.

He’d been thunderstruck the other day when Penelope was trying to explain her ideas about rogue associations. Her words had rung so true somewhere deep inside of him. Perhaps simply because he wanted to believe so badly that he was not mad, but it didn’t
feel
that way.

Months he’d been here, willingly subjecting himself to whatever treatments Allen and the visiting doctors tried. Nothing had worked. If anything, the gray cloud of melancholia hung heavier over his head—not to mention that the mania had gotten worse. But if Penelope was to be believed, if there was true hope for him to reclaim his life . . .

“We must hurry,” she said, interrupting his internal debate. She glanced worriedly at the tree line. “Carter is bound to have noticed our absence by now. There is no going back, not for me. So you’ve got to choose, Gabriel.”

Christ. What a choice. He no longer trusted that Allen had his best interests at heart. He didn’t know if he could trust that his brother and sister-in-law wouldn’t use this opportunity to lock him away for good. And he damned sure didn’t trust himself.

But he trusted Penelope. Not that she would be his savior, but that she would try her hardest.

Heaven help her. He was choosing her. “Let us go, then.”

Penelope’s shoulders slumped with relief. Had she really thought he could deny her anything? He was a fool when it came to her, though not as big a fool as she was, apparently.

She nodded and turned for the carriage. The driver, seeing they were finally ready to embark, hopped down from the box.

Hell. He’d been so caught up in the situation of leaving Vickering Place that he hadn’t much considered the method of accomplishing it before agreeing. He stared at the tiny conveyance, his throat tightening up. The damned black box looked like a hearse. No, he decided. A hearse would be bigger. This was a coffin.

He stared at the carriage door through which Penelope had just disappeared. The interior was dark, and with Pen’s dress being black as night, it was as if the carriage had swallowed her whole.

As it will me
. The irrational thought shook him. He took a deep breath. He had no love of close spaces, hadn’t had since Waterloo. But the traveling coach had just enough room for one on the driver’s box, and a small man at that. The bench on back barely held another wiry man. If Gabriel was going with Penelope, inside it would be.

Best not to think about it too long. The carriage dipped as Gabriel levered himself up and in. The old coach had certainly seen better days. Though the sun still shone outside, the aged interior of the conveyance was unfashionably dark and boasted no windows. A pair of lamps cast feeble sputters of light over the black walls and worn cushions.

He settled himself across from Penelope, doing his best not to step on her skirts.

He tried desperately not to think of small, dark spaces. His chest tightened anyway. He widened his nostrils and tried to breathe more deeply, but the air was heavy and musty and did little to relieve him.

He looked over at Penelope, hoping his distress was not obvious. Thankfully, she was occupied arranging her skirts. Gabriel’s knees brushed against the black wool and she looked up, offering him a smile. He returned a tight one of his own, but shifted uncomfortably in the seat, pressing his shoulders against the thinly padded squab as he surreptitiously tried to stretch out a little. Christ, he could touch either side if he extended his elbows.

Pen’s lips twisted into an apologetic line, understanding. “I’m afraid this was the best I could manage on such short notice. I had to leave my personal conveyance prominently displayed at Vickering Place, so as not to raise any suspicions. My man has instructions to return to London after we are discovered missing. If anyone takes it in their mind to follow him, hoping he will lead them to us, he’ll be going the opposite of our destination.”

The carriage dipped once more as the driver gained his seat and again as the other hopped on back. A small jerk and they were under way.

“Headed north, are we?” Gabriel strove for a light tone, pushing the words through his closing throat. “I suppose it is too much to hope that we are for Gretna Green.”

Pen opened her mouth and then snapped it shut, a becoming blush of pink staining her cheeks, just visible in the flickering of the carriage lamp. “I’m afraid so,” she replied, pursing her lips on a smile.

“That
is
a shame,” he murmured as the carriage picked up speed. He leaned his head back and closed his eyes. “I’d always imagined if I ever made a mad dash north, it would be for happier reasons.” As opposed to stark raving mad ones. What was he thinking, escaping Vickering Place with Penelope? And did he really think he would be able to make it, enclosed like this, to wherever it was they were going?

“I believe this
will
end happily, Gabriel,” she said, leaning forward to place her gloved hand over his fisted one, which rested upon his knee.

He cracked one eye open, taking in her concerned look. Perhaps he had not done as good of a job hiding his distress as he’d thought. He vowed to do better, opening his other eye and pasting an easy, if not wholly genuine, smile on his face.
“Then I will have faith in
your
faith on the matter.”

She smiled as well before letting go of his hand. He focused on that smile, ignoring the darkness that threatened at the periphery of his vision, fighting off his growing panic as the carriage rolled farther from Vickering Place.

It helped, looking at Pen. It always did. Her heart-shaped face was as smooth as alabaster. She had a delicate but stubborn chin, with just the hint of a dimple creasing it. What was that old saying . . .
dimple in the chin, the devil within
? Yes, well, Pen had certainly shown a strength of will he’d not known she possessed before. And a recklessness he’d not expected.

“How long have you been planning this mad scheme of yours?” he asked. Perhaps talking would take his mind off of the pressing fear.

She flushed. “Since Mr. Allen threatened me three days ago. I knew then I would have to resort to drastic measures. So when I went back to the inn that night, I made my plans and hired the carriage to wait for us there until we could make our escape.”

Gabriel widened his eyes. “These poor men have been sitting out in the elements, waiting for us to show?”

She gave him a wry grin. “Only during the days, while I was with you at Vickering Place. Just in case the weather broke long enough for us to justify a walk. But don’t worry. They haven’t complained a bit. And they’ve been well compensated.”

They must have been, not only to wait those many idle hours, but to be willing to liberate a lunatic from an asylum and ferry him to parts unknown. He wondered what Penelope had told them about him, what reassurances she must have given. Then another thought occurred. “What would you have done if Carter had followed us?”

Penelope’s face pulled into a slight wince. “I must admit, I’d counted on his laziness to aid us. I’d hoped he would wait on that fallen stump again. But had he not . . .” She gave a little shrug. “The coachmen were prepared to subdue him until we made our escape.”

Gabriel gaped at her.

“That part would have cost extra, of course,” she added.

“Of course,” he agreed automatically. He raised a brow at her. “I never would have taken you for the bloodthirsty sort, Pen.”

She wrinkled her nose. “I doubt it would have come to
that
. Carter doesn’t strike me as the sort to sacrifice himself for principle’s sake. I imagine he would have meekly allowed himself to be tied to a tree until someone came looking for us.”

He imagined she was right. He also imagined from the determined glint in her eye that if it
hadn’t
happened that way, they would still be in this tiny old carriage hurtling north.

He glanced down at Penelope’s gloved hands, which were clasped tightly in her lap. She wasn’t as calm about this course of action as she was pretending to be.

Damn. Carter might not be one to sacrifice himself, but Penelope was. Had she thought through the possible consequences of their actions? Gabriel shook his head as the reality of what they were doing settled on his shoulders, pressing in on him as much or more than the tightness of the space did. “Pen,” he said seriously, “Carter is
probably
still sitting there on that stump, grousing to himself, or more likely, snoring away. Despite what you said, we could go back—”

Her eyes snapped to his, and she huffed. “No, Gabriel, I know what I am doing.” But a creak of leather belied her confidence as her gloved hands squeezed more tightly together.

“What
are
we doing?” he pressed. “Or rather, where are we going? I assume you have a plan.” They certainly couldn’t go to his country estate—it had been taken over by Edward and his brood when Gabriel had been sent to Vickering Place. And as far as he knew, Penelope’s only residence was her town house in London.

“To Somerton Park.”

Her answer surprised him. “The Earl of Stratford’s seat?” Stratford was married to Penelope’s cousin, he knew. He also knew the cousins to be close.

“Yes, it is the perfect solution for our needs.”

He looked away, focusing on the wall that separated them from the driver. The only good thing about that idea was that Shropshire wasn’t so very far away. He’d be cooped up in this carriage a matter of hours, rather than days.

At least Stratford and his wife wouldn’t be at their country home. He knew the earl to be heavily involved in politics, and Parliament had convened early this year because of the Peterloo massacre last fall. That must be why Penelope had chosen the place. Still . . . “Stratford doesn’t mind us making use of his home whilst they are away?”

“Oh, Geoffrey and Liliana are in residence, though Geoffrey does come and go regularly, what with Parliament in session. But Liliana is due to deliver their second child in a matter of weeks, so they decided against going up to Town this Season.”

Gabriel sat up straight, banging the top of his head against the carriage ceiling. Damn it all. He leaned forward and rapped his fist against the wall, brushing Penelope’s shoulder in the process. “Stop this carriage at once,” he bellowed.

The carriage rocked to a halt, causing both him and Pen to sway into each other.

She grabbed on to him to keep from being pitched to the floor. “Gabriel! What are you—”

“You
are
mad,” he accused. “How could you even think of putting your family in danger?”

Her expression of surprise rearranged itself into an offended frown as she released his arm. “You’re not dangerous, Gabriel. You’ve not hurt anyone. Both your mother and Mr. Allen have told me as much.”

“Yet,” he said darkly. “Bloody hell, Pen.” He ran his hand through his hair, knocking his elbow against the wall with the movement. “It’s bad enough that you insist on being with me and all my unpredictability, but I refuse to put a gentlewoman and her
children
at risk. Think of somewhere else to go.”

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