Midnight
Hartwood Hall
Fearing his reasons for finally gracing Hartwood with his venerated presence, Emily had no desire to greet the Regent. Consequently, upon leaving the schoolroom and seeing Uncle Clarence swallowed up by an onslaught of admirers, Emily stole off in the opposite direction. Her head down, inviting no discourse from others, she quickened her step once she was well beyond the guest-laden rooms. She had successfully reached the great staircase when her path of retreat was barricaded. Standing in such a way that suggested he had witnessed her flight across the front hall, Somerton was on the bottom step, a smile she could not read upon his lips.
To conceal her heart’s deafening beats, Emily spoke with ebullience. “Lord Somerton, have you left the ladies bereft of their favourite dance partner?”
Towering over her like the locked gates of Hartwood, his eyes met hers. “There is only one lady with whom I care to dance, and I could not find her.”
“If your search was a recent one, I was speaking to Uncle Clarence in the schoolroom.”
“Ah!” He joined her on the marble floor. “Would you permit me to lead you back to the music room? Might I dance with you now?”
“Thank you, but — I believe you know that I broke my ankle while at sea.”
“I have been apprised of it.”
“Well, you see, while dancing with your brother, his foot frequently found mine, and now that particular ankle is throbbing.”
“Perhaps we could request a gentle waltz.”
“A daring waltz … one in which we would dance face to face? Is it your intention to set the tongues wagging, sir?”
He stepped closer, too close. His breath, moist and rancid with drink, struck Emily’s face. “I have long dreamed of placing my hands upon your waist.”
“I should like to rest for a while,” she replied, slanting away from him.
“Then I shall settle for a minuet and promise to speak only of the weather and the poor state of our roads.”
“I shall be happy to dance that minuet … after I lie down.”
“What about the Regent? He has generously come all this way to our little party and wants to see you.”
“As the Regent waited long enough to seek me out, he can be detained another half hour.” Emily tried to pass, but Somerton hopped up on the stair again and outstretched his arms to block her way. “Sir! Are you going to make it a habit of accosting me on the staircase?”
His eyes openly wandered her face. “It doesn’t have to be this way.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“There’s still time, Emeline.”
Her laugh was sardonic. “For what?”
“For us.”
Emily blinked at him. “Is it only when you carouse that the hardened shell of your exterior softens and makes you ridiculous?”
“I — I care about you.”
“If you have felt in the least bit solicitous toward me, your method of communicating such feelings has been most irregular.”
Rather than pausing to defend himself, Somerton pressed on with boyish enthusiasm. “You are, without a doubt, in need of some polishing … and a good dose of taming, and your frivolous fantasies must be expunged and redirected, but —”
Emily felt a muscle quivering in her cheek. “But what?”
“I have … since the first day I met you … I have been dumbfounded by an inexplicable longing for you.”
“Alarming!”
“There have been moments when I have suspected … you too are tortured by a most violent yearning for me.”
“What moments? When?”
Somerton brought his face down to hers, his glittering eyes on her mouth. “One word of encouragement from you could change everything.”
“I admit I do have feelings for you, Lord Somerton,” said Emily, seeing the lines on his forehead shoot up in eager expectation. “But only the kind a sister would feel toward a brother — one with whom she rarely gets on.” She angled her head away from his parted lips; her low voice quaking now with indignation. “You have long known my heart, sir. It has not changed.”
His fervid expression withered and dropped away; he looked like a spoiled child, astonished that his desires had been rebuffed. A purpling flush began inching up his neck, and his eyes went flinty before they fell upon the burnished wood of the stairs. Seizing an opportunity, Emily attempted to squeeze past him, but his movements were quick and he cut off her path with his hip, pinning her against the wall. He swallowed several times, and finally lifted his eyes to her breasts. Reminded of the black, rotten, ungoverned disposition of his youngest brother, Octavius, Emily hissed at him in disgust.
“Are you now dreaming of placing your hands upon my throat?”
For an instant, he looked surprised. “No! But I shall happily leave you to your depraved fate.”
“Somerton!”
Helena’s shriek came as a shock; the woman’s approach had been soundless. Surely she must have cast aside her low-heeled shoes in the whirling joy of dancing. Emily raised her chin to meet Helena’s glare, aimed squarely at her before settling in a piercing blaze upon her son.
“I asked you to find Her Royal Highness and bring her straightaway to the music room.”
“I am doing just that, Mother.”
“Are you really?” Helena flapped her hand with impatience. “Well, Emeline? Come along! The Regent’s first words were of you.”
Caught between mother and son, Emily felt as if she were being coaxed into a cage. “Your Grace, please, I have injured my ankle and would like to rest upstairs. The night is still young, and knowing the Regent, he shall be awake, enjoying himself, until sunrise.”
Helena mounted the stairs to hook her gloved arm behind Emily. “You must come along now.”
“I shall not be a part of your plans. I have refused your son’s proposal.” Emily dug her toenails into the soles of her silk slippers. “Did you think that I would change my mind simply because the Regent is here to sanction the announcement?”
“Your annulment has been secured.”
“Yes! And now one part of me is free of Thomas Trevelyan.” Emily compelled herself to stay calm. “It has taken me a long while to understand you, Helena. Did you suppose, by inviting me to Hartwood, you could keep abreast of news on Trevelyan and thus learn first-hand of the dispersal of his stepfather’s fortune? If Trevelyan is hanged, if he is dead and out of the way, does Charles DeChastain’s fortune come to you? Or will it go to his daughter … Lady Fleda?”
Helena went white and grew fitful.
“I can only guess that is why you withheld and read my letters … why you stole Captain Moreland’s letter from my room.”
“I have no time for this nonsense. Come along. I hear them calling for you.”
Somerton enclosed his slippery fingers around Emily’s forearm and steered her down the stairs, hedging her further into the cage. Emily rounded on him. “I am curious. This fortune … has your mother decided that — should it come to her — she will eclipse Fleda and give it to you, so that you may do as you please and no longer have to act as a pawn to your father and eldest brother?”
Somerton remained silent, refusing to meet her wild stare.
“I shall not be humiliated in front of my guests and the Regent.” Helena’s cry was shrill and hysterical.
“You wouldn’t have to be if you hadn’t placed me in this untenable position. I will not marry your son.”
“You have no choice,” seethed Helena. “Your family will insist upon it. They will harass you until you agree.” She closed her eyes to draw in breath. “By now … surely by now … you must realize you could not find for yourself a better situation.”
Uncle Clarence stomped into the front foyer, scowling at the scene by the staircase. “What’s all this? Do hurry, Emeline! The Regent is groaning. One does not keep him waiting.”
Wetherell appeared beside him, steaming and frothing in his suit of violet and sapphire. He looked peevishly at Helena and whined, “Mother?”
Emily’s first instinct was to bolt, but where to? She wanted to scream, but who would listen? The noose was being lowered upon her neck and it was about to tighten. She could only see her way through one solution, as revolting as it was. Resolved, saying nothing at all, looking at no one, Emily turned toward the music room and began a slow march in its direction. Surrounded on all sides by belligerents, she relived that awful day on HMS Isabelle when Trevelyan’s American soldiers had forced her off the quarterdeck, their bayonets trained upon her back.
Assured of her coming at once, Uncle Clarence hurried on ahead to excite the crowds and speak a private word in the ear of the Regent, who immediately wheeled around to greet his long-lost niece with a smile and outstretched arms. Fighting tears, Emily made her grand entrance, hardly hearing the full announcement enunciated with enthusiasm by her Uncle Clarence. What she did grasp reverberated off the walls like a blast of bone-jarring cannon-fire.
“ … the marriage of my darling niece, Princess Emeline Louisa Georgina Marie, daughter of my late brother, Henry, the Duke of Wessex, to Wetherell Lindsay, the Most Honourable the Marquess of Monroe and heir to Hartwood Hall.”
As the guests’ resounding applause pulsed like a headache behind Emily’s eyes, Somerton turned slightly toward her. His face wore no jubilation, no gratification, no malice or mockery, but his haunting, whispered word numbed her to the core.
“Pity.”
Sickened by the triumphant smile glistening on Wetherell’s red lips, Emily looked straight ahead at the well-wishers about to close in on her.
4:00 a.m.
Tuesday, August 24
Emily peeked outside through an aperture in her bedroom curtains. Several vehicles were still parked on the grounds beneath her window, the footmen and horses stoically awaiting the return of their owners. At this late hour, the band was still playing and Emily could hear no signs of wearying in the animated voices of the guests who made it a tradition never to leave a ball until first light.
At 2:00 a.m. Helena had excused Emily from the ball with a politely constrained smile after hearing the doleful tale of her painful ankle, but the duchess had done so alone, there being no one else at hand to send Emily off to bed. Adolphus was out cold on a sofa; Wetherell had happily ensconced himself at the lively Whist tables; Somerton had disappeared, presumably with a young lady who was more amenable to his charms than she; and her two uncles had been latched to comely partners, far too focused on the precise execution of their dance steps to bid their niece goodnight. Half-expecting Helena to accompany her to her room, Emily was grateful to see her laughingly conveyed to the dance floor, for she had no intention of seeking sleep.
Working by candlelight, Emily drew the curtains and hurried to the wardrobe where she gathered up the pillowcase — steeling herself against the potent lure of the sea chest — and carried it to the door. On the chair she had left a pale-blue, ostrich-plumed turban and matching silk-embroidered shawl — items she had earlier selected from amongst her many gifts in the adjacent bedchamber, but had never worn. Putting them on now, she took care in disguising her hair and simple gown under folds of material. Her limbs tingling, her insides in an uproar, Emily gave the room a final sweeping glance, making sure the letter and ring were still atop the desk before she collected the pillowcase and quietly slipped away. In her breast she harboured a solitary lament for her commodious bed, knowing it would be a long while before she lay again in such luxury.
4:30 a.m.
It was impossible for Emily to take the main staircase; there were still too many guests milling about beneath its wrought-iron balustrade. Instead, she tiptoed along the first-floor corridor, through the shadowy upper hall, and past the rooms belonging to the duke and duchess, until she came to the back stairway which took her down to the far side of the ground floor, away from the principal rooms. As this stairway was hidden from public view, Emily could hear, but not see, those still hanging about the dining-room table, eating and drinking and flirting and heatedly discussing politics. Reaching the bottom step, she headed for the library, recalling the existence of an antechamber just beyond its walls with a door that opened onto the south gardens.
For some reason, the beautiful library had been overlooked on this evening. Its air was cool, unsullied with perfume and cigar smoke, and the furniture remained untouched, though someone had placed candles on the table beside the scarlet sofa, giving the large chamber a church-like atmosphere. Emily had almost gained the entrance to the small chamber when a sleepy moan pitched her heart into her mouth. Her eyes widened, fearing she had disturbed Somerton and his lady friend in their lovemaking. But no, it was Fleda whose head popped up over the sofa’s curved frame.
“Who’s there?” she demanded.
Emily quickly went to her, and saw that the girl had been reading her mouldy copy of Dafoe’s Robinson Crusoe. “Shh! It’s me!”
“It’s dark out! Where are you going?” Fleda’s eyes fell upon the pillowcase that Emily was cradling in her arms like a baby, and when she lifted them again they had grown large with alarm. “You’re leaving, aren’t you?”
“I am.”
“If I scream,” said Fleda, “you know they’ll come running.”
Emily nodded.
“And they’ll — they’ll lock you in your room.”
“Yes, they will.”
“Then you won’t be able to leave.”
“Only if they chain me to my bed and place a guard at my door.”
“But you will try again.”
“I will.”
“The first chance you get?”
“Yes.”
They eyed one another, waiting for the other one to say something more. Emily stood stock-still, clutching her bundle close to her, her lips moving soundlessly in prayer. The last thing she expected was for Fleda to begin weeping.
“Will you not stay for me?”
“Fleda, you know I cannot,” Emily replied sadly. “But wherever I am, you shall always be welcome there.”
“How will I know where you are?”
“I shall get word to you — somehow — I promise.”
“Please tell me where you are going.”
“If you think about it long enough, you’ll know.”
Fleda hopped off the sofa, Robinson Crusoe crashing to the floor, and threw herself into Emily’s arms, holding on to her so tightly Emily was certain her ribs would crack. Outside, beyond the library windows, drunken laughter and the whickering of horses were telltale signs that more of the carriages were preparing to take their leave of Hartwood. Fleda suddenly bolted from Emily and hurried to the darkened windows where she scrutinized the flurry of activity on the pavement.
“I see Mrs. Jiggins stepping into her carriage. Go with her.”
Emily moved closer toward the antechamber. “But the woman knows me.”
“I overheard her telling Mother that she likes champagne so very much,” said Fleda, smiling bravely, “she usually sleeps the entire way back to London.”
“My dear little sprite,” laughed Emily, gathering the girl up in one last embrace.
As she went through the door and into the night, she heard Fleda call out to her, “Godspeed, my sister.”
4:45 a.m.
Mrs. Jiggins rolled her head over the side of her barouche. The ostrich plume on her pleated turban had broken in half and was now dangling absurdly over her eyes.
“You say your friends left without you? Oh, you poor dear girl. With all the excitement of the Regent tonight, I daresay they left their heads behind as well. Hop in, hop in and I shall instruct my driver to take you to your home.”
Mrs. Jiggins was snoring by the time her barouche clattered through the iron gates of Hartwood Hall. Smiling to herself, Emily pulled her shawl around her shoulders, nestled into the comfort of the leather seats and listened for the song of her magpie in the chestnut trees.