Devil’s Mist was not a rich man’s architectural folly, like so many other grand houses. Built in the thirteenth century, it had once been a working castle whose lord had apparently had a taste for secret passages and doors that were operated by hidden mechanisms. After taking up residence, Gabriel had spent weeks exploring the catacombs beneath the castle. The project had given him much inspiration for his newest novel.
Gabriel went down another twisting flight of stone steps and strode into the vast hall. Rollins, the butler, materialized from a side door.
“My lord, the post has arrived.” The salver Rollins held out with grave formality contained only a single letter. Devil’s Mist did not receive a great deal of mail. Most of the letters recently had been from the Veiled Lady.
Gabriel paused beneath a particularly fine thirteenth century battle shield that was one of several hanging from the hail ceiling. “Thank you, Rollins. I’ll read it on my walk.”
“Very good, sir.” Rollins turned and moved off between two stately rows of highly polished armor suits. At the far end of the hall he opened the huge doors.
The motto carved into the stone over the doors had not been there when Gabriel had purchased the castle. He had ordered it engraved shortly after moving into Devil’s Mist. Gabriel was rather pleased with it. It was succinct and to the point.
AUDEO. Latin for “I dare.”
It was not the traditional motto of the earls of Wylde. There was no traditional Wylde motto. Gabriel had invented this one for himself and for his heirs. Now that the title had come to his side of the family, he had every intention of keeping it there.
It occurred to him that whatever else might be said about the Veiled Lady, she certainly suited the Wylde motto.
Gabriel examined the letter he had received as he walked out the door. A flicker of excitement coursed through him. It was from his London solicitor. With any hick it would contain the information for which he had been waiting.
The world of solicitors was a small one and money talked loudly in it, just as it talked in every other world, Gabriel had been certain his man would know Peak, the solicitor who handled the affairs of the Veiled Lady. There could not be that many women in London who collected medieval books.
He tore open the letter as he went down the stone steps and out into the chilly April sunshine. The name that leaped off the carefully penned page made him stop short. He stood gazing down at it in a gathering fury.
Lady Phoebe Layton, youngest daughter of the Earl of Clarington.
“Hell and damnation.” Gabriel could not believe his eyes. Rage poured through him. His mysterious, illusive, fascinating Veiled Lady was none other than Clarington’s youngest chit.
Gabriel crumpled the letter savagely in his fist.
The youngest daughter. Not the one who had begged him to save her from an arranged marriage eight years ago. Not the one who had nearly gotten him killed in a duel with her brother. The other one. The one he had never met because she had still been in the schoolroom at the time.
She would have been no more than sixteen when Clarington had destroyed Gabriel financially and forced him out of England. She would have been a mere girl when Gabriel had been forced to sell off the contents of his father’s library, the only legacy he had from his parent, in order to survive.
Eight years ago. The Veiled Lady was no more than twenty-four at the most. Yes, it all fit.
“Bloody hell,” Gabriel said through his teeth. He stalked across the courtyard and out through the old stone gate. Another Clarington chit. As if he had not already had enough of Clarington women to last him a lifetime.
She had a hell of a nerve playing her games with him, he thought. Did she assume she could follow in her sister’s footsteps? Did she believe she could safely amuse herself with him?
“Damnation.”
Gabriel paced to the edge of the cliffs and stood gazing down into the churning sea. The desire that had burned in him for the Veiled Lady was as hot as ever, He would have her, he promised himself. Yes, he would definitely have her. But on his own terms.
How did she dare try her wiles on him after what her family had done to him? he wondered. Was she really so reckless or so arrogant? The frustration and fury he had felt eight years ago roared back into life as if it had all happened yesterday.
But it had not happened yesterday, he thought grimly. He was not the same idealistic, penniless fool he had been then. Lady Phoebe’s father could not protect her this time the way he had protected his other daughter eight years ago.
The Veiled Lady was more vulnerable than slue could have possibly imagined. And so was her family.
The wealth Gabriel had brought back with him from the South Seas was more than a match for the Clarington fortune. And that wealth was now coupled to a tide that was the equal of Clarington’s. With chat kind of fortune and status came power. Great power.
Of course, Gabriel reminded himself suddenly, the Veiled Lady had no inkling of just how wealthy he was. No one knew him or anything about him. He was as anonymous to the Social World as he was to the readers of his novel.
Lady Phoebe Layton wanted his assistance on a quest. Gabriel’s hand closed into a fist. Very well, she would have it. And the price she would pay for his services would be high, indeed.
He would use her to punish Clarington for everything that had happened eight years ago.
Chapter 5
The Marchioness of Trowbridge set a delicate stitch in the hem of a little muslin dress. “You need not be quite so cool with Lord Kilbourne, you know, Phoebe. I am certain he is going to offer for you soon. You may give him some encouragement now without fear of anyone thinking you overbold.”
Phoebe poured another cup of tea and made a face. Her sister did not notice. Meredith was too busy concentrating on the flower she was embroidering onto her daughter’s tiny gown.
It occurred to Phoebe, not for the first time, that anyone looking at Meredith saw a paragon of wifehood and motherhood. It was not an illusion. Meredith was a paragon. But few people outside the immediate circle of her family were aware of the amazing talent for business and financial matters that lay beneath the breathtakingly perfect surface. In addition to being a devoted wife and mother, she was an active advisor to her husband in his many investments.
An inclination for such matters was a common trait in Phoebe’s family. Her father, the earl, was a mathematician who loved to apply his principles to both his investments and his scientific experiments. Her brother, Anthony, Viscount Oaksley, had inherited his father’s abilities. He now ran the Clarington empire, freeing the earl to concentrate on his experiments.
Phoebe’s mother, Lydia, Lady Clarington, was also skilled with numbers. But unlike the others, she preferred to apply her talents at the card tables of her friends. Most of the time she won. Occasionally, however, she did not. In either event she was careful to keep her lord uninformed about her activities. Clarington would have been shocked to know of his wife’s predilection for games of chance.
Phoebe, the youngest in the family, was the only one who had not shown any ability in the fields of mathematics or investments. Early on it had become obvious to everyone including Phoebe that she had not inherited the family talents.
The others loved her dearly, but they did not know quite what to make of her. She was different, and that difference frequently baffled everyone except her mother, who generally seemed unfazed by Phoebe’s ways.
Phoebe was the changeling in the family. The others reached conclusions based on logic. Phoebe used intuition. She read novels while the others studied the stock exchange summaries in The Gentleman’s Magazine. She was reckless where the others were cautious. She was enthusiastic where the others were wary. She was eager where the others tended to be disinterested or disapproving. And she was, of course, the youngest.
The result had been an overprotective attitude toward Phoebe from everyone else in the family except her mother. They all spent a great deal of time fr
etting about her impulsive ways. That attitude had intensified after the carriage accident that had left her with a badly injured leg.
The accident had occurred because of Phoebe’s reckless attempt to save a puppy from being crushed by the vehicle. It was Phoebe, not the pup, who had ended up beneath the carriage wheels.
The doctors had gravely informed Clarington that his youngest child would never walk again. The family had been devastated. Everyone had hovered. Everyone had worried. Everyone had tried to keep eight-year-old Phoebe confined to a sickroom.
Phoebe, being Phoebe, had resisted the efforts to turn her into an invalid. She had defied the doctors by secretly teaching herself to walk again. To this day she still remembered the pain of those first tottering steps. Only her determination not to be bedridden for the rest of her life had made the effort possible. Her family, unfortunately, had never quite recovered from the shock of the accident. For them it was only one incident, albeit the most memorable, in a series of incidents that proved Phoebe needed to be protected from her reckless ways.
“I do not want Kilbourne to offer for me,” Phoebe said. She propped her slippered feet on a small footstool and absently massaged her left leg, which was a bit sore from riding that morning.
“Nonsense. Of course you want him to offer for you.” Meredith set another stitch. She was two years older than Phoebe and the two were as opposite in both appearance and temperament as night and day. Blond, blue-eyed, and as dainty as a piece of fine porcelain, Meredith had once been a shy, timid creature who had quaked at the thought of the intimate embrace she would encounter in the marriage bed.
Years ago when she had been on the brink of her debut into Society, Meredith had confided quite seriously to Phoebe that she wished to take religious vows in order to escape the demands of a husband. Phoebe had agreed that joining a holy order might be quite interesting, provided one got to live in an ancient, haunted abbey. The notion of encountering a few genuine ghosts had a certain appeal.
It was just as well Meredith had not followed her religious inclinations, Phoebe decided. Marriage had been good for her. Today Meredith was a cheerful, contented woman who reveled in the adoration of her indulgent husband, the Marquess of Trowbridge, and the love of her three healthy children.
“I’m serious, Meredith. I do not wish to marry Kilbourne.”
Meredith looked up, her crystal-clear blue eyes wide in surprise. “Good heavens. What on earth are you saying? He’s the fourth in the direct line. And the Kilbourne fortune is at least as large as Trowbridge’s. Certainly it is equal to Papa’s. Mama is so thrilled at the possibilities.”
“I know.” Phoebe sipped her tea and gazed gloomily at the magnificently stitched hunt scene on the wall “It will be a coup for her if Kilbourne makes an offer. She will have another wealthy son-in-law to act as a private banker for her on those occasions when her luck runs low at the card tables.”
“Well, we both know she can hardly ask Papa to cover her debts of honor. He would never approve of her gaming. And you and I cannot continue to go to her rescue. Our allowances are not large enough to cover some of her losses.” Meredith sighed. “I do wish she were not quite so enamored of cards.”
“She usually wins.”
“Yes, but not always.”
“Even the most skilled of gamesters has a bit of bad luck now and then.” Phoebe was inclined to be far more sympathetic with her mother’s enthusiasm for gaming than Meredith was. From her own experience in the world of rare books, Phoebe understood what it was to be cursed with expensive passions.
Meredith bit her lip. “I fear Trowbridge was a little impatient the last time I asked him to oblige her.”
Phoebe smiled ruefully. “Hence Mama’s fervent wish to marry me off to Kilbourne. Poor man. He has not the least notion of what he is attempting to take on. Perhaps I should tell him about Mama’s weakness for gaming before he makes his offer.”
“Don’t you dare.”
Phoebe sighed. “I had hoped Mama and Papa had quite given up on getting me married off. I am getting rather advanced in years.”
“Nonsense. Twenty-four is not so very old.”
“Be honest, Meredith. I am dangerously close to twenty-five and you and I both know that the only reason I’m still attracting the occasional offer at my age is due entirely to the size of my inheritance.”
“Well, you cannot accuse Lord Kilbourne of being interested in you solely because of your fortune. He has estates scattered from Hampshire to Cornwall. He does not need to marry for money.”
“Ah-hah. So why is he interested in me when he can have his pick of the new crop of beauties available this Season?” Phoebe demanded.
She pictured Kilbourne in her mind, studying the image closely in an effort to decide just why she was not particularly attracted to him.
Kilbourne was tall and distinguished with cool gray eyes and light brown hair. She had to admit he was handsome in an aloof, dignified manner. Given his stature in the ton, he was a catch any ambitious mama would relish. He was also a crashing bore.
“Perhaps he has developed a tendre for you, Phoebe.”
“I fail to see why. It is not as though we have a lot in common.”
“Of course you do.” Meredith selected new thread and started a leaf on the flower she was embroidering. “You both come from good families, you both move in the best circles, and you both have respectable fortunes. What’s more, he is of a proper age for you.”
Phoebe cocked a brow. “He’s forty-one.”
“As I said, a proper age. You need someone older and more stable than yourself, Phoebe. Someone who can provide you with mature guidance. You know very well that there are too many occasions when we all quite despair of your impulsive nature. One of these days you will get into more trouble than you can handle.”
“I have survived very nicely thus far.”
Meredith sent a pleading glance toward heaven. “By luck and the grace of the Almighty.”
“It’s not that bad, Meredith. In any event, I believe I’m maturing very nicely on my own. Just think, in a few more years I’ll be forty-one myself. If I can hold out long enough, I will be as old as Kilbourne is now and I won’t need his guidance.”
Meredith dismissed Phoebe’s small attempt at humor. “Marriage would be good for you, Phoebe. One of these days you really must settle down. I vow, I cannot comprehend how you can be content with your life. Always gadding about, chasing after those silly old books.”
“Tell me truthfully, Meredith, do you not find Kilbourne a trifle cold? Whenever I am talking to him and happen to look straight into his eyes, I get the impression there is nothing of substance behind them. No warm emotion, if you take my meaning. I do not think he has any strong feeling for me at all.”
“What an odd thing to say.” Meredith frowned delicately. “I do not find him cold. It is merely that he is a very refined sort of gentleman. He displays a very nice sense of the proprieties. Your problem is that you have been reading far too many of those books you collect.”
Phoebe smiled bleakly. “Do you think so?”
“Yes, I do. All that nonsense about chivalry and knights-errant dashing about slaying dragons to win their ladies cannot be good for your brain.”
“Perhaps not. But it is amusing.”
“It is not in the least amusing,” Meredith declared. “Your fondness for old legends has not only made your imagination far too active, it has given you an unrealistic view of the married state.”
“I do not think it unrealistic to want a marriage based on true love,” Phoebe said quietly.
“Well, it is. Love comes after the wedding. Just look at Trowbridge and myself.”
“Yes, I know,” Phoebe agreed. “But I do not want to take such a risk. I want to be certain that I am being married for love and that I can return that love, before I commit myself to something as dreadfully permanent as marriage.”
Meredith slanted her an exasperated glance. “You do not wan
t to take the risk? That is rather humorous, coming from you. I know of no female who takes more risks than you do.”
“I draw the line at a risky marriage,” Phoebe said.
“Marriage to Kilbourne is not a risk.”
“Meredith?”
“Yes?” Meredith set another stitch with exquisite precision.
“Do you ever think about that night you ran off with Gabriel Banner?”
Meredith gave a start. “Oh, dear. I have pricked my finger. Would you hand me a handkerchief, please? Quickly. I don’t want to get blood on this dress.”
Phoebe put down her teacup and got to her feet.
She handed her sister a linen handkerchief. “Are you all right?”
“Yes, yes, I am fine. What were you saying?” Meredith set aside her embroidery and wrapped the handkerchief around her finger.
“I asked if you ever thought about Gabriel Banner. He is now the Earl of Wylde, you know.”
“I understood he has returned to England.” Meredith picked up her tea and took a dainty swallow. “And to answer your question, I try very hard never to think of the appalling events of that night. What a little idiot I was.”
“You wanted Gabriel to rescue you from marriage to Trowbridge.” Phoebe sat down again and propped her feet back on the footstool. The skirts of her bright lime-green muslin gown flowed over her ankles. “I remember it all very well.”
“You should,” Meredith said dryly. “You not only encouraged me in my foolishness, you helped me knot the sheets I used to descend from my bedroom window.”
“It was so exciting. When Gabriel raced off with you into the night, I thought it was the most romantic thing I had ever seen.”
“It was a disaster,” Meredith muttered. “Thank God Anthony discovered what had happened and came after us immediately. I vow, I have never been so glad to see our dear brother in my life as I was that night, although he was in a towering rage. I had come to my senses by the time we reached the outskirts of London, of course, but Gabriel was still intent on saving me from Trowbridge.”