The Wallflowers To Wives Collection. Bronwyn Scott

The Wallflowers To Wives Collection - Bronwyn Scott


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to wash and go to bed.’

      It was an old trick; winning an argument by leaving the room. Jonathon grimaced. If they were alone, he’d grab her and press her against the wall and kiss some sense in to her but that would hardly do here. ‘Claire, this is not over,’ he called after her. She didn’t bother to answer. She just kept walking.

      Lady Stanhope tossed him a nervous glance. ‘Let her sleep on it. Perhaps she’ll come around.’ Jonathon didn’t put much stock in that. When Claire took something into her mind, she was immovable.

      ‘Perhaps you can talk sense into her?’ Jonathon appealed to Lord Stanhope.

      Lord Stanhope looked cynical. ‘We will not force her. We tried that with Sheriden a few years back and look where that got us.’ There would be no help from that quarter either, it seemed. It was time to take his leave and regroup. When he’d told Claire she was worth fighting for, he’d never thought he’d have to fight her in order to prove it.

      * * *

      The girls came as soon as she sent word the next day. If ever there was a reason for an emergency meeting of the Left-Behind Girls Club, this was it.

      ‘What has happened?’ Beatrice was the last to arrive. She bustled into Claire’s bedroom, stripping off her gloves. She hadn’t paused long enough to leave her things at the door.

      May looked up from Claire’s side. ‘She’s refused Jonathon.’

      ‘For good this time,’ Evie added for emphasis. Claire winced. Hearing someone else say it out loud was so much more final than thinking it in one’s head. But she wasn’t going to cry. She’d promised herself she wouldn’t. She needed her friends, but she didn’t need them to worry for her or to feel they had to do something to fix her situation. This was her problem. Her decision. Never mind that it had been tearing her apart since she’d left Dover. The closer London came, the deeper the knife had dug. She’d barely made her room last night before she’d needed the chamber pot. That’s what happened when one threw away happiness, one retched and then one cried.

      Beatrice settled into the overstuffed chair near the bed. ‘Tell us. What happened in Dover?’

      She told them everything. Evie wiped away a tear when she told them about Jonathon’s brother. May sighed over the romance. Beatrice looked down at her hands. Claire supposed it was a romantic tale, perhaps fit for a Gothic, but not for real life. There was no happy ending here. Or rather, she’d had her happy ending. But afterwards life went on and even her ending had an ending because life was not contained between book covers.

      ‘I can’t have him, because having him will ruin him. It will make him less than what he is and it will be my fault,’ she declared quietly, determined they not see how this was tearing her apart. She loved him so entirely, so completely. Perhaps, if she loved him less?

      ‘You are so brave, Claire.’ Evie gave her a wan smile of support and encouragement. Her friend meant well, but Claire fought the urge to argue with Evie, to shout that she wasn’t brave. She was breaking. She might manage to glue the pieces of herself back together again at some point, but it wouldn’t be the same. She’d never be whole, not without him.

      Her stomach started to roil again. She fought back a wave of nausea. Just the thought of Jonathon lost to her was enough to make her physically ill. She was too cognisant of all she’d lost when she’d given him up.

      ‘There’s only one thing to do. You need to go away until this blows over. The Season will be done in a month. Perhaps you could come to the country with me. We could arrange to go early and say we’re visiting my aunt,’ May offered.

      ‘Or you could come with me. I have to leave soon anyway.’ Beatrice put a hand over her stomach. In a few weeks, even Evie’s careful designs wouldn’t be able to hide the early telltale signs of an advancing pregnancy.

      Claire shook her head at her friends’ generous offers. It would be so easy to take those offers. She could retreat and wallow in self-pity and perhaps self-righteousness in private. But she’d done that once already and it hadn’t been to her benefit in the end. Retreating had only hurt herself. ‘I am grateful. I can’t run away. Everyone will know something is up if I hide. If I am to face down the gossips, I have to go out. Tonight. To the Belvoirs’ musicale evening—’

      ‘I don’t think that’s a good idea,’ Beatrice interrupted immediately, horrified at the suggestion. ‘None of us was invited. You’ll be alone and in Cecilia’s house. Even if she didn’t start the gossip about your absence, she’ll be mad if she believes half of what the gossip sheets have implied.’

      ‘Then perhaps it’s better to get it over with,’ Claire said staunchly, although the idea of facing Cecilia turned her stomach sour. But the Claire she’d become needed to face this down. If she didn’t face Cecilia and the gossip, it would only prove she hadn’t changed.

      ‘Well, if you are set on going, you must have something to wear.’ Beatrice began organising the troops. ‘Evie, look through her wardrobe. May, give Evie some help. I need to talk to Claire.’

      It was clear Bea wanted privacy. Claire let Bea draw her to the long French doors leading out to her little balcony. Would she ever be able to look at those doors without thinking of Jonathon?

      ‘What is it, Bea?’ Claire asked in a low voice. ‘Are you well?’

      ‘I am fine, but I think you might have gone round the bend,’ Beatrice scolded. ‘Claire, you can’t refuse him, no matter what your principles dictate.’

      ‘I will not trap him. This is about doing the right thing,’ Claire argued hotly. ‘Don’t think for a moment this is easy for me.’

      Bea arched a dark brow, her tone dry. ‘No one looking at you would think that. We’ll need rouge to make you presentable no matter what Evie pulls out of your closet. We’ll have Jonathon back by your side in no time.’

      Claire looked quizzically at her friend. ‘Haven’t you heard a word I’ve said? I’ve let him go.’ Oh, dear, the sick sensation came again and she squeezed her eyes shut and took a deep breath to quell her stomach. ‘Can’t you see how hard this is for me? Please, don’t try to convince me otherwise, Bea, because it would be an easy argument to win. I’m holding on to the right choice by a thread. It would take very little for that thread to break.’

      ‘It’s not about trapping and it’s definitely not about principles, Claire, not at this point,’ Beatrice answered, undaunted. ‘You have to march over to him and tell him you’ve reconsidered. Tell him you were tired and not thinking straight last night. I don’t care what you tell him, just tell him you’ll marry him.’ Beatrice was full of urgency. ‘Don’t you understand, Claire? You had sex with him, multiple times.’

      ‘Only three times,’ Claire corrected.

      ‘Once, twice, forty times, it doesn’t matter. I bet he never once used any kind of protection. You could be carrying his child.’

      Her initial reaction was one of betrayal. She was dying inside. She wanted empathy at the least. ‘I didn’t expect this from you, Bea. Of all people, I thought you would respect my decision. You, who won’t marry the father of your child unless he truly loves you. You are hardly in a position to argue that principles be thrown out the window.’

      Beatrice’s eyes narrowed. ‘My man isn’t here offering for me. It’s far easier for me to cling to those principles when that’s all I have. But they are cold comfort, Claire. Trust me.’ She sighed, her eyes sparkling suspiciously as her tone softened. She squeezed Claire’s hand. ‘I am so sorry. I wouldn’t hurt you for the world. This is all my fault. I should not have started this. You didn’t want to do it and I pushed you towards it. I meddled where I ought not.’

      Her anger at Bea evaporated, replaced by a fierce, protective love of her friend. She couldn’t have Bea believing she’d failed. ‘Don’t say that. Whatever happens, it was worth it. I fell in love and I found myself. Bea, you were right all along. It


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