No Conventional Miss. Eleanor Webster

No Conventional Miss - Eleanor  Webster


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translate the Rosetta Stone,’ she said at last.

      He straightened. She instantly felt his withdrawal as he stepped back and was conscious of her own conflicting sense of regret and relief.

      ‘I am not surprised. It is one of the most important discoveries in modern times. Has he been to the museum since it arrived?’ he asked.

      ‘No, I—he—’ London was not a good place for him, but she could not say that.

      ‘His responsibilities have been too great at home,’ the viscount said gently as though understanding that which she’d left unspoken.

      ‘Yes.’

      And then it happened—without warning—without the usual feeling of dread or oppression. The present diminished. The man, the Rosetta Stone, the display cases, even the long windows dwarfed into minutia as though viewed through the wrong end of Father’s old telescope.

      She felt cold, a deep internal cold that started from her core and spread into her limbs.

      A child—a boy—appeared to her. She saw him so clearly that she lifted her hand as though to push aside the wet strands of hair that hung into tawny, leonine eyes. He stared at her, his gaze stricken with a dry-eyed grief.

      She recognised those eyes. ‘I— What’s wrong?’

      ‘Miss Gibson?’ the viscount spoke.

      She blinked, the boy still remaining clearer than the man or the museum.

      ‘Miss Gibson,’ the viscount said again.

      ‘You were so young—’

      ‘What?’ He thrust the word at her, a harsh blast of sound.

      ‘When she died.’

      The boy vanished.

      ‘Who died?’ Lord Wyburn asked as the present sharpened again into crisp-edged reality.

      His eyes bore into her, his jaw tight and expression harsh. She dropped her gaze from his face, focusing instead on the intricate folds of his neck cloth.

      What had she said? What had she revealed?

      ‘Has my stepmother been speaking about me?’ A twitch flickered under the skin of his cheek.

      ‘No, we didn’t, I—’ she said, then stopped.

      ‘I will not be the subject of gossip and you will not do well in London if you cannot be appropriate in word and deed.’

      A welcome surge of anger flashed through her. ‘I am visiting a museum, that is scarcely inappropriate.’

      ‘Discussions of a personal nature are unseemly.’

      ‘Then I will endeavour to discuss only the weather or hair ribbons.’

      ‘Good.’

      He made no other comment and the silence lengthened, no longer easy. She wanted to speak, to cover this awkwardness but, after that momentary anger, lassitude filled her.

      This often happened. Exhaustion leadened her limbs only to be replaced later by a need to run, to jump, to ride. None of which she would do here, of course.

      ‘Wonderful! There you are!’ Lady Wyburn’s sing-song tones rang out.

      Rilla turned gratefully as Lady Wyburn and Imogene appeared at the doorway.

      ‘No doubt you are both entranced with these ancient objects, but I admit I am done with them,’ Lady Wyburn announced.

      ‘Indeed, let’s go.’ The wonders of the Rosetta Stone had dissipated and Rilla longed for her own company.

      As they walked through the corridor and into the entrance way, she could feel Lord Wyburn’s silent scrutiny and her sister’s concerned gaze.

      Only Lady Wyburn seemed impervious to any discord and happily related a discussion with Lady Alice Fainsborough. Apparently, they had met Lady Alice while admiring the giraffe on the second floor.

      ‘A lovely girl,’ Lady Wyburn said as the wizened caretaker pushed open the oak door. ‘Although unfortunately she resembles her mother with her propensity for chins. Still, it is good to know a few people prior to your début and one cannot hold her chins against her.’

      The door creaked closed as they exited into the dampness of the London spring. Rilla exhaled with relief as if leaving the museum made her less vulnerable.

      The rain had stopped, but the cobblestones gleamed with damp and raindrops clung to twigs of grass, glittering as weak sunlight peeked through still-heavy clouds.

      But the smell—it was the smell she noted.

      Earlier, the courtyard had smelled of fresh grass, mixed with the less pleasant odour of horse manure or sewage from the Thames. Now it smelled of neither. Instead, it was sweet, cloying and strangely old-fashioned.

      She wrinkled her nose. ‘Lavender. I smell lavender.’

      Lord Wyburn stopped. She felt the jerk of his body beside her.

      ‘I hate lavender,’ he said.

      * * *

      Even hours later, Paul could feel his bad humour as he sat astride his mount. Ironically, his own ill temper irritated. There was no sensible reason for it and he had no tolerance for moods. Rotten Row was pleasant and unusually quiet and while the clouds looked dark, it had not rained.

      He rolled his shoulders. They felt tight as bands of steel. Amaryllis Gibson had unnerved him. The way she’d looked at him or through him as though seeing too much or not seeing at all. And her change from vivacious interest to unnatural stillness.

      And lavender.

      Why had she smelled lavender? No one smelled lavender on a London street.

      His fingers tightened on the reins. Responsive to the movement, Stalwart shook his head with a metallic jangle.

      Paul had hoped a pleasant ride and fresh air would calm him. It hadn’t.

      All this nonsense about a début. He should have put a stop to the business. Now, he could only hope that his stepmother got both girls married off expeditiously so that he would have little reason to spend time in their company.

      A sudden thundering of hooves grabbed his attention. He swung about as a horse going much too fast cut obliquely across his path. Stalwart snorted, stamping his hooves and shifting in a nervous sideways dance.

      Instinctively, Paul soothed his mount, even as he tracked the other horse. Some crazy pup, no doubt. Thank goodness the park was unusually empty.

      Except—the rider rode side-saddle.

      ‘Blast!’

      Paul spurred Stalwart ahead, but the other animal had the advantage of several seconds and Stalwart was already winded. Hunkering close to his animal’s neck, Paul pushed the horse as fast as he dared and, squinting, discerned a woman’s form, her turquoise habit bright against the horse’s flank. Her hair had loosened, falling over her shoulders in a brilliant red-gold mass.

      Paul gripped the reins tighter still. He knew only one woman with hair like that.

      Irritation and a deeper, more primitive emotion clawed at him. Sweat dampened his palms. He was gaining ground. He’d be able to grab her reins soon enough.

      He must be careful not to startle her animal. For a moment he imagined her thrown, her face smashed or her body crippled.

      Half-standing in the stirrups, he leaned forward, his thighs clamped hard around the horse’s chest.

      Then, without warning, her horse slowed.

      Stalwart bolted ahead. Sitting heavily, Paul swung his animal about. Relief rushed through his body.

      ‘Miss Gibson!’ he shouted. ‘Hand me the reins! What on earth happened? How did he get away on you?’


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