The Bride Wore Scarlet (28 page)

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Authors: Liz Carlyle

BOOK: The Bride Wore Scarlet
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He snatched that, too, and quietly slipped from the room.

Chapter 17

Be extremely subtle, even to the point of formlessness. Be extremely mysterious, even to the point of soundlessness.

Sun Tzu,
The Art of War

A
naïs dragged herself up from the black depths of a dream to a shaft of feeble moonlight cutting across her eyes. She lifted her hand to block it out, and realized she was shivering with cold. And there was something . . . something just beyond her conscious mind. A heavy thing, like a sense of impending doom. Or the remains of a nightmare.

Scarcely half awake, she considered turning over to bury her face against Geoff's chest. To draw in his scent and summon back the memory of his hands flowing over her, of his lips tasting and tempting. But even the exquisite memory of what they had shared could not offset the weight of apprehension. And the chill at her back told her he was long gone from her bed.

Levering up onto her elbow, she looked about the room. She lay naked atop the counterpane, and the outer draperies had not been drawn. Her evening gown and underthings still littered the carpet, just puddles of white and aquamarine in the gloom. Geoff's clothing was gone.

Anaïs dragged a hand through her hair and tried to remember what had awakened her.

A sound. There had been a sound.

Rising and jerking on the robe Claire had left across her chair, Anaïs snatched the blade she kept sheathed beneath her pillow, then moved soundlessly toward the dressing room. She was fully awake now, her every sense alert.

There
. She heard it again. A subtle, almost mournful sound. And yet something not quite human, either, like the flow of an underground river. She went through to Geoff's room, and entered without knocking.

Sheets pooling about his slender waist, he sat bolt upright, already half out of bed, the pale moonlight casting him in an eerie white glow. Despite the chill, both windows were flung wide. The sound came again, like the sough of the wind, but her entire focus was upon him.

“Geoff?” Anaïs hastened across the room, dropping the knife into her pocket.

He thrust out an arm. “Stop!” he rasped.

But she stood at the edge of the mattress now. “What's wrong?” she whispered.

“It's the water,” he murmured, his eyes focused not upon her, but somewhere in the depths of the room. “The water. Can't you see it?”

He was dreaming.

She perched on the bed, one leg tucked beneath. “Geoff, wake up,” she said, reaching out for him. “There's no water. It's just a nightmare.”

“Hush,” he whispered, his palm still held outward. “That's it. Do you see? The water?”

A faint breeze seemed to stir through the room, rippling the curtains. She set a hand to his cheek, wondering if she should wake him. “Geoff, there's no water.”


The darkness
,” he rasped. “The sand. It's in her shoes. She feels it.” This time he seized Anaïs by her upper arms, dragging her to him as if she were weightless. “Good God, why doesn't she see?”

She landed awkwardly across his lap. “See
what
?”

“The moon is bright,” he said, wrenching her arms hard enough to bruise. “The waves are calm. She can't—she can't . . .”

Anaïs set a hand to his cheek. He was shuddering as if with cold, but his skin was feverish. “Geoff,
who
?”

“It's too late.” The choked out the words. “It's too dark.
Tell him
it is too dark.”

Vaguely frightened now, Anaïs forced Geoff's face around and into the white moonlight.

Later she could not have said the moment at which she grasped the fact that the chill in the room was not just a chill. That Geoff was not asleep, that he was not even present. Or at least, a part of him was not. His lupine eyes burned down into her, wild like nothing she'd ever seen or could even have imagined. And despite the gloom, his pupils were like tiny shards of onyx, glittering and multifaceted.

As if he saw through the eyes of another.

And he did, she realized. Dear God, he did.

“Geoff?” Her voice was thready. “Come back.
Please
.”

Suddenly, the air surged about them in surreal, unpredictable currents. The sheer draperies, already tossed by the breeze, began to float. There was a low sound, like wind roaring in a distant tunnel followed by a loud
thwap!
Anaïs looked around to see that
L'Art de la Guerre
had blown from the desk. It lay upon the floor, its pages ruffling back and forth like a wheat field in the wind. Then the papers in his traveling desk lifted and began to spin about the room in a cyclone of foolscap.

Anaïs cast her eyes about the room as a lock of her hair whipped across her face. “Geoff, what's happening?” she cried, clinging to him now.

His grip on her arms tightened, if such a thing were possible. “She is going to die,” he whispered. “She is going to die. He is pushing her under. Holding her.
Killing her.

“Who?” she cried. “
Charlotte?
For God's sake,
who
?”

“Charlotte,” he murmured. “Poor Charlotte. She did not see . . .”

Then Anaïs felt his grasp go slack. Geoff fell back against the headboard, his chest heaving like bellows, Anaïs tumbling over with him.

For a moment it was as if time held suspended. As if no one breathed. Then the roar receded like a vanishing train. A deathly stillness settled over the room. The draperies fell limp against the sills. The cyclone of white flew apart, the scattered papers hitching up against furniture legs and wainscoting like so many dead leaves.


Grazie a Dio!
” she whispered, setting her forehead to his shoulder.

“Anaïs?” The word was all but silent.

“Geoff?” she managed. “Are you . . . here?”

For what seemed an eternity, he said nothing. But she could feel him slowly returning to himself. Then, his breathing rough, Geoff's arms came around her, wide and strong, and she knew that he had returned to the present.

She clung to him, burying her face against his neck, half afraid and trembling inside.

When he spoke, it was as if the words were dragged from him. “It will be soon, Anaïs,” he said, still gasping. “We are out of time.”

Anaïs pushed herself up and he let her go. His eyes were his own again, and filled with grief. “Are you all right?” she whispered, searching his face for reassurance.

His breath was steadying. “Aye,” he finally said. “Well enough.”

A shock of his dark hair had fallen over one eye. Gently, she pushed it back. “What just happened?” she whispered. “Can you tell me? Can you even explain it?”

He shook his head, and set the heels of his hands to his eyes. “Not really.” His voice sounded hoarse. “I was just . . . trying to see. I'm sorry. Did I frighten you?”

“Not in the least,” Anaïs lied. “And you didn't
try
to see. You did see. Something. The water. The sand. Do you remember?”

He dropped his hands as if resigned. “Oh, aye,” he murmured. “I found Giselle's toy. That, and the handkerchief. The letter DuPont brought. I used them.”

“To try to open the door.” She cast her eyes round the disordered room. “And it looks as though it worked rather well.”

He shook his head again. “Not at first,” he said quietly. “But you see how it is. It's . . . it's like a sort of madness comes upon me. I hate it. It frightens people.”

Anaïs thought it was rather more than that. “It doesn't frighten me,” she said again.

He gave a sharp, exasperated laugh. “When I was a lad, I hid it from my mother when the spells came,” he said. “She was terrified. The doctors . . . they told her I had a mental disorder. That eventually she would have to put me away.”

“Good Lord,” said Anaïs. “Surely she did not listen?”

He was quiet for a moment. “No, she took me to someone who was not a doctor,” he finally answered. “A . . . a sort of governess who had trained in Vienna, and who worked with children who were thought mentally disturbed. Mad.”

She laid a finger to his lips. “Stop using that word.”

Geoff watched her for a time, his eyes smooth as blue water now. “Your mother,” he said quietly, “she is a sister to the Earl of Treyhern, Sutherland said.”

Anaïs dropped her hand. “Yes,” she murmured. “Why?”

His gaze fell. “It was his wife,” he said. “She was the governess.”

“Aunt Helene?” Anaïs was amazed. “But . . . but they have been married ages.”

“My mother did not know they had married,” he said. “She thought to buy her away from the earl. To offer her more money. Mamma was desperate, you must understand. It was that, she believed, or an asylum.”

Anaïs laughed. “I should have loved to have been a fly on the wall for that conversation,” she said. “But Helene does have a gift for dealing with children—and uncommon good sense.”

“It was the latter which saved me,” he said. “She told my mother I was perfectly fine. To let me be, and ignore the doctors.”

A memory stirred in the back of Anaïs's mind. “And then you found your mentor,” she said. “In Scotland, yes?”

His smile was wistful. “Ah, that is a very long story,” he said. “Another tale for another night, perhaps.”

But Anaïs was not sure they would have many more nights.

She pushed away the thought. “Well, you have the Gift,” she said. “And all that matters is that you've learned to deal with it.”

“Aye, until I need it,” he said, his expression bleak. “And then it's like calling up the devil. But the devil can't help Charlotte Moreau, can he?”

She threaded a hand through his hair again. “So tell me,” she encouraged. “Tell me exactly what happened tonight. You took the dog, and the other things. And then what?”

He lifted his broad, bare shoulders. “Nothing came,” he said. “Nothing but that awful darkness. It's haunted me, Anaïs, since we got here. But nothing came so I tried to sleep. It happens that way sometimes, just as the conscious mind begins to slip away . . .”

“And you fell into that odd little crack between sleep and wakefulness, didn't you?” she murmured. “I think everyone feels it to some extent. But for you it is—well, you know what it is. And you are all right now?”

“Yes, but Charlotte is not,” he replied, grasping her arms again. “Anaïs, think. When did she say they were going on holiday?”

“The day after tomorrow,” said Anaïs swiftly. “Why?”

Geoff closed his eyes. “Lezennes is going to drown her,” he whispered. “He means to lure her out—a moonlight walk by the sea—and plead his case one last time.”

Anaïs jerked upright. “Oh, Geoff.
No
.”

But his gaze had turned inward. “But she . . . she rejects him,” he went on. “He all but knows she will. And he is prepared. That is why he is taking her away. Away from the house and the servants. Her priest. Even you, perhaps.”

“My God, it would be so easy!” Anaïs whispered. “In the dark, in her skirts and crinolines—she would not have a chance in the water.”

“He will say she tripped,” Geoff whispered. “That a wave came out of nowhere. That they were wading and he could not save her.”

Anaïs clapped a hand to her mouth to still her gasp.

“A romantic walk, hand in hand.” Geoff's eyes were closed now. “He . . . he holds her under. The surf crashes over them. It does not take long. She is so small.” He stopped, and swallowed hard. “So small and tired. After all she has been through, she has so little fight left in her.”

“But—but that's monstrous!” Anaïs cried. “We must tell—”

Just then, the clock in the stairway struck four, the sound doleful in the gloom.

Anaïs squeezed her eyes shut. “Oh, Geoff!” she whispered. “This is Friday! This is
already
tomorrow!”

“Aye, it is that.” He sat up, and set her a little away. “Anaïs, we must make ready to leave. We must take them with us in the night. It's the only way.”

“Yes.” Anaïs rose and went to the window to stare across the street at Lezennes' house “Yes, it is the only way. But first I must go and warn her.”

“Will she believe you?”

Anaïs turned, the hems of her wrapper whipping round her ankles. “I shall do my best,” she said determinedly. “I know—I shall ask her to go with me to confession this morning. She won't think it odd. And once we get to St. Nicholas's I'll tell her everything. I can show her my mark if it comes to it.”

“Aye, now that she'll recognize,” said Geoff, unfolding his long, lean, and very naked body from the bed. “It might do the trick. At the very least, I don't think she'll tell Lezennes what we're up to. But somehow you must convince her that she is safer with us than with him. Still, I cannot like it. I have not gained her trust—and you may not have done, either.”

“Then we resort to ladders and laudanum,” said Anaïs grimly.

“So you managed to unlock the windows?”

“Yes, all of them.”

“Good girl,” he said, snatching up his drawers.

“Oh!” she said witheringly. “I do wish—”

He froze, and flicked a glance up at her in the gloom. “What?”

“I do wish you did not have to put those back on,” she blurted, then snagged her lip in her teeth. “Ah, but now is not the time, is it?”

And if she were wise, there would never be another time . . .

Was she? Was she going to be wise this time?

His mouth twisted. “Afraid we must press on, love,” he said, shoving a leg in. “Wake the house. I want everything packed, loaded, and on the way to Ostend by midmorning. Petit must go along, and tell Captain Thibeaux to make ready. We sail for England tomorrow.”

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