needed. He begged, bargained, and promised his own life for hers if God would
spare her. In helpless frustration he watched her, lying unconscious in her bed,
tossing with fever, and growing paler with each passing day. He had passed each
night at her bedside, imagining the worst. At times, a small movement or sound
from her made him dare to hope. But most of the time, he saw little change and
despaired completely.
So when she had miraculously opened her eyes last night, relief and gratitude
had washed over him so strongly that he had wept like a child. Never had he felt
such powerful emotions, it was as if he had just escaped the hangman’s noose,
had been given a second chance at life.
But it was not over yet. Dr. Stephens had warned him of the infection. And there
would be more than the physical damage to deal with. Michael could not think of
that now. The first task was to get her well, and Dr. Stephens was correct that
his lack of sleep and food, coupled with copious quantities of whiskey, was
impairing his ability to help her.
Pushing away from the desk, he told Jones to have a bath readied, and began
walking wearily to his rooms. At the top of the staircase, he paused outside the
door of her sitting room, which he seemed to do every time he was in the corridor. That room had been so full of life before they had gone to London.
Bloody hell, why had he taken her there? Why had he been so eager to
show her to
the same society that had once shunned him? This never would have happened if
they had remained at Blessing Park as she had wanted. He stared at the door for
a long moment, then impulsively opened it and stepped inside.
It was as he remembered. Bright sunshine streamed in the windows.
Magazines and
books were strewn everywhere, and mounds of needlework were heaped near every
seat. He walked slowly through the cheerful room, taking in every detail.
Their
things had been retrieved from London, and it looked as if she had never left.
Near the fireplace, her violin case was propped against the hearth stones.
He
averted his gaze from the instrument before a deep sense of loss could invade
him.
He moved to leave the room when his gaze fell upon the mound of sewing next to
an overstuffed armchair. He stooped to pick up a piece of soft linen he vaguely
recognized. It was her rendition of Blessing Park—she had told him that, but
still, he could not make heads or tails of it. He smiled softly to himself.
The
memory of her sitting in his study, laboring over that stitchery, made his heart
ache. With one last look around the room, he tossed the linen down and quietly
left the room.
The first rays of gray morning light were peeking in the windows when Abbey
resurfaced. With a moan, she pressed her palm against her forehead; the pain
behind her eyes was almost blinding. She struggled against her pillows and
finally managed to raise herself an inch or two so she could see the room.
On
the green silk settee in front of the fireplace, Sarah slept.
“Sarah,” she called, noting her voice was stronger. The sleeping figure bolted
upright and tossed a blanket aside. It was Michael who strode quickly to her
bedside.
He sat gingerly on the side of the bed and leaned over her, his fingers wandering lightly down her cheek and neck. “Are you all right? How do you feel?”
he whispered anxiously.
“Michael?” Abbey asked, uncertain why she should be surprised.
“Are you in pain?”
Abbey swallowed and closed her eyes, nodding slightly. ‘No laudanum, please,“
she whispered.
He stroked her face again. “You must take some broth,” he murmured, and reached
behind her to pull the bell cord.
“What happened?” she asked.
Michael smiled weakly. “It’s a long story, sweetheart. It will have to wait until you are stronger.”
“You are not supposed to be here,” she said uncertainly.
“I’m not?”
“I’m not supposed to be at Blessing Park.”
“You belong at Blessing Park,” Michael answered curtly, then immediately softened. “I brought you here so Dr. Stephens could attend you,” he murmured as
he carefully brushed hair from her face.
“I fell, I think,” she said as the door opened behind them.
His gaze riveted on her eyes. “Do you remember the accident?” he asked slowly.
“Doctor said I was stabbed,” she added, confused.
Michael muttered something over his shoulder, then turned back to her with a
gentle smile on his face. “I’m sorry, darling. You were wounded rather badly.”
“Did you see?”
His expression darkened. “I saw it, yes,” he muttered, sounding almost angry.
Abbey slid her gaze to the windows. Why couldn’t she remember?
Michael absently
stroked her cheek with the back of his knuckles.
“I don’t understand.” Something was wrong. She could not conceive of being cut,
with a saber, no less. How had it happened? Why had it happened? And Michael was
not supposed to be by her side.
“You should not be here,” she tried again.
“Perhaps not. But I am here, and I am not leaving you.” She realized he did not
deny he should not be there. Something was undeniably and terribly wrong.
“It’s not right,” she attempted again. Michael’s face darkened as the door opened behind him.
Sarah appeared in Abbey’s view. “You are looking better all the time,” she lied,
and set a silver tray on a table.
“How long…”
“Almost a week,” Michael answered softly.
A week? The panic she could not seem to escape was mounting rapidly.
“How bad?”
she asked, the panic raising the pitch of her voice. Michael said something to
Sarah, who immediately brought a bowl over to him.
“You must drink this broth, sweetheart,” he said, and forced a spoon between her
lips.
Abbey swallowed, but caught his hand before he could force the second spoonful.
“Will I recover?” she asked with alarm.
Michael’s eyes slipped to her mouth. “Of course you will,” he said, and spooned
more of the broth down her. He was lying; it was plainly written on his face.
Good God, she was going to die! No wonder she could barely move her limbs! She
started to struggle. She heard Michael tell Sarah to hold her arms and was aware
that he was leaning over her, trapping her with his powerful body, forcing the
broth down her throat. Oh, dear God, please do not let me die! I am not ready to
die! Michael was wiping her mouth with a soft linen towel, saying something to
her, but she could not hear him. Whatever had happened, for whatever reason she
had been cut by a saber, she had lost everything. Her baby. Her health.
Michael.
She did not know why or how, but she knew she had lost him, too.
When Michael pressed the teacup to her lips, she jerked her head away, and the
wrenching pain sent her tumbling downward into the black abyss.
After she had been bathed and her linens changed, Michael sat in a chair next to
the bed, staring down at his ravaged wife who, for the moment, was resting
peacefully. The lines that had appeared the last few days around her eyes were
smooth in sleep, and even the dark circles and lack of color in her cheeks weren’t as noticeable. She looked angelic.
She also looked very helpless. He knew it would not be long before the dreams
would come to her again, tormenting her as they had since they had begun
administering the large doses of laudanum. Last night she had tossed and turned,
crying out in her sleep and flinching with the pain of her own involuntary movement. He suspected memories were coming back to her in sleep that she had
not yet connected with reality. He could only pray that she would regain her
strength before she remembered it all.
Several days passed before Abbey was able to sit up in bed. Sarah and Michael
took turns at her bedside, forcing broth and, later, some type of mush into her.
Most days Harry was allowed to lie at the foot of her bed. His familiar weight
against her leg became the subtle assurance that she was going to live.
The pain
in her head had become less severe, but she was still troubled by a dull ache
and periods of darkness. Dr. Stephens seemed quite confident it would disappear
altogether, just as he assured her the pain in her side would go away eventually. He prescribed less laudanum for her and pronounced her on the mend,
given the circumstances.
Late one afternoon she was propped against the pillows, feeling stronger.
Sarah
had given in to her demands to have her hair washed, but insisted she sit up
until it dried. “Don’t want a bad ague on top of everything else,” she had cautioned. Dressed in a silk nightrail, Abbey half listened to Sarah and Molly,
a chambermaid, as they chatted while cleaning her room. They were oblivious to
her; she rarely said anything. She felt so empty, felt such a dull, aching loss
she attributed to nothing and everything, that she had begun to believe the laudanum had destroyed her mind and her senses. She felt peculiar, different
somehow. As if she had lost not only her baby but a part of herself.
She was preoccupied with her attempt to dredge up fragments of memory from the
recesses of her mind. She had reclaimed snatches of it, but the picture was
incomplete. She remembered the time she had spent at Blessing Park and was aware
that she had felt as whole and complete in that time as she ever had. Yet she
was terribly disconcerted that while she loved Michael dearly, she felt oddly
disconnected from him, almost fearful. Was that due to the laudanum? Or something else, something she could not remember? On the few occasions she had
asked what had happened to her, no one would answer her, leading her to conclude
something terrible had indeed happened. She knew she had been in London. She
could remember snippets of a ball and dancing with Michael. She remembered
hitting him, too, but that was so fantastic that it had to be part of the fiction she was convinced her mind was perpetrating.
“Whatever happened to your cousin Glory? Hadn’t she met some fine sailor?‘’
Sarah asked Molly as they folded a freshly laundered bed sheet.
Molly clucked disdainfully. “Rotten one, he was. Promised the moon and the
stars, I tell you. And not just to Glory. A serving wench on the west side, too,” she said bitterly.
“You don’t say? Poor Glory! She was quite smitten with him, wasn’t she?”
“Oh, she loved him more than life itself. Crushed her, he did.”
“Did he marry the other?” Sarah asked as she took the folded sheet and placed it
on a stack of others.
“Marry? Ha! He left town, the coward. Sailed for America, the dirty bounder.
Lied to them both,” Molly muttered.
“Lied to them both,” Abbey mumbled unwittingly. Her eyes widened suddenly.
Galen! Routier! A flurry of images began to swim in her head. Galen holding a
doll. Routier’s hands groping her breast in the maze, Galen driving her in a curricle. A duel. The memories came in torrents, overloading her senses.
The
dull ache behind her eyes began to intensify, and her pulse began to pound
convulsively in her neck. She heard herself cry out, saw Sarah drop the linens
and fly to her bedside.
“Molly! Fetch Lord Darfield! Don’t dally, girl, go/” Sarah shrieked.
Abbey stared wildly at Sarah. “I remember, I remember, Sarah! Oh, God, I remember!” she rasped hysterically.
Sarah gripped her hands tightly and held them. “It’s all over now! It’s all over!”
“ Routier!‘’
“He’s dead!”
“No, no! Galen! Where is my cousin? Where is Galen?”
“It’s all over and done!” Sarah pled with her. Abbey shook her head, grimacing
in pain as she did. She yanked her hands free of Sarah and began to claw toward
the edge of the bed, the pain in her side stabbing her like a hot iron.
“No, no! There is more, much more! Southerland! I want to speak with the duke!”
Abbey cried.
“You must stay abed, mum! Molly went to fetch Lord Darfield for you—”
Sarah
cried as she grabbed Abbey around the waist.
“ No! I don’t want to see him, Sarah!” Abbey sobbed.
“I am already here,” Michael said from the doorway. Behind him, Molly’s eyes
were wide as an owl’s. Michael nodded at Sarah, who reluctantly pulled away from
Abbey.
“Sarah, don’t go!” Abbey begged. Sarah stopped halfway across the room and
looked at Michael.
“She’ll be quite safe, Sarah. Go on,” Michael said softly, and waited for Sarah
to skirt around him and shut the door behind her.
Confused and oddly apprehensive, Abbey shrank against the linens as he crossed
to the bed. “I want to talk to the duke!” she insisted desperately, pushing herself into the mound of pillows.
“Alex is presently in London. But you can talk to me, sweetheart,” he said calmly.
“ No! Something is not right! You are not right!”
Michael squatted next to the bed and reached for her hand, but she pulled it
away. “We will make it right, Abbey, you and me.”
“I remember! I remember Galen and Routier!”
Michael winced, his jaw clenching. “I know it must be hard for you. It was very
traumatic, love. But I’m glad you are remembering—it means you are healing, and
I so want you to heal.”
“ Glad? Why? So you can cease pretending to care? I remember, Michael!”
Michael’s face fell. He pushed a hand through his hair as his eyes danced across