Read The Secret Love of a Gentleman Online
Authors: Jane Lark
Your loving sister,
Mary
He lifted the second letter and opened that, leaving the first on the sheet covering his thighs.
I wish I had heard from you, I am chastising you constantly for not replying, and yet Andrew keeps telling me you must be busy doing what young men do in town, and I am not to nag you. So do not tell him that I have.
Caro is much changed since we returned. Quiet again, although she does everything she did before we went to town. She visits her friends, in her own little trap with her pony, and she has taken to visiting the local poor. But Andrew is worried about her because she rarely dines with us. Still Andrew and I are seeking to include her when we can, as we have always done.
Write and tell me how you are? What you are up to? It will cheer Caro too, I am sure. And send some word for George, so that he may cease asking me when he will see his Uncle Bobbie next.
The children are well. Iris has discovered how to clap and giggles at us when she does it. It is very sweet. It melts my heart when she does so and Andrew laughs along with her with a twinkle in his eye. You can imagine just how much he is charmed by it. I think she does it so much simply to please him.
Write back to me soon.
Your loving, impatient sister,
Mary
He would not write back. He could not bring himself to do it yet. Perhaps when the wounds Caro had cut were less raw. But not now. He would do as his father had said, and call on her when he was well. He would not know what to say in a letter to Mary. If he implied all was well, Caro would think he did not care, and yet he could not write to Mary and speak of his pain because then he would look weak to Caro. Better to say nothing.
“Is there still nothing from Rob,” Mary stated as Drew sorted through the morning’s letters.
He looked up at her, “No, my dear.”
“It has been four weeks.”
“It is not long for a young man in town, who has himself to think of before his sister.”
Mary sighed. “Yet it is not like him. I am worried, Andrew.”
Every time Mary spoke of it, a heavy pain settled in Caro’s chest. She’d truly hurt him if he’d cut his sister so Caro might hear nothing of him. She was worried too.
“You should go to town and visit him,” Mary told Drew, “at least then I would know he is well.”
“He is well. Your father has written and told you so. They have seen him. Leave Rob alone, he will not appreciate you fussing over him.”
Caro folded her napkin and lay it on her half-full plate. She was not hungry. Her stomach had been nauseous for the weeks since they’d left London. “I am going to retire to the nursery and spend an hour with the children. Then I will call on Isabella and Pauline. I plan to spend the day there.”
Drew looked at her and gave her a sympathetic smile. He knew she was the wedge between Mary and her brother, and yet he said nothing.
She nodded. Drew did not know what an awful mess she had made, though.
When she walked upstairs, her hand rested over her stomach and thoughts whispered through her head, words for the child she believed to be within her. She’d had her courses before she’d left for London, but had not had them since, and it must now be six weeks or more since they’d come.
She was not afraid, nor worried, nor panicked, not even concerned. She could not carry a child full term. There was no need to speak of it to anyone. There was no need to worry Rob.
Yet to believe there was a child within her filled the vacant hole in her heart. She’d always longed for a child of her own, and now she would have a child again, if only for a few months. Even though she would never see it in the flesh. It was her child.
In the nursery she sat with Iris on her knee. Iris clapped as George ordered her to. Iris had become another toy to him.
Images of Rob filled Caro’s head, as they did frequently. She hoped he was well. She hoped he did not still hurt too much.
His father had written of him and said that he was well. She wondered if he was happy without her. She was not happy without him.
What would he think if he knew they had created a child? She imagined a look of wonder and awe in his eyes. Love. She knew how he looked at George and Iris. Yet there was no point in speaking of it to him. It would only make his heart hurt even more when she lost the child.
~
Caro stood by the window in the nursery looking out onto the gardens where she and Rob had frequently played with George in the summer. It had been six weeks since they’d left town and still Caro’s courses had not come, and still Rob had not written to Mary.
Caro was in no doubt she was with child. Her hand constantly hovered near her stomach as she longed to hold it. She had a child. She loved it with all her heart, and at night when she lay in bed she stroked her stomach even though it was still flat, and she sang to the child within it. She wished for it to be happy and know her as much as it might for the months it was alive within her womb. She wished the child to feel her love.
“Caro…”
Caro looked at Mary, who was kneeling on the floor playing spillikins with George.
“We are dining out tomorrow evening. Will you come with us? Andrew would like you to. You should socialise with us, as you did. I am sure it will make you feel better…and there is a dinner dance next week at the Martins’.”
“I see my friends, and I see others when I visit those in need.”
“You need more company than conversation. You enjoyed dancing at the last assembly, and in town. Come with us, to the dinner dance if not to dine tomorrow.”
The dinner dance would probably be no more than a dozen couples. But she felt no desire to go. It was not that she chose to avoid it through fear, merely that she felt no pleasure at the prospect of going, her heart was too wounded to laugh and dance. “I would rather stay here, because that is what I wish, not because I am hiding, Mary.”
Here
… Caro had almost said, home, but she had more and more become aware that this was not her home, it was Drew’s. She longed to be self-reliant as much as Rob had. She longed for somewhere she could make her own. Memories stirred. She had known one place, although then she had been too wounded to appreciate it.
“Very well, but between you and Rob I am worried sick.” Mary looked away, her concentration returning to her game with George.
“You need not worry over me.”
Mary glanced back up. “But you do not look happy.”
“I am content, though, and it is enough, and a beginning.”
George broke into giggles when the pile of sticks collapsed, which made his sister clap in her crib.
Caro’s fingers brushed her stomach. If she were to leave Drew’s home, now would be the time. In a few weeks she would need a maid to let out her clothes, if the child lived that long.
The opportunity to speak to Drew did not come until the next day. She did not go down to breakfast because she was feeling nauseous and the smells of the foods turned her stomach, but after Mary and Drew had eaten she asked one of the footmen where to find him.
“In the library, my lady.”
She knocked on the door gently. It was where he studied the estate books and read his letters. It meant he was working—and alone.
“Come in.”
She opened the door and slipped around it. He sat at a desk that looked out through the window onto the gardens. She smiled. He loved what he’d achieved, his home, his property, but, most importantly, his wife and his family. He deserved to live here with them and not to have a sister hanging about his neck and sucking the life from him.
He stood up swiftly. “How may I help you, Caro?”
When she walked over to him, he gripped both her hands, the gesture saying that he knew why she spent her days so quietly—because of Rob.
“Do you think Rob is truly well,” she asked first.
“His father says so. He would have no need to lie to Mary.”
“Yet Rob has not written, and we know he is capable of acting before his family.”
“His father would see it. I believe he is well, but obviously he prefers to distance himself from the situation and from us now. I understand. It is what I did when Mary left me, if you remember.”
“Yes, but you were a fool, and Rob is not.”
He laughed. “No, he is the most sensible man I know.”
The words shivered through Caro. He was. Rob was wonderful. Her palm lay over her stomach. “Drew, I wish to ask for something.”
“Ask.”
“Do you still own the cottage in Maidstone? Is it empty?”
He looked struck. “Why?”
“I wish to move there. I would not feel so reliant upon you there, if I might have an allowance. Perhaps you would sell the jewellery that I brought with me when I left Albert. You have never let me touch it, but if you invested the money on my behalf I could live on an income from it. I would not need much, and yet it would allow me to live as I wished, quietly, but independently.”
“Where has this come from?”
“Since we went to London I have discovered myself again and I have never liked the person who’s lived here. I would rather be my own woman.” There she could let her child grow within her too, without fear of others noticing or questioning it. If she was lucky, she had another six to eight weeks to know her child.
“If it will make you happier…”
“It will.”
“I own the property, but there are tenants there. I will need to give them four weeks’ notice.”
Caro nodded. She longed for that dark little cottage suddenly. Perhaps it would hurt to leave George and Iris here, and yet once her child had passed, she would visit them often.
Rob’s mother helped him into a dressing gown, so that Rob could move from the bed to a chair. He was to spend his afternoon there. They had positioned it by the window, with a high stool to put his splinted leg up on. It was the first time he’d been allowed to rise.
She slid the silk carefully over his splinted hand and then pulled it up his arm. The doctor had said the splints could be removed from his hand in two weeks.
“Your father said you asked Caroline to marry you…”
Lord
. Rob laughed, on a choke, and coughed as his good hand pressed against his painful ribs. “He said he would not tell you.”
“He said you had not asked him not to speak, but that if he told me I must swear not to mention it to anyone, and he asked me not to mention it to you. But I would have known anyway. You spoke her name more than a dozen times in your sleep when you were taking laudanum.”
He sighed as he lowered his arm. “And Papa must have told you that she refused me.”
His mother gave him a close-lipped smile as she held the dressing gown so he could put his good arm into the other sleeve.
“He said I should try again. What do you think?”
Her smile parted her lips. “If you feel so much for her, why would you not? But I would counsel, as your father did, that you should not hurry it. Give yourself time. You are young.”
He sighed. He did not feel so young any more. He did not feel young at all. He’d survived a physical and emotional trauma in the last few weeks.
“I will fetch your uncle to help you stand. Papa is at John’s with the children.”
“I can move without his help. Simply let me set my arm about you.”
“Ever belligerent. You know you were not so until you went to school. Since then you have always fought so hard to be independent.”
“Because it was easier than fighting to be noticed at home,” he winced as he slid across the bed, trying not to jolt his broken leg. “I left the attention-seeking to Harry. He always had a way for it, winding Papa up. I have never been interested in competing with him.”
“So you decided to play holier than thou and gloat.”
A smile pulled at his lips and a sound of amusement rumbled in his chest as she gripped his arm to help him stand.
He pushed down on the mattress with his good hand and took his weight on his good leg, but what he had not accounted for was that after six weeks’ lying on a bed, his good leg was no longer strong enough to take his weight. He fell back and cried out from the pain which jarred his broken leg, his ribs, and his hand as he instinctively tried to grip the mattress.
“I will fetch your uncle.”
“Would you pass the water first?” He did not wish to admit to her that he felt shaky and dizzy. He did not wish to be told he ought to stay in bed.
As she picked up the water he stared at the chair. It might as well be a bloody mile away.
“You are so like your father,” she said as she handed him the water. “I should have known you would fall for a woman who needed a knight in shining armour.”
His eyebrows lifted. “Was Papa that to you, then?” They never spoke of how they’d met.
She smiled as he sipped more water. “He was, yes. I needed saving and he saved me. And yet it took me time to dare to trust that he could.”
“Why did you need saving?”
The look she gave him was cautious. “I was not in a good place. I do not like to discuss it, yet I mentioned it only because I understand Caroline far more than anyone else in the family.”
“John’s father?” he asked.
“No.” The sharp pitch of her voice told him not to ask any more. “I will fetch your uncle, and do not decide to make your way to the chair yourself.”
He smiled. No, he would not. He was beginning to learn his boundaries.
Uncle Robert returned with her and put his arm beneath Rob’s shoulder to help him rise, then let Rob lean heavily on him as he slowly hopped across the room. But each movement sent agony racing through his broken leg. He breathed heavily when he sat down. His uncle stared at him. “Do you wish me to stay?”
“No, Mama may settle me in, and then I will watch the street and perhaps read.”
His uncle smiled then left them, while his mother moved his broken leg carefully and set it more comfortably on the stool. Then she fetched a blanket.