Chapter 41
The earl was determined to go out.
He eyed his reflection in the mirror as he adjusted his tie, black against the snowy whiteness of his shirt and the silver of his brocade vest. He slipped on a dinner jacket with tails.
It was two days since the scandal had broken, three since he’d lain with his wife.
They’d been avoiding each other with purposeful determination—he had only passed her in the corridors coming and going.
She had not come down to breakfast since their fight.
He should be glad, but he wasn’t. He was angry, and maybe even depressed.
He had his own sources, so he knew the theater was packed every night since their marriage, just as he knew Jane was right—people were going now to see her, the Fallen Angel, to feast with their own eyes upon the Lord of Darkness’s wife, the mother of his bastard.
Sometimes she was heckled by the audience, usually after the final curtain, but once in a while during an act.
The press would still be hounding her if it wasn’t for him.
He had assigned two manservants to Jane, to keep them away from her.
He wanted to help her, but he didn’t know how.
He eyed himself with distaste in the mirror.
She’d had only to marry him to find the devil’s tail and descend with him into sheer hell.
She was his wife and, being such, was brought down with him.
Had he foreseen the consequences, he would have never married her, despite Nicole, because it was killing him to watch her suffer so staunchly.
He could bear the unbearable burden of scandal and ostracism, but Jane was fragile, no matter how brave.
And she was kind and good. She did not deserve what he had brought down upon her.
That he was the instrument of her ruination tortured him.
He sighed heavily and left the room. His strides slowed as he went down the hall, getting slower still when he heard Chad laughing. The sound came from her sitting room. Then he heard her voice, the words not yet distinct. Slowing even more, he finally hesitated, just beyond the partly open door.
“‘But what shall we do?’ Gretel cried. She was afraid of the witch.
“‘Don’t worry,’ Hansel replied. ‘I have a wonderful idea. We’ll take stones, Gretel, and drop them behind us to leave a trail so we can find our way!’” Jane read animatedly.
“He’s smart,” Chad cried excitedly. “It’s what I would do!”
“Is it?” Jane asked, affection in her tone.
The earl swallowed heavily. She was reading a fairy tale to his son. Unable to go on, he stepped closer, to peer into the room.
Jane continued reading. She was seated on the watered silk settee, her legs bent beneath her.
Nicole was in the crook of one arm, sucking her thumb contentedly.
Chad sat on the floor at her feet, leaning against the sofa, gazing up at her raptly.
A blooded Labrador puppy that the earl had given him on his last birthday gamboled around his feet.
The earl could not breathe. He listened to Jane’s sweet, soft voice, his gaze fixed upon her. Her hair was loose, falling over her shoulders in glorious disarray. Nicole decided to suck on a hunk, but Jane didn’t seem to notice or even mind. She was so beautiful. She was such a wonderful mother.
He closed his eyes briefly. He was on his way to a party, with Amelia.
Opening them, he knew such a lump of longing he could not swallow it.
He did not want to go out. He wanted to go inside Jane’s room, sit on the end of the settee at her feet, and listen to her read to their children. He wanted it so badly it hurt.
Yet he was afraid. Nothing could make him enter that room. Nor could he force his feet to move to continue on his way.
And then she looked up, as Chad shrieked at something she’d read, and she saw him.
Her expression was wide-eyed, and she stared.
The earl didn’t move, he couldn’t.
“Papa!” Chad shouted, bouncing to his feet. He ran to the earl and hugged his thighs, then tugged on him. “Come, listen to the story about the witch!”
The earl stared at Jane, his heart pounding in his ears. She was motionless, like a small, mesmerized bird. She did not invite him in.
He felt the acute disappointment washing over him.
He found his ability to function, and he ruffled Chad’s hair. “Sorry, son, I have an appointment.”
Chad pouted briefly, then raced back to his spot on the floor at Jane’s feet. Color was suffusing her face, and she dropped her gaze to the book. “Have a nice evening,” she said, strained.
“Thank you,” he returned, equally strained. “You too.”
His limbs were wooden, but he managed to turn and leave. And as he went downstairs he listened intently to her voice until he could hear it no more.
Jane couldn’t shake the incident from her mind. Had the earl wanted to join them? Should she have invited him in? She felt guilty that she had not, guilty and cruel, yet he had told Chad he had an appointment. Appointment! Hah! With that damned tart Amelia, undoubtedly.
It hurt. It hurt too much to even think about, yet Jane could no more turn off her thoughts than she could stop a flood. She had never dreamed marriage to him would be so painful.
She was tired, exhausted in fact, from the stress of the past few days, both of living in high tension with the earl, even though they rarely saw each other, and of living with the scandal that London was still thriving on.
There had been another packed house, although not quite full this time.
The hecklers had been worse than ever tonight.
Some drunken men in a front row had been taunting her with epithets throughout the final act.
Jane had ignored them, but their cries for her to be their Fallen Angel had truly shaken her.
She slumped on the sofa in her dressing room at the Criterion.
“I know just how to cheer you up,” Lindley said, entering the room.
Jane suddenly felt tears come to her eyes. Tears of self-pity that his presence had brought instantly.
“What’s this!” he cried, dropping down besides her and taking both of her hands. “Jane, are you crying?”
She sniffed and fought the tears and the urge to unburden herself and tell him all of her troubles. “No, no, I’m fine. Just tired.”
He touched her temple, smoothing away hair. “It’s the godawful scandal, isn’t it?”
Jane nodded glumly.
“It will pass.”
“So everyone says.”
He stared at her, and she knew he wanted to ask her questions, intimate ones, about her life with the earl. But Lindley was a gentleman, and still holding her hands, he sat straighter. “Let’s go to a party.”
“I can’t,” she said immediately. “I’m too tired.”
“Ah, but this is no elegant soirée. This is artists and bohemians and students and it will be full of wine and food and fun. Trust me,” he added, his brown eyes sincere.
Jane suddenly smiled. “How do you know artists and bohemians, Jon?”
He grinned. “I’ll never tell.”
She thought about going home—while he was out with Amelia—and was suddenly determined to have fun, to enjoy herself, to live. “All right! Just let me remove this makeup and change.”
* * *
The party was in the cellar of an old building near the Thames on the Strand.
The cellar was some sort of avant-garde cafe, Parisian style.
As they descended rickety wooden stairs, a raucous din could be heard.
Lindley had Jane’s arm, for she was wearing high-heeled red shoes, to help her down.
They pushed through a glass door on the bottom landing.
The interior was crowded and smoky and dimly lighted.
Many small tables were packed within, all apparently full.
All the aisles were crowded too. Jane saw that the crowd was half Society, elegantly dressed for an evening at the theater or opera or private soirées, and partly young students in casual tweeds.
There were even a few women in bloomers, smoking cigarettes.
A stunning African woman stood by a piano singing to a tune beat out ebulliently by a mustachioed player.
A few of the bohemian couples were dancing enthusiastically and wildly near the piano, between the tables and the diners.
Jane’s fatigue fled. She looked at the grinning Lindley and laughed. “Let’s dance,” she cried impulsively.
Lindley was delighted. He pulled her into his arms and whirled her about in the aisle. It was no sedate waltz, this, but something spontaneous and rhythmic and quite original. Someone at the table crowding them began to clap, and others joined in.
The song ended and the woman began another one, this one soulful and melancholy, the beat slow. Lindley didn’t hesitate, but moved Jane into his swaying, barely moving embrace. Jane stiffened. “Jon, what are you doing?”
“You said you wanted to dance,” he replied gruffly.
Jane could feel every inch of his body, the way he was holding her. She wasn’t sure she liked it. She thought of the earl and felt guilty. Yet she was so alone, and she needed somebody. To be held intimately like this was wrenchingly wonderful. She started to relax.
“You’re so damn beautiful,” Lindley whispered, his breath warm on her cheek.
Jane didn’t know what to say, so she said nothing.
When the song ended, Lindley let her pull away. Jane was both embarrassed and agitated from the intimacy they had shared. “Shall we find a place to sit?” she asked uncertainly.
“We can try,” he said, taking her hand. He started to lead her forward, but a couple barred their way in the narrow aisle.
The man was large and dark, and although at first indistinguishable amid the dim illumination, the flickering candles and foglike swirling smoke, so very familiar.
His stance was rigid. It was the Earl of Dragmore.
Jane could not believe it.
His gaze was a furious silver, locked on Lindley. Lindley broke the strained silence. “Hullo, Shelton, Amelia.”
It was then that Jane saw the redhead. As usual, Amelia looked voluptuous and beautiful—and she was grinning. “Hi, Jon,” she purred.
The earl looked from Lindley to Jane. Jane met his gaze, her apprehension immense.
She knew he was enraged to find her there with Lindley, yet he was there with Amelia.
What a pretty coil, she thought, suddenly sick and miserable.
Her instincts were to preempt any eruption from occurring.
“Hello, Nicholas,” she said quietly. He flinched as if shot at the sound of his name. “Amelia.”
The earl’s regard burned her. “Are you enjoying yourself, Jane?” His tone was biting.
She looked at him, eyes wide. “No. I have quite the headache.”
Amelia snickered, glued to the Earl’s side and pressing closer. “Maybe you should go home, to bed,” she said snidely, implying that Lindley would be in it as well.
“You’re quite right.” Jane turned to Lindley. “Would you take me home? I don’t feel well from all this smoke and noise.”
“Of course,” he said promptly. Then he looked at the earl. “Unless, of course, Nick wants to escort you back.”
Jane suddenly froze, her heart clamoring with sudden hope.
The earl’s lips curled up, baring his white teeth. “She came with you, she can leave with you. I have other plans.”
Jane closed her eyes briefly. His cruel words hurt. If only she could hate him. She took Lindley’s arm and they made their way out through the crowd.
So she didn’t see the earl start after them, only to stop as abruptly, wrestling with some inner demon.
“Let them go.” Amelia pouted.
“Shut up,” he said, his eyes never leaving their departing forms. He took another strained step forward, then cursed viciously, raking a hand through his hair. He stared after his wife, until she disappeared through the door.
And the demons howled deep within him.