CHAPTER 20 #2

Gareth rolled onto his back after the convulsive pleasure subsided.

He took a deep breath and opened his eyes.

Long shadows danced on the nearest wall.

The light outside the windows showed dusk gathering to the east, but orange streaks enflamed the western sky.

The window framed it all like a picture.

Beside him on her back, her head facing away, Eva watched too, as if she memorized it.

He turned onto his stomach and threw his arm over her. She turned her head to him. Their noses almost touched.

“You made me seduce you again,” she said. “It doesn’t seem fair. You are supposed to seduce me.”

“I don’t break my promises, unless forced to, like today.”

“But you are supposed to be the bad one, not me. You are the one with the reputation.”

“Not as a rake. Not as a scoundrel.”

“No. As irresistible. I suppose I have proven that true once again.”

“Do not blame me if you know that you should not have what you want, and you decide to take what you want anyway.”

She turned her head, to look at the windows again. “It is pleasant lying like this. I suppose we cannot much longer.”

He was too comfortable to move. “Dinner is not for several hours.”

He began falling asleep, and dwelled on the cusp when she spoke again. “I am afraid a little about tomorrow night. I become more fretful with each passing hour. Even with that gown, I may not be suitable for such a fashionable assembly.”

She worried that she would not do. That reminded him of Whitmere’s assessment that indeed she would do.

“When you gaze in a looking glass, I do not know what you see, Eva. Not what I have seen since I almost knocked you down with my horse that day, that is obvious.”

“What did you see that day, besides an angry spinster standing in a puddle?”

“I saw a woman who knew herself, and who had the self-possession to scold a stranger. A lovely woman with changeable eyes. A brave lady, who did not lie to herself about the unladylike notions entering her head during that argument.”

“You were not supposed to notice the last part. I thought I was very good at hiding it.”

“Were my own thoughts not following the same path, you might have succeeded. But when two people share a sexual attraction that powerful that quickly, it is impossible to hide.”

She pressed her lips to his. “Also impossible to deny, it appears. It is very unfair that I must.”

In his mind, he began piecing together reassurance that he would not expect her to lapse again, but delicious rest seduced him into silence. That and the fact that he would be lying.

* * *

The even northern light, gray now and deepening fast, showed Gareth’s profile with heightened clarity. Subtle shadows formed, barely visible, that required the lightest touch with her chalk to imitate.

She sat in the chair she had moved to the side of the bed, down near its foot so she could challenge herself with a deeper perspective.

Gareth lay on his stomach, his body uncovered, the arm that had embraced her still extended over the space where she had lain.

Her sketchbook page showed his outline, and now she tried to make the figure real.

She studied his face long and hard, and with each moment she became less the artist and more the woman. She saw that face above her in her frenzy of pleasure, severe and sensual, not calm and almost soft like now. She saw it kind, with intimate humor in his eyes when he teased her.

She looked down and realized she had made no marks on the paper for some time.

The light would fade soon, and she must wake him to leave.

She finished the head, but not in detail.

She drew efficiently so she had enough to call forth a memory of how beautiful he looked right now.

Then she moved to his shoulders, trying hard to capture the complexity of anatomy there through highlights and shadows.

She had finished his shoulders and much of his back when the light became useless. She set her sketchbook and chalk on the table with the still life, and went to the bed. She touched his shoulder.

“You must go now. Dinner is in less than an hour.”

He sat up, wiped his eyes, and reached for his garments. Ten minutes later he appeared the same as when he had entered this chamber. Elegant. Confident. Devastating.

He would look the same tomorrow night, only better. She would enter that ball on his arm. His gift to her was a night to remember forever, and one that few women ever knew.

Only the memory that would never die was that of this moment, while she watched him fix his cuffs in the chamber’s shadows. She would never forget the emotion having its way with her.

Desire, he called it. Tempestuous and compelling, but still mere desire. Transitory. Not love the way the poets described. That was an illusion, invented to pretty up base lust.

Perhaps so. She lacked the experience to argue, or to contain and control it.

It was a cursed thing, the human heart. It knew no sense, no discipline. It led one to love what could destroy it, and did not know the difference between joy and pain.

* * *

The next morning, after learning nothing of interest in his conversation with Clifford, Gareth rode out to Ramsgate with Ives to talk to the owner of the transport company that had carried the pictures north.

The man appeared honest enough, and Ives and he agreed that if something had gone wrong in transit, he was probably not involved.

Upon returning to the house in mid-afternoon, all was quiet. The preparations for the ball no doubt were under way. He doubted Eva would emerge from Sarah’s chambers until it was time for the coach.

His own preparations had to wait. Lance had left a summons for him with the butler.

He went above and found Lance being groomed for the day.

Another man sat in the dressing room, sipping wine and looking impatient.

Gareth knew him. Viscount Demmiwood had been friends with Lance until he had married and given up his more reckless, rakish habits.

The intervening years had not been kind to the viscount. While Lance looked to be on the older side of young, Demmiwood appeared more the younger side of old. A paunch of contentment stretched his waistcoat. The fair curls tousling forward over his forehead did not hide a receding hairline.

Right now that forehead showed the pink tint and sheen of sweat that indicated the viscount experienced distress. He kept crossing and uncrossing his legs.

Lance interrupted his hated shave to greet Gareth. “You know Demmiwood. He has come to me with an extraordinary tale. I told him you and Ives should hear it, but the footman sent to Ives’s apartment came back saying he was not home.”

“We both went out of town. He should be back now. Send for him again.”

“I’ve no time for this,” Demmiwood said. “I have to prepare for the DeVere ball.”

“As does Gareth,” Lance said. “No time to waste, then. Tell him, Demmiwood.”

The viscount set down his wine. Gareth gave his attention.

“Two days ago, a picture seller who has been known at times to get his hands on excellent pictures, wrote and asked to call on me. He had something very special, he said. Very choice. Secretive, he was, as if he dared not be specific because others might get in before me if the details were made known. From his excitement, I guessed it would be a Gainsborough. I, like my father before me, am well known as a collector of his work. Finding ones that are not portraits is difficult, of course.”

“So you were interested.”

“Certainly. I may not have my father’s eye, but I am known as a connoisseur.”

Actually, Demmiwood was known as an easy mark.

His willingness to pay good money for weak work was infamous.

He had amassed one of the finest collections of second-rate art in England.

Gareth had been tempted to unload the less satisfactory remnants of one of his brokered collections on him, but did not out of respect for Demmiwood’s old friendship with Lance.

“So I met with this man. He presented me with this.” Demmiwood reached down beside the divan on which he sat and lifted a small picture with a gilt plaster frame. “‘Gainsborough,’ he said. Normally I would have been delighted. However, with one look I knew all was not right.”

“It is forgery, that is certain. A very good one, but still a forgery.”

“I told you Gareth was good,” Lance said. “He spotted a problem from fifteen paces.”

“It is not only a forgery,” Demmiwood said, his agitation growing. “It is a copy. The original used to hang in the gallery of my estate. That is my father.” He pointed at one of the figures. “This is a portrait of him and his brothers when they were boys.”

Gareth went over, took the painting, and retreated to a window to examine it in the light.

“Hell of a thing,” Demmiwood said. “To be offered a forged copy of your own painting!”

“Did you accuse the picture seller of attempting fraud?”

“I did not. I swallowed my outrage, and asked him to leave it with me for a few days while I decided. I did not want to alert him that I knew his game and have him hop a packet.”

“I am grateful you did not alert him. You said this used to hang in your gallery—”

“Demmiwood’s county seat is in Sussex, of course,” Lance said, meaningfully. “Gareth knows all about the missing pictures, Demmiwood.”

“Then he may not be surprised that the original was among them. Packed up and shipped to safety, or so we all thought. Now, this.” His hand flourished at the picture in Gareth’s hands.

Gareth rubbed his thumb along the low corner. Still tacky. The painting had not been done long ago. More likely just months had passed.

Which meant whoever painted this had the original available very recently. It was the first mistake of whoever stole those pictures. With luck it would be all that was needed.

“When does this picture seller expect this back?”

“The painting or my money is expected tomorrow. I debated whether I could force him to tell me the whereabouts of the original, but after contemplating that, I doubted he would even admit to the crime, let along give information that might get him transported.”

Gareth set the picture down next to the divan again. “Give me his name, please. And leave this here for now, in case it is needed.”

Information in hand, Gareth went to his chamber and wrote a note to Ives informing him of the need to call on a picture seller in the morning.

After that he read for two hours, until the manservant he was using at Langley House arrived to help him dress.

At ten o’clock, he left his chamber, walked downstairs, and poured some sherry in a chamber that flanked the reception hall.

He did not have to wait long. Soon a genteel commotion hummed and echoed on the stairs.

Feminine giggles and whispers, and one “Head high, now.” He went to the reception hall and looked up the stairwell.

He caught a glimpse of pale silk and flickering glints, of Sarah’s red hair and Rebecca’s young face.

They turned on the landing and descended. Eva looked resplendent in a blush silk gown dripping with tiny pearls and priceless lace. A matching headdress with two feathers decorated her curled brown hair and a downy shawl draped low on her arms. She all but floated down to meet him.

Beautiful. Poised. Regal. She knew it too. She glowed.

He took her arm. “You are stunningly beautiful, Eva.”

As she entered the coach, he spotted something unexpected.

Entwined amid her curls, almost hidden by the headdress, a spot of color offset all the whites and creams much the way a few violets caused a white night garden to appear all the richer.

The artist had tucked a simple ribbon in her hair, to vary the palette just enough to avoid it being predictable. A lavender ribbon.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.