Free Read Novels Online Home

All Things Merry and Bright: A Very Special Christmas Tale Collection by Kathryn Le Veque, Tanya Anne Crosby, Erica Ridley, Eliza Knight, Barbara Devlin, Suzan Tisdale, Glynnis Campbell (23)

Chapter Five

December 24, 1816

To Mark’s unmitigated gratitude, the owner of the chicken farm maintained a small cabin for seasonal workers, near the hen houses, so he and Frederick enjoyed their own bunks and a relatively quiet accommodation, after the miserable sleigh ride. Fortunately for him, Cuthbert’s cousin James planned a trip to Faversham the next day, because his wife had relations in the area, and they intended to spend the holidays with their family.

Sitting at a small table, he inhaled the scrambled eggs, toast, and kippers a charwoman delivered just after dawn, because James wanted to get an early start. For some reason Mark did not quite understand, the host suggested the journey to Faversham would take the entire day, when they should have made it in a couple of hours by coach.

“Oh, I forgot to mention I borrowed a blade, if you want to shave.” Frederick drained his cup of tea and wiped his mouth. “You know, for the first time since we commenced this nightmare of a trip, I actually feel human after that marvelous hot bath. And I am thrilled that we do not have to ride a horse to get you home, because my arse still smarts. Now, if only I had a change of clothes, I should celebrate, but I suppose we had to leave our trunks with your man, because we could not carry them. By the by, you have a boney arse.”

“See? Things are getting better, and I acknowledge your criticism, but my Amanda has no complaints, and she is all that matters.” Mark stood and walked to the washstand. “And we will soon be home.” Something occurred to him, as he grabbed the soap. “What of your parents? And do you not have two sisters? They cannot all be gone. Why do you not celebrate Christmastide with them?”

“Life happened, Mark.” Frederick tried in vain to smooth the wrinkles from his coat. “While you and I sailed the seas and climbed the ranks of the Royal Navy, life happened without us, and we cannot change it. For some, upon return, what remained of their world included no place for them, and it is just as well.”

“But you can go home and visit, can you not?” Mark worked up a thick lather and smeared it over his skin. In the mirror, he monitored his handiwork as he shaved and tried not to reflect on the worry his wife, no doubt, suffered. There would be hell to pay, but he would gladly do her bidding to pass the night in her arms. “Do they still reside in Portsmouth, or was it Plymouth?”

“Plymouth.” Frederick stacked the dishes and folded the cloth napkins. “There is still some tea in the pot, if you want it.”

“No, thank you.” Mark rinsed and dried his face. After kissing the portrait miniature of his bride, he tucked it, along with her handkerchief, in the little pocket of his waistcoat and donned his coat. “I say, did not your elder sister marry a lobster? As I recall, he was a lieutenant assigned to the Inconstant, was he not?”

“Yes.” Frederick folded the blanket from his bunk. “What of it?”

“I was just wondering—”

Oy.” James opened the door to the cabin, and Mark turned. “Admirals, we are ready to depart, if you will join us in the yard.”

“I am only too delighted.” He held the oak panel for his friend and followed him outside, where a large cart awaited, and he halted in his tracks, as his stomach sank. Frederick would never forgive Mark. “Hell and the Reaper.”

“You are going to pay for this,” Frederick whispered. “And I am not talking about something as simple as brandy and cigars.”

“I could not have possibly known.” Mark reminded himself of his predicament, and he was in no position to be choosy. “But it may not be that bad.”

“Since I have to go to Faversham, I figured I would work along the way.” Without a care, James lifted his wife, who carried a small babe, to the seat. “Just jump in the back, and make yourselves comfortable, because we have several stops to make, given I have numerous orders to fill.”

So that was why the relatively short journey would take all day.

“Right.” Mark offered Frederick a hand, but he slapped him aside.

“I can do it myself.” With a wild series of grunts, in perfect time with multiple failed leaps, Frederick gained the cart with a healthy push from Mark. “Where are we to sit?”

“Anywhere there is room,” James replied. “And hurry it up, as I would like to make Faversham by nightfall.”

“Nightfall?” Frederick remarked in a high-pitched tone, as his eyes widened. “And what a lovely smell you have discovered.”

“Stop grousing.” Mark climbed into the not-so-elegant rig and shoved aside a crate. “Would you rather walk?”

“Yes.” A chicken clucked a response, and Frederick rolled his eyes. “And I thought it could not get worse.”

“My friend, if there is anything we learned in the navy, it is that it can always get worse.” Tucked amid stacks and stacks of foul fowl, Mark and Frederick held fast, as James barked a command, and the cart pitched and lurched into motion. After navigating the farm road, the cart turned onto the lane with a mighty jolt, which thrust Frederick at Mark. “Really, though, it is somewhat comfortable, and the birds deflect some of the wind.”

“Keep telling yourself that, because you just might believe it.” Frederick shook his head. Somewhere in the heap a rooster crowed. “Oh, shut up.”

Christmas Eve was always a calamitous affair in the Douglas household. With the entire Brethren family gathered in the drawing room, Amanda sat in a high back chair near the window, bouncing Horatio in her lap and searching through the snow for any sign of Mark.

“Lady Amanda, would you care for more tea?” Red-faced and sporting puffy eyes, as if from crying, Eileen dragged a chair near the hearth. “Or, perhaps, some company?”

“They can be a bit overwhelming, but you will accustom yourself to them.” Amanda tittered, as Weston, Trevor’s heir, rode Blake’s back, and Edward, Everett’s heir, mounted his papa and charged with great fanfare. “And I hope my nephew did not ruin your holiday. George is a nice boy, if only he remembers that.”

“But Viscount Huntingdon’s behavior does not signify, Lady Amanda.” Despite evidence to the contrary, Eileen projected a shaky smile. “His was harmless banter and play, and I apologize if I concerned you.”

“Nonsense, my dear.” In that moment, Amanda noted George’s attention focused on Eileen, and she arched a brow. Despite the protests, there were games afoot, and she met Hamilton’s stare.

“Yes, my lady?” The butler clasped his hands behind his back. “How may I be of service?”

“Send for the nannies, as it is time for the children to retire.” Shuffling Horatio, she bent her head and kissed his temple. “We should bring in the Yule Log, because the carolers will soon arrive to serenade us.”

Given that was always Mark’s task, she swallowed the bitter pill of disappointment as she issued orders to the Brethren. Again, she glanced out the window, as the sun set on the horizon and nightfall encroached with still no word of her husband.

“Allow me.” Dirk passed Angeline to Rebecca and elbowed his sibling. “Dalton, give me a hand.”

“Aye, brother.” Dalton saluted and kissed Daphne. “I will be right back, darling.”

“Mama, in light of Papa’s absence, should we wait to exchange gifts when he returns?” Sabrina hugged her swollen belly and frowned. “Christmastide does not seem the same without my father in residence.”

“My dear, I could not agree more.” Fingering the expensive necklace at her throat, Amanda lamented Mark’s empty chair, where they often spent lazy afternoons. “But he would not want us to forgo our customary celebrations on his account, so you may indulge as you see fit.”

After the nannies collected the younger generation of Brethren, Amanda perused the tea trolley and the half-empty decanter of brandy. Given the servants busied themselves with various responsibilities, she decided to retrieve a bottle of the amber liquor from Mark’s study.

As she strolled into the foyer, she spied the distinct glow of coach lights and shrieked. “It is Mark!”

Her shout of alarm brought the household running, and she yanked open the door without summoning the butler. The coach drew to a halt, as she descended the entrance stairs, and then she drew up short.

The rig was empty.

Biting the fleshy side of her hand, she sobbed.

“My lady.” The coachman tipped his hat and jumped from the seat. “I have come to deliver the trunks.”

“But—where is Admiral Douglas?” Choking on sheer terror, she fought tears. “Where is Mark?”

“The Admiral is not here?” The coachman blinked. “That is not possible, because he departed Dartford before I did, given I had to supervise repairs to the axle.”

“Repairs?” She swallowed hard. “What happened to the axle?”

“I beg your pardon, my lady, but I thought you knew.” As the footmen collected two trunks from the coach, Amanda waved the coachman inside, where it was warm. “So you have not seen Admiral Douglas or Admiral Maitland?”

“Clegg, you are the first to arrive, and I would have a full account of Admiral Douglas’s whereabouts.” In the foyer, she shut the door. Surrounded by her extended family, she resolved to remain calm, even as panic nipped at her heels. “Now, start at the beginning, and tell me everything.”

Had she thought she was frightened?

As Clegg relayed the harrowing accident, Amanda clutched Cara’s hand. To her relief, the coachman explained that Mark and his friend were not injured in the initial mishap, and for that she uttered a silent prayer of thanks. But when Clegg detailed Mark’s departure, on horseback no less, she grew more concerned by the minute.

Where was her beloved husband?

“After the Admiral and Admiral Maitland made for Rochester, I engaged the services of a local builder to refit the axle and replace the broken wheels, and I resumed the journey yesterday.” Clegg furrowed his brow and frowned. “I assumed they were here, my lady.”

“We should form a search party,” stated Blake in a grave voice. “They could be injured.”

“The roads are too hazardous—you said so, yourself.” Amanda considered the possibilities. “And Mark would not want you to risk your lives on his behalf, thus I will not allow it.”

“My lady, this is my fault.” Clegg bowed his head. “I will leave, at once, to find the Admiral.”

“No, you will not.” As much as she wanted to yield to his position, she could not, in good conscience, do so. “But you may depart at dawn, and retrace the journey, that you might locate Admiral Douglas. For now, I would have you take a hot meal and get some rest, which you have more than earned, that you may be awake and alert, tomorrow.”

“Aye, my lady.” Clegg bowed and exited.

When Amanda confronted her family, she noted the lines of strain and grim faces.

“What is this?” She clapped twice. “Dirk, I believe you were going to carry in the Yule Log.” To Cara, Amanda said, “Dearest, would you be so good as to welcome the carolers, if I am not here to do so, as I left something in my chamber?”

“Of course, Mama.” Cara sniffed and wiped a stray tear. “All right, everyone. Let us return to the drawing room.”

Putting one foot in front of the other, Amanda climbed the grand staircase and crossed the gallery, blowing a kiss to Mark’s resplendent portrait, in insouciant salute. In the hall that led to their private apartment, she relaxed her shoulders and inhaled a deep breath. After navigating their sitting room, she continued to the inner chamber, marching straight to his side of their bed. Sitting at the edge of the mattress, she pulled his pillow from beneath the covers, hugged it to her chest, opened the door to her heartache, and wept.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Flora Ferrari, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Kathi S. Barton, Bella Forrest, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Michelle Love, Penny Wylder, Mia Ford, Piper Davenport, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers,

Random Novels

Eleven Scandals to Start to Win a Duke’s Heart by Sarah Maclean

Melody Anne's Billionaire Universe: Apple Pie, and All That Jazz (A Billionaire Romance) (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Melanie Marchande

Royal Bastards by Andrew Shvarts

Drunk on You by Harper Sloan

DIABLO: Night Rebels Motorcycle Club (Night Rebels MC Romance Book 3) by Chiah Wilder

Loving The Law (Savage Love Book 4) by Preston Walker

Starry Eyes by Jenn Bennett

Power Player: Anti-Hero Game (Power Chain Book 2) by Ryan Michele, Chelsesa Camaron

The Love Boss by Aurora Peridot

Beautiful Potential: A Contemporary Romance Novel by J. Saman

by Ava Sinclair

One Good Man: a novella by Emma Scott

Mountain Man's Baby Surprise (A Mountain Man's Baby Romance) by Lia Lee, Ella Brooke

All Things New by Lauren Miller

An Unlikely Debutante by Laura Martin

His Sweet Treat (Steel Daggers MC Book 1) by Elisa Leigh

In His Arms: (The Vault) by M. Stratton

The First Sin (Sins of the Past Book 1) by Jillian Quinn

Saddled On The Cowboy: A Hot Western Romance by Amanda Heartley

His Devil's Heat (Club Devil's Cove Book 2) by Linzi Basset