Free Read Novels Online Home

When to Engage an Earl by Sally MacKenzie (11)

Chapter Eleven
Loves Bridge, Mid-February 1818
 
Jane stood in the Spinster House study, books to her left, old harpsichord to her right, and looked out on the bleak landscape. The garden that had been so green and wild in the late spring and summer was shriveled and dead in the chill, gray February light.
She felt a bit shriveled and gray and dead, too.
Poppy jumped up on the window seat in front of her and leaned over to butt her head against Jane’s limp hand.
“Oh, Poppy.” She started stroking the cat. As her fingers moved rhythmically over the soft fur, the knot in her chest began to loosen.
She knew part of what was causing her low spirits. She wasn’t lonely, precisely, but she definitely missed her friends. Anne had moved away entirely, and Cat might just as well have, being so busy at the castle.
No, that wasn’t quite it, either. Jane had been avoiding Cat, because, well, she didn’t want to talk about babies. Even Randolph and Imogen were infant-mad.
She liked her independent, orderly existence. She was in complete control of her days. She arrived at Randolph’s office precisely at the same time every morning and left at the same time in the evening. She set her schedule at the lending library. She ate what she wished when she wished. If she wanted to go to bed early, she did—or she could stay up most of the night reading. No one would comment or complain or offer any sort of an opinion on her choices.
Well, no one but Poppy.
But if she had a husband, she’d have to consider his wishes. Even worse, husbands led to babies—she had plenty of evidence of that around her, didn’t she? And then her precious independence would fly out the window. Babies ruled a mother’s life completely.
“Being independent needn’t mean being lonely, Poppy.”
“Merrow.”
Of course Poppy would agree. Cats were at heart solitary creatures. Jane just needed to find new friends, people she could discuss books and current events and other non-baby topics with. But who was there? Loves Bridge was a small village. Every woman her age was married, and she certainly couldn’t join a group of men.
And that made her think of Lord Evans. She’d thought of him rather too often since she’d come home from Chanton Manor.
Of course she had. He was an intelligent, articulate man. It was a pleasure to converse with him.
And he made her feel oddly alive.
What would have happened if I hadn’t stopped his kiss in the garden?
An unpleasant mixture of regret, desire, and nerves twisted in her chest.
She made a dismissive sound and looked away from the window. The reason for her blue-devils was clear—and it had nothing to do with the earl. A dark sadness permeated the entire country. They’d only just put aside formal mourning for Princess Charlotte, who had died three months earlier after giving birth to a stillborn son. The succession was in shambles. The three royal dukes who were free to marry were scrambling to find a wife and produce a child.
And beyond that, everyone in Loves Bridge was on edge because of the curse. Cat’s baby was due at the end of the month. The village was holding its collective breath, waiting to see if the duke would live to see his heir. Poor Cat was shredded with worry, afraid she and her baby would die like the princess and little prince or her precious Marcus would.
Cat could be carrying a girl.
“Merrow.”
Jane sat down next to Poppy. “You’re right. It would be better to learn now that the curse is broken.” She looked carefully at Poppy. “The duke will live, won’t he?”
“Mer-row.” Poppy appeared to nod.
Jane released the breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. “Good. That’s what I was hoping you’d—”
Good Lord, had she completely lost her mind? It was bad enough talking to a cat—she’d been doing a lot of that recently, now that her friends and her brother were married—but to think that the animal was actually replying . . .
She got up and walked into the sitting room. She still intended to redecorate, but the only change she’d made so far was to replace the hideous picture of a hunting dog with a painting she’d found in the cluttered room where the puppet stage had been.
She studied the new picture. A tricolored cat—which looked remarkably like Poppy—watched a brown bird intently.
Poppy passed between her and the painting, heading for the front door.
“So you want to be let out now, do you? All right, I’ll—” Jane jumped in surprise as someone knocked. Who could that be?
Poppy looked at her as if to say “What are you waiting for?” and then sat down and proceeded to clean her paws.
I swear that animal is supernatural.
She threw open the door to find an extremely pregnant Duchess of Hart on her doorstep.
“Cat!” Jane looked behind Cat and then right and left. “Where’s the duke?”
“Visiting Baron Davenport. I drove in with Mary.”
Mary, one of Cat’s younger sisters, was married to Theodore Dunly, the duke’s assistant steward, and was expecting her first child at about the same time as Cat.
“Not in the pony cart, I hope?” Jane could not think it wise for two very pregnant ladies to be rattling around in such a conveyance.
Cat laughed. “Yes, in the pony cart. If we’d been rash enough to try any of Marcus’s carriages, we’d surely have ended in a ditch.”
“You could have had John Coachman drive you in.”
“Oh, pooh! Why bother him?”
Everyone said Cat was carrying well, but she looked enormous to Jane. She stood back—way back—to let Cat waddle past her. “But the baby—well, the babies”—she shouldn’t forget Mary—“are due so soon.”
“Not for another week or two. Everyone says first babies are late.” Cat was panting slightly, her hand on her belly. “And it’s not like I traveled a great distance.”
Any distance was too great, in Jane’s opinion. “If you’d sent word, I would have come to the castle.”
Cat lowered herself carefully onto the settee. “Oh, I didn’t come in to see you—I came to see Mama. But then I saw the Spinster House and decided to stop here while Mary went on ahead to the vicarage.” She smiled. “We haven’t had a comfortable coze for the longest time. I don’t know why.”
Perhaps because I’ve been trying very hard to avoid one.
Jane sat in the armchair across from the settee—she didn’t want to risk bouncing Cat and somehow hastening the emergence of the large melon in Cat’s belly—and watched Cat look around the room.
“I thought you were going to redecorate.”
“I’m still deciding what I want.” There was no rush. She had the rest of her life here.
Her gray feeling grew a little darker.
“You know you can choose what you want and send the bills to Marcus.”
“Yes.” She did know that. She just couldn’t find the energy to care much about her surroundings.
Cat’s eyes focused on the new painting. “I see you at least got rid of that horrible hunting picture.” She grinned. “Though I think perhaps this animal has hunting on its mind as well.” She squinted and tilted her head. “Is it my imagination or does that cat look very much like Poppy?”
They both looked at Poppy.
Poppy raised her leg and started licking her nether regions.
They averted their gazes.
“I’ve made a lot of changes at the castle,” Cat continued. “You must come out and see the place. Maybe you’ll get some ideas for improvements here.”
“Um. Yes. That would be nice.”
Cat shifted on the settee as if she wasn’t quite comfortable and tried again to find something they could discuss. “Did you hear Miss Franklin—I mean, the Duchess of Benton—had a healthy boy last month?”
“No.”
Cat frowned. “I’m sure it was in all the papers.”
Jane had stopped reading the papers. The news was too depressing, and her feelings were low enough. And, to be brutally honest, she didn’t want to risk stumbling across mention of a certain earl linked to any Society woman. “I must have missed it.”
Cat nodded doubtfully, and then changed the topic again, this time disastrously. “You’ve never really told me how your visit to Chanton Manor went.”
Lud! Jane felt her face flush. She looked down quickly to hide her expression. She didn’t wish to discuss that subject.
She cleared her throat. “It was fine.”
Cat waited. Jane kept her lips firmly closed.
“How romantic that Randolph met Imogen again. And they didn’t waste any time, did they?” Cat rubbed her belly. “To think Randolph will have a child six months younger than mine and Mary’s—and Lady Davenport’s. Lady Davenport’s baby should arrive any day now.”
Everyone is having babies.
Which was fine, of course. That’s what married couples did. She was the Spinster House spinster. She wanted nothing to do with babies, though she would try her best to admire any that were presented for her inspection.
Poppy, having finally groomed herself to her momentary satisfaction, came over and jumped up into Jane’s lap. She settled down, warm, heavy, and available for petting. Gratefully, Jane buried her fingers in the cat’s fur.
There was something very calming about stroking a cat, even one with vaguely supernatural qualities.
“I wonder if Randolph and Imogen’s baby will be a boy or a girl?”
This really was getting tedious. Jane understood babies were on Cat’s mind and—Jane’s eyes dropped again to Cat’s enormous belly—other organs, but one would hope she might be a little more sensitive to Jane’s position. Not that her baby-less future dismayed her. Not at all. She just found the topic deadly dull.
“It will be one or the other.” Jane forced herself to smile. “Would you like some tea?”
Cat’s face froze—and then fell into a polite, if hurt, expression. “No, thank you.”
Lud! Cat had been one of her closest friends, and now it felt as if they were mere acquaintances.
It wasn’t Cat’s fault. Yes, her life had moved on in ways Jane’s hadn’t, but if Jane had been completely happy as the Spinster House spinster, it wouldn’t have mattered. She would have been able to roll her eyes—figuratively speaking—and listen to Cat drone on about babies while she thought about something else.
There was a wall between them, a wall Jane had built.
“I’m sorry,” Cat was saying. “You were busy. I shouldn’t have arrived unannounced.”
“I wasn’t busy.”
Cat ignored her. “I’ll just be going.” She put her hands on either side of her and tried to push off the settee.
Nothing happened.
“Oh, blast. I should have known better than to sit here. I’m like a beached whale. You’ll have to haul me up if you want me to leave, Jane.”
“I don’t want you to leave.” Oddly, she wasn’t just being polite. While a moment ago she would have cheered Cat’s departure, now she wanted her to stay. Clearly, she was becoming unhinged.
Poppy jumped off Jane’s lap and eyed the place where Cat’s lap used to be.
“I’m afraid, you’ll have to sit here, Poppy.” Cat patted the spot next to her on the settee.
Poppy decided that was acceptable and leapt up.
Cat looked at Poppy, but spoke to Jane. “Well, you probably will send me packing when I tell you Marcus and I had hoped something romantic might happen for you, too, at Chanton Manor.”
Something romantic had happened, if one considered her two awkward fumblings in the vegetation romantic.
No. They had been far more than fumblings.
Jane forced herself to laugh—and then had to fight not to grimace at the weak sound that emerged. “Something romantic at that gathering? The male attendees—besides my brother—were all married, betrothed, or barely out of leading strings.”
Cat’s eyes held hers. “There was Alex.”
Her treasonous body hummed at the sound of his name. It remembered in exquisite detail every touch, every brush of his lips.
No. He was an interesting companion, but that was all. She could not let her animal instincts rule her. If she did, she might end up giving everything to the earl. She would marry, and that would be far worse than living with Randolph. She wouldn’t have to tidy up after Lord Evans—there would be servants to do that—but he would invade her life in far more intimate ways. Even her body wouldn’t be hers any longer.
She eyed Cat’s belly.
The thought of losing all control like that was terrifying.
“Lord Evans?” she said while pretending to pick a bit of lint off her skirt. “Yes, he was there, as was Lady Charlotte.”
Cat scowled. “Who eloped with Septimus Grant. How did Alex take that?”
It was safer to look at Poppy than Cat. “I have no idea. I left with Randolph and Imogen in the morning while the earl was still in bed.” Oh, Lord. Don’t think about the earl and beds. “Don’t you know? I thought Lord Evans corresponded with the duke.”
“He does, but they never discuss anything interesting.” Cat gave her a searching look, but then, thankfully, moved on. “Speaking of correspondence, Anne has been asking after you. She said she wrote you months ago and has not heard back.”
Anne had written before Jane went to Chanton Manor. She’d started a reply too many times to count, but she always balled the letter up and threw it out.
“I suppose I’m just not much of a correspondent.” She sighed and said a bit wistfully, “It was so much easier when we all lived in Loves Bridge and saw one another regularly. How does Anne go on?”
“She’s well, but Nate, of course, worries about her and the baby.” Cat smiled. “Nate worries about everything.”
He did. He must be frantic now, concerned not only about his wife and child, but also about his cousin. Very soon they would know if Isabelle Dorring’s curse was broken.
Unless Cat gave birth to a daughter.
“Does Anne plan to visit?”
“Not until after her baby’s born. The physician Nate engaged says travel is too risky, and, well, after poor Princess Charlotte, Nate—and Anne—don’t want to take any chances.” Cat rubbed her belly. “None of us do. Oh!” She grimaced.
“What’s wrong?” Jane leapt up and came over to her. “Are you all right?”
Cat smiled, a bit wanly to Jane’s eye. “I’m fine. It was just a little pain.”
Jane lowered herself cautiously next to Poppy, being very careful not to jostle the seat and disturb Cat. “Are you supposed to have a little pain?” She looked at Cat’s belly and squeaked in alarm. A small tent had suddenly appeared in Cat’s dress as if something was poking out of her. “What’s that?!”
“What’s what?” Cat looked down and laughed. “Oh, that’s just the baby—likely a foot or an elbow. Here.”
She took Jane’s hand and placed it over the protuberance. “Feel it?”
“Y-yes.” The bulge got larger, moved, and then disappeared. It was the oddest sensation—though it must have been even odder for Cat, experiencing it from the inside.
Jane put her hand safely in her own lap.
“Oh, Jane.” Cat leaned forward—or as forward as she could lean with her enormous belly. “I do hope you’ll find a husband someday and have a family.”
“Merrow.” Poppy butted against Jane’s thigh in apparent agreement.
“We had such hopes for you and Alex.”
Longing twisted through her. A family with Alex . . .
And no control.
Familiar panic gripped her by the throat. It was bad enough to consider her life with a husband, but with a baby as well . . .
Look at Cat. If she’d managed to preserve a thread of independence after marrying the duke, it was gone now.
Jane had observed enough mothers to know that even once their babies were born, they weren’t free. Their minds and even their souls were tied forever to their offspring. She wasn’t ready for that. She doubted she’d ever be ready.
“I’m the Spinster House spinster, remember?” She forced a smile. “I worked and plotted too long to give it up now that I finally have it.”
“But—” Cat sucked in her breath and put her hand on her belly again.
Lud! “Was that another pain?”
Cat nodded. “A little bit stronger than the last one.”
Jane knew nothing about childbirth, but this did not sound good to her. “Should I get your mother?”
“No, I’m fine.”
Jane eyed Cat’s belly nervously and then looked at Poppy.
Poppy yawned.
“Jane, Marcus and I—and Nate and Anne as well—saw how it was with Alex at the village fair.”
“How what was with Lord Evans?”
Cat smiled. “He was quite taken with you.”
Jane felt a sudden spurt of pleasure—which she repressed immediately. “Gammon! Lord Evans, if you’ll remember, talked about going up to London to look for a wife.” She certainly remembered. “And he explicitly denied having a matrimonial interest in me. I believe his exact description of the notion was ‘ridiculous.’”
Cat frowned. “I don’t think he meant that.”
“I find it is best to take people at their word.”
Cat sighed and her shoulders drooped a bit. “I was certain you two would make a match of it, but I suppose it’s not to be.”
“Merrow.” Poppy put what looked like a comforting paw on Cat’s belly, and Cat stroked the animal.
“Why do you care?” Jane asked. “It’s not as if my marriage affects you.” She had been very eager for Cat and Anne to wed so she could move into the Spinster House, but there was nothing Cat would gain from Jane’s wedding Lord Evans or anyone, for that matter.
Both the cat and Cat looked at her.
“Oh, perhaps I’m just being selfish,” Cat said. “If you married Alex, I’d see more of you, since he and Marcus and Nate are so close.”
That would be lovely, but it was no reason to chain herself to the earl. “I hope you—and Anne when she’s in Loves Bridge—will visit me here.” She tried to inject a teasing note into her words. “You aren’t planning to give me the cut direct, are you?” Though she could see it would not be the same. Once Lord Evans acquired a wife, that woman would become part of their social circle—Cat and Anne’s social circle, that is. Jane would be very much in the way. On the outside. Alone.
Which was fine. She was the Spinster House spinster. She didn’t need anyone else.
“Of course we aren’t going to c-cut you.” Cat flinched again.
Jane looked at Poppy.
Poppy groomed her tail.
Am I mad ? Why do I think Poppy knows what’s going on with Cat and her baby?
Poppy paused her ablutions long enough to send Jane a look.
All right, then.
“Is it the thought of the marriage bed that troubles you, Jane?” Cat asked.
“W-what?!” Jane’s attention snapped back to Cat—and then she jumped to her feet. She did not want to talk about beds or marriage. “You know, I’ve just remembered an appointment. I hate to rush you, but I’m afraid I must go—”
“Would it help if I told you what happens between a man and his wife?”
“No.” She might not be clear on the specifics, but she felt quite certain Alex could explain it all to her in detail—exquisite detail.
But she was not going to get married, so she didn’t need the information.
“I know your mother died when you were fourteen,” Cat was saying. “I imagine she didn’t—oh.” She sucked in her breath and rubbed her belly again.
“Are you certain I shouldn’t get your mother?”
“Yes, yes. I’m f-fine.”
Jane glanced at Poppy—and frowned. The cat was now standing and looking very alert. Is she staring at Cat’s belly?
“But I suppose I should go. You did say you had an appointment.”
“Er . . .” They both knew there was no appointment.
“And Mama must be wondering where I am.” Cat smiled. “Though I think Mary has probably enjoyed having her all to herself for a while.” She extended a hand. “Can you haul this poor whale upright, Jane?”
“Of course, though perhaps you’d best give me both your hands.”
Jane pulled Cat to stand, and—
“Oh!” Cat turned bright red. A puddle had appeared at her feet.
“Er, should I get you the chamber pot?”
Cat shook her head. “I don’t think that’s the problem.”
Merrow!” Poppy ran toward the stairs, and then stopped at the bottom to look back at them.
“I-I think”—Cat sucked in a sharp breath and squeezed Jane’s hands hard.
“Is it the baby?” Oh, dear Lord!
Cat nodded. “I—” She swallowed. “I-I think so.”
Jane knew nothing about babies. What should she—
“Merrow!”
She looked at Poppy. Poppy looked at her, climbed two steps, stopped—and growled.
Her message was unmistakable.
Perhaps Poppy had had kittens. In any event, it would be impossible to know less about giving birth than Jane did. She would take the cat’s advice.
If she didn’t, Poppy would likely claw her ankles.
“Do you think you can climb the stairs? I’ll get you settled in bed and then run fetch your mother.” The vicarage was just across the street, and Mrs. Hutting had given birth to ten children. She would know what to do.
Cat nodded. “And get Marcus. Please.”
“Yes. Of course.” She guided Cat over to the stairs.
Cat paused with her foot on the first step and dug her fingers into Jane’s arm so hard she’d probably leave bruises. “But don’t tell him the baby’s coming. I don’t—” Cat caught her breath and her face twisted with pain.
Jane waited, helplessly patting Cat’s arm.
“Sorry,” Cat finally said. “The pain comes in waves, and I can’t talk during the worst of it. Don’t tell Marcus about the baby. I don’t want him to . . .” Cat tried again. “I don’t want him to do anything foolish and hurt himself.”
Or kill himself.
Jane knew that’s what they both were thinking.
“Don’t worry. You concentrate on yourself and the baby. I’ll take care of the rest.”
Somehow.
She got Cat up the stairs. Once they reached the upper floor, Poppy ran into Jane’s bedroom, so that’s where she started to guide Cat.
“The other room will be f-fine,” Cat said, leaning against the wall and panting until another wave of pain passed.
“Merrow!” Poppy poked her head out of Jane’s room as if to hurry them along.
“I’m not about to argue with Poppy. You know that never ends well.”
Cat laughed. “True.”
It didn’t take long to help Cat out of her dress and stays and settle her on the bed.
“Will you be all right alone? I’ll be as quick as I can.”
Poppy jumped on the bed and curled up next to Cat.
Cat laughed and stroked Poppy’s head. “Poppy will watch me.”
“All right.” Jane didn’t like leaving Cat alone, but she didn’t have much choice. She looked at Poppy.
Poppy twitched her tail and bared her teeth briefly as if to say stop dithering and get on with it.
Jane nodded and took off, using the banister to help her swing round the turn in the stairs. She pelted across the drawing room, flung open the door—
And ran smack into a hard male chest.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

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

Random Novels

Untamed by Diana Palmer

Marked (Valeterra Series Book 1) by Jennifer Reynolds

Under the Mistletoe (Witches of Warren County) by Summer Donnelly

The Fake Fiance Groom: Texas Titan Romances: The Legendary Kent Brother Romances by Taylor Hart

Won by an Alien (Stolen by an Alien Book 3) by Amanda Milo

Escape to Oakbrook Farm: A wonderfully uplifting romantic comedy (Hope Cove Book 2) by Hannah Ellis

Roses in Amber: A Beauty and the Beast story by C.E. Murphy, C.E. Murphy

Castaways by Claire Thompson

Whatever it Takes (Shadow Heroes Book 4) by Virginia Kelly

Hot SEAL, Salty Dog: A Brotherhood Protectors Crossover Novel (SEALs in Paradise) by Elle James, Paradise Authors

Baby Maker (A Real Man, 17) by Jenika Snow

Senator's Pet (Korystus Aliens Book 1) by Avery Rae

Bad Boy's Secret Baby by Kelly Parker

Saving Forever - Part 6: A Romantic-Medical Love Story by Lexy Timms

Mr. B.F.D.: Single Dad & Virgin Romance by Kelli Callahan

Married to the Russian Kingpin (Sokolov Brothers Book 1) by Leslie North

Prey (The Irish Mob Chronicles Book 1) by Kaye Blue

Two Tickets To Bearadise (Bearadise Lodge Book 1) by Chasity Bowlin

Never Too Far by Abbi Glines

Julia and the Duke (Bluestocking Brides Book 2) by Samantha Holt