Read The Spare Online

Authors: Carolyn Jewel

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #Love Stories, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Inheritance and Succession, #Murder, #Adult, #Regency, #Historical Fiction, #Amnesia

The Spare (35 page)

Her eyes flew open, and she grasped his head, looking into his face while she shuddered beneath him. "I love you," she said, straining upward. 'Sebastian, I love you. I've always loved you. Since before we met."

"I know," he whispered. The confession made him want to shout with triumph.

When she was past the peak, he drew her arms over her head and held her tight while he reached for his own rhythm, harder and faster than perhaps she was ready for, only she was. Each time he went in, his belly slid on hers, over a layer of sweat, his and hers. He let go of her hands, but they stayed above her head, clutching the bedpost to keep herself in place for him.

He shouted when he felt the first shiver, a wave that shook him as hard as anything in his life. Better than his dreams. Better than anything he'd felt in all his years. There came a moment right before his seed came that he thought he couldn't reach his own pleasure, that he would be at this unendurable pitch of intensity until it killed him. But he did come, and it didn't kill him, though it felt a close thing. He collapsed, the whole of his weight on her. Sweat dripped from him. He was wrung out and more alive than he'd ever felt in all his life.

She pushed against his shoulders. He pried open his eyes and to his astonishment, her eyes were panicked. He must outweigh her by a hundred pounds at least; he must be crushing her, lying on her like that. He lifted himself onto his elbows, easing his torso off her. Huge, silent tears slid down her cheeks. He slid out of her, and when he tried to take her into his arms, she turned away. "Olivia?"

"Don't."

"What is it?"

"I remember." Her shoulders heaved. "I remember everything."

He pulled her into the curve of his body and said, "Forgive me."

Chapter Thirty-one

«
^
»

 

2:06
a.m.

 

Sebastian waited until the worst of her sobs subsided, then hauled himself to his knees. Immediately, she sat up, clutching her drawn-up legs, head bent, in retreat from him and the world. He sat behind her, legs on either side of her hips, her back to his front, but not touching her. He gathered her hair into his hands, lifting the copper weight off her back to arrange it over one shoulder. She rocked, forehead bowed to the tops of her knees. He didn't know whether to touch her or leave her be. His hands lay useless at his sides.

"Tell me, Olivia."

She moved her head a bit so that her voice sounded clearer. "A vicar can't marry someone like me. He felt just awfully about it, I could tell."

"Nonsense."

"Now you've married me, and there's nothing to be done about it. There's no way to fix it or make it better." The devastation in her voice shook him to his core. What if she'd remembered without him, without even the meager protection of his name? Without anyone to hold her.

He wanted to throttle his brother, he truly did. He pulled her sideways, despite her attempt to resist, resting her back against his good arm: As soon as he had her cradled in his embrace, she wriggled free, scooting back on her knees and raising the sheet to cover her. "Look at me, Olivia," he said. When she did, he said, "I wish to God you'd never remembered."

"How can you say that?"

"Because of what happened to you. I cannot bear the thought of you—" A shiver of foreboding ran up his spine at the despair in her eyes. What if she didn't want him anymore? What if her restored memory meant she was lost to him? "It doesn't change anything between us." He exhaled. "I knew. Olivia, I've known for some time what happened to you. I'm not like Verney who didn't want you afterward."

"How could you know when I didn't?"

"Dr. Richards examined you twice that day. Once, after the assault and again after Andrew and Guenevere were killed. If Andrew were alive, I'd thrash him for what he did. I don't know how he could have done something so despicable."

"No." She lifted a hand to her head, tracing the scar along her temple. Her hair spilled over her shoulders, curling wildly around her temples. "Not Andrew."

Sebastian's heart stopped. "Dr. Richards told me it was."

"No. It wasn't him."

"If it wasn't Andrew, who was it?"

"Hew. It was Hew."

He rolled off the bed and shot to his feet. He wanted to run, to stay still, to collapse all at the same time. The world pressed on him, crushing him with the weight of his own stupidity. "I should have guessed." He threw a hand in the air. "I should have guessed."

"He hurt me."

"And I want to murder him for it."

"He shot Andrew and Guenevere."

"Right now, I don't give a damn about them, Olivia. I'll throttle the bastard for laying a hand on you." His belly twisted into a knot. "What an imbecile I am." He felt sick. Sick to his heart. He grabbed his robe from the floor and thrust his arms through the sleeves. "I told you to marry the man who tried to murder you. Stay here, Olivia. You're not to go anywhere." He strode to the bed and glared at her. "Do you understand me?"

"Yes."

"That's an order. I'm not to be disobeyed."

"Yes."

"I'll throw you in the dungeon myself, if you do." He threw on his clothes, shirt, breeches, and coat and boots and went downstairs. The party continued. Music and laughter. Did no one realize the momentous events of the evening? He slowed, reining in his emotions during the descent to the Great Hall. Eventually, he found Hew in a room set aside for men who wanted to smoke. The air was thick with tobacco. Mr. Cage was there, leaning against the mantel, and several other of his neighbors. The stuffed head of an antlered buck hung on one wall, a rack of hunting guns on another. On the mantel, a box inlaid with mother-of-pearl displayed a set of dueling pistols. Sebastian well-remembered a blistering lecture from his father, received on the occasion of being discovered holding one of the pistols without permission or supervision.

"Gentlemen," he said. He had just enough control over himself that his voice sounded cold and flat.

"My Lord." The men bowed respectfully.

Hew was stretched on a sofa by the fire, smoking a cigar. He rose, holding a drink in his other hand. His affable smile appeared, though Sebastian was certain he was drunk. "Lord Tiern-Cope."

"I need a word alone with Mr. Willow. If you gentlemen would be so kind."

When they were alone, Hew ran his hands through his hair, leaving it standing up at the back. "Drink? There's port decanted."

"Thank you." He glanced around and imagined Hew with Olivia. Unspeakable. He curled his fingers into fists.

Hew ground out his cigar in an ashtray by the sofa. "Port it is, my Lord." He went to the table and poured two glasses. He extended one to Sebastian. "Here you are." He bent his knees. "One cannot help but think, my Lord, that everything I have ought to be Olivia's. And will be soon. Thirteen years later." He raised his glass. "Everything. Even the bloody port in my cellar was her father's." Drink in hand, he pointed to the dueling pistols. "Except the guns. All the guns at my home belong to me. Her father didn't hunt."

"Indeed."

"If this is about Lord Fitzalan and my cousin, I tell you I won't permit it. She's already agreed to marry me."

"I am not here about Fitzalan and Olivia."

"Then this must be about my dear cousin's request that you broker our marriage settlement." He laughed. "Shouldn't take long. She hasn't a thing to bring to the marriage."

Here stood the man who'd murdered his brother and his sister-in-law, and all he could think of was Olivia. He wanted to strangle the man with his bare hands for what he'd done. "Congratulate me, Willow. I am now a married man."

"Indeed?" He lifted his port in salute. "Felicitations, my Lord. I am sure the former Miss Royce is deliriously happy."

"I did not marry Miss Royce."

"Really?"

"I married your cousin."

"You can't be serious." He tipped back his glass, swallowing half the contents in one gulp.

"I am."

"I'll sue her for breach of promise. And you for the interference in my expectations."

"Be my guest."

"On the other hand, perhaps I'll wait. Once you've consummated the union, you may want to annul the marriage."

"There won't be any annulment."

Hew laughed. "Then she tricked you, my Lord. I assure you, she's no innocent."

"My wife is safe from you now."

Hew blanched. "Safe from me?" His eyebrows drew together. "Whatever do you mean?" But his confusion rang false, and they both knew it. He sat down hard, staring at his hands. He gulped the rest of his port.

"Safe, Hew Willow, as my brother and his wife were not."

He stared at his trembling fingers. "She's recovered her memory."

"There wasn't any duel."

Hew took a long breath and collapsed on the chair like a man without bones to hold him straight. "No, of course not."

"You killed my brother and his wife, and you tried to kill Olivia."

"I'm glad you know. It's a relief in a way." He shook his head, chewing on his lower lip. "I haven't been able to tell a soul. Sometimes I can almost convince myself none of it happened. God knows I wish it hadn't. Ever since that day, it's been eating at me." He stared at his hands, now palm up on his lap. "I'm rotten inside. I lie in bed at night, and I feel the rot. I dream about it, you know. Imagine that it didn't really happen that way. I see it all in my head, only instead, I leave. Sometimes I miss and other times someone comes in and stops it, and my life goes on as it was meant to."

"What did happen?"

"Everything went wrong. Right from the start." He sighed heavily. "I suppose you found Mr. Melchior."

"Yes."

"Then you know about my father. Stubborn old fool. Every penny of their fortune. By the time I found out, it was too late. Nothing left. Then, after your father died, your brother came to live at Pennhyll, and he took quite an interest in her." He raised his hands. "Not in that way. At least not so I could tell. He was pleasant enough about it when he confronted me. Didn't threaten. Just said he expected Olivia and her mother to be made whole. That, of course, was not possible."

"How did they die?"

"I never meant to kill anyone." He took a drink, but his hand trembled so badly he only just managed to get the last drops. He rose, scrubbing one hand through his hair. "God it's a relief to tell somebody. More port, my Lord? No?" He refilled his glass and lifted it to the light. "Hands are shaking." He faced Sebastian. "People have affairs everyday. Though I never did until I met Guenevere. Saving myself for my bride, don't you know. But she was such a lovely woman, so unhappy, and we fell into the habit of talking about London and how she wanted to live there and how her husband neglected her. One day I took her in my arms, just to stop her sobbing, make her feel better and once I had her in my arms… Well. She was so lovely." He hung his head. "I adored her."

"Go on."

"Then, one day, we were in the library. Olivia and your brother walked in on us. If I didn't know better, I'd think Guenevere planned it that way. She was certain he was carrying on with some other woman. God, but she was jealous. Beautiful woman, but jealous of her husband and jealous of me, too.

"I'm not making excuses." He shrugged. "Tiern-Cope, your brother, I mean, meant to divorce Guenevere and seek damages against me. Thanks to Guenevere, proof wasn't at issue. He had the crim con and Olivia as a witness to back up what he'd seen with his own eyes. He'd have gotten his divorce and ruined me in the bargain. Well, I thought, if I married Olivia, he wouldn't dare ruin me, would he? She'd be worse off than ever if she was my wife, and he ruined me. That was the very last thing he wanted. Trouble was Olivia and the vicar were all but engaged. So, I decided I'd get us caught but good so we'd have to be married." He laughed. "Your brother would have done anything to protect her from scandal, even if that meant her marrying me. I'm not so bad a catch, you know. Lots of girls set their caps at me. It would have worked. It really would have."

Sebastian put down his glass and walked to the window. He got there and turned. "Mr. Willow, I am the magistrate—"

"Oh, I know that.

"Then you should also know I mean to see you hang."

"I'll put my affairs in order then." Hew took another drink. "Had it all worked out for the next day. For your brother's festivities at Pennhyll. I got Olivia alone and—" He lifted his hands again. "And—didn't matter who caught us, as long as we were caught. Only no one came. I—just lost my head, I suppose. I never thought I'd have to go through with it, but she's a pretty woman, and I'm a red-blooded man. Lovely, really, even with that hair. Besides, I meant to marry her. God, it just all went wrong, and I— She shouldn't have gone anywhere alone, you know. In a way, it's her own fault. If she hadn't fought so hard. The door was open, for God's sake, but no one came." He shuddered. "She screamed and even though I wanted her to scream, I couldn't bear the noise and, well, things… got to a point where I wanted to finish. So I made her be quiet. But then she fell. I thought sure her head was cracked open. She didn't move. I thought I'd killed her or that she was dying, and I ran. Back to the party." He made a sort of helpless gesture. "Not long after that, I saw Dr. Richards arrive."

"Poor devil."

"Yes. We soon heard there'd been an accident, and that Olivia had been injured. I was glad she wasn't dead. I'm not a monster. I didn't want her dead. I thought I could still manage the situation. Even better, actually. How could something like that be kept quiet? Tell your brother I'd heard what happened and offer to marry her if he'd keep my involvement with Guenevere quiet." He clapped his hands on either side of his head. "A few hours went by. The party was in full flow, dozens of people wandering about. No one remarked on me leaving. I found them in one of the parlors, all three, Guenevere, Andrew and Olivia. Olivia wanted to go home, but Andrew wouldn't let her. Would have been foolish, her going anywhere. She was white as a sheet. Her head dressed, her arm splinted.

"The problem was, Olivia took one look at me, and Andrew, I'm afraid, guessed right away. Wouldn't listen to a word I had to say. I had a gun with me—I didn't mean to use it, but I thought—I'm not sure what I thought. I suppose I thought I might have to use it to make them see reason. But I never meant to shoot anyone. I could see my life unraveling just like that, and I hadn't done anything so awful. I was mad, of course, not in my right mind at all. I know that now. Olivia jumped in the way, thought she could save him, I suppose. It all happened so quickly, and like that, they were all three of them dead, or so I thought." He shrugged. "I could hear the servants calling out. I left. Went through that door I showed your friend Fitzalan, and then out the library way."

Other books

A Magnificent Match by Gayle Buck
Truth or Dare by Jayne Ann Krentz
212 LP: A Novel by Alafair Burke
Back by Henry Green
Rites of Passage by Eric Brown


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024