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Dark Regency: The Redemption Of A Rogue Part 6

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The night of the house party had arrived, and with it, a surprise. Michael had instructed the dressmaker in the village to send something for Abbi, and when the dress had arrived, she had taken it upstairs to put it on, after only a token protest. From the cut of her gowns and the pale colors, he knew it had been some time since she'd had a new gown.

The gift had been somewhat selfish. He wanted to see her in something other than pale, worn gowns suited to a much younger woman and one of much lower station. He also wanted to see her beaming with confidence when she faced Lavinia on more equal footing.

When she came downstairs, after what seemed an eternity. She wore a deep, crimson velvet, and her dark hair had been pinned back in a loose chignon. Several tendrils curled over her shoulder, drawing attention to the lush bounty of her cleavage. Lavinia was the more cla.s.sic beauty, but Abigail was the more arresting of the two.

In seeing her outfitted so beautifully, her lush figure displayed to perfection, he wanted to show her off. On the other hand, he did not want to take her back into the den of iniquity that was Whitby Hall. It was necessary, though, and he knew it. They needed answers that could only be found there, and she was safer with him than alone knew at Blagdon Hall. He didn't trust Lavinia's purpose in inviting them, and he didn't trust Rupert at all.

"You look beautiful," he said. It wasn't the sort of flowery prose he would have used in the drawing rooms and ballrooms of London. Of course, Abigail was the type to appreciate a more direct approach. If there was one thing he had learned about her, it was that she tended to speak plainly.



"Sarah did my hair...I told her that she should rest, but she insisted that she needed to begin earning her keep," Abbi said, a blush stealing over her cheeks. "Stop looking at me that way."

"What way?" he asked.

"As if I'm not wearing this dress at all!"

He smiled, unable to feel any remorse at that. Abigail in her naked glory was a sight that he would always treasure and revisit in his mind, and the flesh, as frequently as possible. But taking pity on her, he changed the subject. "Feeling useful will be good for Sarah, I think. Having too much time to think can sometimes make things more difficult."

Clearly relieved at the change of subject, she smiled as she approached him. "Let us go and see what we can discover. I have no wish to remain long under Lavinia's roof."

Michael seconded that thoroughly as they alighted into the carriage and headed towards Whitby Hall. Their bags had been taken over earlier in the day. They were only staying for one night, possibly two. Michael only needed to be there long enough to search the house under cover of darkness. "Be very careful tonight. Stay with a large group of guests. Neither Rupert nor Lavinia can be given an opportunity to get you alone."

Abbi shuddered in distaste. "The same can be said for you... Lavinia will not forgive your rejection of her easily, and if they are responsible for what happened to Sarah, then they have much more to lose than previously thought."

"I can handle them. I only have a few questions I need answered. I should be able to gather the information I need while everyone else is abed."

"Be careful, please. There are so many things happening right now that I've never experienced here. The attack on Sarah, the secret gatherings in the woods. The Gray Lady has never been so active, to my knowledge, and she only appears at all in times of extreme danger," Abbi said.

The ghost had been making almost nightly appearances. She'd been seen pacing the breadth of the hallway, staring through the window to the woods beyond. When Sarah had heard people speaking of the ghost, she'd been near frightened to death. Abbi had explained to the girl that the spirit was a benevolent one and was largely responsible for her having been rescued at all.

She hated to think of what would have become of the girl had they not discovered her so quickly after her ordeal. While her injuries had not been horribly severe, a night in the cold damp gra.s.s would likely have caused a lung ailment that would have taken her life. Never mind the shock of what she had been through.

"Let's not borrow trouble," Michael said, wisely. "There are any number of people in the area who could be responsible. I can't fathom that Lavinia would be overly burdened by the need to hide anything."

"You're right of course. She was always shockingly brazen about her proclivities. She's grown more so since her marriage to Rupert. In one respect, they seem to be perfect for one another, on the other hand, they seem to also bring out the very worst in one another."

Michael kissed her, "I fear we will have the opposite problem. You will not accept anything but the best of me, and I imagine that you will be quite adamant in getting it."

She laughed, "Why do I have the feeling we are talking about very different things?"

His answering grin was wicked. He trailed his hands over the column of her throat, his thumbs grazing over a pulse that skittered slightly. The expanse of bare skin beckoned to him, and it would be a shame, he thought, to cover it. But she should have jewelry. Her new gown called for it, and her new station demanded it.

"Perhaps we should go to London...We need to get you a more suitable wardrobe and open the family coffers. There is a diamond and sapphire set that would look stunning with this gown. They would look even more stunning when I've stripped everything from you but the jewels."

"Shameless."

"Unrepentantly so," he agreed, dipping his head to press a soft kiss into the valley of her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. The slight rasp of his whiskers, coupled with the heat of his skin, had her s.h.i.+vering.

All too soon, they had arrived at Whitby Hall. Arriving in the ancient gig, Michael tossed the reins to a waiting stable lad and hopped down, a.s.sisting Abbi afterward. There was no line of carriages as most of the guests were there for a week or longer, and had arrived earlier. They were the only guests that were arriving for the evening alone. After they had been admitted by the butler, and announced, they moved into the large drawing room where the guests had gathered before dinner.

Upon entering, Michael immediately knew that he had made a grave mistake in underestimating the true deviousness of Lavinia. Most of the guests were female. He imagined their various spouses had either been left at home or were congregated together somewhere, plotting his demise. Every woman in the room had been his lover at one point or other. Lady Caroline Westerbrook, his most recent paramour and the one whom he had left London to escape, was strolling toward him, arm in arm with Lavinia.

Beside him, he felt Abigail stiffen. It wasn't the presence of the women, so much as it was the collectively smug gaze that was being directed at her. She turned to Michael, "What is happening here?"

Any hint of prevarication on his part would only make matters worse. "Lavinia has decided to divide and conquer... And by divide, I mean us. These women are my former lovers."

Abbi had suspected as much as soon as she walked into the gathering. It wasn't like Lavinia to intentionally surround herself with women whose beauty could compete with her own. A sick feeling settled in her stomach as she took in every last knowing look.

Other emotions were taking root, as well. Inside her a maelstrom of humiliation, doubt and jealousy boiled. They were all beautiful; all accomplished in some way, experienced and sophisticated, and they had all known her husband-biblically. She could sense the cattiness in their gazes. She had thought the gown Michael provided for her the most beautiful thing she'd ever owned. That was still true, but it lacked the sophistication and town bronze that the other ladies wore so well and with such apparent ease.

"I think we should go. We should just turn and leave."

Michael took her hand, brought it to his lips, and kissed it fervently, in full view of everyone. His response was whispered. "We cannot. If we walk out, she will know that this is our weakness."

"All of these women, Michael? Really? Every last one of them?"

He could apologize, but it felt wrong to him to do so. He was who he was, and the women in the room represented his past. But Lavinia was approaching, and they needed to present a unified front. "We will discuss this all that you want to later, but for now, let's just get through this night to the best of our ability."

She knew that he was right. "We will talk about it," she said, and behind her bright smile, her teeth were clenched.

"Abigail, darling... And my new brother in law, Lord Ellersleigh," Lavinia called, her voice echoing with false warmth. "I thought it might be nice for Abbi to meet her new peers prior to going to London. I'm sure you will all have so much in common."

"Lavinia, you are as thoughtful as you have ever been," Abbi said. On the surface, the comment was complimentary, but the conversation was occurring in layers.

"Lady Whitby, Lady Westerbrook," Michael said. His greeting was cordial and accompanied by a slightly formal bow. It was also completely lacking in warmth.

"Surely you can spare a warmer greeting than that, Michael," Lavinia said, making free with the familiar use of his name. "I had thought the two of you were well acquainted with one another."

Abbi felt ill. Her humiliation could not have been more complete. "Lavinia-"

"Abbi, come with me darling, and I will introduce you to everyone while Michael and Lady Westerbrook catch-up with one another."

Michael had no choice but to relinquish Abbi's hand as Lavinia all but tugged her from his grasp. He wasn't proud of his past. Many of his former lovers were not what could be considered nice women. They were vicious and cold-blooded. He had bedded them because they were available, and because, he admitted to himself, there was no chance of his heart ever becoming entangled with such a creature. Now, Abbi would be at their mercy. He turned to Lady Westerbrook, but she spoke before he had a chance.

"I didn't know, Michael. I'm so very sorry."

He met her gaze. She was a far different creature from the others present. He truly liked Caroline, and she was a remarkably beautiful woman. But she didn't stir him the way Abbi did. "Why are you here, Caroline? I can't believe that news of my marriage escaped your notice. You have a network of spies that are the envy Whitehall."

She smiled, "No... I knew that you had married. According to the letter from Lady Whitby, which did not include the pertinent fact that your new bride was her stepsister, you had been trapped and were quite miserable with a frigid, social climber."

"Nothing could be further from the truth," he said, furious at Lavinia's meddling and lies.

Caroline placed her hand on his arm, and he began to walk with her around the perimeter of the room. "I can see that. She's very lovely... and of all the women in this room who will cause her the most unease, it shall be me because I was the last."

"There is more at stake here, Caroline. Lavinia is up to something, and this, all of this, is intended to be nothing more than a distraction."

Caroline looked up at him, her regret written clearly on her face. She'd had many hopes for their relations.h.i.+p, but she was honest enough with herself to recognize that those hopes had come from her own desires, and not from anything he had said or done. She had been an affair for Michael, and he had never done anything to indicate otherwise. "Just tell me what I can do to help you, and I will."

"It will be difficult for Abbi, but I need to search the house. If we disappear together, it will be far less suspicious," Michael explained.

Caroline nodded, "I will retire to my room for half an hour, and that should give you the time you need."

Michael looked across the room at Abbi. Though she was deep in conversation with other ladies, her eyes followed Caroline as she exited the room. Five minutes later, when he was slipping from the drawing room, he felt her eyes on him, as well. When he glanced over his shoulder at her, she refused to meet his gaze ~*~*~.

Twenty minutes later, Michael was in the dressing room just off the master suite. Rupert's study had been occupied, so he would search it during the night. In their private chambers, he had discovered a variety of erotic reading material, from the refined to the profane. He had also discovered a wealth of s.e.x toys and implements that he, in his vast experience, had no knowledge of. There were also numerous vials and bottles of herbal remedies and medications. As a physician, he'd encountered some of them in the past. Others were wholly unknown to him, but it made clear one fact. Either Lavinia or Rupert were ill and possibly gravely so. Nothing made men and women more fearsome than impending death.

He had not found the green velvet robes or the golden masks that Sarah had described to him. He made his way back to the hallway, and at the sound of approaching voices, ducked into a darkened alcove.

Lavinia and Squire Blevins were groping one another in the hallway. The Squire lifted her skirts, shoved her roughly against the wall and without any preamble, entered her. Michael looked away, but there was no escaping the guttural grunting or the sounds of the coa.r.s.e coupling.

He wasn't a prude, and it certainly wouldn't be the first time in his life he'd born witness to such an act, that the parties involved were people he despised was more the issue. Thankfully, it was short lived, and when the squire had ceased his panting, he lowered Lavinia's feet to the floor, smoothed her dress and left. Lavinia was close on his heels, returning to see to her guests.

He waited, but his caution created a greater complication. He would be late returning to the drawing-room, and would have no chance to speak with Abbi prior to dinner, no opportunity to explain that appearances had been necessarily deceiving. When he entered the drawing room, the guests were migrating into the dining room. He ignored Lavinia's snide smile as he found Abbi and took her arm to lead her in. He also ignored the frigid glare that Abbi leveled at him.

Michael was only too well aware of how things looked. The smug glances of the other women present, Lavinia's less than thinly veiled slurs, Rupert's lascivious stares directed at Abbi, all combined to make the evening a misery for them both. It had been an utter waste of his time, except for the all too vivid images of Lavinia and Squire Blevins in the hot clutches of l.u.s.t. Those were images he would just as soon forget. It was not the outcome he'd hoped for.

As the dinner progressed, it only became worse. The tension between Abbi and himself was palpable. In one respect, it was the perfect response. It lent credence in the minds of everyone else present this his reason for disappearing from the party was that he and Lady Caroline Westerbrook had slipped away for a liaison. The unfortunate element of the situation was that, having no time to explain the situation, Abbi now believed it as well. It did not bode well for the remainder of his evening.

As the dinner was cleared away, the guests began to segregate. The men retreated to the billiard-room and the women headed back to the drawing-room. Michael managed to steer Abbi into a quiet alcove.

He uttered the first words that came to mind. "It is not what you think." Even to his own ears, it sounded weak and hollow, even if it was the truth. How many men and women had uttered those words to cover up their infidelities?

"Michael, we both know who that woman is and what your relations.h.i.+p with her is. Don't insult my intelligence by asking me to believe that you disappeared for half an hour with a woman who until two weeks ago was your mistress without it being precisely what I think it was! Regardless of what your disappearance signifies to me, we both know what it signifies to everyone else... I will not be an object of ridicule."

Michael sighed heavily, "I promise you; I will explain everything tonight. For the time being, I need you to continue acting as you did at dinner...It works to our benefit to have them all believe that you are angry with me."

She glared at him, before jerking her arm free from his grasp. "That should not prove to be difficult as nothing has changed since dinner, regardless of your pretty explanations."

Michael watched her walk away, waiting until she disappeared into the drawing-room, before retreating to the billiard room. This would not go away quickly, and he did not doubt that he would be paying for it for quite some time.

Abbi entered the drawing room and steadfastly ignored the falsely pitying looks leveled at her by the other ladies present. She couldn't abide being the subject of such a public humiliation. She didn't truly believe that Michael had engaged in an amorous encounter with Lady Westerbook during the absence, but it galled her to know that everyone else did.

His thoughtlessness in casting such scorn upon her was the true source of her anger. She acknowledged to herself, at least, that much of that stemmed from her father's faithlessness to her mother and his marriage to his mistress only months after her mother's death. Lavinia had exploited that weakness of hers, almost from the first.

"Darling, even with your rustic upbringing, surely you understand that this is the way of society marriages!" Lavinia said, her voice dripping with false sweetness.

Abbi turned to meet her stepsister's smug gaze. "Is that why your guest list consists of nothing more than my husband's former lovers? You filled your home with his past paramours and then let us walk blindly into the middle of it."

Lavinia smiled sympathetically, but her eyes remained cold and calculating. "You make it sound so cold, darling! It was only to protect you from false hopes and expectations. It was best for you to learn now what kind of man you married."

"Others may be fooled by your sisterly displays of concern, Lavinia, but you and I both know that this is simply more of your conniving machinations...You should see to your guests, sister, and leave me be."

Abbi walked away from Lavinia, made small talk with locals and steadfastly avoided the guests that had been invited to increase her misery. When the gentleman returned to the drawing room, she pleaded a headache and retired to their chamber. Michael excused himself and followed right behind her, ignoring the slamming of their chamber door in his face.

"Abigail," he began as he entered the room. She was plucking the pins from her hair with quick, angry movements. "I had no idea that Caroline would be there. There was no liaison, planned or otherwise."

"Lady Westerbrook," she said with emphasis, the pins clattering onto the top of the dressing table with sharp pings, "Is not the issue here. The issue is that I will not be publicly humiliated by you!"

One of the pins went skittering off the dressing table, and he retrieved it. Gently, he clasped her hands and removed them from her hair. "I find that I'm rather partial to your hair. I would prefer it if you left it attached to your head."

"You'll forgive me if I find myself less than concerned about your preferences at the moment," she said. She didn't particularly like the waspish tone of her voice, but she found herself incapable of containing her ire.

"Lavinia invited those women, not I," he said patiently. "I cannot change my past, Abigail, and I cannot promise that you will never be put in a position of having to face it."

His ability to completely ignore the reason for her displeasure with him boggled the mind. "But do you have to leave me alone in a room with it while you're slipping away with your lover?" she demanded, her voice a sharp hiss.

Michael threw his hands up in the air. "I did not slip away with Caroline! The only way to search the house without arousing suspicion was to make it appear that we had-"

"Was to allow every viperous woman in this house to believe that you had decided to renew your relations.h.i.+p with your most recent lover only days after we married," she said succinctly. There was no heat in her voice, but the anger still simmered below the surface.

"I am sorry that it hurt you."

"Not hurt, Michael. Embarra.s.sed. You embarra.s.sed me and left me alone to face the censure of others. I was an object of pity before, as the poor relation, but I was not an object of ridicule. You have changed that."

He had no answer for that. It was true. Yes, he had good reasons for what he had done. It had been necessary, and there had been no other expedient way to search the house. It did nothing to lessen what she perceived as her humiliation at his hands. Though he could not admit it to her, to himself he acknowledged that he would have been furious if the situations had been reversed.

"Regardless of your displeasure with me, wife, you must remain in public areas with other guests until I can escort you to this chamber. Surely, you haven't forgotten the horrors that Sarah suffered, more than likely at the hands of your sister and brother in law?"

"I have not forgotten, but do not expect me to tolerate their viciousness for long," she said.

It was a reasonable request. As they readied for bed, they did not speak again. The tension between them was palpable as Abbi spent the night clinging to her side of the bed. Michael stayed with her, staring up at the ceiling until the wee hours of the morning.

When he was fairly certain the rest of the household was settled in for the night, he rose and dressed in his discarded evening clothes. Again, if he were caught in the hallway, his rumpled clothing would simply be part of his cover. He would look as if he were returning from a midnight tryst, rather than a search of the premises.

He paused before leaving the room, and moved to her side of the bed. Gently, he swept the hair back from her face. Even in sleep, she appeared tense. Quietly, he said, "I have to give the appearance of being the unrepentant libertine...It is the only way to move freely through the house."

Her eyes opened, "I know," she replied just as softly. "But that doesn't mean I have to like it.""

It wasn't exactly a truce, but it was close enough for him. He kissed her, taking her lips in a searing kiss. "I'll be back as soon as I can. This may be my only chance to search Rupert's study."

She didn't offer to go with him, knowing that he would refuse, that it would undermine the disguise of meeting with a lover. When the door closed quietly behind him, she felt the hot sting of tears. It was only her wounded pride at having had to be in such proximity to his former paramours, but it was enough to put a damper on their burgeoning relations.h.i.+p.

Chapter Ten.

Michael paused in rummaging through Rupert's desk. He had found a few things of note, primarily that Rupert appeared to be living on appearances only. The Whitby's were ma.s.sively in debt, and most of their debts appeared to have accrued through the acquisition of ancient artifacts from questionable sources.

The items weren't named in the ledgers; the sources were known for the connection to the world of black market Greco-Roman antiquities. A dark suspicion began to form in his mind as he considered his own collection of relics, inherited from his father. Rupert had expressed an interest in them that first night. Could that be the reason for luring him into their social circle? While not extensive, the items were rare and highly prized, and some carried a dark history.

He had never moved in the same circle as Lavinia and Rupert. Given his reputation with women, he didn't have to seek such entertainments. Women had always sought him out. When the offers had appealed to him, he had accepted. When they hadn't, he had declined as kindly as possible. Though the number of liaisons was cause enough for a few raised eyebrows, his preferences had run to the pedestrian.

He had never reached the point of being so bored with the glorious wonders of a feminine body that he needed to add spice the way the Whitby's had. They had delved into perversions had never held any appeal for him.

The letter itself was telling. Rupert had been a bit too enthusiastic in abusing the wife of one of their compatriots, and the couple was regretfully bowing out of coming entertainments. The truly curious part of the letter was that it was signed with only the use of a Roman numeral.

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Dark Regency: The Redemption Of A Rogue Part 6 summary

You're reading Dark Regency: The Redemption Of A Rogue. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Chasity Bowlin. Already has 772 views.

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