Then, as if it had never been, the lake diminished and Rilla was back, once more, within the pleasant room.
Her breath escaped in whistled relief.
‘Come, girls!’ Lady Wyburn swept into the room. ‘Gracious, Rilla, whatever are you doing poking your head through the curtains? You’ll wreck your hair. It is time to greet your guests.’
‘Yes.’ Rilla stood and forced a smile.
She cast one final look through the window, but the scene presented nothing more alarming than a cobbled street on a wet night. The horses stood, stamping their hooves, steam rising from their sleek backs. Coachmen opened carriage doors, muffled under greatcoats dark with wet.
‘Rilla?’ Imogene questioned, her voice low with worry.
‘It was nothing,’ Rilla said.
These moments could not—must not—happen here in London.
* * *
Paul noted Miss Gibson’s absence almost immediately upon rejoining the ladies following dinner and port.
It wasn’t that he looked for her. In fact, he’d been trying to ignore her for the better part of the evening. Rather he appreciated something lacking, like a room without a fire or a flowerbed out of bloom.
At first he surmised she’d gone to the ladies’ retiring room, but as her absence lengthened, he wondered whether she was ill. She’d looked pale earlier. Indeed, even through dinner she’d been lacklustre and distracted, very different from the girl with the flushed cheeks that he’d seen after that wild gallop.
Lord Alfred’s absence took Paul longer to appreciate. The man was not particularly noticeable, more cravat than person. However, after a while, Paul realised he’d not seen that gentleman either for a good hour. He also recalled that Lord Alfred had hovered about both the Misses Gibson at the Thorntons’ ball and had visited Lady Wyburn’s establishment on several occasions.
Paul’s jaw tightened. A headache spread across his temples. Easing himself from his chair, he strolled from the room with forced indolence. Once in the corridor, his spine straightened and his thoughts turned bleak.
The girl was under Lady Wyburn’s protection and he refused to let her act inappropriately with Lord Alfred, or anyone else for that matter. He looked in both the morning and music rooms.
He found no one.
‘Where is Miss Gibson?’ Paul asked Merryweather as the butler entered the hall, his tray heavy with refreshments.
The man started, causing the crystal to rattle. ‘Haven’t seen her, my lord. Perhaps check the library. She likes it there.’
‘The library?’ Paul frowned.
His father had liked the library rather well, although he’d spent more time consuming alcohol than literature.
The door creaked in opening. The light was dim, broken only by a small fire and two sconces. It was only as he neared the hearth that he saw the emerald figure curled within the depths of the leather armchair.
He stopped. She must be sleeping. He softened his tread so as not to startle her. Peculiarly, she clasped a miniature in her hand and her posture seemed unnaturally rigid for one in sleep.
‘Miss Gibson?’ He touched her shoulder.
She made no response.
‘Miss Gibson?’ he said again, more loudly. Still she seemed not to hear him although her eyes were open.
He shook her shoulders, almost roughly, conscious of an unfamiliar start of fear.
She stirred.
‘Are you all right?’ he asked.
She blinked, staring at him as though not comprehending his words.
‘You were asleep,’ he explained.
She shifted. The miniature dropped from her hand, clattering to the floor. Bending, he picked it up. His stomach tightened as he saw the painted face. His fingers clenched against the frame.
‘What are you doing with this?’ he asked.
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