Page 89 of The Lover's Eye

Page List

Font Size:

Miss Armstrong sighed.“I guess I am only remembering the last time we dined here.Miss Gouldsmith was so forthcoming—”

“Miss Armstrong!”came a sharp, anonymous whisper.

Isobel turned to her other side and began filling Marriane’s teacup, trying to mask the race of her beating heart, the increasing tremble in her limbs.Pretend.Pretend.

“All of you were here,” Miss Armstrong said defensively.“She said he called her his ‘little butterfly’.I suppose pet names are more suited to compromised ladies, but then again, I hear there are handsome captains even in Cumberland.”

The porcelain teapot became unbearably heavy at that instant, and Isobel’s hands extraordinarily weak.She missed the edge of Marriane’s cup and poured a little of the piping hot water on the tablecloth.

“Oh, dear,” Isobel said weakly, setting down the teapot and moving to place a napkin over the spill, lest it should make its way onto Marriane’s lap.But in pivoting her body, her elbow struck the teapot on the table’s edge, and turned it over.

The scald of hot porcelain and streaming water assailed Isobel’s lap, the boiling liquid so shocking to her senses that she instinctively jumped up in response to the pain.The elaborate pot crashed to the floor, a piercing shatter upon tile.

Gasps filled the room like ghosts, emanating from every mouth and chair until it sounded like they were moving in from the walls and portraits themselves.

“I’m so sorry,” Isobel said, looking down aghast at her soiled gown and the dismembered teapot.She was trembling all over.“Oh, I’m so t-terribly sorry.”

A firm grip encircled her arm, her awareness so limited, she hardly realized she was being hauled away from the scene.It was not until Marriane had gotten her to the privacy of the breakfast room and placed her in a chair that Isobel realized who had been taking her away.

Being separated from the group had the effect of a dam bursting.Isobel felt a multitude of varied pains at once, hurts that had been there before, only suppressed.Her face stung with petrification and exhausted muscles, and the skin atop her thighs was burning forcibly—a pain that demanded to be felt.

She began to rattle off a slurry of combined curses and concerns.What about her guests, Giles’s mother’s teapot, Mr.Finch?

Marriane disregarded all of them, bending to hike up the layers of Isobel’s skirts until her bare skin was revealed.Then it was her turn to utter an oath.She untied the ribbon keeping Isobel’s left stocking in place and rolled it down.

Before either of them could comment on the fiery red patch of flesh, Betsey entered the room with cold water and rags.“Oh, milady!”she gasped.

“Thank you for coming so quickly,” Marriane said as she and Betsey began to place the cold rags over the burn in disorganized haste.

Isobel still felt detached from reality, dwelling on her pain and mortification rather than the people tending to her.Ordinarily she would have been mortified to have her skirts around her hips and people kneeling at her feet.

“What did she mean?”Isobel asked dryly, moistening her lips.“That Miss Armstrong.All her strange remarks, what did she mean?”

“That is the least of your concerns, Isobel,” Marriane growled, removing a rag that had already been warmed by the hot flesh and replacing it with another.

The grit of pain made itself known in Isobel’s voice.“Tell me.”

Marriane’s tone was exasperated.“You somehow managed to copy much of Aurelia’s bridal luncheon.Is that what you wished to know?”

Isobel gulped.“How much?”

Marriane placed another saturated cloth on Isobel’s leg, the cold water dripping down to the carpet in little thuds and running beneath her stockings and into the backs of her slippers.A cold chill ran down her spine.

“It was held in the central hall.With flowers from the gardens, and the same tea service.”

Isobel slumped more heavily into her chair; a tear surprising her when it slid from the outer corner of her eye.

“Are you hurt?”Giles asked loudly, striding into the room and placing his hands on Isobel’s shoulders.His eyes connected with her leg.“Damn and blast it.”

She looked up at him.He stood behind her, and from her reclined position in the chair, his concerned countenance was upside down.The pinched brows and clenched teeth looked more like a glower, but she felt nothing.Her own pain was overwhelming, momentarily depriving her of empathy—and good sense.

“Just confess it,” she said weakly.

“What?”he asked.Concern had given his voice a sharp edge.

“That I’ll never be Aurelia.”

30