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The Rake's Redemption(7)

By:Sherrill Bodine

       
           



       

Juliana carefully controlled her face when Mrs. Forbes's eyes flickered  across it and then to Dominic, whose unholy grin was nearly her undoing.

"Come along, both of you. Elixir must be brewed before you leave for  London." Mrs. Forbes shook her head with such vigor, her large bun of  grizzled white hair jiggled precariously. "Terrible place the city.  Terrible!"

Was there ever a merrier look than the one the marquis flashed at her  before bowing with a deep flourish and following Mrs. Forbes back into  the kitchen.

The inn's kitchen was large. Fires blazed in enormous fireplaces at each  end of the room, but the air was surprisingly fresh and cool, for a  breeze worried the crisp curtains at huge windows on opposite walls.  Rows of wooden shelves laden with jars of all sizes lined the stone  walls and a long, polished oak table dominated the room. Aunt Sophia  stood over a small black kettle slowly adding herbs to a boiling mixture  while Freddie, coatless and with his shirt sleeves rolled up to his  elbows, stirred with a long-handled wooden spoon.

So intent were they on their duties that they didn't notice Mrs.  Forbes's entrance until she went to the pot to carefully examine the  contents. She sniffed the steam. "Ah, yes. More mandrake root. Juliana,  fetch that small jar of brown powder on the low shelf next to the  window. Here, my lord marquis, chop these leaves."

Juliana watched Dominic shrug out of his coat, paying earnest attention  to Mrs. Forbes's instruction of the precise method to chop herbs.  Smiling, Juliana crossed toward the shelves. At the window she noticed  white and red cloth balls hanging. She expected to find the scent of  cloves and cinnamon, but moving closer discovered the balls scentless.

Frowning, she carried the small jar back to the table. "That is odd, Mrs. Forbes, your pomanders have no scent."

"Not pomanders, young lady. It is my herb potion to keep out insects."

Brushing a droopy brown curl from her forehead, Aunt Sophia turned from  her pot. "Ingenious! I noticed that the kitchen was free of such  troublesome creatures."

"But the bags have no scent. What keeps them out?" Juliana asked,  fascinated by odd-shaped roots and strangely colored powders and fluids  placed neatly about the room.

"Scentless to you, young lady. But not to insects. Works nearly as well as my potions to keep out field mice."

"I say, Mrs. Forbes, wherever did you learn about herbs and potions and  the like?" Freddie asked, his face red and glowing from the heat, his  neck cloth twisted under his left ear.

Lifting her head to a proud tilt, Mrs. Forbes's eyes touched them all  one by one. "My grandmother was a Romany princess. She taught my mother  and then me all the old ways."

"A gypsy princess! Did she teach you to read palms? Always wanted my palm read," Freddie declared with a wide grin.

"Palm reading is for gorgios at the fairs," scoffed Mrs. Forbes. "To  tell the future  …  yes  …  sometimes. My grandmother had the eye. But not  my mother."

Juliana glanced at Dominic and found him smiling that wonderful  heart-stopping smile. "A tribe of gypsies camps on my grandfather's  lands in Kent every spring. When I was young, I climbed down the creeper  outside my bedroom window and went to the woods to listen to their  music."

"Yes," Mrs. Forbes nodded slowly, her eyes resting thoughtfully upon  Dominic. "Music is the gift of God to the gypsies. Robbie has the gift.  After dinner tonight perhaps he will play for you in the garden."

"That sounds wonderful!" exclaimed Juliana. She had a long-standing  fascination with gypsies after once sneaking off to a local fair with  George and Will. They had proven unsatisfactory companions, however, for  when she had wanted to enter the colorful tent where an old gypsy woman  sat gazing into a crystal ball, they had dragged her back to the pony  cart and driven home. "I look forward to hearing Robbie play," Juliana  continued wistfully.

"There are dark circles under your eyes, miss," replied Mrs. Forbes. "I  have brewed a new elixir for you, so you must rest today. That is what  you need, rest and quiet, and that you shall have. Then tonight we shall  see."



Fully rested after a long dreamless sleep in her bedroom, no doubt  brought about by Mrs. Forbes's marvelous potion, Juliana sat at the  window under the dormer. She looked out into the garden through which  Lord Liscombe and the marquis were returning from their ride. They were  apparently sharing a jest. When the marquis flung back his head, his  thick golden hair gleamed in the sunlight, and Juliana thought him a  handsome sight indeed. Laughter made him almost approachable. It was  difficult to believe that he was the same autocratic lord who had tried  to order young Ben and gone so far as to take over the fixing of her  coach. She preferred him the way he had been today in Mrs. Forbes's  kitchen and now, his face full of delight. Bringing the pink rose to her  lips, she reveled again in its sweet scent. It was impossible not to  feel the marquis's charm even though she had no personal interest in him  whatsoever. When Sophia joined her at the window, she quickly concealed  the rose.                       
       
           



       

Staring down at the two young men, Sophia sighed, "Do you suppose, Juliana, that the marquis might be what you are looking for?"

"Aunt Sophia!" Juliana cried, nearly tumbling off the window seat so  great was her agitation. "Of course he doesn't fill my needs! He is  neither middle-aged, nor I am sure, is he lonely and lacking female  companionship."

Sophia smiled mischievously. "I am quite sure he does not!"

"Also, dear Aunt, he may very well already possess a marchioness."

"I had forgotten about that," replied her aunt, looking a little guilty,  but she immediately brightened. "He doesn't behave like a married man.  But we must discover his matrimonial status as soon as possible."

"Aunt Sophia, what has come over you!" Juliana felt curiously anxious  about Sophia's newfound gaiety. Somehow Sophia appeared to be getting  younger the farther away from Wentworth Park they traveled. She is only  thirty-nine, Juliana suddenly remembered, not really old at all.

"Have I grown an extra nose, dear?" Sophia asked pleasantly, her special smile making her truly lovely.

"Oh, Aunt!" Juliana laughed, launching herself from the window seat to  take Sophia's hands and plant a cheerful kiss on her cool cheek. "I was  just realizing how young you really are. We should be looking for a  husband for you."

Sophia smothered a smile. "Such nonsense. The marquis would not suit me  at all." A strange look came over her features. "I am very pleased we  decided to go to London. We must make the best of it." She slipped an  arm around Juliana's shoulders, giving her a quick hug. "I'm famished. I  can hardly wait to see what Mrs. Forbes has in store for us tonight."

Dinner, Aunt Sophia would have said, was an interesting combination of  unexpected dishes. Certainly it was a vast improvement over parties at  The Willows. When one dined with Sir Alfred and Lady Grenville, one  always dined on mutton. Monotonous as it might be, it was often the only  source of entertainment.

Juliana felt Aunt Sophia's burst of gaiety was catching. The air of  excitement was so strong in the small parlor she could almost touch it.  Freddie, seated to her left, took great pains to entertain and, indeed,  his stories, no doubt carefully edited, about life in London caused both  Juliana and her aunt to smile.

At just the right instant Dominic entered the conversation with a witty  aside that enhanced the tale and brought them all to laughter. He spoke  with ease and knowledge on any number of subjects, encompassing  politics, the late French wars, literature, and humorous on-dits  concerning the beau monde.

Juliana studied him carefully, for although she tried not to admit it,  he held an odd fascination for her. It was not only his arresting face  and his athletic body, but his mind was a storehouse of delight that she  was beginning to have an alarming eagerness to explore.

As though he felt her regard, Dominic turned to her, smiling, and  Juliana's heart quickened. His fingers touched her hand. "Come,  Juliana," he murmured softly, drawing her to her feet. "I believe your  wish is about to be granted."

Startled and a little frightened that he could have read her thoughts,  she stared at him for an instant before following his gaze to the  doorway where Mrs. Forbes stood with Robbie, who held an ancient violin.

The night sky blazed with stars and the air was unseasonably warm for  May. By moonlight Mrs. Forbes's garden was a fairyland of shadows and  scents.