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Lady Beneath the Veil(10)

By:Sarah Mallory


* * *

At breakfast the following morning Gideon was all consideration. He  escorted her to her chair, poured her coffee and helped her to the  freshest of the toasted muffins before sitting down to his own meal.

'You are right,' he declared. 'I cannot continue without a name for you.'

She bridled instantly.

'I have a perfectly good name, thank you.'

'You have indeed.' He smiled at her and she found her anger melting away. 'I have been thinking about it.'

'You have?'

Had he stayed awake to relive their night together, as she had done? The little flare of hope quickly died.

'Yes,' he continued. 'We could shorten it to Nicky. A pet name, if you like.'

'My grandfather, the old earl, used to call me that.'

'There we have it, then. I shall call you Nicky-but only with your permission, of course.'

She gave him a shy smile.

'I should like that, si-' She noted his sudden frown and corrected herself. 'I should like that, Gideon.'

* * *

By the time they reached London Dominique thought they were getting on  famously. They laughed at the same things, shared a love of music and  poetry, talked for hours, like true friends. But not lovers. Gideon was  polite and considerate, but nothing more, and Dominique, afraid to risk  the fragile bond between them, lay awake in her lonely bed and ached for  him to come to her. It would not do, however, to admit such a longing,  so she hid it behind a smile and accepted as much companionship as her  husband was willing to give.





Chapter Five

Her new home was a neat house in Brook Street, which Gideon informed her belonged to his father.

'I do have a house of my own I inherited from my godmother, Lady  Telford,' he told Dominique as he helped her out of the chaise. 'But it  is a few miles out of town and so run down that I have never used it.'

'I think this would be more convenient for you,' remarked Dominique,  looking up at the elegant facade. At that moment the door was thrown  open and a liveried servant came out, beaming at them.

'Master Gideon, welcome home, sir!'

'Thank you. My dear, this is Judd, who has known me since I was a babe, which means he takes the greatest liberties.'                       
       
           



       

The old man chuckled in a fatherly way.

'Now then, Master Gideon, you don't want to be telling Mrs Albury such  tales. Welcome to you, mistress. Mrs Wilkins is waiting inside and will  show you over the house.'

'Perhaps she will begin by showing Mrs Albury to her bedchamber,'  suggested Gideon, taking her arm and leading her into the narrow hall.  'We have had a long journey and I am sure my wife would like to rest  before dinner.'

'Aye, of course, I will do that, Master Gideon.' A plump, rosy-cheeked  woman in a black-stuff gown and snowy apron bustled forwards and dropped  a curtsy. 'If Mrs Albury would like to come with me, there is hot water  already on the washstands and I will send Kitty up to help you dress.  She is only the second housemaid, but she's a good girl and has ambition  to be a lady's maid, but if she don't suit we will send to the registry  office for someone else.'

'I shall be delighted to see how she goes on,' said Dominique quickly.

'Very good, madam. Now, which of these trunks is yours, and we'll have them taken up immediately.'

'Only one.' They had brought only the trunk Max had sent with her to  Elmwood and now Dominique met Gideon's eyes in a mute appeal.

'My wife is to have everything new, as befits a future viscountess,' he  said coolly. 'She will manage with what is in the trunk and tomorrow we  will set about replenishing her wardrobe.'

The housekeeper looked a little shocked.

'Very well, sir. If you would care to come with me, ma'am, I'll show  you to your room and we'll unpack that single trunk of yours and see  what there is for you to wear tonight...'

Taking a mental review of the items she had seen in the trunk, Dominique hastily declined the offer.

'You have more than enough to do, Mrs Wilkins,' she said. 'I am sure the maid you have found for me will be able to help.'

* * *

When Dominique came downstairs for dinner she was wearing one of the  muslin gowns from the trunk Max had provided. The previous owner of the  gown had been somewhat taller than Dominique, but Kitty had proved to be  very useful with a needle and had soon taken up the hem. The unknown  woman had also been more generously endowed and Dominique had had to  cover the extremely low and rather loose décolletage by draping a fine  muslin handkerchief across her shoulders, crossing the ends over her  bosom and tying them behind her.

When she joined Gideon in the drawing room he raised his brows and she felt obliged to explain.

'I was delighted to leave off my travelling dress, but the trunk my  cousin packed up for me was sadly lacking in suitable clothes. This is  the most respectable of the gowns and even this required several  petticoats beneath it before I was fit to be seen.'

Gideon raised his quizzing glass and surveyed her. His lips curved into a grin.

'Yes, I can see that.'

She fingered the skirts, chuckling.

'It is the finest quality, as is everything in the trunk, but most of  it is highly improper. I think it must have been left behind by one of  Max's less-respectable guests. He is forever filling the house with  lightskirts and actresses- Oh!' She stopped, colouring painfully. 'I-I  beg your pardon, I d-did not think...'

The cheerful camaraderie disappeared in an instant. Gideon's grin was  replaced by a polite smile. He waved one hand, as if to dismiss her  words, but Dominique knew she had erred.

* * *

Gideon saw her stricken look and wished he could say something to  comfort her, but the words would not come. He had never been one for  dissimulation. How could he tell her it did not matter that he had  married the wrong bride when it did matter, when he regretted it so  bitterly? The woman he had courted, the bride he had expected, was tall  and fair and buxom, with blue, blue eyes and a smoky laugh full of  sexual promise. Instead he found himself married to a diminutive  brunette with a damnably obstinate streak. She was pretty enough,  perhaps, if you liked thin women.

Here he stopped himself. She was petite, yes-the top of her head barely  reached his chin-but she was not thin. He remembered their wedding  night, when they had both allowed their pent-up emotions to run away  with them. He recalled how well her small breast fitted into his hand,  how her tiny waist contrasted with the full, rounded softness of her  hips. Their lovemaking had been as hot and passionate as anything he had  ever experienced and her untutored ardour had fuelled his desire. He  hoped he had not hurt her. He had always expected to take his virgin  bride gently, to go slowly and teach her the pleasures of the flesh.                       
       
           



       

Instead they had tumbled into a hedonistic, lust-filled coupling and he  had risen at dawn bemused and mortified by his lack of control. He  remembered glancing down at his sleeping bride, seeing her hair arrayed  over the pillows in a dark cloud and feeling an unexpected tenderness  for the innocent, fragile girl he had married. He had wanted to protect  her-from the world, from himself. He had made a vow then, that he would  conduct himself with proper restraint in future.

And there could be no going back. Having consummated their marriage, he  must now commit himself to it and put aside all thoughts of the  actress-what had Max called her? Agnes Bennet. Gideon doubted he had  truly loved her, but he had been captivated by her beauty and she had  shown him a flattering attention that had put all sensible thought to  flight. No, it had not been love. Gideon recognised that it was his  pride that was hurt most and the woman now sharing his life had colluded  in the shameful trick. For that he could never forgive her. Of course,  there was no reason why they should not be happy enough and have a  comfortable, civilised existence together. Many couples entered into  arranged marriages and rubbed along well enough, but it wasn't only her  deceit-he could not ignore her French blood.

It was twelve years since his brother James had died at the hands of  the French mob and the pain of that loss had never left Gideon. His  father had trained him to take his place, to become his heir, but James  had been everything Gideon was not, quiet and studious, but with a charm  of manner that made him universally loved-not for him the rakehell  existence of a young man on the town-and Gideon knew how unworthy he was  to fill James's shoes.

Dinner was a strained affair. They were achingly polite to each other  and by the time the covers were removed Dominique was glad to leave  Gideon to enjoy his port in solitary state. She realised sadly that,  however friendly he might seem, Gideon could not forgive her for her  duplicitous actions. It had been a cruel trick and she should never have  taken part, but when she had agreed to it she had been in turmoil.  Blackmailed by her cousin and half in love with the man behind whose  eyes she glimpsed a sadness that set him apart from the others, while at  the same time detesting the man who would run with Max and his  self-seeking, hedonistic crowd. However, standing beside him while Max  gloatingly explained the deceit, the hurt and humiliation Gideon had  suffered was quite clear to her, if to no one else.