James River - Lost Lady - Part 1
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Part 1

Lost Lady.

Jude Deveraux.

Chapter 1.

Weston Manor sat serenely and quietly in the midst of two acres of garden. It was a small house, unpretentious, looking like what it was—an English gentleman's lodging in 1797. Only the keenest observer would notice that two of the gutters had fallen somewhat or that a corner of one of the chimneys was broken away or even that some of the painted trim was beginning to peel.

Inside, the only room that was fully lit was the dining room, but here, too, could be seen evidence of neglect. In the shadows, the Georgian chairs' upholstery was frayed and faded. Tiny bits of the plaster decorations on the tall ceiling had started to chip, and on one wall there was a lighter s.p.a.ce where a painting had once hung.

But the young girl sitting on one side of the table was oblivious to any imperfections in the room, for her eyes were glued to the man across from her.

Farrell Batsford curved his wrist in such a manner that the ruffled silk at his cuff would not be stained by the juices from the toast. Taking only a bit of the meat onto his plate, he gave a thin smile to the girl across from him.

"Stop gawking and eat your dinner," Jonathan Northland commanded his niece, before looking away from her. "Now, Farrell, what were you saying about the shooting at your country place?"

Regan Weston tried to look at her food, even to eat a few bites, but she couldn't manage to swallow any of it. How anyone expected her to be calm and eat at a time like this, when the man she loved was sitting so near her, she couldn't begin to understand. She stole another glance at Farrell, looking up at him through her long, dark lashes. He was aristocratic-looking with his long, thin nose and his almond-shaped blue eyes. The velvet coat he wore with the gold brocaded vest perfectly suited his looks and his slim, elegant body. Blond hair was arranged artfully around his narrow head, waving just a bit at the edge of his pure white cravat.

As Regan uttered a deep sigh, her uncle gave her another quelling look. Farrell wiped the corners of his thin lips delicately.

"Perhaps my bride-to-be would like to take a walk in the moonlight?" Farrell asked quietly, p.r.o.nouncing each word carefully.

Bride! Regan thought. This time next week she would be his wife, and she'd have him all to herself to love and cherish, to hold, to belong only to her. Overwhelmed by emotion, she could not speak; she could only nod in acceptance. As she tossed her napkin on the table, she was aware of her uncle's disapproval. Once again she wasn't acting as a lady should. From now on, she reminded herself for the thousandth time, she must remember who she was—and who she was to become: Mrs. Farrell Batsford.

As Farrell held out his arm for her, Regan tried not to clutch it. She wanted to dance with delight, laugh with her happiness, throw her arms around the man she loved. But, instead, she followed him sedately from the dining room into the cool spring garden.

"Perhaps you should have worn a shawl," Farrell said once they were a short way from the house.

"Oh no," she said breathlessly, leaning a little closer to him. "I wouldn't have wanted to take a minute away from our time together."

Farrell started to say something but seemed to change his mind as he looked away from her. "The wind is off the sea tonight, and it is cooler than last night."

"Oh Farrell, " she sighed. "Only six more days and we'll be married. I'm sure I'm the happiest girl alive."

"Yes, well perhaps," Farrell said quickly as he disengaged her fingers from his arm. "Sit here, Regan."

The tone of his voice was much like the one her uncle always used with her, one of impatience and exasperation.

"I would rather walk with you."

"Are you going to start being disobedient before we're even married?" he demanded, gazing down into her wide-set, trusting eyes. Everything she thought and felt showed in those eyes. She was pretty, in a childish sort of way, in her high-necked muslin dress, but she had about as much appeal to him as a puppy begging for affection.

He took a few steps away from her before beginning to talk. "Is everything ready for the wedding?"

"Uncle Jonathan planned it all."

"Of course—he would," Farrell said under his breath. "Then I'll return next week for the ceremony."

"Next week!" Regan jumped to her feet. "Not before? But Farrell* we* I*"

He ignored her outburst as he held out his arm for her. "I think we should return to the house now, and perhaps you should reconsider the whole idea of marriage if everything I do displeases you."

One look from Farrell stopped her protest. She told herself again to remember her manners and be quiet, that she must never give her beloved any reason to find fault with her.

Once they were back inside the dining room, Farrell and her uncle quickly dismissed her to her upstairs bedchamber. She didn't dare protest; she was too afraid that Farrell would again suggest calling off the

wedding.

Inside her bedroom, she could release her pent-up emotions. "Isn't he wonderful, Matta?" she gushed to her maid. "Did you ever see such brocade as he wore? Only a real gentleman could choose such fabric. And his manners! He does everything correctly, everything perfectly. Oh, how I wish I could be like him, to always be so sure of myself, to know even my slightest movement was correct."

Matta's coa.r.s.e, ugly face frowned. "It seems to me there should be more to a man than just pretty manners," she said in her West Country accent. "Now stand still and get out of that dress. It's past time for you to be in bed."

Regan did as she was told; she always obeyed people. Someday, she thought, she'd be a person of importance. She had money from her father, and she'd have the man she loved for her husband. Together the two of them would keep an elegant house in London where they would give the most fashionable parties, and a house in the country where she could be alone with her perfect husband.

"Stop your dreamin'," Matta commanded, "and get into bed. Someday you're gonna wake up, Regan Weston, and find out the world ain't made of sugarplums and silk brocade."

"Oh Matta," Regan laughed. "I'm not as silly as you think. I had enough sense to get Farrell, didn't I?

What other girl could do that?"

"Maybe any of them with her father's money," Matta muttered as she tucked the covers around her charge's slim body. "Now go to sleep and save your dreamin' for the nighttime."

Obediently, Regan closed her eyes until Matta was out of the room. Her father's money! The words echoed through her mind. Of course Matta was wrong, she reasoned. Farrell loved her for herself, because*

When she couldn't remember a single reason that Farrell had given for wanting to marry her, she sat up in bed. On the moonlit night when he'd proposed, he'd kissed her forehead and talked of his home, which had been in his family for generations.

Tossing the covers aside, Regan went to the mirror, looking at herself in moonlight-silvered image. Her wide-set, blue-green eyes looked like they belonged to a child instead of to a young woman who'd been eighteen for a whole week now, and her slim figure was always hidden under loose, concealing clothes—clothes chosen by her uncle. Even now, her heavy cambric nightgown was long-sleeved and high-necked.

What could Farrell see in her? she wondered. How could he know that she could be sophisticated and graceful when she was always dressed as a child? Trying to smile in a seductive way, she pulled her nightgown off one shoulder. Ah yes, if Farrell were to see her like this, he just might do something besides kiss her forehead in a fatherly way. A very immature giggle escaped her as she thought of Farrell's reaction to the coquetry of his sedate, gentle bride-to-be.

Quickly, she looked toward where Matta slept in the little adjoining dressing room and thought it just might be worth any consequences from her uncle to see her beloved's reaction to her in a nightgown.

After hastily putting on heelless slippers, she silently eased the door open and tiptoed downstairs.

The door to the drawing room was open, candles blazing. In a golden halo sat Farrell, and Regan could do little more than marvel at him. It was quite a few minutes before she began to listen to what the two men were saying.

"Look at this place!" Jonathan said vehemently. "Yesterday a piece of plaster scrollwork fell on top of my head. There I was, reading my paper, when a d.a.m.ned flower came flying at me."

Farrell concentrated on the brandy in his gla.s.s. "It will all be over soon—for you at least. You'll get your money and can repair your house or buy a new one if you want, but I have a lifetime of misery ahead of me."

Snorting, Jonathan refilled his gla.s.s. "You make it sound as if you were going to prison. I tell you, you should be grateful for what I've done for you. "

"Grateful!" Farrell sneered. "You've saddled me with a brainless, uneducated, clumsy chit of a girl."

"Come now, some men would be happy to have her. She's pretty, and her simple-mindedness would be liked by a great many men."

"I am not like any other man," Farrell said warningly.

Unlike many people, Jonathan did not find Farrell Batsford intimidating. "True," he said evenly. "Not many men would make a bargain such as you have."

As Jonathan finished his third brandy, he turned back to Farrell. "Come now, let's not argue. We should be celebrating our good fortune, not going for each other's throat. " He raised his full gla.s.s in salute. "Here's to my dear sister, with many thanks for marrying her rich young man."

"And dying and leaving it all within your reach—isn't that the rest of the toast?" After drinking deeply, Farrell turned serious. "Are you sure about your brother-in-law's will? I don't want to marry your niece and then find out it was all a big mistake."

"I've memorized the doc.u.ment!" Jonathan said angrily. "I've lived in barristers' offices for the last six years. The girl cannot touch the money before she's twenty-three, unless she marries before then, and even at that she couldn't be married before she was eighteen."

"If that hadn't been the case, would you have found someone to marry her when she was twelve perhaps?"

Chuckling, Jonathan set his gla.s.s down. "Perhaps. Who knows? As far as I can tell, she hasn't changed much since she was twelve."

"If you hadn't kept her prisoner in this crumbling house, perhaps she wouldn't be such an immature, uninteresting child. Lord! When I think of the wedding night! No doubt she'll cry and pout like a two-year-old."

"Stop complaining!" snarled Jonathan. "You'll have money enough to repair that great monstrosity of a house of yours, and all I get for years of taking care of her is a measly pittance."

"Caring for her! Since when have you left your club long enough to even know what she looks like?" Sighing heavily, he continued, "I'll leave her at my house and then go to London. At least now I'll have money enough to enjoy myself. Of course, it won't be pleasant not being able to have my friends to my house. Perhaps I can hire someone to take care of a wife's duties. I cannot imagine your niece managing an estate the size of mine." Glancing up, he saw that Jonathan's face had grown pale; his hands clutching the gla.s.s were white-knuckled.

Turning quickly, Farrell saw Regan standing in the light by the doorway. Acting as if nothing had happened, he set his gla.s.s down. "Regan," he said gently, warmly. "You shouldn't be up so late."

Her big eyes were magnified by the tears sparkling in them. "Do not touch me," she whispered, her hands clenched at her side, her back rigid. She looked so small, with her thick dark hair hanging down her back, swathed in a little girl's nightgown.

"Regan, you are to obey me at once."

She whirled on him. "Don't use that tone with me! How dare you think you can tell me what to do after the things you said! " She looked at her uncle. "You will never get any of my money. Do you understand me? Neither of you will ever get a farthing of my money! "

Jonathan was beginning to recover himself. "And how do you expect to get any of it?" he smiled. "If you don't marry Farrell, you won't be able to touch the money for five years. Until now you've been living on my income, but I'll tell you now that if you refuse to marry him I'll throw you into the streets, since you'd no longer be of use to me."

Putting her palms to her forehead, Regan tried to think clearly.

"Be sensible, Regan," Farrell said, his hand on her shoulder.

She backed away from him. "I'm not like you said," she whispered. "I'm not simple-minded. I can do things. I don't have to take anyone's charity."

"Of course you don't, " Farrell began patronizingly.

"Leave her alone!" Jonathan snapped. "It's no use trying to reason with her. She lives in a dream world just like her mother did. " His fingers bit into her skin as he grabbed her arm. "Do you know what it's been like the past sixteen years since your parents died? I've watched you eat my food and wear the clothes I paid for, yet all the while you were sitting on millions, millions, that I would never be able to touch. Even after you were old enough to inherit, what reason did I have to think you'd give me a pound?"

"I would have. You're my uncle!"

"Ha! " He pushed her back toward the wall. "You would have fallen for some worthless, dressed-up dandy, and he'd have run through everything in five years. I just decided to give you what you wanted and at the same time make sure I got what I wanted. "

"Now see here!" Farrell half choked. "Are you calling me—? Because if you are—."

Ignoring him, Jonathan continued, "What's it to be? Him, or you walk out right now?"

"You can't—," Farrell began.