Eleanor Webster

No Conventional Miss


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      Gibson Manor—1805

      The child had been missing for three days.

      Through the nursery windowpanes, Rilla watched the faint flickering of the men’s torches as they searched. Occasionally she heard their hoarse cries.

      It was a wet spring. Heavy raindrops fell rhythmically off the shrubbery. A thick, obscuring mist hung low, tangling in the bare branches and turning the countryside a flat, featureless grey.

      Rilla shivered and rested her head against the cool windowpane. She thought of Sophie. The little girl was new to the neighbourhood, a visitor and only five. Even at nine, Rilla would hate to be outside in this weather. And Rilla was strong and tall. She climbed trees, building perches in their upper branches and swinging from their limbs.

      Oh, why did her head ache? Why did her limbs feel heavy as though weighted with huge sacks of flour?

      Even the glow of twilight hurt and she squeezed her lids tight shut, pressing her palms to her eyes to cut out any vestige of light.

      And then ‘it’ happened.

      For ever after, Rilla said she slept and dreamed. There was, could be, no other explanation.

      Except Rilla did not remember lying down. There was no rest, no comfortable drifting into slumber.

      Instead, it felt as though she remained standing while everything about her changed and mutated: the whitewashed walls, the books, the rocking horse with its worn paint, the brick hearth, her grandmother’s ugly portrait and equally ugly embroidered sampler—gone.

      Cold mist dampened her skin. Goosebumps prickled. Her breath came in harsh gulps. She stared into the fog’s whiteness, trying to make out indistinct forms and shadows.

      Yes, she knew the place. It was the gamekeeper’s cottage, burned down years earlier and now a ruin, its blackened beams softened by ivy.

      Sophie.

      Sophie was here.

      The knowledge came suddenly and completely, without doubt or question.

      Sophie was trapped within the cellar, under the slate floor of the broken kitchen.

      * * *

      Rilla blinked. She was lying on the cold nursery floor, staring upwards at the whitewashed ceiling with its singular crack which looked like a lamb’s hind leg. She sat up. Tentatively she touched the cloth of her dress and twisted her fingers through the unruly tresses of her red hair.

      Dry.

      Her shoes were clean and dry also.

      And yet...

      In the distance, she heard the shouts of the men’s voices.

      She jumped up, suddenly urgent. She must tell them. They did not know yet. They must know. Then they would find Sophie and save her.

      Thank goodness.

      And everything would change.

       Chapter One

      Lyngate Estate—1817

      ‘This sounds like yet another of your ill-advised schemes,’ said Paul Lindsey, Viscount Wyburn, with as much patience as he could muster.

      ‘Piffle,’ his stepmother retorted, shaking her grey ringlets. ‘It would be a crime to allow such delightful girls to languish in the country.’

      ‘But hardly incumbent upon you to rectify the situation.’ Paul stood by the mantel. His gaze drifted from the china figurines to the requisite pink, dimpled Cupids depicted across the drawing-room ceiling.

      ‘Who else will take them in hand? Their dear mother is dead, and Sir George has a predilection for horses and cards. Very sad.’ Lady Wyburn bent with apparent diligence over her needlework.

      Turning, Paul sat across from his relative and studied her more closely. He drummed his fingers on the low rosewood table. Lady Wyburn was the only person on God’s earth he gave tuppence for, and he’d not allow some sticky-fingered squire to rob her blind.

      ‘Stepmother.’ He leaned forward on the ludicrously low sofa. ‘People tend to take advantage of you. If you recall, your young nephew—’

      ‘Not the same thing.’ She fluttered her hand in front of her face as though shooing a non-existent pest. ‘Rilla and her younger sister, Imogene, are charming. Imogene’s looks are exceptional and Rilla is refreshing. Not beautiful exactly, but exotic and interesting.’

      ‘Admirable attributes in a book or a flower.’

      ‘Don’t be flippant, dear.’ She waved her needlepoint, a colourful object of pinks and purples with no discernible pattern. ‘Anyway, Sir George hasn’t a clue how to find them suitable husbands and lacks the funds—’

      ‘And sees you as a lucrative prospect, I suppose.’ Paul shifted his legs, moving them away from the fire’s warmth, again drumming his fingers. He stopped. The noise irritated and revealed an emotional response he would not allow.

      ‘Nonsense. Sir George is an academic of repute. The only prospects that interest him involve ancient Greeks or Romans.’

      ‘Except for the occasional English racehorse. What about their dowries? Will you contribute to that charity?’ he questioned.

      ‘Dear Sir George would not agree. Besides, Rilla would create a rumpus. She is proud and not at all keen on marriage.’

      ‘That will be a change. Rilla? An unusual name.’

      ‘Short for Amaryllis.’

      ‘How unfortunate. Her mother was in a botanical mood, I presume.’ But the name was unforgettable. He’d heard it before.

       Good God!

      ‘Not that girl who rode the pig through Lady Lockhart’s garden at that party we attended before I went to the Continent?’ he asked with dawning comprehension.

      ‘A goat, actually. And she was younger then.’

      ‘You plan to present this...um, young lady?’ A smile tugged at his mouth.

      ‘Rilla is much improved. And we all fall into scrapes in our youth.’

      ‘I do not remember riding stray barnyard animals.’

      ‘You were always a responsible youth. Besides, as I recall, you said it was the best part of the day.’

      ‘That was a long time ago.’ Paul stood and walked to the window, stifling a yawn.

      ‘You’re tired.’ Lady Wyburn spoke sharply. ‘You did not sleep well.’

      Of course he had not slept well. He’d been at Wyburn, hadn’t he? He never slept well at his estate. Or within a ten-mile radius of that cursed lake.

      He rolled his shoulders. ‘It is more likely the heat in this room and not my sleeping habits which make me yawn. Might we return to the subject of your neighbours?’

      ‘Delightful girls.’

      ‘Generally people you find delightful prove unscrupulous.’ He turned from the window with sudden decision. ‘I will pay my respects to the Gibsons this afternoon. I trust you will take note if I am dissatisfied with their character.’

      ‘I always listen to your insights. Ride over now, dear.’ Lady Wyburn waved a hand in the direction of the French window as if expecting him to leap through it on his mission.

      Paul preferred a more conventional exit.

      ‘Goodbye, Stepmother,’ he said, kissing her cheek.

      ‘Enjoy yourself.’

      ‘As I would a visit to the tooth extractor,’