Lucy's eyes were closing and she did not protest. Juliana drew the curtains around the bed and tiptoed from the room. She went to her own parlor and stood at the window, looking out over the garden, her brow knitted in thought. Tarquin could prevent Lucy's friends from visiting her in his house, but she couldn't see how he could prevent her from visiting Russell Street if she had her husband's permission to do so. It sounded as if he thought he could, but how would he do so?
By compelling Lucien to withhold his permission, of course. He could do that by withdrawing his financial support. So she had to get to Lucien before the duke did. She had to find a way to persuade him to stand against Tarquin, whatever pressure was brought to bear. It ought to be possible. Lucien didn't strike her as particularly clever. Vindictive, spiteful, degenerate, but not needle-witted. She should be able to run rings around him if she came up with the right motivation.
Quentin walked into the garden below her and strolled down a flagstone path. He carried a pair of secateurs and stopped beside a bush of yellow roses. He cut half a dozen and then added another six white ones from the neighboring bush. Juliana watched him arrange them artistically into a bouquet, a little smile on his face. It was astonishing how different he was from his half brother. In fact, it was astounding how vastly different the three Courtney men were from each other. Lucien was utterly vile. She believed that Tarquin, beneath the domineering surface, was essentially decent. She was not afraid she would come to harm under his protection. But he lacked his brother's sensitivity and gentleness.
Quentin came back into the house with his bouquet of roses, and she wondered who they were for. Lady Lydia, perhaps?
The thought popped into her head. Something had given her the impression that that would be a match made in heaven. And from what she'd seen, she guessed it was a match they both yearned for. Or at least would yearn for if they thought it could ever be a possibility. But the Duke of Redmayne stood between them. And the duke had little interest in taking Lady Lydia to wife-he was merely satisfying an obligation. Maybe she could change that. People often didn't know how to get out of their own tangles. Witness herself, she thought wryly.
There was a tap at her door, and Lord Quentin came in at her response. He carried the roses, and for a minute she thought they were for her. But he said with a quick smile, "I thought your friend might take comfort from some flowers. They have such a lovely scent and they're so fresh and alive. I don't wish to burst in upon her unannounced, so I wondered if you would accompany me to her chamber."
"Yes, of course." Juliana sprang to her feet. Her hoop swung in a wide arc as she hastened eagerly to the door. A small round table rocked under the impact of the hoop. She paused to steady the table automatically before resuming her swift progress. "She was feeling sleepy when I left her, but it would be lovely to open one's eyes on a bowl of roses. Aren't they beautiful?"
Quentin smiled as she buried her nose in their fragrance. "You have only to give order for the servants to cut some for your own apartments."
Juliana looked up quickly, afraid that he might have read her mind earlier. "Oh, I would pick them myself," she said. "But someone has already put roses in my bedchamber and boudoir." She accompanied him down the corridor to Lucy's chamber, wishing she had the art of small talk to cover her moment of awkwardness.
She opened Lucy's door quietly and tiptoed in, peeping behind the bed curtains. Lucy opened her eyes and offered a tired smile.
"Lord Quentin has brought you some roses." Juliana stood aside so that Quentin could approach the sickbed. "I'll ring for a maid to put them in water." She reached for the bellpull, then stepped back in case Quentin wished to talk to Lucy alone. He might intend to have a pastoral conversation. But Quentin's voice was cheerful, and more avuncular than clerical, as he asked Lucy how she did and laid the roses on the bedside table.
"The maid will look after these. I don't wish to disturb your rest."
"Thank you. sir." Lucy's smile brightened considerably. "I don't know what I've done to deserve such kindness."
"You don't have to deserve it," Juliana stated with a touch of indignation. "When someone's been so ill treated, they're entitled to all the compassion and care that decent people can offer. Isn't that so, Lord Quentin?"
"Indeed." he agreed, even as he wondered why he found her passionate declaration such a novel concept. As a man of the cloth, he should have been expounding the principle himself, but somehow it hadn't crossed his mind until now. The poor were a fact of life. Cruelty and indifference were everywhere in their lives. If he'd thought of their plight at all, he'd simply considered it to be one of the inevitable evils of their world. The rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate. Juliana was opening his eyes on a new landscape.
Lucy looked incredulous, and he was glad he hadn't shown his own surprise at Juliana's revolutionary doctrine. "I'll leave you to your rest," he said. "But should you ever wish to talk to me, please send for me." He bowed and eased out of the room.
"What would I talk to him about:" Lucy inquired, struggling up on the pillows. "I wouldn't dare to send for him."
"He's a clergyman," Juliana informed her, sitting on the edge of the bed. "So if you wanted to talk on churchy matters, then, of course, he'd be available."
"Oh, I see." Lucy looked less bewildered. "Tell me your story, Juliana. I feel much stronger now."
Juliana told her as much as the other girls knew, breaking off when a maid entered to put the roses in water. Henny came in a few minutes later with a hot posset for the invalid. Juliana left to dress for dinner.
In her bedchamber she examined herself in the cheval mirror, frowning at her untidy appearance. Her morning's activities in the Marshalsea had wreaked havoc with her earlier elegance. It was disconcerting to think that she'd had her confrontation with the duke looking like a grubby schoolgirl. That hadn't prevented him from kissing her, however. She knew she hadn't mistaken the desire in his eyes, and surely he couldn't have feigned the passion of that kiss. Perhaps he found scruffy gypsies arousing. Bella at Russell Street had described in her worldly way some of the strange fancies of the men who visited there. Nuns and schoolgirls… who was to say the duke was any different?
Henny bustled in at that point, and she put the interesting question aside, submitting to the deft, quick hands of the abigail, who plaited her hair and arranged the unruly-curls that wouldn't submit to the pins into artful ringlets framing her face. She didn't ask Juliana's opinion about her gown but chose a sacque gown of violet tabby opened over a dark-green petticoat. She arranged a muslin fichu at the neck, adjusted the lace ruffles at her elbows, twitched the skirt straight over the hoops, handed her a fan and her long silk gloves, and shooed her downstairs like a farmer's wife with her chickens. But Juliana found this treatment wonderfully comforting. She had not the slightest inclination to argue with the woman or play the mistress to her servant.
"Ah, well met, my lady. Shall we go down together?" Lucien emerged from his bedchamber as she passed. His voice was slightly slurred, his eyes unfocused, his gait a trifle unsteady. The reek of cognac hung around him. "Don't in general dine at m'cousin's table. Dull work, except that the wine's good and his chef is a marvel. But thought I'd honor my bride, eh?" He chuckled in a restrained fashion so that it brought forth no more than a wheeze. "Take my arm, m'dear."
Juliana took the scarlet-taffeta arm. It was utterly unimpeachable for her to go into dinner on her husband's arm. But how it would plague the Duke of Redmayne! She smiled up at Lucien. "Alter dinner, my lord, perhaps I could speak with you in private."