Part 8 (1/2)
V enetia awoke slowly, pulling the covers higher and snuggling deeper into the coc.o.o.n of warmth. Then the painfully clear memory of Gregor's kiss shocked the last few vestiges of sleep from her mind.
Her lips tingled as if longing for another.
She scrubbed them with the back of her hand. It had really happened, then. Gregor had really kissed her. Which meant...what?
Nothing, she told herself. She said it again, aloud. ”It means nothing. Gregor kisses women all the time. It was merely the strain of the day's events.”
When they met today, they would pretend the kiss had never happened. Though things might be awkward at first, she was certain they'd quickly settle back into their normal pattern.
She climbed out of bed, s.h.i.+vering when her feet hit the wood floor. Where on earth was her robe? She glanced around, finally seeing the edge of it peeking out from under the bed. She s.n.a.t.c.hed it up and bundled into it, wis.h.i.+ng it possessed less lace and more material, then made her way to the window and flicked back the edge of the curtain.
Sunlight streamed into the innyard below, blindingly bright and sparkling on the snow. For the first time in two days, there was nary a cloud in the sky. Better yet, there was a line around the barn where large fat icicles dripped away, slowly melting.
Venetia smiled with relief and dropped the curtain back into place. Perhaps they wouldn't be stuck here very long-which was a good thing, considering how things between her and Gregor had gone awry so quickly.
Unwilling to examine the events of last night without her breakfast, she crossed to the washstand, picked up her silver comb, and began to tame her long hair.
Venetia tugged through the last tangle, wis.h.i.+ng she'd brought her handheld mirror. The one over the washstand was so spotted and cloudy she could hardly make out her face, much less tell anything about her hair.
Sighing, she began the laborious task of pinning up her long locks. She was just sliding the last pin into place when she heard the door across the hall open.
Miss Platt's voice drifted into the room. ”Yes, ma'am! I will go at once and see why no one brought hot water.”
Mrs. Bloom's shrill voice complained at length.
When she finally paused, Miss Platt said in her breathless voice, ”Oh, yes, my dear Mrs. Bloom! It's most disgraceful. I'll go at once, and I will not return until I find some water.”
Venetia went to the door and cracked it open. Miss Platt was just closing the door to Mrs. Bloom 's room, a harried expression on her face.
”Miss Platt!” Venetia whispered.
Miss Platt paused, glancing back over her shoulder. She was dressed in gray again, with no ornamentation to alleviate the drabness of her attire. ”Miss We-”
”Shhhh!” Venetia opened her door wider and whispered, ”Do you have some time to speak? It will take only a moment.”
Miss Platt glanced nervously at Mrs. Bloom's door. ”I don't know if I-”
”Please.”
The thin woman managed a nervous smile and entered Venetia's room.
Once there, Venetia took Miss Platt's hands and led her to the only chair. ”Pray have a seat. I am sorry I don't have more comforts here, but we have to make do.”
Miss Platt shook her head. ”Oh, I couldn't possibly take the only chair!”
Venetia rather wished Miss Platt could. The woman was far taller than she and it was a bit of a strain to look up into her angular face. The light from the window was not very kind to Miss Platt. Her skin was sallow, her lips very thin, and her eyelashes nonexistent. Her only claim to attractiveness was the unusual light blue color of her eyes.
Of course, the exterior was a poor indicator of the soul, as Venetia knew after countless lectures from her father. It had often been proven that a plain exterior harbored a pure soul.
Looking up into Miss Platt's plain features, it was easy to imagine that they shone with an especially angelic goodness. ”Miss Platt, I hope you don't think I'm being forward, but Mrs. Bloom seems-that is to say, she's not always-how did you come to be in her employ?”
Miss Platt flushed a rich hue that showed her to even more disadvantage. ”That's a very complicated story.”
Venetia had expected as much. ”I didn't wish to bring it up at dinner last night, because there were so many people present, but I couldn't help but wonder.”
Miss Platt wrung her hands, glancing nervously at the door. ”Mrs. Bloom does not like me to tell.”
”Because it might show her in an ill light?”
”Oh, no! It's not a bad story, but Mrs. Bloom feels that some people might take her part wrong.”
Indignation warmed Venetia's heart. Her instincts had been right once again; Miss Platt was in sore need of a champion. ”Pray tell me what happened! At least, do so if you wish.”
”It's not much of a story. It-it has to do with my brother, Bertrand.” As she said the name, Miss Platt's thin lips curved into a shy smile, her face softening. ”My brother is a wonderful man, quite handsome and debonair, though a bit-” She hesitated, clearly unable or unwilling to say anything bad about him.
”Naive?” Venetia offered helpfully.
”Yes!” Miss Platt looked relieved. ”Bertrand is several years younger than I. Through an odd set of circ.u.mstances, he found himself in London.” She leaned forward and said in an awed whisper, ”With more than a thousand pounds!”
”That's quite a sum of money.”
”He inherited it from my uncle. My brother and I were raised in the wilds of Dover, and nothing would do but that Bertrand must go to London with his funds. I fear he was a bit out of his element there. He is quite impulsive.” Miss Platt's voice came in a rush, her hands tightly clenched before her, a trace of color on her thin cheeks. ”It's a family trait, I am afraid. My father suffered from just such an affliction.”
Venetia placed a hand on Miss Platt's shoulder and squeezed sympathetically. ”I think I know what happened. Someone took advantage of your brother and encouraged his weakness?”
”Oh, yes!” Miss Platt grasped one of Venetia's hands between hers, a beseeching look in her eyes. ”Miss West, you cannot know the agonies of being so far away from one's only blood relative!”
”Your brother is the last of your family?”
”Oh, yes. Except for Mrs. Bloom.”
”You are related to her?”
”She married my mother's brother, which makes her my aunt by marriage. My uncle, Mr. Bloom, was a very wealthy man. He and Mrs. Bloom took care of Bertrand and me until he died, some years ago. He left the two of us some funds.”
”That's where Bertrand got his thousand pounds.”
”Yes.” Miss Platt's expression darkened. ”I've always thought Mrs. Bloom resented that.”
Venetia patted Miss Platt's hand. ”Where is Bertrand now?”
”In London.” Miss Platt's lips quivered. ”In debtor's prison.”
”Oh, no!”
”Yes! Mrs. Bloom and I are on our way to save him.”
Venetia's mouth opened. ”Mrs. Bloom is going to pay his debts?”
Miss Platt flushed awkwardly. ”Yes, but-” She closed her lips for a moment before speaking again. ”I am not to speak of that. Mrs. Bloom doesn't wish me to say more on the matter.”