A Regency Gentleman's Passion. Diane Gaston
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Название: A Regency Gentleman's Passion

Автор: Diane Gaston

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия: Mills & Boon M&B

isbn: 9781474038027

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ eyes grew heavy. She fought to stay awake. How could she sleep while the fate of her son was in question?

      The sounds in the street were rhythmic and lulling. Her eyes closed.

      And flew open again.

      A loud rapping at the door startled her awake. She sat up, heart pounding.

      “Emmaline,” she heard a man’s voice. “Open the door.”

      Gabriel!

      She flew to the door and pulled it open.

      He was a mere shadow in the dark yard, but as he stepped inside, she could see he carried something over his shoulder.

      Her eyes widened.

      “I’ve brought your son.”

      “Claude!” Her hands clasped over her mouth. Was he dead? “Claude!”

      “He’s wounded.” Without another word he carried him upstairs.

      She grabbed the candle and followed. Claude’s head lolled back and forth with each step Gabriel made.

      Gabriel opened the door to Claude’s room and placed him on the bed. Immediately he began to undress him.

      Emmaline lit more candles, her hands trembling. “Where is he hurt?”

      “His head.” He ripped away Claude’s bloody shirt. “His neck. And leg.”

      She stood by the bed, finally able to touch her son. She helped pull off his trousers, stained with his blood. He’d been shot in the thigh, but a quick examination showed that the musket ball had passed through. On his neck, right above his collarbone, was another wound. She placed a finger near the spot.

      Claude flinched and moaned—signs of life, at least.

      “Water.” Gabriel’s voice sounded forced. “Need to wash. See the wounds better.”

      She sprang to her feet. “I’ll fetch some.”

      She returned with a stack of towels, a pitcher of water, a basin and cup. As she placed them on the bedside table, Gabriel swayed and looked as if he might collapse to the floor.

      She hurried to him, helping him regain his balance. “Are you injured, Gabriel?”

      He shook his head. “Tired.”

      “Sit in the chair.” She eased him over to a wooden chair near the bed and ran to pour him a cup of the water.

      He drank it greedily, but gestured for her to return to Claude.

      Emmaline washed away blood and mud and bits of grass and cloth from her son’s skin and from his hair. Beneath his matted hair was a long gash. A musket ball had scraped him, but had not penetrated. His thigh had a huge hole in it from which blood still oozed. His chest was riddled with round red spots, turning to bruises.

      “His chest plate stopped some of the musket balls,” Gabriel said. The cuirassiers wore steel chest plates, like the armour of medieval times.

      The most worrisome wound was the one on his neck. The musket ball needed to come out.

      She turned to Gabriel. “He needs a surgeon.”

      He rubbed his face. “Won’t find one. There are thousands who need a surgeon. Most worse off.” His gaze met hers. “Too many.” A haunted expression came over his face.

      Emmaline could not allow herself to think of what horrors he’d seen. She must think only of Claude, how to keep him alive.

      She forced herself to remain calm. “I will remove the ball.”

      “Emmaline—” he began in a warning tone.

      She set her jaw in resolve. “There is no other choice. I have seen it done before. I must try.”

      She ran from the room and gathered any items she could think of that would help her remove the ball: her knitting needles, a long embroidery hook, tweezers, scissors. The sky was turning light. At least she would be able to see better.

      Back in Claude’s room, she pushed the bed to the window and set her tools on the bed next to her son.

      Gabriel rose from the chair. “I’ll hold him still.”

      How he would have the strength to do so, she didn’t know, but he stood on the opposite side of the bed and held Claude’s shoulders. She carefully inserted the knitting needle into the wound to find the path of the musket ball. Claude’s eyes opened and he cried out. Gabriel held him fast.

      Swallowing against a sudden wave of nausea, Emmaline did not have to probe far. “It is not deep!”

      Her tweezers were about five inches long, plenty of length to reach the ball. It took several tries to pull it out, all the while Claude writhing with the pain of it. He quickly lost consciousness and became limp. Finally she manoeuvred the ball to the opening and was able to hold it between her fingers. Gabriel released Claude and leaned against the wall.

      “One more thing if you can stand it,” she said to Gabriel. “I want to sew his head wound closed.”

      Gabriel’s arms trembled as he held Claude’s head while Emmaline put thread and needle through the skin, but Claude did not regain consciousness.

      “Sit down now,” she told Gabriel after she was done.

      She bandaged the wounds and covered Claude with clean linens and a blanket. He again moaned, but it was a relief to hear him make any sound. Later, as she had done when he was ill as a child, she would spoon broth down his throat and wipe his brow with cool compresses if he became feverish. There was little else she could do.

      She stepped back from his bed.

      Gabriel rose. “I must leave.”

      She touched his arm. “Take some food first. Something to drink.” She wanted to tell him not to leave her, to stay. With his steadying presence, she felt as if she could do anything to keep Claude alive. Without him, she was alone.

      She walked downstairs with him and made him sit at the table where he’d sat so many happier times before.

      “Just something to drink,” he said.

      She gave him wine and he drank it like water.

      “Now I must go.” He stood again and walked towards the door.

      “Gabriel.” She ran to him as he opened the door. “Who won the battle?”

      He gave her a weary look. “The Allies.”

      She was relieved. When—if—Claude recovered, he would not return to the French army. There would be no need if the British had won. He could have a normal, peaceful life.

      Gabriel put his hand on the doorknob again.

      “Gabriel!” she called again.

      He СКАЧАТЬ