Her jaw dropped and she pressed her palms to her cheeks. 'Oh, dear, that brings such a clear picture to my brain. It is appalling, Nicholas. I am only eighteen.'
'I know,' he said and smiled down at her. He lightly cupped her cheek with his own palm. 'Only consider all the time you and I will spend bringing this about. Will you marry me, Rosalind? Will you let me be your Orlando?'
'A man who knows Shakespeare. It is a powerful temptation, Nicholas, but-'
'Perhaps it is I who am not worthy of you. Look at me, a merchant of Macau, an earl through an accident of birth, detested by his father. Not at all worthy of you.'
She chewed on her bottom lip. Finally, she raised her face to his 'Perhaps I would not lose
'You would not lose a whit. Indeed, you would gain in worthiness.'
'Very well, then it is time you spoke to Uncle Ryder.'
Nicholas raised his head and nodded first to Willicombe, then toward Ryder Sherbrooke, still standing against the door of the drawing room, his arms still crossed over his chest. 'Excuse me, Rosalind.'
She watched Nicholas walk back to her uncle and speak to him low, then he came back to her, lightly patted her cheek, and left.
Ryder merely nodded to her and went back into the drawing room, where she knew Uncle Douglas waited.
17
The following afternoon Nicholas emerged from the Sherbrooke estate room looking thoughtful. When he walked into the study, Grayson said, 'It's about time you came. Rosalind wouldn't translate the Rules of the Pale until you got here.'
Nicholas nodded toward Rosalind, smiling automatically when he saw her. Good, she thought, it was done. She was going to marry Nicholas Vail, a man she didn't know at all. She hoped she would have fifty years to learn all his bad habits. Her Aunt Sophie had once told her that Uncle Ryder still came up with a new crop of bad habits every single spring and it required great ingenuity to stamp them all out. Rosalind was smiling as 'she lowered her eyes to the ancient book and read:
The most amazing thing has happened. The Dragons of the Sallas Pond have sung to me that they believe me ready to join the wizards. Because the Dragons can read a man's thoughts, they sang to me that the wizards were men like myself who maintained the balance of the different worlds tied
Rosalind paused and drank some water. She said, 'The Celts. This is very odd. Why are there Celtic gods in the Pale?'
'Why not?' Grayson said. 'If there are Tibers, surely we can accept Celtic gods.' He shrugged. 'We still didn't learn anything at all useful, but I will say that this is a powerful story. I can see the fortress of Blood Rock clearly in my mind.'
Nicholas said, 'You think it is a fiction, spun out of Sarimund's brain?'
Grayson shrugged. 'Were there not so many odd things about how I came upon the book, I should say yes immediately. But there were odd things, more than odd, really. Magical things. I find myself enjoying it as I would any good tale.'
Nicholas rose and prowled around the room, pausing here and there to pick up a cushion or a teacup or a book off a table. He said, 'I don't like any of this. It is as if Sarimund is playing with us, perhaps mocking us, and perhaps this Blood Rock is something he created to ease the boredom of his time in the Bulgar.'
Rosalind said, 'There are only a few pages left. Shall I finish them today?'
Grayson consulted his watch and rose. 'Let us finish it tomorrow. I must be off. I have an engagement.'
'Aha,' Rosalind said, grinning shamelessly at him. 'An engagement with the lovely Lorelei? Will her father be hanging over your shoulder the whole time? Perhaps her four sisters will giggle in a circle around you?'
'I am not the one scandalizing my parents,' he said. 'Look at the two of you-engaged! I tell you, Rosalind, it fair to curdles my belly to think of you married, and you wore pigtails only weeks ago, I would swear it. Nicholas, I will tell you about her misspent childhood, how she was as bad as any demon I ever created, led all the children into mischief, always with a wicked smile, drove my parents and Jane-Jane is the directress of Brandon House-quite mad. Yes, Mother is right, you were a Devil's spawn, Rosalind.'
Nicholas sat down on an embroidered green wing chair, stretched out his long legs in front of him, and crossed his hands over his belly. 'Tell me one evil deed this Devil child executed, Grayson-only one, because I don't