The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

Bed of Crimson Joy

A grand chapter, BD. I was delighted that William had courage to reprimand Lord Morris and set the playing field aright. Also, his generous courtesy towards Miss Wentworth was kind and truly saved the day for Caroline. But what is this malady that he is burning with? And will Daniel leave to take him home and care for him? I look forward to the next chapter, not only to learn of Williams health, but to hear Daniel's explanation about the past.

Craiger
 
I have to say that it was worth reading this story instead of doing my paper that's due in about 1.5 hours. Off to get the essay done!
 
Chapter 7

Black mists part, and I realize that I am carried into my bed chamber at home. I am only vaguely conscious that it is Daniel who is carrying me to the bed. I sink into darkness and float back up into the dim light to hear garbled bits of frantic discussion. A voice, maybe Joseph, “doctor at number seventeen….across Hanover…”
Another voice, certainly Daniel, “…put him to bed… I’ll… the doctor…” I don’t want him to leave, but am unable to speak or stay clear of the encroaching mist. The candles gutter quietly and go dark.

____________________________________


A sensation like rising from sleep to find daylight, but there is no daylight, only the darkness of night. I see a neighbor to whom I have not been properly introduced standing by my bed. His voice sounds very distorted and distant. “Fever of unknown origin…. dangerously high….. frequent washing with cool water.” Again the dark mists engulf me.

_____________________________________


Blinding light drives sharp needles into my head. I keenly feel the cold and am in much pain, aching throughout my body. Before the mists recede, I am aware that there are voices around me, but none of the language makes sense. It is like water flowing over stones, constant and incomprehensible. The black curtains part, and I see my servants, Joseph and Mary Anne, trying to help me, but a fiend is blocking them from me. How I recognize the creature as a fiend, I can not tell, for it has some features I know as belonging to Daniel and some that are not natural to this world. It has Daniel’s form and face, but one hand is a ragged wicked appendage with razor-like claws dripping with gore. With that fearsome extremity it scrapes at my chest, leaving me in great agony. I beg Joseph and Mary Anne to help me, but they are unable to hear me over the fiend’s roar insisting that they are to abandon me. I can only comprehend some of its speech…”gross incompetence… more harm than good… I’ll tend… myself,” in a voice like a thousand cannons. My servants leave me in the grips of the monster who leans over my bed its smiling danielface and whispers to me with a gentle danielvoice, and touches my head with a caressing danielhand while its true fiend’s claw excavates my chest to hold up beating slices of my heart that it displays before me before flicking them against the wall.

I plea to be released from its ravenous maw, but the fiend only taunts me by cooing as one would with a baby, “What is my pretty Will trying to say? What sweet nonsense he is speaking.”

_____________________________________

I am again in the depths of darkness. The candles sputter and flicker. I see a man standing at foot of bed, leaning heavily on one of the posts that hold up the canopy above me. With two human hands he is clutching the post as though he could not stand without it. I think for a moment that the man is Daniel, but I see that he is staring at me and weeping, calling my name over and over. I don’t remember seeing a grown man weep before, so I recognize this must be the fiend returned in Daniel’s form. Then a long snaky tail comes from behind him scaly and grey, whipping through the air. I am petrified and unable to move as the tail burrows beneath the blankets that cover me. It coils around my legs again and again like a jungle vine, holding me captive so that it can penetrate and probe my most secret parts. My moans of agony only prod the fiend to mock me by sobbing harder.

——————————————————————————————

The light returns to torment me, and with the light the fiend has brought a man like a soldier in a scarlet coat. I can not tell at first if he is another fiend, but they refer to each other as ‘colonel’ with much bowing and protocol, so he must be another unnatural being to be so familiar. The scarlet one tells the Daniel one, “something similar… in India…. critical to lower fever…. wash with rum or other alcohol …. evaporates faster… rather nasty business.” I beg for Joseph to come rescue me, but the two fiends ignore my cries.

_____________________________________________________

The light has fled. All is dark. By the shadowy flicker of candles, the fiend hovers over my bed. Its danielvoice implores me to fight harder, and I would gladly yield now to its caresses, but its clawed hand has cut away all of my heart, and my chest is left a gaping, bloody wound.

_____________________________________________________


Needles from the harsh light torment my eyes. The fiend’s tail is bedevilng me, wrapping around my throat to choke me as a snake would its prey. l watch with impotent horror as the fiend’s tail creeps down my body so that it can pinch and sting my manhood. Continuously I beg the fiend to end my shame and my pain, but it is provoked only to put its danielface close to mine and pretend to be frustrated, “Please, sweet one, tell me what you want. I can’t understand you.”
________________________________________________________

The light withdraws, and I now fear it will not return. Beyond the little circle of dim light from the candle, the fiend waltzes with Death in the darkness. Mary Anne appears, and in her face I see dread. She holds a basin of water that the fiend dips cloths into to soak them before placing them on me. My impending death forces me to bargain with the fiend. I beg it to destroy the letter that I wrote to Daniel so long ago. The fiend cocks its head like a puzzled hound. “What’s that, Will?” it asks.

“The letter,” I beg. “Get the letter back and burn it. When I am dead, no one must know.”

It looks angry. “No talk of dying, Will! You will beat this.”

Mary Anne tries to help me. “What’s he talking about… a letter? What kind of letter?”

The fiend will not be turned from my destruction. “It’s just the ravings of his poor fevered brain, I fear.”

“You must destroy it! My life would be for naught if it destroys my reputation,” I cry.

It taunts me by denying, “There is no letter, William. Don’t worry. Just rest and get better.”

I feel the mists rising around me, so I insist one last time. “The letter I wrote about Aubrey St. James.” The face of the fiend hardens and shifts with understanding.

Mary Anne asks, “Who is Ow-berry James?”

The fiend is goaded to fury by the revelation of its secret, and it grabs the basin and roars, “Stop yapping, woman, and go back to the kitchen.” Its face is no longer like Daniel’s, but is twisted by anger and changed beyond recognition.

I despair as she leaves since none are left to help me.

The fiend draws near, and again assumes the gentle danielface and combs his danielfingers through my hair as one would with a beloved spouse. “That letter was burned long ago,” it lies. “I promise that it can not hurt you now.”

Death awaits in the shadows, and the instrument of my destruction is still possessed by the fiend. I weep, and the tears flow into the hole left when my heart was ripped away.

_____________________________________________________________

My bedchamber was dim and grey when I awoke, all of the colours washed out and muted. I was looking at the windows that overlooked Hanover Square, the velvet drapes pulled back to allow in a little light. The hush before dawn, I wondered? No, since the windows face the sunrise, the weakness of the light must indicate that it was just past twilight. With great effort, I turned my head to the right and found that Daniel had pulled a chair adjacent to the bed, his arms cradling his head on the counterpane next to my hips. I could see his face, calm and relaxed in his sleep, looking quite innocent and boyish. His mouth was parted, and his deep, even breathing edged towards light snoring. The tranquility of his face called to my mind the details of the odd dreams that I had been having, but they were unclear and lacked clarity. Daniel was in them in some other form. An evil spirit, perhaps? I was uneasy without knowing exactly why and touched my chest half expecting to find an empty cavity there.

I reached my hand towards his head and lightly caress the dark, glossy curls, and dropped my arm to the bed. Daniel’s eyes opened with drowsy reluctance, then he jumped to his feet, startled by my stare. The chair crashed to the floor behind him, and he stood, chest heaving, eyes wild, an unbroken stallion seeing the saddle for the first time. The moment of panic passed when he realized that my eyes had followed him, or perhaps when I whispered, “What time?”

“William?” he asked. “I thought…” He quickly stepped to the bed and rested his palm on my forehead. He inhaled a long, shuddering breath before making a noise almost like a sob, “Thank God!”

“How do you feel?” he murmured softly to me.

“Weak. Tired. Is it …evening?”

Daniel grabbed one of my hands between both of his, patting me soothingly. “Yes, it is,” he looked at the clock on the mantel. “Eight and a little past.”

I thought about that for a moment. “Have I …been ill…all day then?”

He gave short, bitter bark of laughter that was devoid of mirth. “No. Almost four days have passed. Today is Wednesday.”

“Wednesday?” I wondered. How was it possible that so much time had eluded me?

“Do you need anything?” Daniel asked me gently.

“Is there any… water?” I asked, gravelly-voiced.

“Certainly,” he assured me. “But let me send for the doctor first.”

He strode to the hall, and bellowed, “Joseph! Joseph! Come quickly.” He returned to the bedchamber, and poured water from a pitcher on the tea table into a crystal beaker. Kneeling beside the bed, he cupped the back of my head for support and held the glass to my mouth to allow me a few sips. I heard the clatter of feet on the stairs, and Joseph came running in, the fastest he had moved in years, his face creased with anxiety. Daniel stood up and clapped my servant on the back. “The fever appears to have broken. Run to fetch the doctor.”

Joseph sighed with relief, and I gave him a little smile. “Does my heart good, sir,” he said, “to see you looking better. I’ll be back with the doctor double quick.”

While we waited, Daniel fussed over me in a hundred ways, fluffing my pillows, smoothing the counterpane, brushing my hair back from my face.

Soon the doctor arrived, and boomed as he entered the chamber, “So our patient has abandoned Morpheus’ arms? We were all rather worried about you, sir.”

Daniel hovered while the doctor rested his hand against my forehead, muttering, “Good… good. The fever seems to have broken.” He grabbed my wrist to feel my pulse with his broad, flat fingertips. “Hmmm…. weak, but steady. A very curious case, sir, most provoking.” He turned to Daniel to instruct, “As long as he fever does not return, he may take a little light broth for a few days, then some boiled fowl and vegetables. Nothing in a sauce for a while, nothing too rich or too heavy.”

“Yes, I’ll have the cook make some now,” Daniel said.

“And to drink, some weak tea at first, and then perhaps some port wine, well diluted with water.”

I protested weakly, “Pray do not… take any wines from… my cellar…to spoil them by adding… water.” I breathed heavily from the effort of the long speech before continuing, “Too humiliating… to be thought of as… a barbarian.”

Daniel grinned at me. “Now I know that you are recovering, William, if you have resumed fretting over what Society thinks of you.” He winked at me. “I’ll go see to that broth.”

The doctor pulled the chair beside the bed again, sitting down to ask, “May I ask you a few questions to fill in my scant knowledge?” I nodded. “The fever came upon you rather suddenly, did it not?”

“Over two … or three hours.”

“You were very fortunate to have the faithful attendance of your friend, Colonel Moore.” He thought for a moment. “Although I fear that he rather terrorised your servants.” He chuckled. “Treated them as though they were troops threatening to bolt at the first sound of cannon fire. Quite the martinet. However, I could not have asked for a better assistant.”

“How… so?” I asked.

“I don’t think that he has left your side for these four days and nights. Watched you as intently as I would have myself. A great friend to you, sir. Brings to mind some of the friends of the readings of, what-do-you-call-it, uhh.. classical antiquity. A regular Castor and Pollux you are”

“Castor and Pollux… were twin brothers,” I said. “You are thinking of… Damon… and Pythias?”

“What? Yes, yes, I see. To be sure,” he mused. “More your line than mine, I daresay.

While the doctor prattled on, I thought about how his opinion about Daniel’s faithfulness seemed to be at variance with my experience of him. Something about the dreams I had while I ailed also floated around just out of sight, never coming quite into view.

My thoughts were interrupted by Daniel’s return with a cheery, “Here’s a little soup to restore you to health, Will.”

Mary Anne followed with a bowl on a tray that she placed on a table by the bed. The doctor peered into the dish and and nodded his approval. “That’ll do nicely, I think.” He picked up his hat and made a small bow to me. “Sir William, I leave you in capable hands. A few days of rest, and you will be in the pink of health.” He nodded to Daniel, “Colonel, I bid you a good evening. With your permission, I shall return tomorrow.”

“Thank you, doctor. Until then.”

Mary Anne stood staring at me. “Oh, sir, what a fright you gave us all,” she exclaimed in her broad country accent.

“It is kind of you…to be concerned,” I said slowly.

“I could hardly sleep anight for the fear,” she moaned. “You was carrying on something awful.”

Daniel returned to the chamber after seeing the doctor out. “That will do, Mary Anne. No need to frighten him.”

She rolled her eyes, “He’s calmed considerable now! When he was crying in fear about that letter like every demon of Hell was after him, I like to have run from the house myself.”

“That’s enough!” Daniel said very firmly, his temper barely under control.

Alarmed, I asked, “Letter? I talked about… a letter?”

Mary Anne said, “Fairly raved you did, about a letter to Ow-berry James.”

“Daniel!” I blurted involuntarily.

“Woman!” he bellowed. “Cease your stupid prattle and return to the kitchen at once.” He grabbed her arm and dragged her from the chamber. “Don’t come back up here until I ask you to!”

“Daniel,” I begged weakly. “What did I… say about Aubrey… St. James?”

“Nothing,” he said shortly.

“She knows!” I cried.

“She doesn’t know anything,” Daniel scoffed.

I despaired, “I’ll be ruined.”

“There is no letter, Will,” Daniel reassured me. “Well, not any longer anyway. There may be some ashes scattered in an abandoned British fort in the high sierra of Spain,” he chuckled, “but I challenge anyone to raise them from the dead.” He came beside the bed and started gently lifting me into a semi-sitting position, propping me up with pillows against the headboard. “Let’s get a little broth down you.”

“Don’t change… the subject,” I demanded. “The letter. What do you mean?”

He spread a napkin over my chest. “I’m not sure why I bother with this,” he laughed. “You’ve rather ruined that nightshirt with slobber and snot over the past few days.” He scooped a little broth into the spoon and held it to my lips.

I scowled, “I can feed… myself.”

“Open!” he ordered. I was too weary to fight and reluctantly complied. “And I win again,” he laughed softly.

“You did not!” I insisted, “The letter?”

He sighed as he held another spoon of broth up to me. “I told you everything there is to know. I burned it in a campfire in Spain.” Another spoon was jabbed in my mouth. “It can never do you even the slightest bit of harm.”

My confusion must have shown on my face. “But you said…”

He cocked his head, “What did I say? When?” he asked curiously.

“Your response to my… confession.”

He snorted, “It was hardly a confession, William, and I don’t remember what I said.” He scraped the last of the broth out of the bowl. “Shall I go to the kitchen for more?”

I shook my head.

“Do you want to change out of that soiled shirt?”

“Stop fussing.” I pointed to the chair. “Sit.”

He slowly raised a single eyebrow and studied me. “What’s this about?”

“You owe me an explanation.”

It took him a moment to recall. “Ah! Yes,” he smiled. “You want it now?”

“I’ve waited… fourteen years,” I said tartly.

He drew the chair up beside the bed, stretching his legs out before him. He fiddled with his cuffs and fidgeted in his seat.

“How to start?” he mused. I waited impatiently. “As you know, I am the son of a simple tradesman, blessed with neither fortune nor aristocratic blood. Through a mysterious bequest from an unknown benefactor, I was allowed to attend Macalester’s School where I met you.” I made a gesture to indicate that this was all well known to me. “I repeat this only to emphasize how little I had in common with the other students.” He sighed. “Every boy in the school knew I was his social inferior and made it his mission to make me miserably aware of the fact. Except one.” He gave me an indulgent smile.
“You were the only one who made my life endurable, and that was the least of your sterling qualities,” he said.

“Ridiculous!” I sighed. “It’s not true, and even so,… what does that have… to do with anything?”

“It is relevant. You were a wee, fragile-looking thing in those days, but always had a kind word for everyone. And so intelligent!” he exclaimed. “Even the masters were afraid of your intellect.”

“Nonsense.”

“It is all true, very true,” he insisted, “Of course, I was a scamp and a scoundrel, always tardy for lessons, never prepared, a rude retort ever at my lips.” Daniel chuckled ruefully, “What endeared you to me always was your willingness to follow me into whatever escapades and shenanigans I could devise.” He shook his head, “Your enthusiastic trust was most unexpected and truly appreciated.”

“How many beatings… did I endure for your… sake?” I wondered.

“More than you deserved,” he laughed, “but not as many as you had earned, I’m sure.”

I scoffed.

“Very quickly we grew quite close and our friendship bloomed into a relationship of rather a different nature.”

I interrupted, “You really don’t have to rehash that.”

He studied me coolly. “Yes,” he drawled, a rather opaque quality in his dark eyes that I
could not read. “I forget how sensitive you are on that subject. In any case, if I might
add one more embarrassing detail?”

“As if I could prevent you,” I whispered.

“After the masters extinguished the lights at night, I would lie awake, unable to snatch even the slightest morsel of sleep until you had crept into my bed and curled up between my ribs and my arm.’ He smiled at me rather sweetly. “Once you had burrowed in, all was right with the world as far as I was concerned, and I could go to sleep.” Then he smirked, “At least as long as I did not have to satisfy your prodigious passion.”

“Daniel!” I hissed.

“You really did have the most insatiable appetites then,” he laughed. “Not that I was complaining.”

“You are vile and unspeakable,” I grumbled.

“Perhaps, but you would not have me change, I daresay.” He looked a little sad. “The time when we were sixteen or seventeen years of age is one I remember fondly. I was happy… and in love.” I stared at him gape-mouthed. “Oh, don’t look so surprised! I thought you were the most remarkable creature I had ever seen. Still do for that matter.”

Gruffly, I conceded, ”I thought the same about you.”

“And now?” he inquired.

I reflected, “I’m reserving judgement until I hear the rest of this tale.”

“Well, yes. I knew how you felt then.” He paused, “And I know how you feel now even if you won’t admit it. In any event, when the time came for us to part at the end of our school days, you made it less difficult by going about it with such dry-eyed acceptance. It was painful, was it not?”

“It was,” I admitted, “More than I thought I could bear.”

“Where did we find the strength? Those first weeks I was in the army without you, I wanted to crawl under a tree and die. The only thing that kept me going was looking forward to your letters. I cherished them more than you could know.”

“I think that I have some idea.” I had experienced the same elation upon recognizing his familiar scrawl.

He nodded thoughtfully. “Yes, perhaps you do. In any event, one day we were camped near Badajoz, on the banks of the Rio Guadiana, when the mail from England caught up with us. I was so excited to see that there were two letters from you. I don’t remember the first one at all, something about your studies, I suppose. But the second…”

“The one about Aubrey,” I said with much emotion.

“Yes. Poor Aubrey St. James. I don’t recall that you had ever mentioned him more than once or twice in passing. When I read those lines with your litany of…”

“Please don’t,” I interrupted. “I burn with shame still.”

He looked at me sharply. “Why? Your behaviour was noble and honourable. Your tale of the abuse that poor boy suffered at the hands of his father filled me with rage. Your role in helping him escape to France to find his mother! The courage you displayed! The sacrifices you made!” He shook his head in amazement. “I would have thought it rank fiction except that it was too characteristic of you for me to doubt the veracity. I had never heard of anyone acting such a magnificently selfless way.”

I was shocked to hear him say this. “Your response at the time certainly indicated that you thought otherwise.”

He was baffled. “I can’t imagine why you would think that. I was filled with such love and admiration for you. I don’t remember the exact words, but while I don’t have your skills as a writer…”

“I still have your letter, and I can quote it word for word.”

“Please do!”

“Between the curt opening ‘Sir’ and the rude close, ‘your obedient, et cetera’ came only three lines: ’In receipt of your letter about Aubrey St James. At last your true nature is revealed. I shall save your missive as a reminder of the what you have become.’
Considering that I had admitted to you some three or four crimes that could lead me to the gallows, you must see how the coldness of your letter lends itself to no interpretation other than disapproval. “

Daniel frowned. “I said I do not have your talents for scribbling, and that is proof. I intended to express my admiration, and that leads me to my point. In my eyes you possess every manly virtue while I have been nothing but a bundle of vices, and at seventeen, I felt that disparity mostly keenly.”

“Daniel!” I snapped. “You do us both a great disservice. You make me sound like a marble saint.”

“Be that as it may,” he said, waving aside my objections, “I resolved then and there as I read that letter about your rescue of young St. James that I could not subject you to my wickedness any further and that I must reform my ways. I set as my goal the day when I had earned equality with you by balancing your wealth and family connections and your outstanding character with the glory I could win on the field of battle.”

This revelation left me speechless.

“It took fourteen years, but at last the distinctions I won in the defeat of the French at Waterloo made me realize that I could approach you as an equal, that I was worthy of calling you my friend.”

I quivered with emotion, as I studied his face that was flushed with pride. “Is that story true? That you shunned contact of fourteen years until you could return a hero?”

“Yes, that is the reason.”

“That is so…” I stuttered in a shaky voice. “So… so…”

Daniel supplied helpfully, “Noble? Romantic?”

I found the word I was looking for. “Stupid! Moronic! Idiotic! I have never heard a more useless reason in my life.”

His face fell. “William, I thought that you would find it touching!”

“Touching?” I hissed. “You left me suffering from a broken heart for all those weeks and months, not knowing if you were dead or alive while you were seeking glory to inflate your ego?”

“Well, when you put it that way, I admit it doesn’t sound as convincing.”

“I am incredulous. If I had any strength in me, you would be on your arse in the street right now.”

“William, don’t be angry. I was young and foolish.” He knelt beside the bed and grabbed one of my hands, imploring, “I can’t bear to lose you again. While you were ill these last few days, I was tormented in hell for fear of you leaving me. You must forgive me! You must!”

“Those are just empty words, Daniel.”

He ripped off his cravat and began opening his shirt. “What are you doing?” I demanded in a panic.

“Look!” he said, fishing something out through his open collar. “Do you remember this?” He held in the palm of his hand a silver pendant that was suspended on a chain around his neck. He thumbed it open to show a lock of fine blond hair on one side and a portrait of me at a much younger age. “That look of sweet innocence in your face? Only I knew the fires that burned behind those eyes.”

I fingered the pendant, twin to the one downstairs in the library, the portrait of him that I had kept.

“See, Will?” he asked softly. “It is not just meaningless words. I have carried a reminder of you next to my heart all this time.”

I closed my eyes. “Daniel, you stun me.”

“But in a good way?” he asked hopefully.

I opened my eyes and reached over to thumb away a tear that was trickling down his cheek. “Can there be a good way to be stunned?” I wondered. With some effort I moved away from him on the bed. His face looked frightened. I pulled back the counterpane, and patting the space I left empty for him, said, “Get in.”

“William!” he exclaimed. “You are not yet well enough for …. that.”

I said, “Keep your breeches on, you randy satyr! I only want you to hold me again.”

He let out a slow, ragged breath. “So you forgive me?”

I squinted at him as he removed his boots. “Can I sleep on that? Let you know in the morning?”

Before he extinguished the candles he gave me a wide smile of unbounded joy. “Absolutely!” he said as he crawled beside me.

It took us a minute of shifting around and jockeying for position before we were comfortable with me again nestled between his arm and his ribs, my head on his chest.

With a single finger under my chin he lifted my face to his and gently touched his lips to mine. There was scarcely any pressure behind the kiss, only warm, velvety softness. I again lay my head down.

We stayed like that in silence for some time before Daniel said, “You have grown into a magnificent man, Will, but you fit against me better when you were sixteen.” I could hear the smile in his voice and also a quiver of a much deeper emotion.

I let out a breath I didn’t know I was holding and said, “I think that we will find it’s the clothes. We’re not accustomed to wearing this many garments in bed together.”

A soft chuckle in the dark, “I look forward to testing your hypothesis, William.”

I fell asleep with Daniel’s heart thumping beneath my cheek.
 
What an awesome and romantic chapter, BD. Daniel has proved to be a trusted and loyal friend. Many would have abandoned a sick and feverish man. Even though there have been fourteen some years of fearful and silent wondering, the spell has been broken and those years have melted away into a comfortable, after lights out, security in each others arms.

How appropriate this chapter should appear on the 26th of June. Love wins again.....

Craiger
 
Chapter 8

Just as the night eased into dawn I came to a drowsy state of half-sleep. Resting my head contentedly against Daniel’s chest, I listened to his deep breaths with the most tranquility I had felt in a long time. Although I extracted an agreement from him to allow me to wait until the morning to decide if I would overlook his foolish reason for causing me so much pain, once I had settled again in his arms there could be no other course of action than whole-hearted acceptance of his apologies. With the first pastel lights of the new day I even inclined to beg his forgiveness. Before sleep again overtook me, I felt him stir and start to pull away from me.

Groaning in protest without opening my eyes, I clasp my arms around his neck more firmly. “No, my love,” I grumble, “do not leave me yet. Tarry a while longer.”

He leaned to kiss the top of my head softly, “I dare not stay longer, sweet Will. The servants will be up and about shortly, and I can’t be found in your bed lest they be scandalized.” His sleep-roughened voice awakened a flicker of arousal in me.

He slipped from the bed and started gathering the clothing he had discarded the night before. The sudden removal of the heat of his body made me shiver, and I burrowed deeper under the counterpane. “Do you see my other stocking?” he asked me. “I am certain I was wearing more than one.”

“There by the hearth, I think,” I said.

“Ah! Indeed.” He added it to the pile in his arms and returned to beside my bed. I clutch the linens beneath my chin, and look into his eyes as he stands over me. “The room feels warm enough to me, but you seem chilled. Do you want me to add to the fire before I go?” Daniel asked quietly.

After thinking for a moment, I said, “No need, but I feel your absence most keenly already.”

Chuckling, he cupped my face and sighed, “I shall return as soon as Joseph comes up with your breakfast, my love.” He bent to press his lips sweetly against mine for a moment. “Go back to sleep and rest.”

I watched as he padded softly out the bedchamber, turning to give me a smile before pulling the door shut behind him.

Immediately I slid into the spot in the bed where he had spent the night, greedily seeking any residual warmth from his body and deeply inhaling his scent from the pillows and the linens. An innocent sleep soon overtook me.

Some two hours later, the creaking of the door’s hinges awoke me. I hoped for Daniel, but Joseph came in with breakfast on a broad mahogany tray.

“D’ye want to eat here at the table or in your bed?” he asked.
For a second, I thought that I want Daniel here to make that decision for me and stared longingly at the closed door to his chamber across the hall, but then shook my head to clear the cobwebs before answering, “Here, I think. It’s as cold as a tomb in this room.”

“Aye. The coldest June I ever remember. Seems more like March than summer.” He helped me sit up against the pillows. “Will a fire help? Or another quilt?”

“No, but pray open the drapes a bit. Very gloomy in here.” I stared at the tray that was now in my lap. “What is this?” I asked, sniffing suspiciously at a cup of unfamiliar pale brown liquid.

“A little beef broth like the doctor ordered.”

“Why is it in a teacup instead of a proper bowl?” I frowned at the serviette as well since it did not appear to be as stiffly starched as it should. Standards in the household had slipped considerably during my illness.

Joseph glared at me. “Colonel Moore thought you would find it easier to drink it that way.”

I feigned a casual attitude. “Oh? Is the colonel already up?”

“No,” he muttered. “I’ve not seen him.” Pushing a small plate across the tray, Joseph urged, “Try the toasted bread. It has a little of the currant conserves you like so much.”

Sipping a mouthful of the broth, I had to admit that the cup presented fewer problems for me than the bowl and spoon had, and I found the bread and jam almost irresistible.

As soon as I finished, Daniel bounded jauntily into the room, a big grin on his face. “Good morning, Will!” he bellowed. “How do you feel this morning?” His impeccable, dress would suffice to attend a levee with the Prince Regent.

“Better, thank you. Did you sleep well?” I asked politely, miserably aware that I smelled foul in a night shirt I had worn for several days.

“Not at all. Had terrible dreams, just terrible.” He greeted Joseph. “I’ll take a bit of tea and some of that bread and jam.”

“Bad dreams?” I queried as Joseph took the tray with the breakfast dishes from me and stomped out of the room in a huff.

Daniel pulled a chair beside the bed, nodding, “Indeed. I dreamt I slept next to some fantastic creature that kept kicking me with icy feet and spinning about to pull all of the covers off of me.”

I smiled at him. “How odd! I dreamt I slept next to a great snuffling bear that kept growling at me and snoring.”

He leaned forward to kiss me and whispered, “Good morning, again, my sweet.”

I rubbed my thumb along his jaw and asked contritely, “Did I really kick you and steal the counterpane?”

He pretended to ponder for a few seconds, his beautiful dark eyes fastened on mine. “Maybe a little, but there is no one I would rather lose a blanket to. I hope I didn’t disturb your rest too much.”

“Only because you were so close, and I long for a more intimate embrace, my pet.”

“Soon,” he whispered softly. “Soon.”

Joseph returned with Daniel’s tea and tossed a handful of letters and newspapers onto the bed beside me. “Here’s the mail for the past few days.”

I scowled at the pile. “Anything urgent?”

“A few bills there on the top.”

Flipping through the envelopes, I didn’t find anything that demanded my immediate attention, so I tossed them aside and looked up to find Daniel nibbling at his bread as he stared at me thoughtfully.

“What?” I asked.

“Nothing,” he shrugged his broad shoulders.

“You have something on your mind,” I said. “Let it out.”

He hesitated, looking at Joseph who pottered about, straightening the room. “I was just wondering if you had any news of that soldier we discussed last night, the one looking for clemency,” he said in a low voice, quiet but not so much as to attract the servant’s attention.

“Apparently he has been acquitted of all charges and won’t be executed at dawn as previously reported.”

He sighed with relief and said. “So happy to hear it. He’s a good man and is quite repentant for his misdeeds.”

I nodded reflectively, “Snuffles in his sleep, though, I hear.”


“Ah, yes,” he said, “attributed to a lack of sufficient bed linens.”

Joseph harrumphed at us. “A conversation between the two of you is like listening to the poor inmates at Bedlam Hospital what’s lost their minds.”

With a secret smile at Daniel, I picked up the copy of today’s newspaper, The Gazette and Post, and leaf through the few pages there. Much of the news was taken up with the annual departure of Society from the summer miasma of London to more salubrious climates at Brighton and Bath or the country. I noted to myself to ask the doctor when I would be able to go to Surrey to my own estate.

On a page of announcements, one caught my eye, and I exclaimed with pleasure, “Oh! I am so pleased.”

Daniel looked up from his correspondence, “What is that, Will?”

I read, “ ‘The Earl and Countess of Bramford announce the Engagement of their Son and heir, Viscount Bullington, to Miss Amanda Wentworth. Nuptials to be celebrated at St George’s Church, Hanover Square, in October.’ Oh, good for her. Such a sweet girl.”

“Rather too clever for that sneering boy, I daresay.” Daniel said with dancing eyes.

I nodded, “Very spirited young lady.” The next announcement made me groan, “Oh, no!”

Daniel looked at me with alarm. “What is it?”

Sighing, I read it again. The news was not any better the second time. I read aloud, “ ‘At the Countess of Stratham’s Ball, Friday last, a certain ENGLISH OAK was heard to wittily remark that criticism of the Medical Skills of a certain FASHIONABLE PHYSICIAN and Royal Fellow are best left to the unhappy Heirs of his unfortunate Patients.’” I throw myself back against the pillows and moan loudly.

Daniel cautiously asks, “What am I missing? That makes no sense.”

“The Royal Society just published my paper on the oak tree of England. It’s what I said about Dr. Hall at Caroline’s the other night. Sweet Jesus, he will be livid when he sees this.”

“Dr. Hall?” puzzled Daniel. “That quack? Why do we care what he thinks?”

His use of the word “we” gave me pause for a second, but I answered, “He has very powerful patrons, even members of the royal family. Oh, this is very bad.” I shielded my eyes from the glare through the windows, “The reading has made my head hurt,” I complain.

Daniel stood up and started snatching the papers and letters from the bed. “Enough of this nonsense,” he barked. “You have been ill and need to rest.” He tossed all of it onto the table by the fireplace and returned to the side of the bed. He ran his hand lightly through my hair, saying, “Close your eyes, and I’ll read to you.”


“You don’t need to do that for me!” I demurred.

“Of course not,” he said softly, leaning down to kiss my cheek, “and that is why it gives me such pleasure to do it for you.”

After drawing the drapes to reduce the light, Daniel placed his chair by my side and picked up a book from the table next to the bed. Opening to the place saved by a ribbon, he remarked, “Let me know if you grow too weary, agreed? ‘Tis a kind of blasphemy to imagine,’” he read, “‘that any created being can disturb the order of the world, or invade the business of providence. It supposes, that that being possesses powers and faculties… ‘ oh, good lord!” he exclaimed. “What the bloody hell am I reading?”

“It’s David Hume. A very important work on natural philosophy.”

He flipped through the volume skeptically. “Damned unnatural if you ask me. You read this sort of thing for entertainment?”

“Yes,” I admitted. “I do.”

“No wonder you’re always crabby with your head filled with this dry stuff.” He smirked at me. “Don’t you have any translations of racy French novels? Y’know, shepherds chastising countesses with riding crops or naughty woodland nymphs cavorting in gowns made transparent by the morning dew?”

I snickered, “Regretfully, no. I can imagine you reading one aloud to me… with a variety of peculiar voices, of course.”

Daniel grinned, “Of, course! Plus a range of accents to rival the principle actor at the Theater Royal.”

“Alas, we shall have to content ourselves with poor Mr. Hume.”

He grumbled, “I would sweat through the labors of Hercules for you, my love, but this may kill me.”

He smiled sweetly and resumed reading in his warm, hypnotic baritone. I soon fell asleep again for the rest of the morning. When I awoke, I was alone in the bed chamber.

“Daniel?” I called out timidly.

He came quickly from across the hall. “Ah! Did you have a restful sleep?” As was his custom now, he placed his hand against my face, as much to reassure himself that my fever had not returned as to express to me his affections.

“Yes. What time is it?”

“About two of the afternoon.”

“Why did you let me sleep the day away?”

His eyebrow arched as he asked ironically, “Have I thrown your schedule off? Do we need to cancel the Embassy Ball? A thousand pardons, your grace.”

I picked at the counterpane restlessly, sulking, “I wanted to talk.”

He smiled, “We can discuss whatever you like as long as it’s not what I read of your Hume. Not so much as a syllable stuck in my brain.”

Before I could respond, Joseph came into the room. “Sir William, we have a serious matter that I need bring to your attention.”

Daniel frowned. “Does it have to be now? He is scarcely recovered from his illness. Can this wait until he is better?”

Joseph shook his head firmly. “It’s a sensitive matter that is urgent. Time will make this worse.”

I gestured for him to come nearer. “What is it?” I asked.

He stood at the foot of the bed, looking from me to Daniel uneasily. For a moment my breath caught in my throat. Had he heard our whispered endearments? Had he seen Daniel sleeping in my bed last night?

He swallowed hard. “It’s the maid, sir. Mary Anne.”

Had she seen us? But there was no reason for her to be upstairs in the middle of the night. I asked, “Yes? What about her?”

Joseph fidgeted for a few seconds in silence. “She’s in a predicament, sir,” he finally says.

Daniel demanded, “What kind of predicament? Speak up, man!”

Joseph blushed scarlet, his eyes bugging out. “The worst kind, sir. For a woman, I mean.”

Suddenly I felt a chill of relief flush through me as I realized what had happened. The poor thing was with child. “How far along is she?”

“About four months, she guesses,” said Joseph.

I thought for a while. “Is this your doing?” I asked.

He quivered with indignation, “Why, sir, I never! I never so much as looked at the hussy.”

I held up a hand to pacify him, scrubbing the other one through my hair. “I know, I know. You are a man of scruples and integrity. I don’t doubt your character, but I had to ask.”

Partly mollified, he admitted, “I did not ask her who the father is, but she may be able to tell you.”

“Not that it would do any good to know,” I sighed. “Bring her up here.”

After Joseph left, Daniel wondered, “What will you do, William?”

Thinking for a moment, I sighed, “I have no choice. She must be dismissed.”

“That seems harsh,”

“It is harsh and cruel, but it’s what convention demands.”

“Really? What interest does ‘convention’ have in this?”

“I don’t know,” I say bitterly. “It’s what is done to resolve the matter by sweeping it away.”

“And if you buck standard behavior?”

“My reputation would suffer.” At the sight of his amused smirk, I add, “Being fully aware that in certain circles my reputation would be enhanced by the proximity of a pregnant female does not make this easier.” I pleated and unpleated the bed linens fretfully.

Daniel looked at me sadly. “I will never understand your fear that people you scarcely know and don’t respect will think you improper. It seems to be a constraining way to live.”

“It is,” I bite out. “I envy you for your devil-may-care attitude, but I do have obligations.”

Before the argument could continue, we were interrupted by the return of Joseph with Mary Anne in tow, splotchy-faced and sobbing.

I smoothed the counterpane as I stalled for time. Finally, I looked at her and said gently, “I’m so sorry for your troubles, my dear.”

“Oh, sir, you can’t send me away!” she cried.

Joseph took her roughly by the elbow. “That’s enough of your cheek, woman!”

“Let her be,” I reprimanded him quietly. “There is no way to ask this delicately, so forgive my rude question, but do you know who the father of the child is?”

She sniffled, “Yes, sir. It’s Peter, the second footman at number 78.”

“I see.” I tried to recall my neighbor at 78 Hanover Square, but only came up with an imperial nose, a sneering lip and quivering jowls. “Would the lad be willing to marry you?” Women in service were rarely allowed to take a husband, but marriage would afford her other opportunities that carrying a bastard child would not.

Her tears resumed in earnest. “No, he already has a wife in his village in Yorkshire.”

I chuffed a sigh of despair. The air in the chamber thickened around us, silent but for Mary Anne’s crying. Joseph’s resentment of the frailty of female flesh and Daniel’s umbrage at my course of action crackled through the room like lightening.

“You will have to leave my service, I’m afraid,” I told her, provoking a fresh series of keening howls, “but I will cushion the blow as much as I can. Joseph, would you bring me paper, a quill and some ink?” He left to find what I needed, while Daniel handed Mary Anne his handkerchief. She clutched it in her hand, and wiped her nose on the sleeve of her dress.

“Do you have someone to stay with, Mary Anne?” I asked.

“No,” she wailed.

“A friend or some family that could look after you for a while?” I pressed gently.

“I have a sister in Spitalfields.”

I winced. Spitalfields was one of London’s darkest slums, but it would have to do. “Very well. I shall give you a draft on my bank for some money to get you through… I think nine months’ salary plus a bit more for the wee one should do. You will also have a letter of reference from me because you are a hard worker and have generally been a good maid.”

She stared at me sullenly but remained silent.

Joseph returned with the paper and quills on the mahogany tray. I quickly penned a note to my bank authorizing them to give a few pounds sterling to Mary Anne, a bland note to any future would-be employers that avoided effusion but stated her strengths in plain terms, and a note to place an order at a shop located close by the bank.

I folded the pages and wrote addresses on the outside but did not seal them with wax, handing them to Joseph with the instructions, “Take her to the bank to withdraw the money and accompany her to her sister’s home to be sure she’s safe.”

Joseph glared at her in resentment of the additional burden, but nodded curtly to me.

“Goodbye, Mary Anne. I wish you well,” I told her.

She sneered, “Don’t waste your false wishes on me, sir. Save them for someone who isn’t fooled by your hoity-toity airs.”

“Now see here, woman!” yelled Joseph. “Ye’ve been treated better than you deserve.”

I did not expect Mary Anne to fall on her knees with gratitude; however her open hostility pained me. Joseph pushed her roughly across the room, but she paused at the door and scowled at me, “You’ll regret this!”

Alone with Daniel, I filled the uncomfortable silence that followed by murmuring, “Well, that certainly was ugly.”

He sat in the chair next to the bed and took my hand in his, lacing our fingers together. “You did what you think is best for everyone,” he said softly. “Don’t be too severe on yourself.”

I lifted our joined hands to my face to press my lips against his palm. “Thank you,” I whispered.

My heart was heavy as I thought about the young woman and the life ahead of her that I had just made much more difficult. Doing what was expected of me, conforming to the rules and dictates of society, gave shape and discipline to my life, but that did not lessen the feeling that I had taken the coward’s path by dismissing her.

I was able to draw some comfort from Daniel sitting beside me, holding my hand, gently stroking my hair in an easy silence although I knew he disagreed with what I had done and no doubt had a lot to say on the matter.

After a while he asked, “Do you need anything right now?”

“No,” I said. “I’m going to rest.”

“Good,” he responded, rising to his feet. “You look weary.”

I held his hand for a few more moments… my chest expanded just being connected to him skin to skin. “Will you come back when the servants have gone to bed?” I asked.
“Of course, my lamb,” he whispered before he left.

I awoke some hours later to a darkened and silenced room as Daniel returned. Through the heavy drapes I could hear the bells of St. George’s chime midnight. I moved over to make room for him in my bed, and as he settled next to me, we tangled our legs together. I nestled against his side, pulling his face to mine for a kiss. I caressed his broad chest, promising, “Soon, my love.”

He laid his cheek against the top of my head. “I can hardly wait.”
 
How nice to have the return of Will and Daniel. Poor Mary Anne, but her own unfortunate decisions placed her in the predicament she faces. I don't like her final words however. Does she by chance have an inclination of Will and Daniels relationship? Time will tell. At least they are reunited in a continuance of their youthful romance. Thanks, BD.

Craiger
 
Back
Top