"Andre Norton & Rosemary Edghill - Carolus Rex 1 - The Shadow of Albion" - читать интересную книгу автора (Norton Andre) It is not fair! Though the side-curtains of the bed were closed, Lady Roxbury had
ordered the curtains at the foot drawn back so that she could see the portrait over the fire. Within its frame of gilded plaster, the painted visage of Lady RoxburyтАЩs grandmother Panthea, the first Marchioness, gazed mischievously down at her descendent, magnificent in satin and lace. PantheaтАЩs bejeweled hands toyed with a key, a dagger, and a rose, in sly allusion to the Roxbury arms and their motto: тАЮI open every door.тАЬ Oh, if there were only a door for this, away from the cruel weakness of her body and the knowledge of duties unfulfilled тАУ! тАЮA visitor for you, my lady.тАЬ KnoyleтАЩs voice trembled тАУ as well it might, since she was acting against her mistressтАЩs express orders to admit no one. Lady Roxbury struggled upright against her pillows, anger deepening the hectic color in her cheeks. тАЮWho тАУ тАЬ she began, before the inevitable spasm of coughing took her. As she clutched her handkerchief to her lips, she felt strong cool hands, against her back, supporting her and pressing the worst of the pain away. тАЮWho dares?тАЬ she demanded at last, when the paroxysm passed. тАЮI dare,тАЬ a voice said calmly. тАЮAs Your Ladyship knows, there is little I do not.тАЬ Lady RoxburyтАЩs eyes widened fractionally as she caught sight of her visitor for the first time. Dame Alecto Kennet had been a great beauty in her day, and was still a woman of commanding and formidable presence. In her time she had been actress and confidential agent, mistress to two Kings, and more. In later life she had chosen obscurity as the companion of the Dowager Duchess of Wessex, herself a woman who shunned the limelight. Even so, only the veriest of green-heads would hold Dame Alecto at naught. Lady Roxbury managed to say. She lay back against the mounded lace-trimmed pillows, trembling with the effort of showing an untroubled countenance to her visitor. тАЮAnd so I might yet be, did you not need me more,тАЬ Dame Alecto replied. She unpinned her wide, plume-trimmed scarlet bonnet and set it upon the bench at the foot of the bed next to a slightly-battered hatbox done up in coarse string. Her hair, titian in her youth, had faded almost to pink with age, but was still elaborately dressed beneath its rich lace cap. She studied Lady Roxbury intently through eyes that Time had washed to silver as she unclasped her wool traveling cape and laid it beside the bonnet. Lady Roxbury managed a bleak smile. тАЮI shall soon need nothing at all,тАЬ she said wryly, тАЮor so my physicians tell me. I wonder who shall have Mooncoign when I am gone?тАЬ тАЮYou would be better employed in wondering who will do that which you ought to have done, when you are not here to do it,тАЬ Dame Alecto snapped. тАЮWho will take your place, Lady Roxbury?тАЬ Such plain speaking was not something her ladyship cared for at any time, and still less at a time like mis. Ignoring the effort it cost her, she forced arch indifference into her voice as she replied. тАЮI dare say Wessex will find someone. But you have not come to tease me because my dying releases your mistressтАЩs grandson from his betrothal?тАЬ тАУ It suddenly occurred to Lady Roxbury that, though Bath was a. dayтАЩs journey away, she had received her death-sentence from Dr. Falconer only hours before. Even if the doctor had talked, there was no way that the Dowager Duchess could have |
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