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Authors: Margaret Pemberton

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BOOK: Devil's Palace
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‘Who told you,' she sobbed, wrapping her arms around her body, as if to hold herself against an inner disintegration.

‘It is of no moment.'

‘But it is! Oh! What if he should tell Povzervslay? What will become of Valeni?'

Lord Beston was aware of a rising excitement that took all his self-discipline to control. ‘ You must tell me everything yourself, Zara. Right from the beginning.'

Zara moaned and for a moment Beston was afraid that she was going to lose consciousness.

‘Count Karolyi loved Sandor as if he was his own son. He always meant Valeni to be Sandor's.'

Lord Beston felt the blood throb in his temple. Dear God, what was she telling him? That the arrogant Hungarian was one of the old Count's by-blows?

‘If only he had adopted Sandor, then Povzervslay would have no claim to it …' She was crying again and her husband could scarcely prevent himself from shaking her shoulders.

‘Yes?' he prompted, leaning forward, his eyes gleaming with anticipation.

‘But he wouldn't. He loved our mother too much. He thought that if he adopted Sandor, news of his action would leak into society and then there would be speculation and gossip.'

‘Our
mother?' Beston repeated softly, hardly daring to breathe.

Zara closed her eyes. She had feared this moment all her life, now there was a strange relief in saying:

‘There was no question of Count Karolyi adopting me. He gave me to Prince and Princess Katzinsky when I was only days old …'

Beston's breath hissed. ‘Your mother was Count Istvan's wife?'

‘But of course!' Her eyes flew open. Her husband was smiling. ‘But you knew that! You told me you knew!'

‘I know all I need to know,' he said with exultant satisfaction. ‘I know that you're not a Katzinsky but an illegitimate nobody. I know that you married me under false pretences and that I can now be freed of this marriage without any damage to my own reputation.' His teeth showed wolfishly as his smile widened. ‘ I know that your bastard brother has no right to the title he holds.'

Zara felt as if she was falling into a bottomless pit. A pit of her own making. ‘No!' she gasped, falling on to her knees before him. ‘Oh, promise me you will say nothing. Povzervslay is a man of blood and violence. His tenants live in mortal fear of him. He must not be allowed to wreak his wrath on Valeni tenants.'

Lord Beston picked up his silk hat and gloves. ‘ Povzervslay's actions are immaterial to me. However, honour demands that I inform him that he has been usurped.'

Zara flung her arms around his knees dementedly. ‘ It was Count Istvan's dying wish that Sandor inherit!'

‘Then he should have taken the precaution of legally adopting, and legally willing Valeni to your brother. As it is …' Beston shrugged his shoulders expressively and turned for the door, sending Zara sprawling.

‘No! Oh, no!' Imploringly she stretched out her hands towards him.

Her husband laughed. ‘ I imagine Povzervslay will be exceedingly grateful to me, but before I have the pleasure of telling him the truth, I shall indulge myself in telling Monte Carlo.'

‘You … are … a … devil,' she whispered, and fell unconscious at his feet.

Lord Beston laughed, adjusted his hat and closed the door on his stricken wife.

At first Charlotte wondered what sound had awoken her with such a start. She stared perplexedly at the darkened shutters. No light filtered through the slats. Had dusk already fallen? If so, she had been asleep for several hours, overcome with an emotional exhaustion. The sound that had woken her came again, this time umistakable. A female cry of anguish.

Hastily Charlotte sprang from the bed and stepped into her dress, fastening the tiny buttons with hurrying fingers as desperate sobs reverberated through the villa. She ran along the corridor to the top of the staircase and at the sight that met her eyes, halted, her hands flying to her throat.

Zara was sobbing, her words strangled, barely coherent. Sandor was holding her in his arms, rocking her against his chest with unutterable tenderness.

‘He knows everything, Sandor! He's going to the casino now to make the news public! He's going to ruin you, my love.'

‘There is nothing to fear, Zara. I will speak with Beston.'

‘It is no use, he is evil.' She began to shiver uncontrollably. ‘He will not rest at vilifying you and myself. He will have Mama's name disparaged in every salon, at every card table.'

Gently Sandor extricated himself from her grasp. ‘ That he will never do, Zara,' he said, and at the tone of his voice Charlotte's blood chilled. ‘Georges, attend to Lady Beston for me. I am going to the casino.'

Charlotte felt her heart begin to beat in slow thick strokes. The dark menace that surrounded him like an aura had finally been unleashed. Charlotte had no doubt that on behalf of the woman he loved, Sandor was capable of murder. He strode to the door, ignoring the jacket that Georges held out for him. His white shirt was slashed open at the throat, every muscle in his body taut and tense like that of an animal about to spring on its prey.

Charlotte felt the strength leave her legs. If he confronted Lord Beston in such a demonic fury then only tragedy could result. She clung to the banisters for support as Georges called after him agitatedly,

‘No, sir, I beg of you to consider!'

The door slammed and rocked on its hinges and Zara threw herself prostrate on the chaise longue and began to sob as if her heart would break.

Chapter Ten

Charlotte forced herself to move, to run down the crimson carpeted stairs.

Jeanne was leading the semi-conscious Lady Beston into the main salon. The door of Beausoleil was flung open. The dusk had deepened. The moon was rising as Charlotte ran out into the night. The carriage was still there but in the distance she could hear the galloping of hoofs. Georges was at her side, white-faced and shaking. She grasped his arm urgently. ‘ The carriage, Georges. I must take the carriage.'

Georges did not demur. As she stepped inside she heard him order the coachman to drive at full speed for the casino after Count Karolyi.

The whips cracked. The carriage lurched into motion. She found that she was praying aloud. He could not kill Lord Beston. The consequences would be too terrible to contemplate. The road she had taken so often now seemed endless. Pine trees soared starkly against the moonlit sky. Orange and lemon groves loomed grotesquely.

‘Faster,' she urged beneath her breath. ‘Oh please,
faster!'

Revellers turned in alarm as the Karolyi coach hurtled to the entrance of the casino. Charlotte flung open the carriage door herself and ran heedlessly past the startled gentlemen at the casino's entrance.

He was not in the Salle Mauresque. Jewelled heads turned in her direction. Eyebrows rose in surprise. Her gown was not suitable for such a venue. Louise smiled in her direction and was perplexed as Charlotte stared at and through her sightlessly.

Where was he? In the Salon Privé? In the theatre? The answer came unerringly. He would not face Beston in such a throng. He would confront him on the darkened terraces.

Fluttering fans, smiling faces, pressed in on her on every side. She pushed through them. She must reach the terrace and Sandor's side before it was too late.

Lord Beston paused in his conversation with his companions in a side doorway and gazed after her thoughtfully. The girl was distressed and alone. He crushed out his cigar in an onyx ashtray, excused himself and followed her at a discreet distance.

Charlotte hurried out of the casino and on to the darkened terrace. Couples, hands closely entwined, strolled languidly, laughing flirtatiously. The night air was soft and warm, heavy with fragrance. Charlotte picked up her skirts and began to run along the flower-bordered terrace, down the steps where oleanders and dark-green shrubs lent privacy and seclusion. It was here that Sandor had first kissed her. From here that she had run from him, burning with shame at the response that had consumed her.

What would be his reaction when she caught up with him? Fury? Indifference? Certainly he would not take kindly to her interference, but she could not stand idly by whilst his murderous rage led to actions he would surely regret. His meeting with Lord Beston would end in violence, there could be no other outcome. And Lord Beston was not a lackey who could be thrashed and forgotten. He was a man of high public standing—a peer of the realm. A man whose capacity to hate far exceeded his capacity for love.

Her heart hurt in her chest. He was not there. The lower terraces were empty. Despairingly she turned, intent on once more searching the glittering rooms of the casino.

‘You appear to be searching for someone, Miss Grainger. Would it be Count Karolyi?'

Charlotte's hand flew to her throat as Lord Beston stepped from the shadows. Her first reaction was one of overwhelming relief that Sandor had not, as yet, confronted him. Her second, one of apprehension as he moved towards her, barring her way.

‘No,' she said, gathering her scattered wits, forcing herself to smile and be civil. ‘I was simply taking some air. The gaming rooms are intolerably hot this evening.'

‘And you, Miss Grainger, are incredibly beautiful.' In the darkness his tall, narrow frame seemed far more substantial that it had by daylight. The moon sailed from a bank of cloud and she could see the expression in his curiously colourless eyes clearly. They held the same hungry gleam that Prince Victor's had held. Charlotte's apprehension deepened into fear. She struggled to keep her voice light, praying that he would not detain her.

‘Thank you for the compliment, Lord Beston, but I must now be returning to the tables. My presence will be missed.'

‘I think not,' Lord Beston said easily. ‘You did not, after all, enter the casino with any companions. Nor speak to anyone on your whirlwind tour of the rooms.'

‘I was simply observing who was present this evening, and now, Lord Beston, if you will excuse me …' Determinedly she moved forward but to her alarm Lord Beston did not step aside.

‘I think, Miss Grainger, it is time we had a little
tête à tête.'
Unhurriedly he removed a cigar from his inside pocket, lit it and blew a wreath of blue smoke upwards.

Charlotte did not move. She sensed that to do so would be to precipitate action on Lord Beston's part. Then he might detain her by force. At last he said,

‘You seem inordinately fond of Karolyi, and, knowing that gentleman as I do, I feel obliged to acquaint you with some unsavoury aspects of his character.'

At the prospect of hearing of Sandor's love for Lady Beston from Lord Beston himself, Charlotte felt panic well up in her. ‘ I am not a close friend of Count Karolyi and I have no desire to learn any more about him than I already know,' she said through parched lips.

Lord Beston puffed contentedly on his cigar, certain of victory. She was lying of course. She was Karolyi's mistress but she would not be so after tonight. Not after he had embellished his story with unpleasant innuendos about the depth of affection between brother and sister. She would be devastated and distraught, and he would console her. The prospect was an immensely pleasing one.

‘Count Sandor Karolyi is a man about to face ruin.'

‘Then I am sorry, but it is none of my affair.' Dear God, she had to escape. She could not endure to hear of Sandor's love for Zara from Beston's lips.

Purposefully she tried to step past him but he laid his hand on her arm restrainingly.

‘The man is an impostor. A usurper.'

Charlotte halted, rigid with shock. This was not the revelation she had expected. Lord Beston's eyes were triumphant.

‘He has duped Baron Povzervslay out of his rightful estate, and he has aided and abetted my wife into deceiving me.'

Charlotte stared at him in bewilderment. ‘I am afraid I do not understand you.'

‘You will,' Lord Beston said with an unpleasant laugh. ‘And so will everyone else when I disclose the truth.' He glanced down to where his hand grasped Charlotte's slender wrist. Desire licked through him. ‘So you see, Miss Grainger,' he said, drawing her protesting hand to his lips and kissing it passionately, ‘ he is not a man it is wise to be seen with.'

‘And you, sir,' Charlotte retorted, aware of a note of rising hysteria in her voice, ‘are not a man it is wise to be alone with!' She tried to wrench her hand away from his hold and failed.

Lord Beston laughed and caught hold of her waist, pressing her body so close to his that Charlotte could feel the buttons of his jacket pressing painfully against her breasts.

‘I like you exceedingly Miss Grainger.… Charlotte. Let us be friends, eh?' His lips sought her averted face, his moustache brushing her skin unpleasantly.

‘No!' Charlotte gasped. ‘ Your behaviour is infamous. I demand that you release me instantly.'

‘Not until I have told you the truth about the man you feel such misplaced loyalty for,' Lord Beston said, his voice hardening. ‘He has no feelings of affection for you. None for any woman except his sister; my wife.' He began to laugh again and in his laughter was the sound of madness.

Charlotte felt revulsion flood her body. His words made no sense to her but it was obvious that his hatred of Sandor was sufficient to endanger Sandor's life if they should meet.

Lord Beston's mouth sought hers with desperate urgency. ‘ So no more Count Karolyi,' he panted as she struggled against him. ‘No more Zara. Let them comfort each other in penury while we …' His mouth fastened on hers. She could feel his teeth biting her lips, smell the sickly sweetness of his breath.

Lord Beston was not a man who normally let passion rule his senses, but the enormity of his wife's revelations had temporarily deranged him. His power over the unsufferably self-assured and arrogant Count Karolyi was absolute. And as if to prove it, he had every intention of possessing Karolyi's mistress, with her consent or without it.

BOOK: Devil's Palace
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