‘We will see.’
Grace lifted her chin. ‘If you don’t tell Talek, then I will be forced to.’
Henry tilted his head, his eyes narrowing as he studied her.
‘Your interest in our business dealings puzzles me. Why would a woman trouble her pretty mind with such things? At first I thought it was born from a desire to have the numbers tally. There is nothing more galling to a mathematician than when numbers misbehave. The drive to solve the problem can both infuriate and invigorate.’ He smiled. ‘I see that you are surprised I know how it feels. You see, Grace, people like us prefer things to stay organised and in their place. Numbers are so less confusing than people.’
He refilled his glass. ‘Laudanum has a way of calling a man back to it,’ he said, adding a scattering of drops to his drink. He turned back to her and lifted the glass in a toast.
‘To my good health,’ he said, before taking a noisy gulp. ‘I think you must have a fondness for Talek to be so concerned. It must be very confusing for you to have your heart overruling your head. Does your heart pound as a result of some inconsequential action on his part? My poor Grace . . . it must be unsettling for you to find no logic in how your body reacts to his presence.’
Grace’s eyes widened. She wasn’t sure what shocked her the most — how intimately he was speaking to her or that his words so accurately reflected how she felt.
Henry smiled. ‘I’m right, aren’t I? You are in love with Talek and it is this that drives you. You have been presented with a problem and you are desperately trying to solve it for him. Let me relieve you of that burden.’ He opened his arms in mock innocence. ‘It is not your problem to solve. Go home to Bodmin Moor. Leave the clay lands to those who know about clay.’
Grace did not move. ‘If you don’t tell him, I will. I promised Amelia I wouldn’t, but I don’t think I can live with myself if I don’t.’
Henry sighed. ‘Amelia has more sense than you. You, on the other hand, are as troublesome as a gnat at dusk. Talek is an honourable man, but you’re right, reputation is important to him. In fact I would go as far as to say that it is everything to him. Imagine his disappointment should he find out about you.’
The room moved about her. Only Henry’s smiling face, taunting and smiling, anchored her with its clarity.
‘I don’t know what you mean.’
‘I saw you that day, hiding from a dirty blacksmith. Alfred Petherbridge,’ he mused, ‘a nobody with a tale to tell. And he was willing to tell it. Only too willing. He must really hate you. Of course, I paid him to keep quiet. It wasn’t for your benefit, you understand, more for mine. The information he provided was a valuable commodity. It is far better to keep it in one’s arsenal for a more fitting time.’
Henry waited for her reply. Grace said nothing, unsure how much he really knew.
‘Come, come, Grace. Are you not going to ask me what he said? No? Then let me tell you anyway, because if you continue your stupid quest of stirring up trouble, I’ll have no choice but to tell every person I meet that your father was a brutal rapist. Theysay bad blood will out. Doesn’t make you very good breeding stock, does it? Talek would want nothing to do with you, if he knew, and he wouldn’t want Amelia near you. The association would be unthinkable.’
‘You can’t know that for sure.’
‘I’m as sure as you are. Isn’t that why you fled your home? Because you were spoilt goods and wanted to start afresh?’
Grace fought the urge to slap his smiling face. She felt her nails digging into her palms as she balled her fists. Was the depth of her anger a measure of her hatred for Henry or her love for Talek? In that moment she really didn’t know.
Her voice sounded far calmer than she felt inside. ‘Then there is no more to be said and I will leave you to your recovery.’
Grace reached for the book and passbook to find it was gone.
‘You really should have kept a better eye on it, Grace,’ chided Henry.
‘Where is it?’
‘It’s my property and I have simply reclaimed it. Now it’s my word against yours, that’s if it ever existed at all.’ He looked to the burning fire, littered with fragments of grey, burnt paper, curling in the heat. ‘Some confusion on your part, I think. You saw some figures and was confused as to what they related to. It’s time you left matters of commerce to the men in this world.’
Grace fought to remain calm. Without her evidence or Amelia’s support, it was her word against Talek’s trusted business partner and sister.
‘Take from it what you will,’ she replied. ‘I have nothing more to say to you and, I trust, you have said all there is to say to me. Good day.’
* * *
Grace inhaled a long shuddering breath. She hoped the act would calm her. It did not. She looked back at the house, andwas unable to recall striding out of it only moments before. Her world was imploding about her and she did not know what she should do next. Every choice open to her seemed to be paved with painful truths.
She could tell Talek about Henry, but he would learn of his sister’s involvement. Grace was sure that Amelia’s betrayal would hurt him to the core and the thought of destroying his trust in his sister brought her to the brink of tears. She would also be betraying Amelia as, foolishly, she had given her word to say nothing. And the pain would not end there, as now Henry had threatened to tell Talek of her own secret. How would he react to learning her father was a rapist? She dared not think of it.
She could keep quiet and hope that Henry’s business deal had no lasting effects. If it did, she could play ignorant and hope Talek would believe her. Could she base a fledgling relationship on lies that were waiting to rise up and take hold one day? She shook her head in frustration. What was she thinking? There was no relationship or ever would be, Talek had made that very plain.
Yet if he should find out about Henry’s transaction — and the product did cause problems — and he discovered that she knew, he would never forgive her.