Читать книгу My Fair Lord - Wilma Counts - Страница 10
ОглавлениеChapter 4
The next morning Jake answered a knock at his door to find a footman standing there with a bucket of hot water.
“Good morning, sir. Lady Henrietta will be happy to have you join her for breakfast in the morning room. I am to show you there when you are ready,” the young man recited.
“Thank you, uh—”
“Baker, sir.”
“I’ll be a few minutes.” Jake quickly completed his morning ablutions and shrugged into a tan jacket which complemented his black trousers and a pair of new black boots that he hoped would mold to his feet sooner rather than later.
“Her ladyship’s an early riser, eh?” he commented as he strode down the hall and stairs beside the liveried servant.
“Yes, sir. She’s always the first to come down—‘bout two hours afore the rest does. Usually she heads directly to the stable for her morning ride, though.”
“Does she now?” Jake murmured, thinking his “lessons” were beginning already and hoping he did not make some silly mistake in his masquerade.
“Here we are.” The footman knocked, and at a clear “Come,” opened the door. “Mr. Bolton, milady.”
“Thank you, Baker,” she said. “Leave the door ajar, please.”
So. She is not willing to flout convention by being totally alone with a man to whom she is not related, Jake thought.
The room was small and cheerful with yellow flowered wallpaper above light oak wainscoting. White wicker furniture dominated the room—a round glass-topped table with four padded chairs, along with an oak sideboard, and a few other chairs with colorful cushions. Early morning sunlight flooded in from French doors that led to a small patio and a well-tended garden beyond. A profusion of potted plants gave the impression of extending the garden to the interior. Lady Henrietta sat at the main table with an elaborate silver service in front of her; he noted fragile china plates and cups at two place settings. All the table items were embellished with the earl’s coat of arms.
He had noted the room and its furnishings, but it was the woman who truly commanded his attention. Her muslin dress was light forest green embroidered with tiny blue and white flowers. A square neckline revealed just a hint of the cleavage of what promised to be a tantalizing bosom. Elbow-length sleeves ended in a narrow fringe of white cotton lace. Her lower arms and hands were bare. Dalliance crossed his mind again.
She lifted her head and smiled. “Good morning, Mr. Bolton.” The smile was devastating, showing a well-shaped mouth and white teeth that were not exactly perfect in their symmetry. Her eyes, a smoky green today—they had been more gray than green on those two previous occasions—reflected only a friendly but business-like expression.
“G’ mornin’ ta ye, milady.”
“Please. Have a seat, Mr. Bolton.” She gestured to the other place that had been set. When he was seated, she asked, “Would you like coffee or tea?”
It had been ages since he had had breakfast–or any meal, for that matter—with a pretty woman in such an intimate surrounding. “Coffee, please,” he managed, having observed that it was what she was drinking. He willed himself to remember who and what he was supposed to be. “That is, milady, I’d kinder like the coffee, though truth ta tell, I’m more used ta tea in the mornin’.”
“I am more accustomed to tea,” she said.
“Ye are? Why ye drinkin’ coffee, then?” He tried to keep his expression impassive, for he had recognized her correction for what it was.
She suppressed a moue of annoyance. “So which will you have today?”
“Coffee, please, milady.”
“You misunderstood,” she said, pouring his coffee. “I was attempting to tell you how to express that idea in polite society.”
“Oh. I ’spect ye gots lotsa work to do wit’ me.”
She sighed. “It would appear that I do. So let us begin. This table setting is very simple. Ordinarily, we shall have breakfast in the dining room, serving ourselves from the sideboard, but I thought you might be more comfortable in here today.” She proceeded to explain and demonstrate the correct use of items on the table—how to hold the silver, which knife for this, which spoon for that, to use the tongs rather than fingers for small lumps of sugar, and so on. When she had finished, she rose to tug at the bell pull, which signaled a footman to bring a tray with covered plates already filled with buttered eggs, sausages, and ham, along with plates of toast and muffins.
When the covers were removed, Jake noted that his plate was considerably fuller than hers. He looked up with a raised eyebrow, but she shrugged and said, “We did not know what sort of appetite you might have.”
“Oh.” He tucked in, trying to keep in mind the instructions she had given earlier—and his supposed ignorance. It occurred to him that she had deliberately arranged this morning’s tutorial out of deference for what might have been an ordinary dockworker’s feeling out of place in such an environment as an earl’s London dining room with a number of other people present. He wondered how many ton misses would have had such foresight and empathy.
During the meal, she kept up a flow of small talk, explaining that they would work on diction and language, manners and deportment, and, well, whatever might come to mind. She encouraged him to ask questions, any question, no matter how foolish or unimportant he might think it. Jake thought she seemed nervous, but he also noted that she had apparently put a great deal of thought into this endeavor. As they were finishing, the door opened wide and Lady Henrietta’s younger brother, Richard, sauntered in. He was dressed in his Guards uniform and did not take a seat, but leaned across the table to snatch a muffin.
“Morning, Retta. Bolton. I trust everything is proceeding apace,” he said with this mouth full. He pulled a face. “I am off for some early morning training. Marching. Though why a cavalry officer needs marching practice, I know not.” With that, he was gone.
She returned to her “tutorial” tone. “Ignore my brother. His manners are abominable. Generally at any meal if you just take it slowly and watch what others are doing at table, you will probably get along without incident.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
* * * *
Retta had been nervous as she waited for Mr. Bolton to appear in the morning room, for she had been remembering the conversation she and Gerald had with Uncle Alfred the previous night. At their instruction, a footman had informed Lord Alfred when he returned for the evening that Lord Heaton and Lady Henrietta wished to speak with him in the young ladies’ sitting room. Meanwhile, Gerald and Retta played piquet as they waited in the sitting room that Retta still shared with Melinda; in the absence of the earl and his wife, Rebecca and her husband had been invited to use the master suite after returning from their wedding journey. Prior to Rebecca’s marriage, all three young women had had bedchambers off this room. As Retta and Gerald sat playing cards, Rebecca popped in, wearing her go-to-the-ball finery, to collect Melinda. Retta complimented her on a gown of blue silk with a net overskirt of the same color.
“Very nice.” Retta said. “The gown exactly matches your eyes as we thought it would.”
Rebecca twirled around, then glanced at a clock on the mantle. “Yes. It turned out very well. I do wish Melinda could be more prompt. I do not want to sit and crush my skirt any more than necessary before the ball.”
“Melinda went down ten minutes ago,” Gerald said.
“She did? Well, then, I suppose Lenninger has waited long enough for me.” She stepped toward the door and added, “By the way, Retta, I heard you two in the library with your Mr. Bolton this afternoon. I think I chose very well.” She giggled and left with a parting shot, “Very well, indeed.”
Retta grimaced. “Which means she thinks she has all but won already.”
“For what it’s worth, my money is on you,” Gerald replied and handed her the cards. “Your deal.”
A short while later, Retta found Uncle Alfred’s reaction to be exactly what she and Gerald had expected.
“Wha-at?!” he asked in surprise as he took one of the empty chairs at their card table and Gerald told him not only that a threat had been made against Retta’s life, but that a Bow Street Runner was now in residence to see to her protection. “And I am only now hearing of this? Your father said nothing of this in his last communication with me.”
“I think he was wary of putting the message in the dispatch papers that usually contain his letters to you. This arrived by special courier this morning after you had left for the day. Seems to have been written rather hastily.” Gerald handed over a missive he and Retta had spent the better part of an hour composing.
“Hmm.” Uncle Alfred read it through twice, then said in a worried tone, “I am not sure one man from Bow Street will be up to such a task.”
“I must admit that I was somewhat doubtful about that myself,” Gerald said, “but I discussed it with two of Castlereagh’s men in the Foreign Office, and they assured me that they would also keep eyes and ears attuned to unusual activities directed our way. And the Bow Street magistrate tells me we have his best man on the job, though he stressed that we must be very discreet about Bow Street’s involvement. Very discreet.”
Retta was mildly surprised by the aplomb with which Gerald carried off blatant lies.
Uncle Alfred scratched his head of snow-white hair and turned his dark eyes on each of them in turn. “Hmm. Well, if Sir William Hendrickson is satisfied with Bow Street’s involvement, I shall not question it, though I do wonder why you did not inform me sooner. The army might have supplied a suitable body guard.”
“We wanted to do so,” Retta said. It took little effort to feign regret, for she really was sorry to be deceiving one of her favorite people in all the world. “But you had already gone, and Papa’s letter was quite explicit, you see.”
She felt relieved when Uncle Alfred rose to take his leave, kissed her on the forehead, and said, “He probably feared you would be off to some charity work in an unsavory part of town—or something of that sort—before he could put protection in place.”
* * * *
Now, as she dealt with Mr. Bolton for the first time—really dealt with him, one on one—she was happy to let good manners carry the day. In the back of her mind, she remembered Miss Pringle’s admonishing all her pupils, “A lady always seeks to put others at ease no matter differences in rank.”
Mr. Bolton proved to be an amiable companion once her brother dashed away. Seeing this as an opportunity to assess the strengths and weaknesses of her “pupil,” she allowed herself only an occasional correction of grammar or pronunciation as they discussed the weather that promised a sunny day and then how subdued the city seemed now that the frenetic victory celebrations of the summer were over. They had both seen some of the street parades of nobility and could share impressions of the Czar of Russia, the King of Prussia, and the popular generals, Blücher and Wellington. They agreed that having Napoleon tucked away on the island of Elba was itself cause for England’s general mood of self-satisfaction.
“Don’t know as how I’d trust that feller even on an island, though. I heard he was allowed ‘bout a thousand people to go with him,” Jake said.
“Really? So many?” she responded. “Well, perhaps they will keep him occupied enough that he will not even dream of trying to repeat his offenses against the world.”
“Mebbe . . .”
This morning, Mr. Bolton was clean-shaven, so the scars on his face were less noticeable than they had been as white streaks through a two- or three-day growth of dark beard. His firm jaw was more pronounced too, but his blue eyes were just as intense as they had been across that plank table in The White Horse.
One could lose oneself in those eyes, she thought, then immediately chastised herself for such an unacceptable thought about someone so unsuitable. A proper lady should never find a near-servant so personally attractive. Lady Henrietta was not especially prim and proper, but she was aware of obligations to her family whose position in society and government entailed certain responsibilities. Nevertheless, she also noted the way the fabric of Mr. Bolton’s coat stretched across broad shoulders and that his hands, long-fingered and, like his face, deeply tanned, looked strong but not necessarily rough. That his nails were clean and trimmed struck her as unusual in a common laborer, but she shrugged off that observation. How had he become so tanned on the docks of a city so often enshrouded in cloud as London was?
He gave her a quizzical look, which, along with a half-smile and a raised eyebrow, suggested that he knew exactly where her thoughts had drifted. Arrogant man. He is probably used to having women fall all over themselves for him.
She sensed him gazing at her with a questioning look at her hands, and she realized that she had so lost herself in the ease of conversation with him that she was sitting casually with both elbows on the table, her coffee cup suspended between her hands. She replaced the cup in its saucer with a clatter and spoke in a business-like tone that changed the relaxed atmosphere.
“I must attend to some errands this morning, and I should like you to accompany me.”
“Yes, milady.”
“My brother and I have discussed the matter, and we feel that, initially at least, when you and I appear in public, it would be better for you to seem to be a member of the Blakemoor staff. Jeffries has, I think, laid out proper livery in your room. You and Annie shall accompany me.”
“Annie?”
“I do apologize, Mr. Bolton. Annie is my maid. I gather you have not yet met her.”
He looked thoughtful for a moment. She wondered if he might object to appearing to be a servant, but then he said quietly, “No, ma’am, I ain’t met ’er, but I’ll do as ye tell me ta do.”
The most important of her objectives this day was to call upon her aunt, Lady Georgiana Mickelson. Since she intended the visit to be a short one, she instructed Mr. Bolton and Annie to wait for her on a bench in the Mickelson entrance hall.
Lady Georgiana, widow of a very successful man of business, was her father’s sister and her godmother. Retta had always been fond of her “Auntie Georgie,” who had been a fiercely independent woman even before she lost her husband at a relatively young age and was thus forced to cope alone with much that life had tossed at her. Retta knew that Lady Georgiana had held out against family censure to marry a man with whom she was truly in love even though he was engaged in trade.
“William and I were ready to fly off to Gretna Green,” she had once confided to her goddaughter, “but the family—even your stepmother—finally gave in, and the wedding took place at St. Martin’s in the Field.”
That her husband had left her a huge fortune—along with a comfortable home in the Bloomsbury district—had, of course, made her independence more palatable to nay-sayers. An ever-critical society that had long since learned to tolerate Lady Georgiana’s eccentricities and her tendency to speak her mind.
With Cousin Amabelle planning to accompany Rebecca and Melinda into the country, Retta needed a chaperon. Who better than her beloved Auntie Georgie—if she could be persuaded to perform that task?
Lady Georgiana received her niece in her drawing room and the two of them sat together on one of two couches upholstered in deep gold. “Oh, my dear girl, what sort of scrape have you got yourself into now?” her aunt asked rhetorically when Retta, after first swearing her aunt to secrecy, had explained not only that she needed a chaperon, but also the particulars of the wager with Rebecca. Retta had always confided in her aunt, who had been far more of a mother than the countess had proved to be. “I suppose if I refused, you would be required to give up the scheme and join your sisters in the country.”
“Possibly . . .” Retta conceded. “I had thought of having Miss Pringle suggest someone, but I am sure you recognize the delicacy of this matter and the need for utmost discretion.”
“Yes, I do.” She gripped her niece’s hand briefly. “And I am glad to see that you recognize that need too. This could well blow up in your face, my dear, but, frankly, I should like to see you succeed. It promises to be very entertaining—and just the sort of come-uppance some of those society cats have coming to them. And your sisters could use a life lesson or two as well.”
“You will do it then? Remove to Blakemoor House?”
“You must give me a few days to arrange matters, but yes, when Amabelle and the girls leave, I will remove to Blakemoor House and try to lend some semblance of propriety to your residing in that mausoleum with only your brothers and Alfred and some strange man.”
“I assume Madame Laurent will accompany you,” Retta said. “With Rebecca and Melinda both in the country, you may have their rooms next to mine.” Madame Laurent, also a widow and a cousin to the earl of Blakemoor and his sister, had been Lady Georgiana’s companion for several years.
Lady Georgiana nodded. “But of course. Celeste is away at the moment, attending to some business with her son. That young scamp is something of a trial to his mother. She does not talk about it much, but I gather that he is not exactly happy as a country curate. She will be sorry to have missed you.”
“Please do give her my regards. And, thank you, Auntie, for rescuing me from a fate not to be contemplated—the censure of the ton’s leading tabbies. Thank you so very, very much!” Retta impulsively hugged her aunt and kissed her cheek. “Mr. Bolton is waiting below. Would you like to meet him?”
“Of course.”
Lady Georgiana dispatched a servant to bring Mr. Bolton to the drawing room. When Retta introduced them, he bowed and stood patiently as her aunt looked him over thoroughly, but seemed to withhold her judgment for now.
“You remind me of someone I know—or once knew,” Aunt Georgiana said in a thoughtful tone. “But never mind that now, I assume you are fully aware of what is involved in this rather unorthodox scheme?”
“Yes, ma’am. Leastways, much as a body can be, I ken.”
“And you have agreed to it freely?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Well, then . . .” Lady Georgiana shook her head in reluctant acquiescence. “I do hope nothing untoward comes of this for either of you.”
Mr. Bolton bowed again and Retta hugged her aunt again as they took their leave. They retrieved Annie and set out for the rest of Lady Henrietta’s errands of the day. As they approached the carriage, which had been left standing in the roadway in front of her aunt’s house, a smart curricle pulled up in front of the Blakemoor carriage. A stylish young couple alit and immediately called greetings.
“Oh, Lady Henrietta, do tell me we have not missed you,” the young woman said with a pout.
The man lifted his hat and bowed, “Lady Henrietta, how nice to see you.”
“Lord Ralston. Lady Ralston. I wish I could stay to visit with you, but I fear I must get on with an important errand this morning.” She gestured at Annie to enter the carriage as Jake held the door, and she paused to exchange a bit of small talk with her friends concerning the weather and her promise to visit the newest addition to the Ralston nursery.
Retta sensed a rigidity in Mr. Bolton that she had not noticed before, and she noted that his hat was rather low on his forehead as he stood stiffly and seemed to gaze beyond the small group.
She took her leave and stepped into the carriage, Mr. Bolton handing her in ever so correctly.
* * * *
Jake had accepted the idea of his seeming in public to be a servant in Blakemoor House as yet another layer of disguise. He just hoped he could keep all these roles straight—and that in performing such duties he might never encounter anyone he had known in his youth. As he and Annie waited for Lady Henrietta, he had learned more about her ladyship and about the dynamics of the family of the Earl of Blakemoor. Annie was a pretty blond girl who seemed to Jake to be rather young for her position as lady’s maid to an earl’s daughter; he guessed she had no more than sixteen or seventeen years. She was fiercely loyal to her mistress who was a favorite in the servants’ hall.
“She ain’t like them other two. Or the countess. Lady Henrietta has heart,” Annie said fervently. “Always lookin’ out for those women and children at Fairfax House.”
“Fairfax House?” he asked with mild interest.
“A charity house in Spitalfields run by the Fairfax sisters. They takes care o’ women what’s been beaten or left without, and orphans too.”
“Spitalfields?” This had piqued Jake’s interest. “Are ye tellin’ me her ladyship goes to sich a rough part o’ London?”
“Ya. She does. Takes them clothing and other things. What’d ya think we put them bundles and that basket in the boot fer?”
“’Twasn’t my place to wonder none.” But in fact he had wondered. “She goes to Spitalfields alone?”
“Well, with me an’ the coachman an’ at least one footman usually. You, today. Sometimes they’s one or two other ladies goes with us. Sometimes not.”
Before Jake could pursue this discussion, he had been called to meet Lady Georgiana. Later Annie’s prattle had been overshadowed by that near miss he had endured outside Lady Georgiana’s house.
When he heard Lady Henrietta greet Lord and Lady Ralston by name, he drew in a long breath and willed himself to be but part of the scenery. Years ago Ralston had been a fellow student at Winchester, though two years behind Lord Jacob Bodwyn and Lord Peter Fenton. Still, they had then spent a good deal of time in each other’s company, engaging in the usual schoolboy pranks. Now, if Ralston recognized him, all was lost.
Jake deliberately turned himself at an angle to the Ralstons as he held the door for Annie and her ladyship, then jumped in behind them and closed the door. He breathed an inward sigh of relief.
Wellington was right: people see what they want to see or what they expect to see.