decent change of clean clothes and being
dead broke did very little to improve her
wardrobe situation. It was a bit
humiliating to dine with guests at the
manor looking like a peasant, but things
couldn’t be helped. She would hold her
head up high even knowing her aunt would
be silently gloating.
There was a timid knock at her door
and she answered it to find a teenage girl
standing on the threshold. The girl was
wearing a maid’s uniform, and had silky
black hair. Her long lashes rested at the
tops of her cheeks as she stared
respectfully at the floor.
“Mr. Trayburn sent me to help you
dress for dinner, Miss Decatur,” she said,
bowing to her. “My name is Rikka. I
usually clean the manor, but I have some
training as a lady’s maid.”
“I don’t really need any help,” she
admitted.
“I
don’t
have
anything
appropriate to wear.”
There was a loud thud at the head of
the servant stairs. Maralee and Rikka
looked down the hall to see David
Caraway shoving a large trunk down the
hall.
“This thing sure is heavy,” he
complained when he reached the door to
Maralee’s room.
“What is this?” Maralee asked.
“Trayburn made me carry it up from
the storeroom in the servants’ quarters.
He’s been keeping it down there to hide it
from your aunt,” David said. “If you’ll
stand aside I’ll push it into your room and
then return to the kitchen. Jean is probably
wondering where I ran off to.”
Maralee moved into the room and
watched the trunk curiously as David
shoved it into the room. “Uh, thank you,
David,” she said when he stood up and
wiped the sweat from his brow with the
back of his hand.
“You’re
very
welcome,
Miss
Decatur.” He ducked his head and left.
Rikka was already opening the trunk.
She began pulling articles of clothing out
and laying them across Maralee’s bed.
“Those are my mother’s clothes,”
Maralee said, her heart thudding with a
powerful inrush of emotion.
“They are wrinkled and outdated,”
Rikka commented, “but they’ll do for now.
We’d better hurry. Mr. Trayburn wanted
me to make Bailey look like an overdone
peacock next to our beautiful swan.”
Rikka grinned at her. “He doesn’t really
seem the romantic type, but those were his
exact words.”
It turned out that Rikka was an
excellent lady’s maid. She soon had
Maralee looking like the proper mistress
of the Decatur estates. Her shimmering,
pale blue gown was plain, yet elegant
with an empress waist and small, cupped
sleeves. Maralee was surprised by how
perfectly the gown fit her. When she
caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror
over the dressing table, she was stunned
by how feminine she looked.
“For lack of time, we’ll have to do
something simple with your hair,” Rikka
said, pressing her down on the bench in
front of the dressing table. Within minutes,
she had arranged Maralee’s hair into long
loose curls, which draped down the center
of her back.
“Trayburn told me to apologize for not
being able to hide your mother’s jewels as
well as he hid her clothes. Mistress
Bailey quickly realized the jewelry was
missing.”
“I am grateful to him for saving what
he could, and I thank you for helping me
look halfway presentable. I’d better
hurry.”
Rikka helped her slip into a pair of
satin slippers that matched the gown
perfectly. Maralee left the room to venture
to the dining room.
She found her aunt was into the third
course of her meal and her two guests,
while seated at the table, weren’t eating
anything. Maralee pretended not to take
much interest in the two rough-looking
men who were listening intently to
Bailey’s low instructions.
“I’m sorry I’m late,” Maralee said
quietly, taking the chair pulled out for her
by Trayburn.
“You look stunning, Miss Decatur,”
the old butler told her with a smile.
“Thanks to you,” she whispered.
His smile widened. “I shall bring your
first course, mistress,” he announced so
that the others at the table could hear.
“I thought you might need some sleep,
so I didn’t send anyone to wake you for
dinner,” Aunt Bailey explained, looking
nervously from one of her guests to the
other.
The two men, one with jet-black hair
and other with dark brown, were watching
Maralee with interest in their amber eyes.
Both men were ruggedly handsome and
had danger written all over them. Both
Wolves, no question.
“I appreciate your concern, Aunt
Bailey,” Maralee said, unfolding her
napkin and laying it in her lap. “Please,
introduce me to your guests.”
“They were just leaving,” Bailey said,
trying to catch the eye of either one of the
men, but they were too busy staring at
Maralee to pay her any attention.
“In the middle of dinner?” Maralee
asked,
hoping
she
looked
mildly
perplexed.
“Very well,” Bailey said coldly. “This
is Marc.”
The black haired man nodded at her,
and Maralee offered him a welcoming
smile.
“This is Jack,” Bailey introduced the
other man.
“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Marc,”
Maralee said, “and Jack. I am Maralee
Decatur.”
Both men stared as if she’d sprouted
horns and a forked tail and then turned
accusatory gazes on Bailey. Maralee
pretended not to notice their reaction and
instead turned her attention to Jean who
had personally brought the first course of
her meal into the dining room. He set it
before her and lifted a silver cover from
her plate. Maralee’s nose was blessed
with the heavenly fragrance of Jean’s
famous crab quiche.
“Oh, Jean. This looks amazing,” she
exclaimed,
and
Jean
flushed
with
pleasure.
“I made it especially for you. It used to
be one of your favorites,” he said. “And
just wait until you see what’s for dessert.”
“You’ll have me as fat as a cow if you
keep feeding me like this.” She had
already noticed her pants becoming
snugger over the past week. This didn’t
stop her from digging into the perfectly
formed quiche with her fork. It melted on
her tongue and she closed her eyes in
bliss. “Even better than I remembered,”
she told the chef.
He smiled at her and left the room,
returning to the kitchen to complete his
next masterpiece. While she ate, she
attempted
to
carry
on
friendly
conversation. The two Wolves grunted
occasionally, but refused to speak.
“So how did you meet these two
handsome young men, Aunt Bailey?” she
asked in a teasing tone.
“Uh…well…”
Aunt
Bailey
stammered. “They helped me out of a tight
situation several years ago.”
“What kind of tight situation?”
Aunt Bailey laughed nervously. “Don’t
worry about things like that, Maralee,” she
said, her voice squeaky. “You should rest
so you can return to your adventures as
soon as possible. You’ve been home for a
week already. Shouldn’t you be planning
to leave again?”
Maralee chuckled as if amused.
“Whatever are you talking about, Aunt
Bailey? I’m here to stay. I think I should
get to know your friends if they’re going to
be visiting you in my home.”
Bailey glanced nervously at Jack and
then stood up abruptly. “Before you go,
Jack. I have to give you that
thing
,” she
said, grabbing Jack by the sleeve and
pulling him to his feet. Marc climbed to
his feet as well, but Bailey shook her head
slightly and he sat back down. “We’ll be
right back,” she promised in a falsely
cheerful voice.
Maralee watched the two leave the
room and then turned her attention to the
shifty, black-haired man.
“You should have some quiche,”
Maralee told him. “It’s very good.”
He stared at her for a moment. She
could practically feel the animosity in his
eyes. “No, thank you,” he said gruffly.
“So what exactly does my aunt do for
you?” she asked. “I know you do her
killing for her.”
Marc’s eyes widened and then he
shook his head. “You are mistaken.”
“Then I apologize,” she said. “I
suppose you think I’m a threat to your
people.”
“Why would I think that?”
She smiled. “Because I know your
secret,” she said. “I know what you really
are and your weakness to silver.”
Jack was suddenly in the doorway.
“Marc,” he beckoned. “Let’s go.”
Marc glanced at Maralee and then
climbed to his feet.
“Are you leaving already?” Maralee
asked.
“We have a prior engagement,” Jack
said. “Excuse us.”
“Have a good evening,” she said, and
they disappeared into the hallway.
Aunt Bailey rejoined her a few
moments later. Maralee puzzled over her
brief encounter with the Wolves. They
seemed to be afraid of her or at the very
least wary of her. She wondered what
Aunt Bailey had told them.
“Have you really decided to give up
on your adventures?” Bailey asked her
with a false smile. “You’ve always loved
your freedom.”
“Well, we all have to grow up
sometime,” she said. “When will you be
moving out?”
Bailey’s mouth fell open. “You’re
going to make me leave?”
“Well, you’re welcome to stay in one
of the other properties on the estate,”
Maralee said in a civil tone. “I’m not
about to toss you out on your fanny after
all
you’ve done for me.”
“But—”
“Oh, you don’t have to thank me. You
were married to my uncle for almost two
years before he was killed. Surely such
devotion to my family deserves its
rewards.” Though her words were laced
with sarcasm, her demeanor was that of a
young lady having a pleasant conversation
as she dined upon the delicious fare
presented by attentive servants.
“I—”
“Well, think about it. I’ll understand if
you’d rather move to town. You do have
some money of your own, don’t you?”
Bailey’s eyes seemed to flicker with a
fiery hatred. “Why would I have any
money of my own? Your father controlled
all of the Decatur money when he died.
Jason left me with nothing.”
Maralee shrugged. “The Decatur’s
always take care of their own, however, it
seems only reasonable that you would be
a very wealthy woman, seeing as you
cleaned out my bank account months ago.”
All of the blood drained out of
Bailey’s thin face. “I didn’t.”
Maralee looked up from her plate.
“Don’t lie to me,” Maralee demanded. “If
there’s one thing I inherited from my
father, it’s a fighting spirit. Don’t think I’m
going to sit back while you take what’s
mine.” For some inexplicable reason, an
image of Nash flashed through her mind.
She dropped her fork, overcome by a
sudden wave of dizziness.
“Miss Decatur?” Trayburn questioned,
leaning over her shoulder. “Are you
feeling ill?”
She glanced up at the butler who had
taken care of her family since her father
had been a boy. His face swam out of
focus and then back again.
“Miss Decatur?” he said, his voice
sounded far away. “Miss Decatur.”
“I think…I need to…lie down…” she
whispered, before she slumped sideways
out of her chair.
“Is it serious, Doctor?” a distant voice
filtered through the fog in Maralee’s brain.
“Serious?” another voice entered.