Sally MacKenzie Bundle (155 page)

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Authors: Sally MacKenzie

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James smiled down at Sarah. There was a sparkle in his eyes as though he were enjoying some grand joke. He turned to the older women. “Aunt, Lady Amanda, may I present Miss Sarah Hamilton of Philadelphia? Sarah, this is my aunt, Lady Gladys Runyon, and her companion, Lady Amanda Wallen-Smyth.”

“Damn!”

Sarah glanced around to see where the expletive had come from. Charles looked bewildered; Robbie looked ill.

Lady Amanda’s nostrils flared as if the pig had left the sty and had had the audacity to root around her skirts. “Alvord, I don’t care if you import your wh—”

Lady Gladys put a hand out to stop Lady Amanda. “Sarah
Hamilton
did you say?”

“Exactly, Aunt. She is here to visit the Earl of Westbrooke. I believe they are related.”

Robbie groaned.

James—Mr. Alvord, Sarah corrected herself—looked positively gleeful when he turned to introduce her to his male friends. “Miss Hamilton, this is Major Charles Draysmith.”

Major Draysmith bowed. “My pleasure, Miss Hamilton.”

“And this,” James said, his grin widening, “is Robert—Robbie—Hamilton. The Earl of Westbrooke.”

Sarah gasped. Lord Westbrooke executed a jerky bow.

“You can’t be my uncle. You’re too young.”

Robbie ran his hands through hair that looked so like her father’s. “No, sorry about that. I’m your cousin. My father died last year. We’ve just put off mourning.” He smiled weakly.

“So you are David Hamilton’s daughter, girl?” Lady Gladys said. Sarah turned back to face her.

“Yes, ma’am.”

Lady Gladys nodded. “Now that I look at you, I see the resemblance. Hamiltons always did breed true. And where might your father be? Surely he accompanied you across the Atlantic?”

“My father died in early December.”

“I’m sorry, child.” Lady Gladys did look sorry. “I always liked your father. He had an intensity about him that was quite compelling. And your mother? Is she deceased also?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“But why did you leave America so shortly after your father’s death?” Lady Amanda looked suspiciously at Sarah.

There was no point in hiding her situation, Sarah decided. It would be clear soon enough. It looked doubtful that her cousin could take her in, so she’d need help finding work.

“My father was very active in politics and a respected physician, but he had little interest in practical matters. He gave money away freely and never insisted that his patients pay for his services. I would have had very little to live on had I stayed in Philadelphia. But I couldn’t stay—I promised my father I’d come to his brother in England.”

Lady Gladys shook her head. “Well, I’m sorry for your loss, Miss Hamilton, but that does not explain what you were doing in my nephew’s bed. Certainly that’s not how they go on in the colonies?”

Sarah flushed and raised her chin. “I thought it was
my
bed. Mr. Alvord came along later. I was quite as surprised as you to find him there this morning.”

“Mr. Alvord? James?”

“Yes, Aunt, we’ll sort all that out shortly. What
I
would like to know is why you felt compelled to invade my room?”

Lady Gladys flicked her fingers at him, but Sarah noticed she did have the grace to blush. “You didn’t come home last night. I was worried.”

“Madam, I am twenty-eight years old. I have risked my life for my country. If I decide not to come home one night, I think that is my own affair!”

“But you never do, James. Not come home that is. You are very responsible. And there
is
the Richard business. Of course I was worried. You might have been seriously hurt.”

James looked to the ceiling for inspiration and made a mental note that his aunt knew something about “the Richard business.” The Foreign Office could take lessons from his aunt and Lady Amanda. Their spy network was more extensive than either Britain’s or France’s.

“Did you think to ask the innkeeper how I was?”

“I was worried, James. I didn’t think to ask. And how would he know if something had happened to you in the night?”

“Apparently something
did
happen to him in the night.”

James chose to ignore Lady Amanda’s muttered comment. “Good God, madam,” he said, addressing his aunt, “didn’t you even think to knock?”

“I thought you were dying. There was no time to knock.” Lady Gladys coughed and glanced away. Her cheeks flushed. “I, um, was quite surprised at the sight I encountered.”

“Yes, yes.” James didn’t want his aunt to go down
that
conversational path.

“You know you will have to do the right thing, don’t you?” Lady Gladys gestured towards Robbie. “As head of his family, that idiot there should demand it.”

Robbie’s hair was now standing at right angles from his head. He squeezed his eyes shut. “James…” he began.

“Stubble it, Robbie. I’m more than willing to marry Miss Hamilton.” James laughed. “It saves me from the Marble Queen, doesn’t it?”

“Marry me!” Sarah could barely get the words out. She felt as if a huge weight had settled on her chest.

“You are most thoroughly compromised, girl,” Lady Gladys said. “Half the country saw you stark naked in bed with my nephew.”

“But nothing happened!” Sarah frowned. “At least, I hope nothing happened.”

Robbie and Charles were suddenly attacked by coughing fits. Lady Gladys and Lady Amanda stared at Sarah as if she had lost her mind.

“What did or didn’t happen is immaterial, young lady. I don’t pretend to know how things are done in the colonies, but in England when a gentleman compromises a lady—and believe me, there is no doubt that you are compromised—he marries her. James understands that.”

“Yes, Aunt.”

Sarah turned to Mr. Alvord. “But it was an accident.” Even Sarah could hear the panic creeping into her voice.

James smiled reassuringly down at her, then looked at his aunt. “Perhaps it would be a good idea if Miss Hamilton and I spent a few minutes alone to sort this out?”

Lady Gladys snorted. “There’s nothing to sort out.”

“Still, a few minutes of privacy are in order.” James looked back down at Sarah. “Miss Hamilton, will you join me for a short stroll? The Green Man is only a step or two from a rather pleasant little stream. I suggest we go there.”

Sarah nodded, though she got the distinct feeling that her concurrence was not required. Mr. Alvord bowed to the assemblage and whisked her out of the room.

“I am sorry for all the confusion,” he said when they had finally cleared the noise of the inn. “It’s been rather a comedy of errors, has it not?”

“I’m not certain if it is a comedy or a tragedy, Mr. Alvord.”

“James.”

“But I barely know you. I couldn’t possibly call you by your given name.”

“Of course you could. I intend to call you Sarah.”

Sarah frowned up at him, but he grinned back.

“In any event, ‘Mr. Alvord’ is incorrect. My family name is Runyon. Alvord is my title.”

“Your title?”

“I’m sure your republican soul is not going to like this, Sarah, so I hesitate to inform you that my full name is James William Randolph Runyon, Duke of Alvord, Marquis of Walthingham, Earl of Southgate, Viscount Balmer, Baron Lexter.”

“No!” Sarah stopped walking and gaped up at him.

James shook his head. “It’s the truth.”

Sarah worked her way back through the long list of titles. “You’re a duke!”

“Of Alvord. Yes.”

“Does that mean I’m supposed to call you ‘my lord’?”

“Technically, you’re supposed to address me as ‘your grace.”

“My grace?”

James grinned. “I would love to be your grace.”

Sarah thought about that. She shook her head. “I can’t do it.”

“That’s quite all right. I’d much rather you called me James.”

“Hmm. Will Mr. Runyon do instead?”

“That would be a little too revolutionary, I’m afraid. It wasn’t so long ago that Madame Guillotine was separating our French brethren from their heads. Strip us British peers of our titles and our shoulders twitch.”

Sarah looked at James out of the corner of her eye. “You aren’t one of those lords who’ve lost all their money, are you?”

“No, my estate is intact.” He raised an eyebrow in query. “Why would you think I was under the hatches?”

“You can’t afford a nightshirt.”

“A nightshirt?” He snorted. “I’m sure I have a dozen of the things. I just never wear them.”

“Why not? My father wore a nightshirt. Do Englishmen not do so?”

“I have no idea what Englishmen as a breed do or don’t do. I have not made a survey of it. Might I point out—not that I’m complaining, you understand—that you weren’t wearing a nightgown when I made your acquaintance.”

Sarah flushed. “That was only because my trunk had an accident in Liverpool—the sailors dumped it overboard when they were unloading. What you see before you are the only clothes I now own.”

They had arrived at a pretty little brook shaded by a stand of trees. James led her over to a fallen trunk. Sarah sat; he propped one booted foot on the log and leaned on his knee.

“Why don’t you tell me what happened last night,” James said. “How did you end up in my room?”

“I didn’t know it was your room!”

He smiled. “All right. Tell me how you ended up in that room, then.”

Sarah adjusted her skirt. “It’s really not so mysterious, but I grant you it shouldn’t have happened. I came in on the stage late last night with no maid and no luggage. The innkeeper did not approve of me. He was going to turn me away when your friend—my cousin—came by.”

She stared down at her feet. “I knew Robbie was drunk, but I was so tired I didn’t ask questions. I was desperate for a room with a bed.” She looked back up at James. “I’m not a good sailor. I didn’t sleep well on the passage to Liverpool. And since I haven’t much money, I took the mail to London and then the stagecoach here without stopping. Last night was the first time in two months that I slept in a bed that didn’t move.”

James smiled. “Poor girl. When I got to the room, I did try to wake you. When I didn’t have success right away, I figured you were exhausted and let you sleep.”

Sarah smiled back tentatively. “Does your aunt usually burst in on you like that?”

“No.” He shrugged. “She’s right, though. I usually am home. I didn’t tell her I’d be staying out.”

Sarah frowned. “It does seem a little extreme, panicking when you were only gone overnight. It’s not as if you are a little boy.”

James sighed. “No, but my aunt sometimes forgets that I’m not. She raised me after my mother died when I was eleven. Old habits die hard.”

“Yes, I can see that.” Sarah shifted on the log. There was no getting around it. She had to ask. “I need to know something.”

“Yes?” James grinned. “I hope it has nothing to do with nightshirts?”

“Well, not exactly.” She bit her lip. “Don’t laugh.”

“I’ll do my best.”

“Your aunt said I was thoroughly compromised.”

“Yes, that’s very true. I think there is no question of that.”

“How thoroughly?”

James chuckled. “Very. I’m afraid you really must marry me.”

Sarah swallowed and gripped her hands together. “So I’m with child?”

“What!” James’s jaw dropped. Then his eyes lit up, and he slapped his hand over his mouth. His shoulders began to shake.

“You promised you wouldn’t laugh!”

He nodded vigorously.

“I know it’s silly that I don’t know these things, especially since my father was a physician, but I don’t. I mean, I have a vague idea. Look.” She listed her evidence. “We slept in the same bed, at night. We didn’t have any clothes on. You kissed me. Isn’t that enough?”

James shook his head no.

“So if I’m not pregnant, how can I be compromised, or at least,
thoroughly
compromised?” Sarah frowned. “Am I still a virgin?”

“You did not lose your virginity to me.”

“So if I’m not pregnant and I’m still a virgin, you don’t have to marry me, do you?”

James shifted his boot on the log. “It’s not that simple.”

“Why not?” Sarah crossed her arms over her chest. “Neither of us did anything wrong, so why should we be punished?”

“It’s not a matter of
doing
anything wrong, Sarah; it’s
appearing
to do something wrong.”

“That’s ridiculous.”

“It may be ridiculous, but that’s the way the world—or at least this world—works. And I can’t believe society in Philadelphia is so different.”

“Well, I wouldn’t know. I wasn’t a part of Philadelphian society.” Sarah smiled. “And since I have no desire to be part of English society, my reputation or lack of it doesn’t matter, does it?”

James frowned. “What do you intend to do then, Sarah? From what you told Aunt Gladys, you’ve cut your ties to America.”

Sarah smoothed her skirt over her knees. “Well, yes. I can’t go back, that’s true. Even if I could find the passage money, I have nowhere to go there, not really.”

She thought about the Abington sisters. They would let her continue to drudge for them at the Abington Academy for Young Ladies. She grimaced. She certainly was not braving the Atlantic again for that.

“Frankly, I hadn’t considered much beyond just getting here. My father was so insistent that I come. I guess I had hoped the earl could help me. I don’t suppose Robbie is married, is he?”

“No.”

Sarah sighed. “Then there’s no hope there. I can’t live with him—even I know that. I will need a job. I have some experience as a teacher. Do you know of a school for girls that could use another instructor? Or a family in need of a governess? I’m better with classical studies than painting and music, but if the child were young enough, I’m sure I could cover those subjects adequately.”

James sat down next to her and took her hand. “Sarah, teachers need their reputations more than anyone. I can’t think any mother would entrust her daughter’s formation to a woman who had secrets in her past—and you now have a secret, a very big secret. You and I know what did—and didn’t—happen in that room, but try explaining that to someone who wasn’t there. A mother would never get by the words ‘bed’ and ‘naked’ and, frankly, ‘Duke of Alvord.’ No, love, if you are staying in England, you will have to consider your reputation. Would marriage to me really be a punishment?”

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