folds of flesh. His nose was terribly misshapen, and his lips thick and wet.
His
hands, which rested on a shovel in front of him, looked like two hams. His shirt
and waistcoat strained across his barrel chest and protruding belly.
Abbey recognized him immediately; she remembered her father’s first mate very
fondly. He always had a dour exterior, but he also had a heart as big as the
ocean.
“Withers!” she cried with glee, and impetuously threw her arms around his neck.
Surprised, Withers dropped his shovel and stumbled backward. “Come now,” he said
gruffly, and pulled her arms from his neck.
“Withers, don’t you recognize me? I’m Abigail!”
“Who?” He searched her face, then slowly, a rare smile began to crack his thick
lips.
“I’ll be. Little Abigail? The terror of the high seas?”
Laughing, Abbey nodded furiously. “The very same! Oh, Withers, how truly delightful to see you again!”
A slow blush crept into Withers ruddy cheeks. “It’s ain’t you Lord Darfield married?” he asked uncertainly.
Abbey flinched. “Uh… well. As a matter of fact, it is,” she said as cheerfully
as she could.
“Well, I’ll be. Heard he was marrying but I had no inkling…”he remarked thoughtfully. “Never thought I’d see that. No, sir, never thought I’d see that,”
he marveled, chuckling. “When you were but a wee lass, the marquis didn’t care
for you a’tall! Always on him, you were. Why, I think if your papa hadn’t put
you off the ship, he’d‘ve jumped overboard!” He laughed.
Abbey felt the slow creep of embarrassment stain her cheeks. To have it confirmed that he had despised her even then was humiliating.
“That was a long time ago!” she declared shakily.
“Aye, it was indeed. Well, look at you now, lass. As pretty a lass as I ever did
see!” he said fondly. Then his expression turned stern. “Now see here, Miss
Abigail, I don’t work from sunup to sundown just so’s you can come in here and
handle the flowers to death.”
“I am truly sorry, Withers, but they are so beautiful!” Abbey exclaimed.
Withers’s fleshy cheeks jiggled like jelly as he shook his head in furious disagreement.
“I don’t care if you be the Queen of England, you ain’t allowed to touch me flowers without asking!”
Abbey could not help smiling broadly. She had always admired the gruff old man,
and his adamant protection of his garden was something she understood very well.
“I will not touch your flowers without permission, Withers,” she said agreeably.
“See that you don’t,” he mumbled, and pushed past her to examine the rose she
had touched. Satisfied that it was not damaged, he turned around and swiftly
eyed her up and down. “So you be the marchioness now.”
“I suppose.”
“Didn’t expect that.”
“So you have said.”
Withers raised a wiry gray brow. “Still know how to whittle?”
“I haven’t in a long time, but I don’t think I’ve forgotten. Do you?” she teased.
Withers scowled. “Course I do,” he grumbled, then retrieving his shovel began to
move down the graveled aisle. Abbey followed closely behind.
“You know, Withers, I could help you here,” Abbey suggested hopefully as she
stopped to examine the waxy leaves of an ivy hanging overhead.
“Don’t let just anyone in here. Bailey and Hans been with me a long time,”
the
man responded quickly.
“I shall be quite careful. I am not without experience, you know. I had quite a
large garden—well, not as large as this, of course, but large by Virginia standards. It was quite successful too.”
Withers settled back onto one hip and perched his great hands on top of the
shovel. “Virginia don’t have the same climate. We grow roses almost year
round
here. They are a hardy strain, and I won’t have any practice that will weaken
them.”
“Of course not,” she agreed cheerfully.
“They ain’t easy to grow. Takes work.”
“Absolutely. Hard work.”
“Can’t do it part o‘ the time, either. Got to be committed.”
“Yes, of course. One must be very committed. Rain or shine, they need their
care.”
Withers scratched the thick patch of gray hair as he considered her.
“Well,” he
said with a growl. “I might let you visit me here. But you got to mind that you
do as me or Hans says. And don’t listen to Bailey; he’s so simple no telling
what he’d say.”
“I promise.” Abbey nodded and smiled brightly.
Withers’s gruff facade melted, and he straightened. “Got work to do. See that
you don’t touch anything,” he muttered as he walked away.
Abbey smiled at his great departing back and gleefully went about exploring the
whole of the hothouse, being extremely careful not to touch anything. She was
aware that Withers watched her closely, just as he had done aboard her father’s
ship so many years ago, but he never said a word. When Abbey finally began to
make her way back to the house, he appeared from nowhere at the entrance of the
hothouse and thrust a white rose in her face.
“Here,” he said, then stalked away.
Abbey smiled fondly as she brought the rose to her nose. The heavenly scent had
a soothing effect on her. In here, it was possible to forget her circumstances,
forget that Michael apparently had despised her even as a child. She would not
think of that now. She had arranged her day so that she would not have to think
of him, and so far, it had gone very well. She certainly was not going to
start
now. Stuffing the rose behind her ear, she marched back to the house, determined
to rearrange that godawful chamber they called a sitting room.
Michael did not return as expected, which was just fine with Abbey. The next few
days flew by as she delighted in exploring her surroundings. She attended the
stables every morning with her maimed dog Harry always on her heels, and finally
extracted a promise from a stableboy to teach her to ride one of the fabulous
horses. Although she had spent a little time on the back of a mule in Virginia,
she had never learned to ride, but reasoned it could not be very different.
She
also took a great interest in the pregnant milk cow. She made the boy who tended
the dairy to promise to send word when the cow showed signs of birthing.
She
had, after all, helped birth other calves, and she could be counted on to assist
when the time came. The color had drained from the boy’s face when she had
volunteered, but he had solemnly given his word.
In the afternoons, Abbey visited the hothouse. Withers had given her a small
section of roses to work with—under his strict supervision, of course.
Every day
she appeared in a black skirt and simple white blouse and an outrageously
decorated straw hat that looked something like a misshapen fruit basket.
She
patiently explained to anyone who looked particularly pained by it that her cousin Virginia had made it specially for her, and therefore, she was obliged to
wear it. Even though she knew it was perfectly hideous.
By the middle of the week, the weather turned warmer and drier, and she took to
exploring Blessing Park. It was more beautiful than any land she had ever seen;
lush carpets of grass and tall, stately trees abounded. Beyond the walls of the
expansive garden were a small lake and a gazebo, and behind the lake, soft,
rolling hills fell away to small dales. One day Abbey happened across the old
ruins of a castle in her exploration and spent the next two days exploring every
nook and cranny while Harry slept in the sun.
Sometimes she even allowed herself to imagine the Michael of her memory roaming
the ruins. Try as she might, she could not get past the tendril of longing she
had held for years, a tendril for the memory of him that was so inextricably wound up in the real man. The real man looked like the Michael of her memory,
moved like him, and even sounded like him. But the words that came out of the
real Michael’s mouth were so wrong, so unlike the memory. Fortunately, at the
ruins, she could substitute her own words in place of the heartless ones.
At night, after an early supper, Abbey retired to her new sitting room. She always had Sarah in tow, sometimes even Cook, and they would wile away the hours
much as she had in Virginia. When two younger maids had come with fresh linens
and the weekly papers from London one evening, Abbey eagerly invited them to
stay. By the end of the week, Abbey played hostess to a sitting room full of
female servants from Blessing Park.
They tried to teach her needlework, but to no avail. Undaunted, Abbey began to
embroider a picture of Blessing Park for a draught screen. None of the servants
had the heart to tell her how poor her skills were. When her patience with the
needlework wore thin, she would read outrageous on dits from the London papers
that had the women laughing hilariously. Or she would read from the history
books that graced her room and private library. Apparently the Almighty Darfield
enjoyed purchasing expensive volumes of history and in a matter of days, the
women were quite well acquainted with Persian history.
She also played her violin for them. The first time Abbey had produced the instrument, she claimed she was rather a mediocre talent compared with the great
virtuosos and could not sing or play the pianoforte as might be expected.
But
the beautiful strains of music that lifted from her strings kept the women in awe and brought a tear to Sarah’s eye. Every night after that, the same luscious
strains of music would drift through the house, and before long, Sebastian, Jones, and the master’s valet, Damon, would hover about the hallway, along with
an occasional footman, enraptured. Sebastian remarked one morning that there was
nothing the marquis enjoyed more than music. Abbey had wrinkled her nose at
that; she would have sworn they had absolutely nothing in common.
Several more days passed and the Devil of Darfield still did not return.
Abbey
was proud of herself for almost forgetting the King of Rude and settled comfortably into the world she had created for herself. It was a bucolic and simple existence, one she found more and more to her liking as the days passed.
She began to relax for the first time since coming to England, and decided that
she could very easily make a life at Blessing Park if she were forced to do so.
She convinced herself that the absence of a loving husband—and naturally,
children— would not be so hard to bear as she feared, as long as she had Blessing Park and the many diversions it offered her.
One morning she received two letters. The first, much to her delight and surprise, was from her second cousin, Galen Carrey. Even though she had not
heard from him in some years, she recognized the handwriting immediately. Quite
excited about receiving a note from her dearest—and only— male cousin, Abbey
danced a little jig about her sitting room before carelessly breaking the seal.
My dearest Abbey, greetings and salutations. I had intended to visit you in America but received word of your father’s untimely demise just prior to departure. I am greatly saddened by the news, as I harbored the most
tender of
feelings for the captain, much like those for my own father, may they both rest
in peace. I learned from Aunt Nan that you have gone to England. As business has
kept me on the continent till now, I have not had the opportunity to see you as
I have desperately hoped to do. However, I find my circumstance has changed, and
I shall very soon be on England’s green shores again. I should very much like to
see you, as there is much I would tell you. Hoping this letter finds you well, I
shall look ever forward to our reunion. Fondly, your cousin, Galen.
Abbey was thrilled with the prospect of a visit from Galen. She remembered him
very warmly. The son of her father’s cousin, as best she could recall, Galen,
who was just a few years older than she, had spent a few summers aboard the
Dancing Maiden. She had worshipped him; he had paid special attention to her,
particularly on those long voyages to the East. It was Galen who had given her
her first and practically only kiss beneath an Indian Ocean moon. She sighed at
the memory, wondering absently why she had not heard of him in the last few
years.
She shrugged happily as she reached for the second letter which was from a
neighbor inviting her and Lord Darfield to Sunday dinner after church services.
Delighted, Abbey returned word that if they did not mind, she would attend alone, as Lord Darfield was away.
When Sunday came, and a rather plain carriage was brought to the front of the
house, Michael still had not returned.
Wringing his hands, Sebastian followed Abbey to the door like a fretting governess. “Lady Darfield, I would be remiss in my duty if I did not tell you that the marquis will not care for you dining at the Havershams’ without him. He
was quite insistent you not leave Blessing Park.”
Abbey smiled sweetly at Sebastian’s reflection in the mirror as she adjusted her
bonnet. “I am only attending church services and a friendly dinner, Sebastian.
He should not care in the least.”
“He expressly bade me to keep you at Blessing Park until such time as he has the
honor of introducing you!”
“Ha!” Abbey snorted and turned to face Sebastian with her hands on her hips. “I