Read The Kidnapped Bride Online
Authors: Amanda Scott
“But I thought Dower House was haunted,” mused young Master Bessling idly.
“Nonsense,” Nicholas responded sternly. “You thought nothing of the sort.”
“I distinctly recall that Gram once said she left Ash Park rather than be relegated to that ghost-ridden monstrosity,” Colin insisted blandly. But his twinkling eyes gave him away.
“I don’t believe she ever said any such thing,” Nicholas declared roundly, “and you, my friend, had best think twice before starting any ill-conceived rumors where I can hear them. Forgive him, my lady. ’Tis mere boyish high spirits, all on account of being let out of school early.”
“I shall keep my wits about me, my lord,” Sarah assured him with a chuckle. “I have never been particularly missish, you know, and I am afraid that, were I to encounter a ghost at Dower House, I should simply invite him to acquaint me with his name and history.”
Nicholas grinned appreciatively, but she noticed that the boy gave her a rather measuring look. It was forgotten a moment later, when Dasher hurried into the hall and bore young Colin off to show him to his bedchamber, and Nicholas invited Sarah to show him what had been accomplished at Dower House.
Miss Penistone met them in the entry hall, expressing her pleasure at his lordship’s safe return. Then, the three of them toured the house. Nicholas commended them without reservation for the work that had been done and chuckled when Miss Penistone handed him a list of further requirements. He seemed especially pleased when Sarah told him that she had decided to acquire as much as possible locally.
“I am glad to hear you say that, my lady, for it can only be beneficial to us all.” He glanced at the list. “I see that your first priority is to install your own cook. I should have thought a lady’s maid would be more welcome.”
“Well,” Sarah began doubtfully, “if you don’t object, sir, Betsy has agreed to work for us.”
“An excellent notion,” Nicholas agreed. “She is a good worker. But she is no lady’s maid. I think you will agree that a proper dresser should be brought from London. I have, in fact, already arranged it, and she will arrive later this afternoon.”
Something in his tone told Sarah more than his words had done. “Lizzie!” she exclaimed.
“The same, and delighted to come, I might add.”
“Oh, splendid! But that means … that is, I collect that you must have seen my uncle, sir.”
“Indeed.
And
your aunt. And she, I might add, is as formidable as ever.”
“Are they still furious with me?” Sarah asked in a rather small voice.
“A bit. I think your uncle will come round eventually, but Lady Hartley is undecided as to whether she should be more enraged by the impropriety or by the stupidity of your actions.”
“I see. Then you told them the truth?”
“I thought they deserved to know,” he said gently. “Would you rather I hadn’t?”
“Of course not,” she replied quickly, then in answer to a gleam of mockery in his eye, she added, “I don’t really know, sir. All I know for certain is that I’ve no wish to confront her ladyship for a good long while!”
Nicholas chuckled. “I don’t doubt it.” He glanced at Miss Penistone. “And you, ma’am? Have you quite settled in now?”
“Indeed, my lord. The house is coming about rapidly, thanks to Mr. Dasher’s extraordinary powers of organization.”
“I’m delighted to hear it, though not surprised. Dasher’s greatest talent is his ability to conjure up the impossible at a moment’s notice. It made him an indispensable asset in the Peninsula, I assure you.” A few moments later, they glimpsed a party of men servants under Dasher’s personal direction carrying two bedsteads, and Nicholas left them to finish putting their house to rights, observing that he would see them both at dinner.
Lizzie arrived as promised about four o’clock and, after a rapturous reunion with her mistress, exclaimed and scolded over the state of Sarah’s wardrobe. But when she declared that she would like to have a few moments alone with the person who had been caring for her mistress’s clothes, Sarah called her to order, explaining that, though Betsy had never been trained to it, she had done her best.
“She has been very kind to me, Lizzie, though she was hired as a housemaid, and I shan’t allow you to scold her. “Now, do put off your cloak and never mind my affairs until you have quite settled in. Then I shall ask you to help me dress for dinner, so the gentlemen will stare!”
“And so they shall, m’ lady,” Lizzie promised in her soft Irish lilt as she hurried out the door to see to the bestowal of her own things. She was soon back, ready to go to work. She had changed her gown for a fresh one and bundled her fiery red hair into a snood at the nape of her neck. Her blue eyes twinkled, but her pert little nose expressed distaste for Sarah’s black gowns.
“I know, Lizzie, but nothing can be done about it,” Sarah said. “He was my husband, after all.”
“Aye,” replied Lizzie tersely, “and ’tis none of my place to say what I think about that!”
“Certainly not!” Sarah agreed, but she smiled. “I know what you think, Lizzie, and I apologize for deceiving you as I did. All I can say now is that I made a foolish mistake.”
“Well, as to apologizing to the likes of me,” Lizzie said sharply, indicating that Sarah should sit in the dressing chair, “there’s no call, m’ lady. My faith! If only you could have seen her ladyship’s face when I told her you’d gone!”
Sarah grimaced. “I heard about it, thank you. You might have chosen a time when Lady Jersey was elsewhere.”
Lizzie chuckled. “And didn’t I hear about that later! The very instant m’ Lady Jersey took her leave. ‘Miss O’Hare, you are never again to burst into my drawing room in such an unseemly way.’ My sainted Patrick, but she was in a snit!”
She mimicked Lady Hartley’s tones exactly, and Sarah couldn’t help laughing, though she knew she ought to reprove her instead. It was certainly not proper for her to allow her maidservant to make jest of her aunt. But she was glad Lizzie was here. She said so, adding, “No one else could ever do my hair so well.”
Lizzie just grinned, and her nimble fingers went right on working. Sarah watched closely but, even so, could see nothing unusual. Just a twist here and a tuck there. Nevertheless, the result was wonderful and vastly becoming. Her bronze tresses were piled atop her head like a tumble of curls arranged any which way. Tendrils curled around her ears and down the nape of her neck, and the style gave her height and an extra touch of elegance as well.
She pinched her cheeks to give them extra color, while Lizzie inspected the dress she had chosen to wear, flicking imaginary bits of lint and smoothing a tiny wrinkle before holding it ready for her to don. Once the buttons had been fastened and the skirt twitched into place, she stood back to view the results.
“Well, ’tis passable,” Lizzie sighed, “but not what we like. Black is
not
your color, my lady. There just isn’t enough of you to carry it off. It overwhelms you.”
“I know, Lizzie.” Sarah smoothed her skirt, hating the feel of the bombazine and wishing the dress needn’t be quite so plain and priggish. With a low-cut bodice and short sleeves, she would not seem so enveloped. But it could not be. She slipped her feet into a pair of silver sandals, for she had not thought to do anything about proper shoes and had been wearing her dark green kid boots till she was heartily sick of them. A few moments later, when she entered the library with Penny beside her, Nicholas eyed her approvingly from the top of her head to the gentle folds of her floor-length hemline.
“I am glad you were able to secure proper attire so quickly,” he said. “Of course, you will not wish to sport so frivolous a hair style at the funeral, but amongst us here, it does not matter.”
Colin had been eyeing a tray of wine glasses and sherry when they entered, but his uncle’s remark brought a grin to his face. “He might at least mention that the style becomes you charmingly, Lady Moreland,” he observed sweetly.
“That will be quite enough out of you, my lad, if you wish to dine with the grown-ups,” his uncle warned. “You may make yourself useful, if you please, by pouring a small glass of sherry for each of us.”
“There are only three glasses,” Colin mentioned suggestively.
“So there are,” Nicholas agreed. “Pour, brat.”
The boy obeyed and seemed not the least cast down by his lack of success. Later, over dinner, Sarah asked him about school, and he obliged with several amusing anecdotes, seeming quite at home in adult company.
“Will you not miss having your friends about you?” she asked, once the laughter following one of his tales had died away. “I should think Ash Park would seem rather lonely after Harrow.”
“Not at all, my lady,” Colin replied. “I shall have my horses here, and there are streams nearby for fishing. I like the Park. Besides, Uncle Nick has said I might invite one or two of my friends for a visit if I like or perhaps go to visit some of them later.”
He seemed perfectly content, and although he cast an indignant look at his uncle when told, after dinner that he might now take himself off to bed, he went without argument. Once Colin had gone, Sarah and Miss Penistone would have left Nicholas to enjoy his port in solitary splendor, but he requested that it be served in the library and asked them to join him there.
“I wanted to speak to you both about the funeral,” he said quietly, when they had seated themselves. “It is to be very private, without any grand fuss, but there is no telling who might come from Town. Dasher will be ready for anything, of course, but I wanted you to be prepared as well. What on earth have you got on your feet!”
Sarah, though listening conscientiously, had idly held one foot out to the fire. She snatched it back, tucking it primly under her skirts. “I’m sorry, my lord, but I didn’t think about shoes before. Nearly everything I have is of a color to match a gown. I thought these would be the least offensive.”
“Well, you certainly cannot wear silver sandals to your husband’s funeral,” Nicholas declared flatly. “Have you any suggestions, ma’am?”
“No, my lord,” Penny replied. “My own shoes are black, of course, and I should be pleased to lend them, but my feet are of a larger size than her ladyship’s, so they would not answer.”
“Well, don’t be silly, Penny,” Sarah said acidly. “We could always stuff the toes, if his lordship will insist upon every propriety being met.”
“An excellent notion,” applauded Nicholas. “I am glad to hear you propose it. That will do very nicely indeed.”
Sarah stared at him, dumbfounded. “You are joking!”
“Indeed I am not, madam. You should have thought of the need for shoes before I left for London, where I could easily have seen to their purchase. But since you did not, and since Miss Penistone has offered to lend you a pair, you will have to make do.”
“Well, no one else thought of them either,” Sarah declared, her temper flaring, as usual, at his authoritarian attitude. “And you cannot truly expect me to attend a funeral where you admit you don’t know whom I might meet in stuffed-up governess shoes!”
Nicholas swallowed the last of his port and got to his feet. “’Tis a pity we didn’t think to hire someone to do your thinking for you, Countess, since you seem unable to accept that responsibility for yourself. However, we did not; And since I very lamentably failed to realize that you would need black shoes, you don’t have any. Nevertheless, you will be properly dressed tomorrow or be prepared to answer to me. And whatever the reason for this,” he added, looking down at her grimly, “there is no cause for you to speak so insultingly of an offer that was kindly meant.”
Flushing to the roots of her hair, Sarah opened her mouth to answer him in kind, but encountering the cold anger in his expression, she faltered, stammering an apology instead.
“So I should hope,” Nicholas replied uncompromisingly. “But you would do better to make your apology to Miss Penistone, rather than to me. Now, if you ladies will excuse me, I have work to do.” He held the French doors open for them and, her eyes filling with sudden, burning tears, Sarah flounced past him, the placid Miss Penistone following in her wake.
“That abominable man!” Sarah muttered wrathfully, after striding for some moments in irritated silence.
“Well, he was perhaps a trifle severe, my dear, but you cannot deny provoking him,” Miss Penistone observed fairly as they mounted the steps to the house. “I am sorry you do not like my shoes.”
Sarah was immediately contrite. “Oh, Penny, don’t be absurd. It has nothing to do with your shoes, and I am truly sorry if I offended you. Indeed, I don’t know what it is about that man that makes me fly into the boughs like I do.” She pushed open the front door to the sight of Erebus sprawled at the foot of the stairs, his tail thumping the floorboards in greeting. “Dogs sleep outside,” she said firmly, pointing out into the night. With a heavy sigh, the huge dog lumbered to his feet, his soft brown eyes brimful of reproach as he treaded ponderously to the door. On the threshold he turned back with a final plea for mercy. “Out,” said Sarah, and defeated, he plodded down the steps and melted into the darkness beyond. “Where was I, Penny?” she asked, shutting the door.
“Something about not knowing—”
“Oh, I remember. That was silly. Of course I know. Sir Nicholas—that is, Lord Moreland—is so puffed up in his own arrogance that it just makes a body boil. I’ve a strong notion to wear my gold dress tomorrow, just to teach him that I am not to be ordered about like a lackey.”
“I shouldn’t advise it, love.”
Sarah remembered the cold fury in his lordship’s eye and unaccountably shivered. “No, perhaps not.” She sighed. “I suppose we’d best have a look at your shoes, Penny.”
A pair of black leather slippers was found that could be induced to stay on Sarah’s tiny feet, and so it was that she appeared at the funeral in strict widow’s wear from tip to toe, with her hair swept back severely from her face and all but hidden under a black lace veil. There were very few mourners. Beck was there, but he made no attempt to approach her and, accosted by Sir William Miles, left with that gentleman as soon as the coffin was lowered into the ground. As expected, several people did arrive from town, but they were all men, and as it transpired, they were men to whom Darcy owed money. Once the ceremonies were over, they accompanied the family back to the house and disappeared, one after another, into the library with Nicholas.