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Authors: Patricia Veryan

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*   *   *

“But I had so hoped you would stay for the garden party at Aspenhill,” said Lady Louisa. Josie had sought her out in her private parlour, and now she put aside the letter she had been writing, stood, and drew the girl she called her niece to sit with her on the cushioned bench by the unlit fire. “I trust,” she went on, searching the bright, happy face, “that my son, or Elliot Fontaine have not—er…”

“Oh, no. For it is always lovely to hear compliments, is it not? But I must get home, for there is no saying what sort of bumble broth my poor Dev will tumble into do I leave him alone for much longer.”

“He
is
a rascal, isn't he?” My lady's intent look eased. She said with a nostalgic sigh, “I miss him, you know. He was always here when he lived with Alastair, and so lighthearted and full of fun. Dear Dev … It is as well, my dear, that he has you to—take care of him.”

“So I tell him, ma'am. Much heed he pays me. I'd my work cut out to guide him in the matter of The Scott-Matthias, and
that
would never have done!”

My lady stared, then said, much amused, “So we have you to thank, do we? You minx! We quite thought he would be caught, and Isabella is such a dreadfully proud and opinionated girl. But excessively beautiful, I own.”

“And likely wishes to wed him only because she thinks they will make such a striking couple. As indeed they would—her so dark and exotic, and Dev”—her eyes softened—“so fair. So very handsome.”

My lady mused, “They would draw all eyes, that is certain. But—no, I cannot agree that is her reason. She is madly in love with him, Josie.”

The resolute little chin tilted upward. “How unfortunate for her.”

My lady laughed merrily, and they enjoyed their amusement until Josie said, “Oh, I do hate to leave you, dear Aunt Louisa. You are always so kind.”


Must
you leave, dear? You're—quite sure John hasn't been a nuisance?”

Josie smiled and said gravely, “Do not be alarmed, ma'am. Dev insists I am too young for matrimony, and I know I am rankly ineligible and poor Sir Martin would be horrified. No—never look so dismayed. It is so. Besides, the Crichtons leave for Cheltenham tomorrow and have offered to take me home and to collect my dear Pan from Aspenhill. It is past time I left you.”

Flushed and flustered, my lady protested feebly, then exclaimed, “Good gracious me! You surely do not think that wretched woman would go to Dev?”

“I'd not put it past her,” said Josie smoulderingly, then added, brightening, “But—no, my ancient is probably muddling peacefully with his animals.”

*   *   *

“If your confounded brute of a stallion was kept in his pasture,” said Alain Devenish, straddling an arm of the blue brocade sofa and regarding his irate caller without affection, “we might be spared all this fuss and bluster.”

Sir William Little, his square features very red, sent a wrathful gaze scorching into the younger man's sparking blue eyes, and stamped across the great drawing room to fetch up beneath the portrait of Devenish's long-dead and lovely mother that hung above the wide hearth. “I did not ride over here,” he snarled, “to come to cuffs with you, sir!”

“Did you not? I had thought you came to punch my head because you cannot keep your stallion in his paddock.”

“Cannot keep him in—” roared Sir William, swinging about, his face purpling. “By God, but I can keep him in! Or could if I'd a neighbour who didn't encourage raff and scaff from all over the country to come here and open the damned gate!”

Devenish sprang up at this. “Blast it all—are you on about that again? Just because I refused to prosecute some poor devil who poached on my lands and was likely starving—”

“And thereby advertised to the whole damned country that we in Gloucestershire are easy marks, sir!” Sir William, who stood six feet three inches in his stockinged feet, and towered over Devenish, advanced and in a voice heard in the stables, declared, “There is no cause for anyone to starve in England, sir! A man may find honest work
if
he so chooses. But when there are people like you issuing invitations to every damnable ruffian for miles around to come here and live off the fat of the land at our expense, why should they seek honest work?”

His jaw thrust pugnaciously at his formidable guest, Devenish retaliated, “Honest work, my eye! Much has it cost you if an occasional poacher crosses my lands! And do you think there's honest work to be had, you're either blind or so curst pig-headed that—”

“Have a care,” raged Sir William, his big hands clenching. “Have a care, or—by the Lord, you'll rue the day!”

Devenish threw back his head and enjoyed a hearty laugh.

“I came here,” Sir William thundered, “with—with the best of intentions to—”

“To grass me, or try to,” interposed Devenish.

“To try to reason with a young puppy! I see I might have saved myself the trouble!”

“Save, save, save! How the word haunts you, poor fellow. Do you think of nothing but your purse? I'd not guessed you are in such desperate straits, but if your stupid stallion has freshened my mare, as you claim, send me your charges and I'll pay a stud fee. Though to say truth, I do not admire the brute's lines.”

All but apoplectic, Sir William snorted, huffed, and swore, and marched over to snatch up the hat and whip he had laid on a side table. “I'm not done with—with you—sir!” he panted, shaking the whip under Devenish's irrepressible grin. “If you were not—” He glanced down ragefully, closed his lips over the intended remark, then gobbled, “You will hear from my solicitor! I—I warned you, sir!”

Devenish had not missed that suggestive scan of his game leg, and the smile died from his eyes. “I wish you will stop frightening me so,” he said coolly. “I vow I'll not sleep a wink tonight!”

Sir William fumed his way to the French doors, flung one open, marched onto the terrace, then swung about, to roar, “It's that damned rabble-rousing Redmond has caused you to turn against your own class! That radical friend of yours spouts the same sort of jiggery-pokery nonsense in the House of Lords as do you in Gloucestershire!”

“Thank you.” Devenish limped over to bow derisively. “Mitchell Redmond is a
very
good friend of mine, and one of the finest gentlemen I know. And furthermore, Little,” he went on, raising his voice as Sir William stamped down the steps to where a stableboy walked his mount up and down the rear drive-path, “if you and your kind had one jot of humanity in your collectively stony hearts, you'd show a little compassion for those less fortunate than your over-fed, pampered selves.”

Inarticulate with wrath, his victim flung himself into the saddle and charged off at the gallop.

Chuckling, Devenish turned about and made his way to his study. The house seemed very quiet and the chill hall echoed emptiness. Josie should have written days ago. ‘Wretched chit,' he thought. ‘She is punishing me because she found me with Yolande.' But that, of course, was ridiculous. Josie would be pleased if he married again. Not that he could marry Yolande, even if he wished to. Which he didn't.

His study was cold, yesterday's ashes were still in the grate, and the wastebasket had not been emptied. He grumbled his way to the windows and threw the half-closed velvet curtains wide open to let in the pale autumn sunlight. Turning, he limped to the sullied fireplace and shook one finger at the portrait that hung above it. “You see what happens when you don't come home, Miss Josephine Storm. Only look at this mess! Your fault, ma'am. All your fault!”

The artist who had painted Josie two years earlier, when her guardian had judged her to be fourteen, had captured all her bright, eager optimism, and Devenish was silent for a moment, gazing smilingly up at that youthful face. Her features had changed so gradually, he'd not at first noticed that his waif was growing up. Growing to be beautiful. She didn't know she was beautiful, and oddly enough, some dense persons did not at first see her beauty. But in some miraculous fashion, her eyes, always bright, had become large and brilliant. Her mouth had softened and was more sweetly curved, her chin a trifle more rounded. And her dainty body— He cut off that train of thought quickly. It was as well to envision her a child, still. A gawky, perplexing, tender, loving, caring— “Hum!” he muttered, and said, scowling up at her, “If you had not surrounded me with oddities and misfits, madam, I might not now be in such sorry case. Behold my desk! Well, at least you're not here to tidy it so that I cannot find any—”

“Lordy, lordy, lor',” quoth a husky, breathless voice. “What a bloomin' mess 'tis, Mist' Dev'nish.
What
a bloomin' mess.”

“Mrs. Robinson,” he said uneasily, eyeing the bundled untidiness that was his housekeeper, and stepping over the ginger cat that wandered in, yawning.

“Thassme,” wheezed Mrs. Robinson, beating an erratic path to the bell pull and tugging it energetically. “Get th' fireboy here, Mist' Dev'nish. Dunno what M's Josie'd say 'fshe could see this mess. Dunno, I'm sure. Shoulda rung, Mist' Dev'nish. Shoulda rung. You just sit y'sel' down, there. Just sit y'sel' down, an'—”

She advanced upon Devenish who, holding his breath, retreated to his desk chair and sat down abruptly. “Mrs. Robinson,” he began firmly, “have you been at—”

His unfinished question became redundant as his housekeeper bent to pat him fondly on the shoulder and wheeze into his face that she had indeed been hard at work, but he wasn't to mind, like the good kind soul he was. She turned to busy herself at the desk, and Devenish blinked, waved away the fumes of gin, and drew a deep breath.

“Hey!” he cried belatedly. “What are you about?”

She blinked bleary, faded blue eyes at him. “Changin' y'r flowersh, sir. These be—”

“They're perfectly fine!”

“No, they're not. They're dead, sir. Been dead nigh a week. M's Josie put 'em there jus' 'fore—”

“Well, yes. But—er…” He watched glumly as the cherished and brittle stalks were swept into the wastepaper basket. From a bucket on the floor, Mrs. Robinson produced a glorious, fresh, vibrant bunch of chrysanthemums, which she proceeded to stuff into the vase from which the dead roses had been so ruthlessly ejected. “Cannot think how this water stays s'fresh,” she muttered, knowing perfectly well why it had done so.

Devenish flushed scarlet and bent over his papers.

“Nor I can't think what's 'come o' that dratted fireboy,” she went on, slanting an amused glance at her employer's fair head. She gathered her sagging shawl about her shoulders, turned, and reeled dizzily.

Devenish grabbed her arm. “Are you all right?”

She looked down at him. She was a victim of cruel circumstance: a husband who had fallen at the Battle of Vitoria, two small children who had died of measles and malnutrition, and the despair that had made her into a drunkard. Grief and starvation had aged her far beyond her forty years. Her hair was greying, her eyes rheumy, and the flush of alcohol painted her lined cheeks. But the smile that now lit her face was tenderness personified. She touched Devenish's supporting hand timidly. “I'm sorry, sir,” she sighed. “I didn't mean … but then, I don't never mean…”

He tightened his grip. “I know. You're doing much better, Mrs. R. I shouldn't wonder, in fact, if it was
you
Squire Little came over to see this morning, you rascal!”

She giggled tremulously and moved off.

“How about some lunch for the lord of the manor?” Devenish called.

“Right 'way, sir,” she croaked, and beat a wavering retreat.

Sir William's acid remarks had reminded Devenish that he'd failed to reply to Mitchell Redmond's last letter. Despite the fact that Josie had not tidied his desk, he was quite unable to find Mitchell's communiqué and gave up the search when a footman brought in the day's correspondence. Leafing quickly through it, he saw nothing inscribed in the neat copperplate hand he had hoped to find. He glanced up. The footman had not departed, and grinned at him. His wig was lopsided, and he looked fondly conspiratorial. This large chap, Devenish recalled, was the reformed pickpocket. Yearning for a stuffy, conservative footman who regarded him with bored disinterest, or even a modicum of dislike, he demanded, “Is this the lot, Cornish?”

“Ar,” said the footman, and pointed out helpfully, “Ain't nothing from Miss Josie.”

“So I see,” said Devenish, fixing him with a hard stare.

“Never mind, guv. She'll be back in a day or three.” Apparently oblivious to the frown in his employer's eyes, he added, “You got one there from Lord Bolster.”

“Perhaps,” Devenish remarked with icy hauteur, “you can inform me of its contents.”

“Love-a-duck! Not me, mate. I mean—guv.”

“Sir,” said Devenish sternly.

“Cor! I thought it was lord!”

“I mean, blast your eyes, that you should call
me
‘sir'!”

“Oh. All right, cock. Keep fergettin', don't I? Anythink you says. 'Cept reading of yer letter. Can't. Read ‘is lordship's writin', I mean. Bloody awful. Worse'n yours, Sir Guv.”

Devenish's incensed glare was countered by a grin that spread to reveal the lack of one front tooth. Devenish tried to keep his countenance, but the ludicrous aspect of it was too much for his blithe spirit, and he laughed helplessly.

The footman laughed with him in a high-pitched scream.

Devenish wiped his eyes, and said between chuckles, “Get out of here … you damned … hedgebird.”

“That's better, sir—mate,” replied the footman, and took himself off to advise his colleagues in the servants' hall that “The Guvnor” was proper gut-foundered 'cause Me Lady Elf wasn't back yet.

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