No Longer a Gentleman (20 page)

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Authors: Mary Jo Putney

Tags: #Romance, #Women Spies, #General, #Historical, #Fiction

BOOK: No Longer a Gentleman
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“I’m surprised to see you carrying a purse too small to conceal a weapon,” he remarked as he took the card.

“I’ve weapons concealed elsewhere,” she assured him, amusement in her eyes.

He glanced at the card, then read it again, startled. “The Honourable Catherine St. Ives. Your father was a peer? You’ve always implied that you’re from a lower order of society. In fact, you said your family was not the rank of mine.”

She shrugged. “My father was a mere baron, the third Lord St. Ives. We’re merchant stock, not old and prestigious and wealthy like the earldom of Costain.”

“Close enough. You come of noble blood.” It was another piece of the puzzle that was Cassie Fox. Or rather, Catherine St. Ives. Returning to her childhood station after spending a lifetime as peasant and peddler had to be … supremely disorienting.

“That meant nothing when I was cleaning out chicken coops in France,” she said dryly. “And it means even less now.”

“Your brother would have been the heir,” he said. “Who inherited instead? Or were there no heirs so the title went into abeyance?”

“My father had a younger brother, and he had three sons. The two oldest were around my age.” She made a dismissive gesture. “There was no shortage of heirs.”

“Haven’t you ever written your cousins?” he asked. “Surely they would be glad to know that you survived.”

“Catherine St. Ives died,” she said impatiently. “She would have stayed dead except that resurrecting her for the next week or two will make me a more convincing fiancée. When I leave Summerhill, she will return to her French grave, this time for good.” She turned on her heel. “Enough of this nonsense. I’m hungry.”

As she headed toward the dining room, Grey slipped the card into his pocket. She might not be interested in her family, but he was. He’d have a word with Kirkland.

He caught up with her and offered his arm again. She laid her hand lightly on his forearm and they progressed to the dining room as if they were entering a grand ball. Kirkland, Mr. and Mrs. Powell, and a nondescript young woman Grey hadn’t met were eating family style around the table.

Everyone glanced up as Grey and Cassie entered. There was a stunned silence as everyone, particularly the men, stared at Cassie.

Kirkland was first to rise to his feet. “Miss Fox.” He inclined his head and permitted himself a small smile. “I always knew you were brilliant at disguise, but I didn’t recognize that your greatest disguise was concealing your natural beauty.”

“Flatterer,” she said without heat. “The credit goes to Lady Kiri and the helpers she summoned to transform me.” As Grey pulled out a chair for her, she continued, “I am not Cassandra Fox at the moment. I decided using my birth name will best suit this particular charade.” She gave Kirkland a card.

His face became very still. “Your father was the third Lord St. Ives?”

She nodded, her expression opaque.

When she didn’t say more, Kirkland continued, “Since you’re traveling to Dorset as a lady, you need a maid, so one of my associates will take that role.” He gestured to the girl next to him. “Miss St. Ives, may I present Miss Hazel Wilson? I think you’ll find that she has the usual skills of a lady’s maid’s, and a few more as well.”

“I’m pleased to meet you, Miss Wilson,” Cassie said formally. “Thank you for taking this position on such short notice.”

“Call me Hazel, miss,” the girl said with a London accent. She stood and curtsied. She had brown hair and a pleasant if unremarkable face. Her blue eyes showed humor and intelligence. “This would be Lord Wyndham, I presume?”

Grey bowed with the respect due one of Kirkland’s agents. “Indeed I am, Hazel. Thank you for your willingness to leave London for the wilds of Dorsetshire.”

Hazel bobbed her head. “I look forward to dressing your beautiful hair, miss!”

Cassie blushed. “I hated my red hair when I was a girl. I was called the Carrot.”

“Any girls who teased you then are now envious, and the boys will be languishing for your smiles,” Grey said as he took his own seat.

“Your gilded tongue is in good working order,” she said with amusement.

“He’s right, miss!” Mr. Powell blurted out.

“I think the lass is more interested in shepherd’s pie than flattery,” Mrs. Powell said, giving her husband a stern glance. “If you pass your plates, I’ll fill ’em up.”

Grey and Cassie obeyed. As he smelled the steaming-hot pie, Grey realized he would enjoy this common fare more than the elaborate meals served in his parents’ homes.

Though his appearance was once more that of a gentleman, he was a very long way from the young Lord Wyndham who had left Summerhill ten years earlier.

 

 

Chapter 32

 

 

London was dark when they left the next morning. The journey from London to Summerhill could be made in a day if the roads were dry, but it was a long day with numerous changes of horses. Cassie and Hazel spoke occasionally, but Grey mostly gazed out the window, disinclined to talk as he watched the familiar landscape go by.

How often had he made this journey? Very often. He knew every town and village, every posting inn, and he’d known a few friendly barmaids on this route as well.

He liked seeing landmarks like the spire of Salisbury Cathedral, but his tension grew with every mile. If his father died when Grey might have been there at the end if he hadn’t taken an extra day to mentally prepare for the trip …

But he and Cassie had needed that day in different ways, and his family would benefit by the advance notice of Grey’s return from the dead. Though his mother might choose to keep the news from his father, she would tell Peter and Elizabeth. They must be grown by now, but in his mind, they were still children.

His family would welcome him even if they were also disappointed in him. Once he got beyond the first few days, it would be all right. So he told himself repeatedly. In between prayers for his father’s survival.

It was dark again by the time they finally reached the estate. As the carriage turned in at the gate, his heart was pounding and he realized he was clenching Cassie’s hand. Summerhill, Summerhill, Summerhill!

The long, tree-lined drive up to the house wordlessly declared the long history of Costain wealth and power. He took comfort in the thought that he was merely one slightly bent twig on an otherwise healthy family tree.

As the carriage halted under the porte cochere on the east side of the house, Grey said tersely, “This house is fairly new, less than a hundred years old. Far more comfortable than the rambling original building.”

“I’ll take comfort over historic drafts any day,” Cassie said lightly as he helped her from the carriage. He felt tension in her gloved hand, but she concealed it well.

Now that she wanted to look fashionable, she had the superb French sense of style. She looked every inch the sort of aristocratic beauty a man like him would be expected to marry. Yet she was so much more.

“Courage, mon enfant,” she whispered in French under her breath.

“And you also, mon petit chou,” he whispered back. “At least here our lives aren’t threatened. Only our pride and sanity.”

Her face brightened with suppressed laughter. “Since you put it like that …” She took his arm and they walked to the door, where he wielded the massive brass knocker. It was shaped like a dolphin, a sign of the sea that lay on the other side of the hill.

There was a long wait and Grey knocked again, all too aware that the death of the master of the house would cause this kind of disruption. Finally, the door was opened by a flushed young housemaid. Her gaze passed over the visitors with no recognition beyond seeing that they were obviously well born. She bobbed a somewhat ragged curtsy. “Are you expected, sir? Madame?”

“We are,” Grey replied. “Lady Costain has been notified of our visit. Please tell her we have arrived.”

“Very good, sir. If you’ll wait in the small salon just over here, I’ll inform her ladyship.” The girl bobbed another quick curtsy and darted off without asking his name.

The salon was cold and ill lit. Too restless to sit, Grey took the tinderbox from the mantel and started a fire. “Housekeeping standards have slipped,” he said. “That child has not been well trained.”

“Obviously receiving guests is not her usual job.” Reassuringly composed, Cassie settled on a brocade-covered chair.

He straightened as the fire caught and small flames appeared. “Do you think that means my father has …” His throat closed and he couldn’t continue.

“There is no reason to believe he’s gone,” she said swiftly. “And no point in worrying. We’ll find out soon enough.”

Another wait. Grey was tempted to go in search of his mother, but before the last of his patience vanished, the door swung open and he heard her voice saying, “You should have taken their names, child!”

Lady Costain swept into the room, followed by the maid. She was still tall, blond, and beautiful though she looked strained, as if she’d been carrying too many burdens.

Grey had believed he’d never see her again, and the fact that she was here, now, paralyzed him. Half afraid she was a dream and would disappear, he managed to whisper, “Mother?”

She said brusquely, “My apologies for …” Her gaze reached Grey and she stopped dead in her tracks. Color drained from her face. “No, it’s not possible!” she whispered. Then she crumpled to the floor in a dead faint.

“Mother!” Horrified, Grey rushed to her side and dropped to his knees, cradling her in his arms. “Mother, it really is me, not a ghost!”

“Bring smelling salts quickly,” Cassie ordered the housemaid. “Are there any other members of the family available?”

“Lord Wyndham is here,” the girl replied.

Lord Wyndham? Peter must have assumed the title when Grey had been given up for dead. Grey snapped, “Send him here immediately. Tell him his mother is ill.”

Tenderly he carefully lifted his mother onto the sofa, then spread a knitted knee robe over her. She looked so tired, with lines in her face that hadn’t been there ten years before. But it really was her. His wry, patient, loving mother. He blinked back tears.

Lady Costain’s eyes fluttered open to see Grey bent over. She made a choked sound and raised a shaking hand to touch his cheek. “You … you’re real?”

He caught her hand and held it. “I am.” A pulse beat hard in his throat. “Didn’t you get the message Lord Kirkland sent yesterday? I wanted to avoid shocking everyone like this.”

Her gaze searched his face, as hungry as his. “A message arrived, but I didn’t bother to open it. He writes now and then to say he has found no information about you, but continues to search. With your father ill, I couldn’t be bothered to read that.”

“So much for my good intentions,” he said ruefully as he helped her sit up. “I’m sorry, I wanted to spare you this.”

“When I saw you here, I … I had the horrible superstitious thought that you were a ghost come to guide your father to heaven.” She pulled him into a hug as tears ran down her cheeks. “Of all the times to ignore a message! Oh, Grey, Grey!”

Pounding feet could be heard and a distraught young man burst into the room. “Mother, are you all right?”

Grey straightened and saw … himself at twenty. Or close enough. Peter had reached his brother’s height and was blond and heartbreakingly handsome. His face looked designed for laughter—he’d always been a cheerful child—but he was haggard, worried now for his mother as well as his father.

Peter skidded to a halt, his astonished gaze going from his mother to his long-lost brother. “Grey?” he asked incredulously. Disbelief on his face, he stalked closer, his gaze searching. “You must be an imposter! My brother has been dead these ten years.”

“Sorry to disappoint you, Peter,” Grey said with a twisted smile. “I would have written to disabuse you of the notion, but the prison where I resided was shockingly short of amenities such as paper and pen.”

“My God,” Peter breathed as he studied Grey’s face. “That scar on your left eyebrow, from that time you fell on broken stones and cut yourself. It really is you!”

Grey touched the faint mark. “The scar I acquired when you shoved me down at the pond, if I recall correctly.”

They’d been playing by the water on a hot summer day and Peter had gleefully caught his older brother off balance, only to be horrified when the cut Grey received had bled copiously. In retrospect, it was a happy, playful memory. Grey offered his hand hesitantly. “You apologized for days.”

“I’ll apologize again if you like.” Peter caught his hand with both of his and pumped enthusiastically. “Prison, you say?”

Grey started to explain, then couldn’t. His return home had released a torrent of raw emotion. If he tried to explain Castle Durand, he’d fall apart entirely. He managed, “For ten years. Later, I’ll tell you more, but not tonight. Please, tell me about Father! What happened? How ill is he?”

His mother joined her sons, composed again. “Costain fell when he was hunting and his horse balked at a high fence. He broke a bone or two, but the real danger is a head injury. He … he’s been unconscious since the accident.”

Several days then. That was bad, very bad. Grey closed his eyes for long moments as he battled despair that he might have arrived too late. “Can I see him?”

“Of course. Your sister is with him now. We’ve been taking turns sitting with him.” Lady Costain’s eyes narrowed as she registered Cassie’s presence for the first time. “Please introduce your friend to me, Grey.”

He turned to Cassie, who had stayed tactfully in the background. Taking her hand, he drew her forward. “Allow me to present my affianced wife, Miss Catherine St. Ives.” He whispered a silent “Thank you” that his family couldn’t see. “Cassie, my mother, Lady Costain, and my brother, Peter Sommers.”

His mother’s gaze intensified as she studied Cassie. “St. Ives. Are you one of the Norfolk St. Ives?”

Cassie’s fingers tensed, but she said with the confident calm of a born aristocrat, “I am, Lady Costain. But I met Lord Wyndham in France.”

“Where she saved my life.” As Grey spoke, he saw a shadow flicker across Peter’s face. He’d been happy to find that his brother was alive, but now he was recognizing that the title and inheritance he’d come to regard as his own had been snatched away. It was a complication Grey hadn’t considered, but should have. Peter was no longer a child, but a man. He’d not welcome being superseded.

Grey buried the thought for later since he could handle no more anxiety. Not tonight. Taking Cassie’s arm, he said, “I assume Lord Costain is in his usual rooms?”

When his mother nodded, he set off, grateful to have Cassie at his side to keep his nerves steady. Bad enough that his family was staring at him, but servants were peering from behind doors and around corners. The attention made him twitch, but he couldn’t let that show. This was home. He must appear sane, no matter how difficult it was.

There was something deeply unreal about striding the familiar corridors, climbing the marble steps with one hand on the polished railing he used to slide down. Yet at the same time, Summerhill seemed eternal, the ten years in France scarcely more than a bad dream. This disorientation must be one of the reasons he’d been reluctant to return. If not for Cassie, it would be easy to drown in the depths of his own mind.

His parents had a massive suite of rooms in the center of the house. Grey entered his father’s bedroom with Cassie beside him. Lamps cast soft light on his father’s still form. The earl looked lost in the large bed, his powerful figure diminished.

His father’s longtime valet, Baker, sat on the near side of the bed. He glanced up, barely noticing Grey as his admiring gaze went to Cassie. Then he saw Peter enter and his jaw dropped as he looked from Peter to Grey and back again.

Grey nodded to him and circled to where a lovely young blond woman was sitting, head bent and golden hair tied back. Lady Elizabeth Sommers. His little Beth.

He rounded the bed, then halted in his tracks. Elizabeth was nursing a baby.

It was Grey’s turn to be shocked. His little sister, a mother? Yet she was twenty-three now. Certainly old enough to have a husband and child. He fought for composure, for nothing else had made him as aware of how much time had passed.

His sister looked up from her baby and her gaze made the same journey from Grey to Peter and back again. In the dimly lit bedroom, it would have been possible to assume that Grey was Peter returning to the sickroom, but since they were together, the conclusion was obvious.

Elizabeth’s mouth formed an O of surprise. She breathed, “Grey?”

“None other. Like a bad penny, I have returned.” He was proud of himself for keeping a light tone as he brushed a kiss on her forehead.

The baby was blond and cherubic. Grey was no expert on babies, but he was pretty sure that compliments pleased doting parents. “Who is this lovely creature?”

“My daughter. Your niece.” Elizabeth’s expression blazed with excitement. “I named her for you. Grace.”

He was touched and rather awed by this tiny perfect being. “A better name for a daughter than Greydon. Who is your husband? Someone worthy of my sister?”

She smiled. “Johnny Langtry.”

The Langtry family’s estate marched with Summerhill. As the two highest-ranking families in this part of the shire, there had always been easy communication between the households.

John Langtry was a couple of years younger than Grey, and his father’s heir. Solidly built and with an infectious smile, he was a thoroughly good fellow. Far more reliable than Grey. “Minx! You had your eye on him since you were in the nursery.”

Elizabeth grinned. “Johnny never had a chance. Not that he’s complaining!”

Grey studied his sister and her daughter, the images of a blond northern Madonna and child. “He’s a very lucky man.”

“He is indeed,” his mother said as she joined them, putting her hand on Grey’s arm as if fearing he’d vanish. “You must be tired if you came from London today, Grey. Let’s adjourn to the morning room for refreshments. Baker can stay with your father. We all want to know what happened to you for all these years.” Her gaze went to Cassie. “And I wish to become acquainted with my future daughter-in-law.”

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