Read Secrets of Sloane House Online
Authors: Shelley Gray
Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Historical, #Romance, #General, #dpgroup.org, #Fluffer Nutter
A few people in the choir noticed her amusement and grinned back at her, seeming to enjoy the novelty of having a kindred spirit on their side in the audience.
And then she caught one man’s eye and her heart skipped a beat. There, in the middle of this mismatched choir run by a temperamental director, stood Reid Armstrong.
The moment he recognized her, his expression changed from vaguely amused to concerned. After murmuring something to the man on his left, he walked down to see her.
“Mr. Armstrong. Beg pardon, Mr. Armstrong!” the director called out.
Reid stopped. “Sir?”
“Beg pardon, but you have not yet been dismissed.”
“I’m sorry, Deacon Thomas,” he said with a little bow. “But there is someone in the audience I must speak with.”
Deacon Thomas looked over his shoulder in surprise, spied her, then smiled. “Is that the way of it, then? Well, don’t tarry too long, sir.”
A few of the older women tittered as Reid kept walking.
Rosalind felt her face heat. For a moment she considered standing up, but then fearing that it might draw even more attention their way, she stayed seated until he scooted in next to her.
“Rosalind, what a surprise! Are you okay? Is something wrong?” he asked, each word tumbling over the next. “How did you know I was here?”
“I didn’t! There was a fray outside. The crowd got rather big and rowdy quickly. I darted in the church to escape.”
Looking concerned, he reached out for her gloved hand. “Did anyone accost you? Were you hurt?” Gently, he placed her hand between his own.
Even through her glove, she could feel the warmth of his touch. “N–not at all.”
Noticing her stammer, he leaned forward, bringing with him his scent of balsam and cologne. “Are you certain?”
How could she ever reveal that it was his touch and concern—and not the noise of a crowd—that had her on pins and needles? “I am perfectly fine.”
Afraid he would notice how affected she was by his touch, she gently pulled her hand away and straightened her spine a bit. “Anyway, I entered the church for my safety. But it was your chorus of voices that drew me in. You all sounded lovely.”
“I’m afraid our esteemed director doesn’t quite agree.”
She thought about that. “I have never been part of a chorus, of course, but I imagine that being exacting is every choir director’s job.”
“I fear you are right.” He looked at her sheepishly. “I am ashamed to say that sometimes we egg him on. Getting him on his high horse can be quite fun. He is usually the quietest of men.”
She nodded toward the man speaking to the group. Deacon Thomas kept looking over at Reid in an irritated way. “Unless you are agitating him on purpose, I think you should return to your place. He is missing you.”
“I will. And what will you do?”
“Oh, I’ll check outside in another moment or two. If the brawl is over, I’ll go on my merry way.” She leaned forward. “I have the whole afternoon off. Three more hours.”
“Then I insist you stay for the rest of the practice and allow me to walk you home.”
She knew, of course, that she felt too happy about his invitation. It wouldn’t do for her to get any closer to him. Especially when she considered Veronica’s threats. “I’m not sure if that is a good idea.”
“Please reconsider. It’s rare that we are away from the many prying eyes and ears at Sloane House. Plus, we have many things to discuss.” His face became shadowed. “Some things have happened recently that you might not know about.”
Thinking of Veronica accusing her of stealing and Nanci’s refusal to talk about what had happened between her and Douglass, Rosalind nodded. “I, too, have news.”
“Mr. Armstrong?” Deacon Thomas called out, his voice now tinged with impatience. “Do you intend to return to us anytime soon?”
“Yes, Deacon,” Reid said after a quick wink in her direction. “I am sorry for the disruption.” He scooted off the pew and trotted back to his place in the choir.
Rosalind couldn’t help but smile as she leaned back and watched him take his place. He really was the most wonderful of men. Kind to her, recklessly full of fun with deacons. Suave and debonair with the ladies and gentlemen of his station.
As she realized that one day he would find his wife among those ladies, she felt a bit deflated. It would be so nice to imagine that their alliance could continue for years and years. Oh, she certainly didn’t entertain any hopes that everything that kept them apart would suddenly not matter. She was too much of a realist now to ever think that.
But she did like to think that they’d become friends of a sort. Simply put, she enjoyed his company, and she had a feeling he felt the same way about hers. But once her mission was concluded, their alliance would fade. No bride of his would understand a friendship with another woman.
And even if she did, it certainly wouldn’t be the same. They would have lost their reason for being friends. Before long, their conversation would falter into meaningless comments about the weather and the state of their health.
And their former friendship would be merely something she recalled with a slight, surprised skip of her heart. Wondering if she’d simply imagined their alliance was something more than it ever was.
Perhaps she was even doing that now?
The thought gave her pause and embarrassed her. As the deacon raised his hands and led both the organist and the choir into another hymn, Rosalind scooted a bit farther into the center of the pew where the light from the open doorway didn’t skim her skirts. Where she could sit in the shadows, alone with her thoughts.
Desperately hoping that Reid wouldn’t be able to discern her thoughts from where he stood.
R
eid couldn’t help but continually glance toward Rosalind. Sitting by herself in the middle of a lonely pew, she looked more fragile than ever.
And, he realized, beautiful.
Wearing a smart-looking bonnet instead of the usual servant’s white cap, her dark mahogany hair shone against the dark wood behind her. Her simple dress, devoid of lace, bric-a-brac, or beadwork, emphasized her slim figure.
It took everything he had to stay on task and keep his attention on the choral director’s directives and the complicated musical score they were learning. Still, he fooled no one.
“Who is the lady?” Andrew Biltmore whispered when the deacon was correcting the sopranos’ stanza.
“Merely a friend.”
“Surely she is more?” he said, lowering his voice. “She came to your rehearsal, after all.”
“She’s here by happenstance. There was a ruckus outside. A few men started an argument and several others joined in. She stepped inside for safety, then was drawn in by our music.”
Andrew looked like he was torn between skepticism at the story and gratification about their chorus bringing in an audience. “It’s your lucky day then.” He grinned. “Where did you meet her? At one of your many parties or dances?”
Reid shook his head. Andrew was a junior lawyer in a small legal firm. Not of his social class. While he was socially acceptable, he wasn’t part of one of the families that attended the balls. He was certainly nowhere near Douglass Sloane’s social status, or Reid’s for that matter. But that said, Andrew was quite a bit beyond the servant class.
And that meant Andrew would be shocked and not a bit dismayed to imagine that Reid was courting a housemaid. Young men generally hoped to marry up, after all. Reid instinctively knew Andrew wouldn’t understand a mere friendship between them, either. And to betray Rosalind’s confidence was unthinkable.
Luckily, Deacon Thomas didn’t give them any further time to speak. He raised his arms and had them begin the last section of the hymn from the very beginning.
Forty minutes later, the deacon dismissed the group, they said their good-byes, and Reid was escorting Rosalind down the busy street. Horses and their carriages trotted by, their clip-clopping hooves mixing in with the jangle of the trolley bells in the distance.
“You are a wealth of surprises, Mr. Armstrong,” Rosalind said with a smile. “I would have never imagined you as part of a church chorus.”
Reid was used to the comment. He’d known when he joined the choir that his choice of activities would be questioned, but he’d found that his enjoyment of the group far outweighed any negative comments. However, he was still interested to hear her reasons for the statement.
“What surprised you? My singing in a church or the company I was keeping?”
“Both.” She paused, obviously choosing her words with care. “I had no idea you could sing. And while I don’t see myself as an authority on the upper classes, I didn’t imagine church—or church functions—were seen as important.”
He pondered that as he kept to her right, taking her arm as a pair of unruly boys scampered down the sidewalk on her left. “I’m a Christian,” he said at last. “It’s as much who I am as the color of my eyes or the fact that I’m left-handed. My mother is very devout. She raised me to have the Lord in my life. I’m grateful for that.”
“And your father?” she asked as they paused at an intersection.
He thought about that. “His faith is important to him as well, though I must admit that he was never one to openly embrace his faith. Usually it was just an understood thing.”
Determined to get to know her better, he looked into her eyes. “What about you?”
“Me?”
“Yes. It’s only fair that you get to have your share of questions,” he teased. “Were you raised with religion?”
“Yes, but it wasn’t so formal. We have a community church, but it takes over an hour to get to it. Living on a farm as we do, my folks couldn’t always take off so much time, not even on Sundays.”
“You mean to say that your animals haven’t heard of a day of rest?”
She chuckled. “Oh, they’ve taken the resting part to heart. They just haven’t come around to thinking that we need to take time off too.” She shook her head in mock sorrow. “No matter how much I’ve talked to the pigs, they still want to eat every day.”
His lips twitched, enjoying her humor. “So what do you do instead?”
“We have church at home. My father reads from the Bible. We pray together. We talk about our week and our dreams. Talk about where we see the Lord calling us.”
“That sounds nice,” he murmured, meaning it. “I like the idea of making things simple.”
“It is simple, but it is certainly nice too.” She smiled. “One of the benefits of growing up in a large family is that there are a lot of us to contribute to any discussion. Sometimes we agree. Sometimes we don’t. But no matter what, those moments together in our family room? When we’re all seated and discussing the Lord’s Book? It brings us closer together.”
“You’ve been blessed.”
“I think so.” Glancing at him, she added, “But there is something awe-inspiring about sitting in a pew and listening to a choir. It was beautiful.”
“I’m rather new. I’ve only been there a year. But I do like it. As you noticed, our choir is made up of all sorts of people.”
“Mainly middle-class folks?”
“Yes.”
“And that doesn’t bother you?”
“Not at all. My roots are firmly middle class. Besides, I like knowing all sorts of people.” He smiled, hoping she’d realize he included her in that group.
She smiled back at him then, just as a group of four schoolgirls walked by. Their chatter was loud and their need to stand four-across made it necessary for Reid to pull Rosalind close to his side, almost against the plastered wall of a bank building.
With that step, she was so close that he could smell the faint scent of lemons in her hair.
His hand curved around a trim waist that felt only slightly corseted.
Surprised, she gazed up at him. Her lips were slightly parted, her eyes beckoning him. If they were alone, he knew he’d be tempted to kiss her.
Which, of course, would be a terrible mistake. No matter how much he enjoyed her company, nothing more personal could ever erupt between them. Definitely nothing romantic.
All he was doing now was helping a friend in need. Being a Christian. Nothing less.
Because there could definitely be nothing more.
Rosalind soon discovered that not only had her walk with Reid been observed by some of the other servants, but apparently, according to Mrs. Abrams, it had also been commented upon by one of Mrs. Sloane’s acquaintances.
Less than an hour after she returned, she felt the effects.
At the servants’ table that evening, everyone from the scullery maid to Mrs. Abrams herself treated her with a bit of disdain. By the time they had finished the main course, Rosalind was feeling stung and more than a bit defensive.
“Mr. Armstrong merely walked me back. That is all,” she said for the third or fourth time. “As I’ve told you all, I darted into his church to escape quite a ruckus.”
Nanci sniffed. “Don’t you sound all high-and-mighty now, needing a fine gentleman to accompany you on the sidewalks.”
Cook cast a sharp glance her way. “Getting a bit above ourselves, are we, Rosalind?”
Emma raised a shoulder. “Maybe he’s sweet on her.”
“Of course he is not,” Rosalind protested. “Mr. Armstrong was merely being kind.”