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Authors: Julia London

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door of the coach swung open, she looked out into the snowy night, then at Middleton.

He smiled, grabbed her hand, brought it to his mouth and pressed his lips to her knuckles, then let her go. “Have a care when you refuse a man’s offer to dance, Lady Ava,” he said with a wink.

Her mind had obviously deserted her, for all Ava could mutter in return was, “Thank you.” And then she concentrated on making her jelly legs move. With the considerable help of Middleton’s coachman, who caught her when she landed awkwardly, having forgotten her blasted shoe, she managed to exit the

carriage without making a fool of herself. Once she was firmly on the ground, she pulled her cloak over her head and glanced back at the coach.

The marquis leaned forward and smiled through the open carriage door. “Good night, Lady Ava. It has indeed been a pleasure.” He glan ced at the coachman. “See her safely to the door, Phillip,” he said, and then leaned back, all but his long legs disappearing from her sight.

The coachman shut the door and held out his arm to her. “If you please, milady.”

She pleased. Ava put her hand o n the man’s arm and walked forward, bouncing unevenly to her right,

her mind a million miles away from her shoe.

And when she was safely inside, and his carriage had gone on into the night, Ava removed the offending shoe and smiled softly. She couldn’t wait to tell her mother what had happened. Well, almost everything that had happened —she was not as foolish as that.

But that dreamy smile would be her last for some time, however, for her stepfather rushed into the foyer before she could divest herself of her cloak, his expression unusually serious. For a moment, Ava thought

he somehow knew of her ride in Middleton’s carriage and meant to take her to task for it.

But he uncharacteristically reached out his hand to her.

“Ava,” he said.

“Yes, sir?” she asked, surprised and a little frightened by the gesture.

“Your dear mother suffered a seizure of some sort just after supper. I regret to tell you that the physician

is not hopeful.”

Three

C assandra Reemes Fairchild Pennebacker, Lady Downey, died suddenly at the age of five and forty years.

While it may have seemed to some that scarcely had the last clump of dirt bee n shoveled onto her grave when her husband, Egbert Pennebacker, Viscount Downey, left for France, in truth a month had passed. One long, interminable month during which Egbert suffered the tears of Cassandra’s daughters and niece while he fretted that his longtime mistress, Violet, had perhaps found another benefactor. He could not possibly know, for she was in France.

Frankly, Cassandra could not have picked a more inopportune time to die. Egbert, who had never been one to partake in the whirl of the soci al season, had been set to sail for France the very morning they

buried his wife. Naturally, he’d sent a letter to Violet straightaway relaying the sad news and sending

along sufficient funds for her safe voyage to England so that she might help him throug h a very trying time. He’d yet to hear a word, not a solitary word. Not a note, not even a whisper of condolence in a month.

The uncertainty of what was happening drove him quite mad, and he paced his study more often than not,

his stout legs and small feet taking him round and round the room while he nervously soothed the few strands of hair remaining on the crown of his head. In this state of acute anxiety, he could scarcely bear

the company of the grieving girls. They moped about, rarely went out, an d had covered everything in

black. At supper just a few nights past, when he’d casually mentioned he’d not enjoyed asparagus soup

in many years because Cassandra did not care for it, Phoebe burst into tears. He’d lost his temper altogether.

“For Christ’s sake!” he’d bellowed with such force that his monocle popped right from his eye. “How long must I endure the incessant wailing in this house?”

“She’s not wailing, sir.” Ava quickly intervened as Greer handed Phoebe a handkerchief.

“Surely you can understand the deep sense of loss my sister feels —indeed, we all feel.

Our mother has only recently

passed.”

Honestly, as if he needed to be reminded of that.

Egbert stared hard at a spoonful of soup for a moment before quickly stuffing it in his mouth and spooning more. Of course he didn’t begrudge them the time to grieve their mother properly—he, too,

was sorry for her demise. After all, she’d been his wife for ten years and a tolerable one at that. He just wished they would do it in their chamber s and not muddy his thoughts any more than his thoughts were already muddied. While her passing was sad, life did indeed go on, did it not?

He’d finished his meal in silence, but his mood had grown darker and darker as he eyed the three of them. They look ed at him as if he were the one being unreasonable.

After supper, Ava had ushered Phoebe and Greer up to their suite of rooms and left him alone with his port and his cigar, but not before bestowing a disapproving look on him.

That one was just like her

mother. Egbert imagined they all despised him, and truly, he wasn’t so heartless, but Violet had been his little flower for nearly eight years. He could not bear the thought of losing her, too, and was desperate for

an excuse to quit this endless mourning a nd leave London to learn for himself why Violet had forsaken him.

And that night, with the help of his port and a cigar, he landed on his excuse. Joy filled him, and he sprang from his chair and hurried to his study, his legs working hard to carry his rotund body as quickly as

possible. Once there, he took pen and paper in hand and dashed a quick letter to Violet, filled with various declarations of adoration and devotion, and informing her that he would arrive in Paris in a fortnight.

The second letter he wrote was addressed to his spinster sister, Lucille Pennebacker, at the Lake District family estate, Troutbeck. In that letter, he insisted his sister come to London straightaway.

A week later, Egbert summoned his stepdaughters to the main salon. As he watched them enter his study swathed head to toe in the black bombazine of mourning, he mentally congratulated himself on being a charitable man, for what he would do for these three orphans was far and away the most charitable act

they could expect from anyone. Certainly he would never turn out three orphaned debutantes, and he wished them no harm —but he wasn’t their father, was he? It did not, therefore, fall to him to ensure they found their way in this life. No, that responsibility had been Cassandra’s and now belonged to the girls’

kin, whoever that might be. That was precisely why he had urged Cassandra to marry them off before it was too late.

Alas, as with everything else, Cassandra had scarcely listened to him at all.

Pity that she hadn’t, for it would have spared them all a great deal of anxiety. Here were her precious

girls, completely dependent upon his charity as they took their seats. They sat properly and smiled uncertainly at his sister, Lucille, who had arrived just this morning and who had, judging from the thin smile on her doughy face, already found her charges quite in need of her guidance.

Ava, the oldest and boldest of the three, looked from Lucille to Egbert and to Lucille again. She’d never really warmed to him, and he could see myriad thoughts and suspicions flashing in her green eyes. This

one thought too highly of herself to his way of thinking, for she’d never agreed to any of the acceptable offers they’d received for her hand.

Egbert had wanted to accept the very generous offer Lord Villanois had made last Season, but

Cassandra wouldn’t hear of it. “His fortune is hardly the sort I should want for our Ava,”

she’d said with

a sniff. “And he is far too fond of his drink. I shall not waste a perfectly g ood dowry on the likes of him.”

Egbert did not believe that Villanois was more or less fond of his drink than any other man, but

Cassandra continued to make excuses, just as she had done when other men had come forward, for no man was good enough for her dear Ava.

Egbert rather supposed any offer would be good enough for her now that he was the final authority. Her carefree ways were a luxury Ava would know no more —she was well past a suitable age for flitting from ballroom to ballroom. She was of an age that she should have a child on her hip and one in her belly.

Ava seemed to sense his disgruntlement and glanced at Phoebe.

But Phoebe did not possess her sister’s intuitive sensibilities, and merely smiled at him.

He’d always thought Phoebe was too trus ting of mankind in general, really.

“May I introduce my sister, Miss Pennebacker,” he said, gesturing lamely to Lucille.

The three young women nodded politely; Lucille actually stood and curtsied as if they were royalty, saying, “It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance.”

“Thank you,” Ava said.

“I’ve rung for tea,” Egbert said, and impatiently gestured for Lucille to sit. She sat. “It shouldn’t be a moment.” He idly watched Phoebe as she situated her gown just so. She was similar to her sister in size and shape, but her pale blond tresses were lighter, her eyes a bluish green. Privately, Egbert always

thought her the most handsome of the three and had believed her time on the marriage market would be quite short. Unfortunately, Phoebe was too shy for h er own good, and to make matters worse, she had a

propensity for dreaming—her head was always in the clouds, or in a book, or in some sort of artistic endeavor—and he rather supposed that was why she hadn’t received any offers.

When he’d expressed his concern about the lack of offers for Phoebe to his wife, Cassandra had brushed his concern aside with the ridiculous excuse that Phoebe had a special talent for art, and to

marry would rob her of the freedom to express herself. “If she were forced to marry, any husband would keep her pregnant and in the nursery before he would allow her to paint, mark me,” she’d said with much superiority.

Egbert didn’t understand his wife’s reasoning, for that was exactly where they all belonged.

A commotion at the door startled him from his thoughts.

“The tea has come,” Lucille announced, and bustled forward with her big hips bouncing along behind her

to meet Richard, the butler, as he brought in the tea service.

Ava and Phoebe turned to see what she was about, but Greer sat still, looking curiously at Egbert. That

was because Greer was inherently a rather clever and curious girl. She was dark where her cousins were light, her hair the color of coal and her eyes dark blue. She was as handsome as her cousins but in a

subtler way—a man had to look twice to see the beauty in her.

When Greer’s mother, Cassandra’s baby sister, had died, her father was quick to remarry, hoping to

gain the son he’d been deprived of with his first wife’s death. Cassan dra had taken Greer in, and as far

as Egbert knew, Greer’s father had never taken an interest in her. Therefore, Greer was what he considered the poor relation. Yet Egbert was perhaps fondest of her, for she shared his practical, intelligent nature.

Unfortunately, because Greer was a poor relation, Egbert’s charity toward her had been overextended. Certainly there was another person in the illustrious Fairchild family who could bear her cost, or at the

very least, see her married.

Greer had received offers, too, but by the time they had been brought round, Egbert had realized Cassandra meant to keep them all with her, and had lost interest in the excuses she threw up in Greer’s defense.

An inadvertent smile creased his lips as he looked at the three of th em now. He intended to remedy their unmarried situations just as soon as he returned from Paris. They would be married to the highest bidder

in turn, or, if they refused, sent to live with relatives. He had no desire to support them any longer than he must . For goodness’ sake, he already had the burden of Lucille.

The three young women looked at him expectantly as Lucille poured tea.

Egbert sighed, pressed his fingers to his temples, and leaned back in his chair. “Very well, then, we are all settled and I shall not make preamble. The question is simply put: Now that Cassandra has died, what

are we all to do? I shall tell you what I am to do. I have found it very difficult to mourn my wife properly, what with all her things and her children about. It’s been very…” He racked his brain for a word, and finding none, repeated, “…difficult.”

“You poor dear!” Lucille said, and put her hand at op his, squeezing gently. “I had no idea you were so aggrieved.”

Egbert glanced down at her pudgy hand, then glanced up at her face. Lucille promptly removed her hand.

“If I may, my lord,” Ava said, leaning forward slightly in her seat. “Perhaps we might spare you the, ah…

difficulty. We’ve discussed it, and we should like you to know that we’d be willing to reside elsewhere if

it pleases you.”

Oh? This was an interesting twist —something completely unexpected. “Elsewhere? And where would that be?” he ask ed, almost gleefully.

“We thought a small house in Mayfair. Nothing too grand, of course. And we’d require only Beverly, our lady’s maid. Oh, and a housekeeper, of course.”

Egbert was taken aback—Cassandra had never mentioned that these three had funds o f their own. He couldn’t see how it might even be possible. Certainly if he’d known, he would have insisted on the details

so that he could manage it for them, for really, what did three young women want with their own funds? “ Your own residence,” he repe ated carefully.

Ava nodded.

“And I suppose you have sufficient funds?”

Ava exchanged a look with her sisters. “I’m rather certain that we do.”

But she did not look entirely certain because she was, obviously, a woman, and women were not meant

to handle finances. “Could you then, perhaps, become certain?” Ava blinked. “I beg your pardon?”

“How can you possibly hope to lease a residence if you don’t know how much money you’ve got?”

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