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Mr. Cavendish, I Presume

Page 49

   


Oh now, that was rich. Blessed with a family resemblance, they were. How quaint.
“What did he say?” Thomas finally asked.
“I don’t know. I wasn’t there. And then I couldn’t very well interrogate her in his presence.”
“No, of course not.” He pinched the bridge of his nose, thinking. This was a disaster.
“I’m quite sure he did not reveal his . . . identity to her.”
Thomas gave her a dry look.
“It is not my fault, Thomas,” Grace said angrily.
“I did not say that it was.” He let out his own irritated snort and then pressed on toward the drawing room.
Mr. Audley was a cancer in their midst. In all the years Grace had worked here, they had never exchanged angry words. And God only knew what the man was saying to Amelia.
From the moment Grace rushed from the room, neither Amelia nor Mr. Audley had uttered a word. It was as if they had reached an unspoken agreement; silence would prevail while they both tried to make out what was being said in the hall.
But unless Mr. Audley’s hearing was superior to hers, Amelia accepted that they had both been stymied.
She could not make out a thing. Grace must have intercepted Thomas at the far end of the hall.
Grace did seem exceedingly agitated that afternoon, which Amelia found strange. She realized that she had asked a great deal of her, especially when Grace’s friendship was more to her sister than herself, but surely that could not account for her odd demeanor.
Amelia leaned forward, as if that might possibly improve her eavesdropping. Something was brewing at Belgrave, and she was growing rather irritated that she seemed to be the only person left in the dark.
“You won’t be able to hear them,” Mr. Audley said.
She gave him a look that tried to be reproving.
“Oh, don’t pretend you weren’t trying. I certainly was.”
“Very well.” Amelia decided there was no point in protesting. “What do you suppose they are talking about?”
Mr. Audley shrugged. “Difficult to say. I would never presume to understand the female mind, or that of our esteemed host.”
“You do not like the duke?” Because surely the implication was in his tone.
“I did not say that,” he chided gently.
She pressed her lips together, wanting to say that he did not have to say it. But there was nothing to be gained in provocation, at least not at this moment, so instead she asked, “How long do you stay at Belgrave?”
“Eager to be rid of me, Lady Amelia?”
“Of course not.” Which was more or less true. She did not mind him, on principle, although he had been rather inconvenient this afternoon. “I saw the servants moving trunks about. I thought perhaps they were yours.”
“I imagine they belong to the dowager,” he replied.
“Is she going somewhere?” Amelia knew she ought not to have sounded quite so excited, but there was only so much disinterest a young lady could feign.
“Ireland,” he replied.
Before she could ask more, Thomas appeared in the doorway, looking decidedly more like himself than the last time she’d seen him.
“Amelia,” he said, striding toward her.
“Your grace,” she replied.
“How lovely to see you. I see that you have met our guest.”
“Yes,” she said. “Mr. Audley is quite diverting.”
Thomas glanced over at the other gentleman, not, Amelia noted, with particular affection. “Quite.”
There was an ominous silence, and then Amelia said,
“I came to see Grace.”
“Yes, of course,” Thomas murmured. It was, after all, the ruse they’d concocted.
“Alas,” Mr. Audley said, “I found her first.”
Thomas gave him a look that would have quelled any man of Amelia’s acquaintance, but Mr. Audley only smirked.
“I found him, actually,” she put in. “I saw him in the hall. I thought he was you.”
“Astounding, isn’t it?” Mr. Audley murmured. He turned to Amelia. “We are nothing alike.”
Amelia looked to Thomas.
“No,” he said brusquely, “we are not.”
“What do you think, Miss Eversleigh?” Mr. Audley asked.
Amelia turned toward the doorway. She had not realized that Grace had returned.
Mr. Audley rose to his feet, his eyes never leaving Grace. “Do the duke and I share any traits?”
At first Grace seemed not to know how to answer.
“I’m afraid I do not know you well enough to be an ac-curate judge,” she finally replied.
Mr. Audley smiled, and Amelia got the sense that they were sharing a moment she did not understand.
“Well said, Miss Eversleigh,” he said. “May I infer, then, that you know the duke quite well?”
“I have worked for his grandmother for five years,”
Grace said, her bearing stiff and formal. “During that time I have been fortunate enough to learn something of his character.”
“Lady Amelia,” Thomas cut in, “may I escort you home?”
“Of course,” Amelia agreed, rather looking forward to the journey. She had not been expecting his company. It was a most delightful change of plans.
“So soon?” Mr. Audley murmured.
“My family will be expecting me,” Amelia said.
“We will leave right now, then,” Thomas said, offering her his arm. Amelia took it and stood.
“Er, your grace!”
They turned toward Grace, who was still standing near the doorway. She looked rather agitated. “If I might have a word with you,” she said haltingly, “before you, er, depart. Please.”