Lilly caught her breath. “A baby!” she breathed.
Natasha looked startled.
Raymond laughed. “I told you we would not be able to hide it for long,” he said to Natasha and kissed her temple. “Yes, a baby, in the new year,” he said.
Neil sat up from his slouch. “Is it…well, dangerous, Mother? At your age? Forgive me for the question, but I would like to know.”
“It can be,” Natasha said. “The doctors say there should be little risk for me, though, as I have successfully born all seven of you without issue. One more is nothing. Although it is likely to be the last baby I can have.” Her cheeks were turning bright red, for this was far more intimate than any other family conversation.
All three boys were staring at their drinks or their shoes.
“You did ask,” Raymond told them.
“I’m reminded about being careful what one wishes for,” Cian rumbled in his baritone.
“That is not the only reason we asked you to step away from the ball,” Raymond said. “Cian, you turn twenty-one next year. That’s an age that every society in the world considers to be the start of adulthood. You have finished your degree at Cambridge. By your birthday you will have been running the estates yourself for nearly a year. It’s time for you to step fully into the role.”
Cian rested his long fingers against his temple. “I can’t imagine how I could step any more fully into the role than I already am.”
“You must take up residence at Innesford Hall as the head of the household,” Natasha said gently. “You cannot linger in our shadow forever.”
“As head? But where will you go?” Neil demanded. He looked at Raymond. “I thought you hated the manor in Sussex?”
“I dislike the place as much as Vaughn dislikes his. His comes with encumbrances, though. Mine does not. I shall tear the manor down and rebuild.”
Everyone stared at him.
Raymond went on. “By the time you turn twenty-one, Cian, the new manor will be ready. So will your home in Cornwall.”
Cian scowled. It was the same thundery expression as Neil’s. “You’ve already started the work,” he said. “Or you would not be so certain of the date when it will be done.”
“I have,” Raymond said calmly. He picked up Natasha’s hand. “The new manor is quite large. There will be plenty of room for anyone who wants to visit, or even stay for a while. We’re hoping, Cian, that you will find a reason to settle in Innesford and establish a life there.”
Lilly knew what they were not saying. They were expecting that in the near future, Cian would marry and have a son, who would secure the title for the family.
From the deepening scowl on his face, Cian also seemed to understand what they were not saying.
“We are doing this not just to give you your inheritance,” Natasha said. “We are also doing this for us.” She glanced up at Raymond. “Raymond and I would like to find a place that is neither mine, nor his, but ours. The new manor in Sussex will be ours.”
“Innesford is yours,” Raymond added, his gaze meeting Cian’s.
After a moment, Cian nodded.
Chapter Five
Lilly stayed inside Elisa’s house for the next ten days. She had never before measured how much time she spent outdoors. If she had been asked before those ten days, she would have said she spent little time there. She had responsibilities within and no engagements or commitments to draw her away from the house.
It was only when she deliberately chose to stay inside, as Thomsett had suggested in such an urgent way, that she realized how truly free she had been to step out the door and go wherever she chose. The glory of St. James was that everyone she knew and could possibly want to visit was within walking distance. Hyde Park was ten minutes away.
When she could not go to the park, when she was forced to stay indoors—even though it was her own decision—the borders of the house and everything in it chaffed and irritated her.
Sharla and Jenny had a full calendar, with dances and dinners, soirees and suppers and invitations for more and more appearing on the breakfast table next to their places every day. They had moved on from Lilly’s tutelage so she could not immerse herself in planning advanced lessons. The two little girls, Blanche and Emma, were distracted by the weather and the many enticing events and interests in London. Lilly did not like to burden them with extended lessons at this time of year.
In early June, Elisa announced that the Great Family would be attending the Trooping the Colors. The Queen’s secretary had invited Annalies and Rhys to sit in the Royal box—at the far back corner, to be certain, yet still within the compound at Horse Guards Parade where the Queen reviewed the troops.
Therefore, everyone else would go along to watch as well.
Lilly did not have to try hard to make an excuse. Perhaps her mother and Elisa had already spoken about him. Elisa merely nodded her understanding. “It will be a beautiful day. You will miss the sunshine and the spectacle, although there is always another year.”
Most of the staff were permitted to leave the house for the few hours the ceremony lasted, to find a place where they could watch. By the time everyone left, the big house in Grosvenor Square felt empty and silent.
Of course, her own family would have also left almost no one at home, as would the Davies household.
It was rare to be truly alone like this. Lilly looked out the window. Drifting in through the window with the soft afternoon breeze, she could hear the clop of the horses, the murmurs and calls of the spectators and the shouts of the sergeant majors lining up their units and calling out the beat of the march.
There were even drums that she could hear rolling in the distance, like a far summer storm.
She was as outside the affairs of people as it was possible to get.
This is what you wanted, she reminded herself.
Contrariwise, she could not stand the isolation. She wanted to be outside in the sun, clapping and cheering as the troops marched past, just as everyone else was.
It might be wise to stay indoors for the next little while.
Thomsett’s low voice and quick advice had thrummed in her mind for days. How much did he know? How much had he guessed? Of everyone in the family, he was the only one who had cautioned her, who had recognized her fear and had acknowledged it.
He was most likely out there, watching former comrades march by, just as everyone else was.
What if he was at home, though? Paulson had stayed behind. It seemed to be a butler’s lot to tend the home fires while even the most junior help got the afternoon off. Paulson, though, said it was his duty to remain behind and guard the house, that a butler did not desert his post for any simple whim.
Lilly suspected that Thomsett would be just as scrupulous in his duties as Paulson.
Without pausing to think it through, for she knew she would change her mind if she did, Lilly hurried over to the wardrobe and gathered her bonnet, her light lace gloves and her parasol and hurried downstairs.
She glanced in the drawing room as she passed the big archway. Paulson was not anywhere in sight. She didn’t want to seek him out and watch his face crinkle in disapproval at an unmarried miss tramping around St. James by herself, so she slipped out the door and let it shut quietly behind her.
On the broad steps down to the pavement, she paused to draw in a deep breath of fresh air and raise her parasol. Then she walked swiftly to Park Lane.
There were many more people on Park Lane, walking the length of it to reach the Horse Guards Parade. Lilly threaded her way through them, for they were strolling, while she needed to slough off ten days of inactivity and frustration. By the time she reached the Williams house, she was slightly breathless, although the exercise had revived her flagging spirits.
As she climbed the steps up to the big blue front door, thunder cracked, flat and loud, all around her. Lilly gave a little scream, that she smothered with her hand and looked around.
Then another volley sound
ed, rolling across the park.
Then another.
Lilly leaned against the wrought iron fence surrounding the tiny front yard of the house and laughed weakly at her own silliness.
It was the forty-one gun salute to the Queen, that was the highlight of the parade. The guns would fire another thirty-eight times.
Lilly turned the big round handle on the front of the door and stepped inside. She didn’t knock. She never knocked, for this was her home as much as Elisa’s was.
The first footman, Monroe, came hurrying from the back of the house while she stood untying her bonnet and removing her gloves. “Lady Lillian,” he said breathlessly, as the guns fired again.
“Then Thomsett went to the parade as well, Monroe?” she asked. “Somehow that doesn’t seem like him.”
“Begging yer pardon, m’lady, but Thomsett isn’t at the parade.”
“He’s not?” she asked. “Where is he? For he is patently not here. Is he in his workroom?”
Monroe pressed his lips together, looking uneasy. “He’s in his room. Upstairs.”
“Thank you, Monroe. That will be all.” She headed for the stairs.
“He asked that he not be disturbed, my lady.”
Lilly frowned. “That doesn’t make any sense at all. He’s the butler.”
“I’m sorry, my lady. I’m just passing along his instructions to the staff.”
“I am not a staff member,” she pointed out coldly.
“No, my lady. Beggin’ your pardon, my lady.” Monroe bowed and backed away.
Lilly climbed the stairs, weighing up whether her need for answers was more important than Thomsett’s need for privacy. Yet this afternoon was such a rare opportunity to speak to him without being constantly interrupted by the demands of his responsibilities. She could go for weeks before such a chance came along again. Maybe even months.
She climbed up the bare wooden stairs to the top floor. The last flight was narrow and the steps worn down, the hand rail smooth from generations of hands sliding along it.
As she climbed, the last round of the guns fired. Silence followed.
No dust or dirt lingered up here. No decoration, either. The narrow corridor was plain, with many doors, each with a number painted on it.
It was not completely unknown territory to her. Lilly remembered climbing here as a child. She had liked to play knuckle-jacks on the bare wooden floor, because the knuckles made a nice solid sound on the wood that they did not on the carpet downstairs. She remembered which room Corcoran had used and presumed that Thomsett was using that room, now.
Lilly knocked on the door with a firm rap and waited.
“Go away!”
The two words were spoken breathlessly. Unevenly.
Alarm speared her. “Is something wrong?” she called through the door. “Thomsett, are you well?” He had sounded as though he was in pain. That was why her heart pattered as it did.
His answer was a long time coming. “I’m fine. Go away. Please.”
His attempt at reassurance did not work. Her alarm rose. She put her hand on the handle. None of the doors locked. The staff had footlockers for their valuables, instead. Lilly could just walk in and nothing would stop her.
Only, should she?
She dithered at the door. What if Thomsett was in need of help? He’d told no one to disturb him. He might lie there in pain for hours and hours and no one would be the wiser.
Through the door, she heard him groan.
Lilly thrust down on the handle and opened the door. “What is wrong?” she demanded, stepping inside. She halted, two paces in, her hand still on the door handle, her questions dying on her lips.
Thomsett wasn’t lying down. He was sitting. And he was not sitting on the high, narrow bed where she had expected him to be. He was on the bare wood floor in the corner of the room.
He wore no shoes and no shirt. His undershirt sleeves were rolled up unevenly and the middle of the shirt was dark with sweat. His face gleamed with the same moisture. His hair, normally swept back neatly, was loose, the locks curling around his ears and temples.
He had pulled his knees up so they were nearly against his chest. His eyes were red-rimmed and dark with shadows, the lids nearly closed. Just a sliver of green showed beneath. “You…” He swallowed, his throat working. “Leave me alone.”
“Not if you are in pain,” she said, moving closer. Everything about his rigid body told her that he was hurting. She had been right to enter the room. “Let me help,” she said. “Tell me what I can do.”
Thomsett laughed. It was a harsh sound lacking any amusement. “No one can help me.” His tone was bitter. He reached out with his hand, groping blindly, for he did not open his eyes or move his head.
She saw he was reaching for a bottle of some sort of spirits, sitting uncapped on the floor near his hip. With a soft curse, he turned his head to locate it and snagged the neck. With a sigh, he brought the bottle to his lips and drank deeply.
Only half the bottle remained. Lilly recognized the name on the label, although she had only seen the liquor in decanters before and rarely. Rum was considered by most gentlemen to be a poor man’s liquor.
“But you don’t drink…”
He lowered the bottle and put it carelessly aside once more. His eyes opened a little wider. “Except for when I do.”
Lilly stood three feet away from him, afraid to come any closer. Yet the need to help, to find a way to lessen his pain, kept her pinned to the spot. Instead of moving closer, she lowered herself to a crouch, her skirt folding up around her. “Tell me what you need.”
“Silence. An absence of stupid questions.”
“You’re drunk. That is why you reject help.”
“I’m going to get a lot drunker, too.” His speech, she noted, had not deteriorated as his sobriety vanished. He still spoke precisely, in a manner typical of an upper class man.
“Why?” she demanded, struggling to understand what was happening to him.
“Why?” He sighed and reached for the bottle once more. “Because then I won’t hear them anymore.”
Her heart thudded. He had answered a question directly. “Hear who?” she breathed and waited to see if he would answer that, too.
“The guns,” he whispered.
Guns.
She had been scared silly out on the footpath when the forty-one gun salute had begun. Were they the guns he was referring to? “The guns have stopped,” she told him.
He started laughing again. Slowly, as if his arm weighed far more than it did, he lifted his hand to his head. He pressed the tip of his finger against his temple. “In here, they haven’t.”
He dropped his hand into his lap, as if the weight was too much for him to bear any longer. Then he reached for the bottle. This time he found it without looking and dragged it closer.
Lilly got to her feet, her heart and mind racing. He was still hearing the guns? “You’re hearing them, over and over, yes?”
He drank another mouthful of the rum and wiped his lips with the back of his hand. His gaze slid up to her face. “You know. I know you do. It happens to you, too.”
Lilly clutched her arms around her waist, cold. Her neck prickled. Her face and neck grew heated. “I have no idea to what you refer,” she said stiffly.
“Of course you don’t. Just another secret in the family chest.” His speech was growing blurred. After three-quarters of a bottle, he was showing the effects.
Lilly took a step back. “There is nothing you will let me do to help, is there?”
“No one can help me.” He said it tiredly, his head rolling back to lean against the wallpaper.
“I will make sure no one disturbs you for the rest of the day,” she said. “Not even the family,” she added, for Thomsett had already made sure the staff would not find him here in this state.
He didn’t answer. His eyes were closed. The liquor was having the intended effect. His senses were dulled enough to halt the sounds of the guns a
nd the memories they stirred.
Quietly, Lilly turned and left the room. She closed the door and held her fingers against it, thinking it through. There was no lock. Nothing to shield him. The staff would not dare seek him out, if they valued their positions, although he could not give the same order to the family. If they had any reason to speak to him, they would feel as free as she had to come looking for him, or send a footman or maid to rouse him and have him attend them.
Lilly, though, could stop them. It would mean staying up late and making sure that Monroe and the other footmen were alert and smart about meeting the demands of the family. The three of them would have to cover for Thomsett. She would supervise them and make sure they met the challenge.
It appeared she would be spending the night here.
Lilly hurried back downstairs. “Monroe!” she called, as she hurried into the drawing room. When he did not appear immediately, she rang the bell. Monroe appeared a minute later. His jacket was crooked.
“You must attend every call,” Lilly told him. “You, or one of the other footmen, with no delays. I need to write a note that must be taken to the Wardell house in Grosvenor Square. I will be staying the night, Monroe, so please have a maid make up my usual room. Also, the family will be returning from the ceremony at any moment, now it is over. Please ask Cook to make up some lemonade, if there are lemons on hand. Is there any ice?”
Monroe looked flustered. He frowned, memorizing her quick requests. “I don’t rightly know about ice,” he said.
“Everyone will request ice with their lemonade. It’s a warm day out there. Best go see to it now, hmm?”
He stared at her.
“Go along,” she said sharply.
“Yes, my lady.” He turned and left, moving faster than when he had arrived.
Lilly went to her mother’s morning room and settled in front of the secretary and pulled out a piece of Natasha’s stationery and picked up the pen and wrote.
Her heart was calming. Arranging household matters in this way was similar to arranging lessons for young ladies. This was something she could do and the only thing it appeared that Thomsett would allow her to do.
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