Love Regency Style

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Love Regency Style Page 201

by Samantha Holt


  Never mind that most of it seemed aimed at her bosom.

  Gabriel Wellingham was a man, after all, and she had been told by her mother that most men were attracted to women with ample breasts. Her mother seemed to know such things with a degree of certainty that sometimes made Elizabeth wonder how she knew.

  “Will your father even allow you to marry the earl?” Char­lotte asked in a quiet voice. “If I understand what Father said, and hearing the Marquess of Devonville say it, too, the Earl of Trenton does not share your father’s political views.” She spot­ted a dark blue riding bonnet and was admiring the decora­tion attached to it when she realized Elizabeth was suddenly uncomfortable. “What is it?”

  Sighing, Elizabeth pursed her lips. “I do not believe Father would begrudge me the groom of my choice,” she said very carefully. “But I do wish he would at least … take an interest in whom I might marry,” she added, her attention going back to the bonnet she held. Unlike Charlotte, a marriage had not been arranged for her, nor had her father made suggestions regarding possible matches. If it was up to her to choose, she would do so based on the suitor’s title, his annual income, and whether or not she found him to have a pleasant countenance. There was the hope he could please her in other ways, as well, but she rather doubted she could expect so much in just one man.

  “Be careful what you wish for,” Charlotte whispered as she leaned towards Elizabeth’s ear. “My father is suddenly showing entirely too much interest in my situation. Despite the arrange­ment he made with the Wainwrights, I do not believe he wants me to marry the Duke of Chichester.” She straightened, her worried look completely at odds with her earlier joy at sharing her news about the Earl of Trenton.

  “Why ever not?” Elizabeth asked, her aquamarine eyes as wide as they could be. “You’re to be a duchess, for good­ness sake!” Charlotte had been betrothed to the heir to the dukedom since she was three! Just because the older brother was deceased didn’t mean she couldn’t marry the younger brother—the man Elizabeth knew to be Charlotte’s true love.

  “Father has heard the on-dit. He believes Joshua will never recover enough to assume his duties,” Charlotte explained, her voice rising enough so that the man at the counter looked their way again.

  Elizabeth forced her face to remain impassive. She had heard the very same gossip. “But, he will. Won’t he?” Eliza­beth stammered, suddenly not so sure. What if the gossip was true? She had been wondering if Charlotte’s expectations for Joshua Wainwright’s recovery weren’t just a bit too high. What if Joshua didn’t recover? Charlotte was due to marry when she reached one-and-twenty, just six months from now. If Joshua could not fulfill his duties as a duke, perhaps it was better that Charlotte be married to someone else. Another year or two and she would be too old to be considered biddable for most titled gentlemen.

  The crestfallen look on Charlotte’s face made Elizabeth want to take back her query, though. “I apologize, Charlotte. Please forgive me,” Elizabeth whispered quickly. “I hear such terrible things, but you see him every day …”

  “He will recover,” Charlotte assured her, her head nodding quickly. “I have seen to it he has the very best doctor, and there is a nurse—a nun, actually—who sits with him when I cannot. The physician said that since Joshua has survived this long, he will live. Another week and he’ll be past the worst of the pain.”

  Elizabeth gasped at the suggestion that Joshua Wain­wright was still suffering. It had been several weeks since the fire. “I am relieved to hear you say so. You … you haven’t said as much, at least to those who ask after him. Perhaps you must be more forthcoming with what you know,” she suggested, real­izing Charlotte’s information was more hopeful than most had heard. “And you must be more forthcoming about his improv­ing state. In fact, you must start your own gossip!”

  A pink flush spread over Charlotte’s face, the young woman obviously uncomfortable by her friend’s suggestion. Gossip could be a hurtful, damaging tool when used by those out to destroy someone. But perhaps it could also be used to good effect.

  “I .. I suppose I must,” she agreed finally. “Yes, in fact, I think I shall have to, if for no other reason than to be sure my father hears the good news of Joshua’s recovery from someone other than me.”

  Elizabeth regarded the peacock-feathered bonnet she still held, admiring the workmanship and deciding it would be a good match for her teal carriage gown. “I think I will buy this,” she commented, nodding her head in the direction of the man at the counter.

  Charlotte seemed surprised by the choice. “A bit … daring, don’t you suppose?” she wondered with an elegantly arched eyebrow.

  Smiling, Elizabeth nodded and strolled up to the counter. “Yes. And it’s about time I was,” she answered in a whisper. She directed her attention to the shop owner. “Put this on my father’s account, won’t you, Mr. Peabody?” The words were out of her mouth before she could slip him the money from her reticule without Charlotte noticing. Had Elizabeth been alone, she would have paid for the bonnet out of pin money. With Charlotte next to her, though, she dared not. She could always come back and pay for the bonnet later.

  The shopkeeper set aside his newspaper and nodded at Elizabeth Carlington. “Of course, Lady Elizabeth,” he said with a hesitant smile. “Should I deliver it, or will you want to take it with you?”

  Charlotte stepped up to the counter. “Oh, let’s do take it with us. And this one, too,” she said as she placed the dark blue riding bonnet on the counter. “If our mothers are to believe we went shopping this afternoon, we’ll need to come home with something.”

  Mr. Peabody nodded. “As you wish, Lady Charlotte.”

  As the shopkeeper wrapped the bonnets in tissue and placed them in pasteboard boxes, Charlotte wandered toward the front of the store. Glancing out the window nearest the door, she noticed their maids flirting with a groom and tiger who were standing ready next to a rather new town coach. She was reminded of the day before yesterday, when she and her mother, Lady Ellsworth, had called at Carlington House. Although Lady Morganfield had invited them to have tea with her in the parlor, Elizabeth wasn’t in residence at the time.

  Elizabeth retrieved the two boxes from Mr. Peabody and moved to join Charlotte. A nattily dressed gentlemen held the door for them as they made their way out. “Thank you, sir,” Elizabeth said with a nod as she passed the man, his face hid­den by the brim of his beaver as he bowed.

  “Where were you the day before yesterday?” Charlotte wondered as she stepped past the man, nodding her thanks as she did so and moving to stand in front of the window of the shop next door. Her attention was drawn to a reticule in the women’s accessory shop window. “Mother and I called on your mother, and even she seemed surprised you weren’t yet home from morning calls.” The shorter woman had wandered onto the next shop window, admiring a row of brightly colored silk fabrics displayed much like a rainbow.

  Elizabeth realized Charlotte was asking about the period of time when she would have been at the Bank of England, bribing Mr. Whittaker to offer Mr. Streater the clerking posi­tion. She wondered how much to tell her friend. Her first foray into arranging a position for a wounded soldier had been suc­cessful, but the how of it wasn’t something she felt comfort­able sharing, even with her best friend. If Charlotte somehow found out about her charity, though, she would be hurt to dis­cover Elizabeth hadn’t trusted her enough to tell her about it from its start.

  Elizabeth pulled a pasteboard from her reticule and held it out to Charlotte. “I have started my new charity, ‘Finding Work for the Wounded.’ I placed my first client the day before yesterday,” she explained in a lowered voice. “And I just inter­viewed two more gentlemen this morning. I am thinking of hiring them to help me with my venture.”

  One of Charlotte’s eyebrows arched up as she regarded the large script ‘Lady E and Associates’ in the middle of the card. ‘Finding Work for the Wounded’ was centered below the ‘Lady E’, and below that, an addr
ess was listed. “You started your own charity?” Charlotte asked in surprise, rereading the text and the address on the calling card. “Elizabeth! This is … this is very worthy,” she got out before biting her lower lip with a tooth. “Is Lord Morganfield your associate? Did he provide assistance in arranging this … 30 Oxford Street location?” she asked, glancing between the card and Elizabeth.

  Her friend sighed, suddenly afraid that most would jump to the same conclusion. “My father knows nothing of this. At least, I have not told him of it.” At Charlotte’s soft gasp, Eliza­beth added, “I want to prove I can do this before I tell him,” she explained quickly. “And before I ask for an increase in my allowance.” It would be some time before Theodore Streater would be able reimburse the charity. She would need more funds before she could hope to place any more men into positions.

  Charlotte gasped again. “You’re using your own pin money? Whatever for?” she asked, a bit alarmed. A lady of the ton could align herself with a multitude of charities, but their patrons generally held soirées to generate operating funds.

  “Rent,” Elizabeth responded with a nod. “I’ve let a street-level office from a solicitor in Oxford. I intend to keep regular hours, perhaps ten to one. But there are so many expenses, Lottie. Writing paper, ink, postal costs.” She paused a moment, deciding not to add bribes to the list. “I never knew it would be so difficult to convince employers to hire our wounded soldiers.”

  Charlotte shook her head. “Now that the war is over, there are a large number of soldiers looking for work. It must be hard for all of them. I hear some must pay to gain a position.” Her attention was once again drawn to where their maids hov­ered a few feet away, the girls’ attentions still on the groom and tiger who were posted near their master’s very new town coach and four matched Cleveland Bays next to the sidewalk.

  Elizabeth considered the reasons an employer might charge a new employee—it guaranteed the new hire would report to work and perform the task in a manner satisfactory to the employer.

  She realized it wasn’t such a preposterous idea after all.

  However, the wounded men she had been helping didn’t have any funds from which to pay to gain employment. Most were quite poor. And those who sought positions as clerks needed a good suit of clothes, boots or shoes, and a haircut in order to appear professional enough for their interviews. “So, when I placed my first client at the Bank of England two days ago, it cost me twenty guineas,” she finally admitted, needing to tell someone of her success, although at the moment, success felt as if it came with too large a cost. She didn’t need to look at Charlotte to know her friend was stunned by the news.

  “Oh, Elizabeth,” Charlotte breathed, her gloved hand moving to the top of her bosom and pressing hard against the dark blue pelisse she wore. Charlotte took another breath, the look of shock on her face so apparent Elizabeth thought she might faint. “Why so much?”

  Elizabeth felt tears prick the corners of her eyes. “My cli­ent … he … he is missing an arm,” she finally got out. “But he writes with his left hand and was a clerk with the bank before he joined the army to fight the French.” Pausing to blink a couple of times and gather herself, she added, “I have a wood­worker making him an arm …”

  Charlotte’s eyes widened again. “An arm?” she repeated, sounding as astonished as she looked.

  “So there will be something to put in his sleeve,” Elizabeth clarified in a hoarse whisper. “With a hand of sorts attached at the end. It will be covered with a glove, of course, so it should not be so … noticeable,” she added, hoping she was making sense. “The thing of it is, all of my clients have some sort of evident wound or impairment that makes it impossible for them to land jobs for which they were perfectly suited to do before the war.”

  Charlotte shook her head. “This is going to cost you a fortune!”

  Elizabeth nodded in a way that indicated she had come to the same conclusion. “I expect it will at first. But I have decided on a way to help pay for some of it. As these men make their wages, they are to give some back. To reimburse the kitty, so to speak, and provide the funds necessary for the next man in line to land a position.”

  Her friend regarded her for a very long time. “You’ve given this a lot of thought, haven’t you?” she asked rhetorically, a bit surprised that a woman such as Elizabeth Carlington could come up with such a novel idea for funding a charity. “If Joshua wasn’t a duke, he might have need of your charity, I expect,” she said solemnly, her gaze on something far away.

  Frowning, Elizabeth considered her friend’s comment. “He was not wounded in the war,” she replied, realizing there were others out there like Joshua Wainwright who had wounds that prevented them from being able to easily reenter society. “But I think I could see my way to make an exception for situ­ations such as his,” she added thoughtfully.

  “Oh, Elizabeth,” Charlotte sighed, “I do hope this works for you. For your … clients.”

  Shrugging, Elizabeth sighed. “Me, too.”

  At least Theodore Streater was employed. He had sent a note saying he had finished his first day at the bank, and it was as if he had never left his position to join the army. This morn­ing, when she had met with the two ex-soldiers she planned to hire as her assistants, she had been assured there were more wounded who wanted an audience with her. And given the nature of her charity, news would spread amongst those who had served together. Soon there would be several in the office every day.

  Elizabeth wondered how long it would be before the Earl of Trenton learned of her charity. And would he be obliged to help her continue her work should they marry, perhaps even agreeing to fund the enterprise?

  He could certainly afford to do so.

  Or would Gabriel require that she turn her venture over to someone else to manage? Perhaps assuring her that she could continue her participation in a less active role? Or, worst of all, would he require she stop the charity altogether, claiming that it didn’t suit a lady of the ton to be associated with crippled men?

  Given she hardly knew the man, she could not begin to guess how Gabriel Wellingham would react to the news.

  So, until she knew otherwise, she decided it would better if she didn’t tell him.

  Chapter 10

  A Thank You Gift

  “Good afternoon, Neville,” George Bennett-Jones said in greeting as he made his way to the back of the hat shop.

  “Ah, George,” the shopkeeper said as he looked up from the counter. He held a quill in one hand. “Fine day, no?”

  George grinned as his gaze swept the store to find no other shoppers inside. “Yes, very. And it was made even finer by those two young ladies who just departed. It looks as if they spent some blunt,” he said in a conversational manner, hoping the man would share some information. He removed several coins from his pocket.

  “That was the ladies Charlotte Bingham and Elizabeth Carlington. Real beauties, both of them. Both got bonnets,” Neville Peabody commented as he waved to the papers he was filling out.

  A quick glance at the counter showed two bills of sale. George saw the top one and noticed the name ‘Lady Elizabeth’. “And charged them to their daddies, I suppose,” George said with a grin.

  Neville shrugged. “Yeah. Kind of odd in the case of Lady Elizabeth, though,” he said as he indicated the bill he was com­pleting. “She usually pays with her own blunt.”

  Interesting, George thought to himself. A lady of the ton who used her own pin money to pay for her purchases? Except

  she had probably spent all she had to secure the clerking posi­tion for Teddy Streater. “How much for the bonnet Lady Eliza­beth purchased?” he asked suddenly, surprising himself with the query. You cannot buy gifts for young ladies, he remem­bered Josie saying when she was teaching him about proper manners. Well, this wasn’t a gift, he decided. This was … well, he didn’t know what it was, but it wasn’t a gift.

  After all, Lady Elizabeth wouldn’t even know he paid for t
he bonnet.

  The shopkeeper gave him a glance before reading the amount on the bill of sale. “Half a crown,” he stated. “It was green velvet and had peacock feathers,” he added, as if he needed to justify the cost of the bonnet.

  George tossed a coin onto the counter, wondering if he would ever see the bonnet perched on Lady Elizabeth’s head. “I’d like to pay for it,” he said as he motioned toward the bill of sale. “As a … ‘thank you’ … for something she did … for a friend,” he added when he noticed the shopkeeper’s cocked eyebrow. At first, he hadn’t considered the implication of his comment, and now he hoped Neville Peabody wouldn’t spread gossip about his having paid for the bonnet.

  His eyebrows cocking in surprise, Neville smiled and handed him the paper. “That’s an awful nice ‘thank you’,” he commented lightly.

  Nodding, George agreed. “Well deserved, though. Good day, Neville.”

  He pocketed the receipt and left the shop, a bit relieved to see that Lady Elizabeth and Lady Charlotte and their respec­tive maids were no longer nearby. His tiger opened the new town coach door. Quickly stepping up and inside, George gave instructions to the groom to head for Bostwick Place.

 

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