And the good vicar was not bluffing or teasing, despite the fact that the difference in their stations should have meant dueling was not an option. “I am still not confident Letty will have me, though you give me reason to hope.”
Banks undid his sleeve buttons and turned the cuffs back. “Hope. Explain yourself.”
If Banks had used that tone of voice to ask for a recitation of the Ten Commandments, David would have dredged them up from memory, and in the correct order.
“Letty can leave the boy to you,” David said, “in which case he is the son of a defrocked vicar, or she can raise him on her own, the problems there being self-evident. In the alternative, she can raise him with me, giving the child the benefits of wealth, title, and a large and influential family. For Danny’s sake alone, Letty will at least consider my suit.”
Now, she would consider it—provided the vicar agreed with David’s reasoning.
While David debated pressing his guest on the issue, Banks took another parsimonious sip of his drink. “Your reasoning is… ruthless. I like it, because Danny is what matters here. I will give my sister the benefit of my thoughts on the matter.”
Hope germinated, a small, glowing warmth in David’s heart. While he hurt for the vicar, he rejoiced for Letty and for her son, though the boy faced a significant adjustment.
David rose, a lightness suffusing his fatigue. “The hour isn’t so late, but I have an important appointment in the morning, and you rode in this weather from Upper West Bogtrot to hell and back. Will you return there, by the way?”
“I will,” Banks said, yawning. “If only to make my good-byes and tidy up for my successor. There’s no question I will be leaving the church.”
This would be a significant loss to the church, and to the sinners of Upper West Bogtrot and other parts. “You can’t be a curate somewhere?”
“I am not suited to leading a flock, and I’m not being humble. Some responsibilities I manage very well, others I loathe. And if one’s marriage is in shambles, perhaps that situation should take precedence. I was content in the church, Fairly, but I went into it in part because my father said not to, and in part because I didn’t know what else to do with myself.”
“So what will you do now?” This would matter to Letty, but it also mattered to David. “Particularly when you’ve a small boy to consider into the bargain.”
“I will sleep on it.” Banks rose and took his glass to the sideboard. “I am resolved that I will leave my post and separate from my wife, which is a vast difference from the resolutions I had when I knocked on your door. Let’s see what the good Lord provides for me tomorrow.”
Such… self-possession was worthy of a duke. “Shall I send my valet to you?”
“I wouldn’t know what to do with him.” He tucked his boots under his arm, likely his only pair. “If you could untie this?” He lifted his chin, indicating the knot David had put in his neckcloth.
“I know why Letty loves you,” Banks said quietly, as if to himself while David worked at the knot. “You are genuinely decent. You are startlingly, quite unexpectedly, astonishingly honorable.”
“And you”—David smacked Banks gently across the cheeks with the ends of the neckcloth—“are halfway to being foxed. Force yourself to drink water before retiring tonight, and to sip water throughout the night. Your head will thank you in the morning. I want you to consider a question.”
“I’m not that foxed. What’s your question?”
“If you could divorce Olivia or have your marriage annulled, would you?”
Banks did not deliberate as a proper saintly bastard ought to when faced with such a question.
“Yes, I would divorce her, though Olivia is the last woman who’d commit adultery and divorce is something I’d not know how to pursue.”
And yet, Banks had lit out hotfoot in the direction of divorce, mentally. If Banks were under one-and-twenty at the time of the marriage, and his father had not approved the match, then annulment was indeed a possibility.
“Pursue a good night’s sleep for now,” David suggested, lighting a branch of candles. “I’ll see you to your room.”
Banks followed, saying nothing until they reached the door of the guest room.
“I wanted to hate you, you know. Not very vicarly of me.” More saintliness, suggesting it was a bad habit that would take some time to break.
“Letty is not your congregation. She’s your sister, and your feelings were brotherly.” About which, David knew a great deal.
Banks leaned his forehead against the doorjamb. “My feelings were murderous, which is part of why I brought Danny. I would not initiate violence while I was responsible for him.”
“The strategy was effective. What’s the rest of the reason?” Because there was more. David already knew Letty’s brother well enough to know there was more.
“I could not leave him in Little Weldon without knowing when Olivia would return. If she got her hands on him, I have no doubt she’d use him against Letty, and against me.”
“You’ll meet with my solicitors about an annulment,” David said. “You’ve said your bishop is the sympathetic kind, and he’d hear the case. Either that, or you’ll have to leave the country, and Letty and Danny will both need you.”
“We could all three go away,” Banks said, head lifting like a hound catching a fresh scent. “In fact, I think that’s an excellent suggestion.”
“It’s an awful suggestion.” David opened the door to the guest room. “Get the hell into bed, Vicar, and do not think of taking Letty and Danny out of the country. Don’t forget to drink plenty of water.”
“Right.” The vicar bowed a little carefully. “Plenty of water, do not leave the country, but do leave the church and annul my marriage. From your lips to God’s ears.”
When David closed the bedroom door, his last glimpse was of Daniel Banks staring down into the face of the child he loved like a son, his expression stark with devotion and loss.
***
“I had a long and interesting discussion last night with your viscount.”
He’s not my viscount, Letty wanted to retort, but Daniel hadn’t been trying to bait her.
“He’s an interesting man. What did you discuss?”
“We discussed how you’ve managed to avoid dying in the gutter these past several years,” Daniel said.
“You are angry with me.” Because the day was—finally—showing the promise of sunshine, they were in the front parlor. The teapot sat between them, but Letty had yet to pour.
“Angry,” Daniel repeated, as if tasting an exotic dish.
“Disappointed, then. Profoundly disappointed, again.”
“Again?”
She could not read him, as if he’d shifted internally from being her brother to being a vicar on his way to a bishop’s see, a man mortally good at hearing confessions and handing out exquisite penances. “I disappointed everyone from God on down when I was sixteen.” This was why her name upon arriving to London, had shifted from Elizabeth to Letitia, because the creature she’d become did not deserve her mother’s name.
“You became such a disappointment by not agreeing to marry Uriah Smith?”
That too, of course. “By allowing him the liberties that resulted in the need for marriage.”
Daniel rose to pace the room, while the tea grew cold in the pot. “You were not to blame. You were fifteen when that man got his hands on you, sixteen when you tried to bring a halt to it, only to find he’d raised the stakes. He was nearly twice your age, Letty. Did you think I wanted to see you wed to him?”
They were going to rehash this now? “You never said one way or another, and Father certainly made his wishes clear. If you disagreed with him, you kept it to yourself.”
Daniel had come home from a comfortable post as curate in the Midlands as tight-lipped and unsmili
ng as she’d ever seen him.
“Honor thy father and mother,” Daniel bit out. “I’m sorry, Letty. Very, very sorry. I did not want you to marry that beast, and I will be forever glad you did not.”
“Thank you for telling me.” The words should have comforted; their timing left her with a hard ache in her throat. “Tea, Daniel?”
He leaned back against the mantel to study her, which struck Letty as a not very vicarly posture. “He loves you, you know. Really loves you.”
Letty busied herself pouring, though she might have put six lumps of sugar into the same cup. “Lord Fairly?”
“Who else?” Daniel ambled across the room to drop into a rocking chair. “I understand your former… associate is deceased.”
The cup and saucer nearly slipped from Letty’s grasp, so unexpected was Daniel’s angle of inquiry, for his inquisition of her had only started.
“If we’re going to fight, Brother, then have at it. His lordship was good enough to give us some privacy to do so, and I have the sense you’d like to tear my head off.”
He picked up the teacup but didn’t take a sip. “A part of me would like to rip up at you, but it’s nothing, Letty, nothing at all, compared to the anger I feel toward Olivia, and toward myself.”
“Yourself?” The teacup in Daniel’s hand trembled minutely—with temper? With some other emotion? Perhaps Daniel shared Letty’s compulsion to pitch the entire service against the wall. “Olivia and I lied to you, and you are angry at yourself?”
“I understand why you did what you did, Letty. You saw no alternatives, and as young and inexperienced as you were, as pretty as you are, Olivia didn’t want you to see alternatives. Things could have gone much, much worse for you here in London than they did. I can only conclude that the good angels kept you under constant watch. You’ve suffered at the hands of at least one man who makes me ashamed of my gender, but your suffering seems to be at an end.”
There was suffering, and then there was suffering. If Letty could help it, she still didn’t go into the bedroom where she’d lain with Herbert Amery. But then there was the pain of having parted from David, and that suffering might not ever end.
“So explain to me,” she said, pouring herself a cup of tea she did not want, “why you direct your anger at yourself.”
“Because I have been blind,” Daniel said. “Absolutely stone, stubborn blind. A few days ago, one of the members of my congregation tried to tell me Olivia was a backstabbing, ungrateful, godless bitch, but I didn’t want to believe it. All around me, I had evidence that Olivia was at the very least a hypocrite. Oh, I knew she was unhappy with me, and I made allowances, but this… Whatever Olivia told me, I believed. The evidence of my own heart, the evidence before my eyes, I did not.”
And then, there was suffering. That Letty should hear her brother’s confession seemed only fair. “Evidence such as?”
“Your dresses.” Daniel waved a hand at her. “When you came to visit, you were always so tidily turned out, and in finery even a frugal housekeeper would not be found in. The presents you brought for Danny were beyond what a housekeeper should have been able to afford. Your attachment to Danny never faded to that of an aunt who was merely visiting. You look at him now the same way you looked at him when he was one week old, like he’s the answer to all of your prayers. You aren’t merely fond of him, Letty, you love that boy as fiercely as any mother loves her son.”
“I do.” Even those words—a little refrain from the wedding ceremony—were hard to get out around the lump in her throat.
“And that, my dear,” he said gently, “is why you’re going to take pity on Fairly and accept his suit.”
He was still her older brother after all, and battle had finally been joined.
“Daniel, you don’t understand. David is a good man, and he has a title, and he was above my touch before I met Uriah Smith. He will love his children to distraction, and when they are not accepted socially, it will be my fault, and there will be nothing I can do to make it right.”
Daniel rose and closed the parlor doors. When he turned back to face Letty, his expression was incongruously relaxed and untroubled.
“Letty, it is for Fairly to say whom he loves to distraction, and for me to protect Danny from the disgrace association with me will visit upon him. It is for you, my dearest sister, to recall the simplest tenet of faith: with love, anything is possible.”
He was a man facing ruin and the loss of all he held dear, and yet he was smiling. Letty pitched into her brother’s arms and started to cry.
Sixteen
“Zubbie’s a good sort,” Danny said, “but he’s only four, and little boys are bound to get into mischief at that age.”
How expertly he mimicked his father—his uncle.
“And how old would you be, Danny? Eight at least, I’d guess. Maybe even nine, judging from those muscles in your arms.”
Danny giggled from his perch on David’s shoulders, a sound that went wonderfully with the bustle and bonhomie of Tatt’s at midday. “I am five and a half, and soon I shall be six.”
“Why will you be six?” For that matter, why be twenty-eight?
“Six comes after five. You only get to be five for one year, and then you have to go to the next number. How old are you?”
Children were so patient with their elders. “Four thousand seven hundred eighty-two,” David replied, eyeing a chestnut mare. “How do you like the looks of this one?”
“Chestnut mare, better beware. She’s pretty. Zubbie would like her.”
“She isn’t for Zubbie. She would be for your Aunt Letty.”
Because the child was sitting on David’s shoulders, David experienced physically the tension that straightened the small spine and had the boy clutching David’s hair more tightly.
“Shall we watch her trot out?” David hefted the child off his shoulders and settled him on his hip, and sure enough, Danny’s expression was one of wary tension. “Danny, is something wrong?”
Danny shook his head, then buried his face against David’s neck.
“Well, let’s have a look at the mare, shall we?” They watched her walk, then trot up the aisle, and David liked what he saw. Her gaits were rhythmic, smooth, and relaxed, and the mare regarded the hubbub of the stables with placid condescension. She put David in mind of a more elegant version of his own mare, so he asked to have her saddled.
He sat Danny down on a pile of straw, while he tried the mare out himself. She was sound, patient, and every inch a lady. She responded to his aids with alacrity, and was as comfortable to sit as she had been to watch.
“Danny, lad,” David called to the child, “up you go. You tell me if your aunt would like her.”
Danny scrambled aboard and barely let David shorten the stirrups before he was off around the yard, posting the trot as if born knowing how.
A grizzled stable lad shook his head. “Them little ones. The horses just know…”
“Have you any ponies?” Because David had been little once long ago, and because back at Letty’s modest house, two adults needed time for a difficult conversation.
“Have we!” The man thwacked his cap against his thigh, which sent a nearby yearling dancing on the end of its lead rope. “The Quality is all leaving Town for summer, and we’ve ponies coming out our arse, pardon me language.”
“The boy is clearly well off the lead line,” David said as Danny guided the mare through a change of direction. “Show me what ponies you have that are safe both in harness and under saddle.”
Young Danny had fun with the mare, and the mare with him. They trotted every which way, halted, backed, trotted some more, and eventually came to stand right before David.
“She’s splendid,” the child cried, beaming. “Do I have to get off now?”
“You do,” David said, reaching up for him. “You think Aunt Lett
y will like her?” A cloud passed across the boy’s expression, so fleetingly that David would have missed it were he not watching closely.
“She will,” Danny said, watching as the mare was led away.
“But?”
“I know some things,” Danny said, looking abruptly sullen and mulish.
“Are they important things?” David asked, taking a seat on a saddle rack.
“They are secret things. Bad secrets.”
“And who,” David asked, not a murderous thought to be seen—on his face—“asked you to keep these secrets?”
“She didn’t ask me, she told me. If I tell, she’ll throw me on the rubbish heap.” He glanced around nervously, probably checking for a nearby rubbish heap.
“That does not sound like a very nice or fair thing to do to a fellow who isn’t even six yet,” David said, settling a hand on Danny’s bony little shoulder. “Do you want to tell the secrets, Danny?”
Danny nodded, staring down at the dirt floor, then rubbed his nose on his sleeve. “I mustn’t. She said.”
“Do you know, Danny”—David began to rub the child’s back in the same soothing circles he’d seen Banks use the night before—“a viscount is a very important fellow. We’re such important fellows that I’ve met the regent himself.”
“You’ve met Prinny? Oddsboddykins! Is he quite stout?”
“He’s very grand, and because the prince was once himself a little boy, he told me he takes a dim view of anybody who thinks they can toss little boys—English little boys, in particular—onto rubbish heaps, as do I.” The stable manager led up a Welsh pony gelding, but the beast was quite small, and David shook his head.
“I won’t get thrown on the rubbish heap if I don’t tell.”
“You won’t get thrown on the rubbish heap no matter what. I won’t have it, Danny, and I am a viscount.” For once, David could say that with relish. “The vicar would not hear of it either, nor would your aunt Letty. Not if you teased Zubbie, not if you said very bad words, not if you punched an old lady in the nose and knocked her into a hog wallow. Nobody is allowed to throw little boys onto the rubbish heap, particularly not little boys whom I happen to like.”
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