The musical instrument sat beneath a portrait of a woman dressed in the Elizabethan style. Her coloring matched Lady Mariel’s enough for him to guess this must be some distant ancestress of hers. He dismissed the portrait as he glanced at the ceiling. A plaster ceiling medallion was surrounded by designs he could see needed refurbishing. Like the weathered stone on the outside of the Cloister, the interior showed signs of its many centuries. He rose politely as Lady Mariel Wythe entered the room accompanied by another woman and, surprisingly, an enthusiastic spaniel. He ignored the black and brown dappled dog as he regarded his hostess. Although his face remained serene, he was shocked by the transformation. The dirty-faced scamp had become the archetype of a titled lady in this sixtieth year of Queen Victoria’s illustrious reign.
Her gown of deep green perfectly accented the decor of the room. Black lace hung from the high collar and draped across the front to hide the curves of her body. Matching lace at the cuffs accented the glistening sable of her hair, now demurely pulled back in a perfectly coiffed bun. The one thing that had not changed were her snapping eyes. They looked at him and away, obviously dismissing him as nothing more than a pest.
“Reverend Beckwith-Carter, please sit down,” she said with what he knew was mock warmth. “Tea should be here soon. I anticipated that you would like refreshments before your journey back to Foxbridge.”
“Assuredly, my lady.” He hid his smile and his glance shifted to the other woman in the room. Her position as companion to the irascible Lady Mariel Wythe was proclaimed by her severe dress and the conservative style of her iron-gray hair.
“This is Amanda Phipps,” Mariel said offhandedly. “She wishes to join our conversation, for she has wanted to meet you.” She did not add that she had been disgruntled to have Phipps announce she was attending this meeting. Having her companion with her would mean she must watch her tongue. She did not want to distress Miss Phipps again by being impertinent to a man of the cloth.
Ian shook the older woman’s hand gravely. “Miss Phipps.”
“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Reverend,” she said in her scratchy voice.
“Reverend Beckwith-Carter?” Mariel asked sharply. “I meant to ask you before. Are you related to the family at Beckwith Grange?”
He returned his attention to Lady Mariel, and willingly. She was lovely, and he admitted to himself that he enjoyed looking at her. He was glad others had prepared him for facing this adversary.
“Distantly. I do have cousins at the Carters’s home of Avelet Court to the north of Foxbridge. As they are related to your neighbors, I assume I must be as well.”
“Do sit,” she repeated. When she saw he would not until the ladies did, she dropped to a settee. Her lips tightened as he sat next to her. To rise and choose another chair would be too impolite.
Mariel shook her head absently as Phipps asked if she wanted to pour. Such rituals did not appeal to her today. All she wanted was to have this meeting over so she could escape to the privacy of her room and the pain burning as hotly as the fire which had destroyed the old Cloister. She glanced down at the dog lying by her side and wondered how people could not understand her anguish when the spaniel did so readily.
She glanced up to see the minister watching her with an amused expression on his face. Tightly, she stated, “This is Muffin.”
“Muffin?” Ian could not halt his laugh. The idea that the coldly correct Lady Mariel Wythe had given her dog such a charmingly sweet name was amusing.
“Is there something wrong with that? I don’t believe it’s a curse unfit for the ears of a godly man.” A glare from Miss Phipps warned her to be silent, but Mariel felt rebellion bubbling within her. After all, she had not invited the minister to the Cloister. That she must suffer his mockery simply because he wore an ecclesiastical collar seemed the worst kind of foolishness. She refused to be intimidated by her companion. Passing a filled cup to her guest, she did not look at him. Crisply she asked, “What do you want with me, Reverend?”
“Lady Mariel,” he said quickly as he heard Miss Phipps’s sharp intake of breath. He saw a scowl aimed at her charge. It was evident his hostess was more bothered by his presence than he suspected. With a silent chuckle, he wondered what had been discussed upstairs. “I have come simply to make your acquaintance. I had understood you were at home on Thursdays.”
“You could have delayed a day or two.” She did not meet his eyes as she stirred her tea endlessly.
He said in a hushed tone, “I was very sorry to hear about the fire. I had no idea the damage was so extensive until I walked through there myself. Can you salvage any of it?”
“I don’t know.” Her voice softened again as she spoke of the house. “It doesn’t seem possible the old Cloister is gone. It has weathered so much and watched all the changes of modern England. Now it is gone.”
Her blue eyes rose to meet his. As he expressed his sympathy for her loss, he saw something other than rage in her volatile eyes. He could tell that for her the old Cloister was more than a building. A bit of her had died with its destruction.
This side of Mariel Wythe he had not been told about by those eager to introduce him to all the gossip of the shire. He had listened with half an ear to what was said, for he liked to form his own opinions of people.
“Will you rebuild?”
“Why? The building was an anachronism.” She shrugged. “It is Uncle Wilford’s decision.” When he regarded her with confusion, she explained, “Wilford Wythe is the name of the current Lord Foxbridge. He is abroad now.”
Miss Phipps spoke when the silence swelled to eat at them. Her questions of how he liked Foxbridge and his new position were ones he had answered often since his arrival.
He gave her the appropriate replies—he had honed them to perfection—while his eyes strayed again and again to the woman next to him.
She did not taste her tea or take a cake from the plate offered by Miss Phipps. Such a rigid stance he had seen taken by those who tried to mask the mourning for a family member. Never for a pile of stone. When he inadvertently cut off Miss Phipps in mid-word by turning to the younger woman, he noticed nothing but the sorrow billowing out like a dark cloud from Lady Mariel.
“I understand you are very involved in community projects, Lady Mariel.”
Starting, she looked up at him in surprise. Lost in her grief while she mentally composed the letter to her uncle, she had forgotten Reverend Beckwith-Carter sat next to her. Drawing a shade over the vulnerable openness of her face, she straightened and said, “Yes, I am. It has long been the policy of the Wythes to be concerned with the welfare of the shire. I am simply continuing that tradition.”
“I would be intrigued to hear about it.”
“Would you?” She bit back the words she wanted to hurl at his perfectly composed, too handsome face. If only his hair did not curl so correctly across his forehead or his collar fold exactly as style commanded. Then she might not have made every effort to unruffle him to repay him for invading her home during her grief. She did not like people who made her feel inadequate.
“Yes, my lady. I have heard—”
“I am sure you have.” She rose, forcing him to do the same. She smiled coldly. Sometimes convention could be used to her advantage instead of being simply a prison. “Perhaps we can continue this conversation at a later date.”
Ignoring Miss Phipps’s hissed displeasure at his hostess, Ian nodded. He lowered his untouched cup of tea to the tray. He picked up his cane and dark hat. When he offered her his hand, she pretended not to see it and became involved with rearranging the tea table.
“When would be convenient?” he asked.
“Convenient? For what?” Mariel turned to him in surprise. She had hoped he would be offended and leave. It appeared he had thicker skin than the previous parson.
“To speak of your involvement in the village.”
“I was not under the impression that my secular activities were of interest to you, Reverend.�
�� She moved past him to the door, her dog following like a variegated shadow. Putting her hands on the dark-green velvet portieres, she stated, “If, and I stress if, I find the time to discuss this, I will inform you. Good day, Reverend.”
Her footfalls racing up the stairs echoed back into the parlor. Ian shook his head when Miss Phipps began to apologize. “No need.”
“She is not usually like this.” The woman wrung her hands, wanting to ease the situation. “It is the fire. Losing the Cloister like this has broken her heart.”
He nodded. “I understand.” He did comprehend what she could not say. Miss Phipps’s devotion to her difficult lady showed him that Lady Mariel might not be as immovable as she wished to portray.
Wishing her a good day, he left the house. His carriage waited. The household staff had known the interview would be short in duration. Smiling, he picked up the reins. If Lady Mariel thought she had daunted him, she guessed wrong.
Upstairs, Mariel listened to the renewed reprimand on her unacceptable behavior. She had learned long ago to act as if she was hearing Phipps while she thought of other things. The older woman had been with her too many years for Mariel to say what she truly felt. It made Phipps happy to think her lady heeded her advice. When her companion took a breath, Mariel hastily agreed to be kinder next time she met the new minister.
As soon as she was alone, she changed into an old dress. Taking ink, paper, and a pen, she skulked down the stairs. No one stood in the foyer. She slipped around the base of the steps to flee along the hallway that led to the original part of the house.
She easily threw the new bolt on the door separating the two sections. At first, as she entered the spartan building, she could imagine nothing had changed. Within a half dozen paces, the signs of the fire dissolved her dreams. By the time she had walked a few more feet, the roof was gone and the destruction complete.
She found the bench where she had been sitting when Reverend Beckwith-Carter interrupted her. Putting the ink bottle on the stone next to her, she began the most difficult letter she had ever written.
“Dear Uncle,
“I wish I could find words to soften the blow of what I must tell you. I can think of none.
“Two nights ago there was a fire in the old Cloister. The new Cloister is relatively unharmed. The wind, in addition to the well thought-out design of the house, saved it. As for the monastery section, it …”
Her pen halted. She could not write the words. To do so would legitimize them. She did not want to lose the hope that she could waken and find this all to be a nightmare.
Mariel did not like to admit something had happened she was unable to fix. This helpless feeling was so strange she did not know how to handle it. Anger overwhelmed her. Whom or what she was furious with, she did not know. Having no one to blame this on increased her irrational rage.
Her toe toyed with a small pebble fallen from the wall. Even without Phipps’s lecture, she had known her behavior toward the reverend was unacceptable. Although she did not care what the man thought of her, she knew her uncle would have been ashamed of her lack of hospitality. She adored her uncle and never wanted to give him cause to think badly of her. He was her only living relative, and despite his journeys to the farthest realms of the earth, a closeness existed between them that no distance could lessen.
A stone tumbled to the floor. She looked up, her sorrowful thoughts interrupted, but saw no one. She sighed.
The fire had made her too jumpy. Tomorrow she had to go into the village to deal with the problem at the Ladies’ Aid Society. Then she would fulfill her promise to apologize to Reverend Beckwith-Carter.
Smiling, she collected her writing materials and rose. That would shock the new minister. Her atonement for taking out her frustration on him would be the last thing he expected. Soon he would learn that Mariel Wythe was not like the other ladies of his church.
As she walked through the rubble, Mariel decided that she would relish her relationship with Reverend Beckwith-Carter. He was not easy to cow with a sharp word. She thought they would have many confrontations during his tenure in Foxbridge. She anticipated the next gleefully.
Chapter Two
Ian heard a strange clanking from beyond the parsonage, but could not break away from his work. The prose flowed so perfectly from his pen, he hated to pause to see what was causing the sound. He enjoyed working in the cozy study. From the moment he arrived and discovered that this small house would be his home during his assignment to the church in Foxbridge, this had been his favorite room.
Far less formal than the drawing room across the hall, its walls were covered with an Oriental paper of pale cranberry. More chairs than the room should contain crowded around the paisley settee with its carved arms and cabriole legs. The centerpiece of the room was the massive, rolltop desk situated between the two front windows overlooking the village green. A side window gave him a view of the hills between the settlement and the glory of Foxbridge Cloister near the ocean.
As the noise continued, his mind refused to concentrate until he satisfied his curiosity. He pushed his chair back on the gray rug, which showed the signs of many such motions over the decades.
He arranged the pages on the top of his desk and stood to straighten his collar. As he pushed aside the cream lace curtains at the window, his eyes widened in shock. Moving along the green was a sight more bizarre than any from his wildest dreams.
Grasping his cane, he rushed to the foyer and out onto the porch just as the vehicle slowed to a stop directly in front of him. The driver of the horseless carriage lifted wide goggles and removed a full hat covered with veiling to reveal shining dark hair and a pert nose between sparkling, blue eyes.
“Lady Mariel!”
“Good morning, Reverend. I hope I haven’t interrupted you. I drove in for the Ladies’ Aid meeting at the schoolhouse, but I am a bit early. If you have time, I thought we could discuss the matter you hinted at during your visit to the Cloister.”
Mariel had not discovered the proper phrase to allude to her behavior of the day before, so she acted as if they had parted amicably. Guessing the reverend was a gentleman, she assumed he would not correct her outrageous statement.
He offered her his hand as she stepped lightly from the strange vehicle. “What is it?”
With a laugh, she realized he was so astounded by her automobile that he had heard nothing she’d said. “This is the latest form of transportation. It is an electric automobile.”
“Electric?”
“Yes. I have a generator in the stable to recharge it. We have no electricity in the Cloister, so it was easiest to put the generator in an unused building. Every night, I connect the cables to the batteries behind the seat. In about ten hours, they charge enough so I can get a day’s driving out of it.”
“An automobile,” he repeated in awe. He ran his hand along the chrome decorating the outside of the blue machine.
Outwardly, it looked little different from a normal buggy. The four wheels could have been exchanged for the ones on his carriage. The seat was positioned slightly farther back. Instead of reins, a lever sprouted up next to the driver’s seat. Pedals on the floor must deal with starting or stopping it, but he did not have enough knowledge about these new automobiles to guess which. On the floor in front of the driver, gauges had been inserted into the dashboard. All of it was as alien to him as if it had been brought from the moon.
Stretching to look closer at the interior of the vehicle, whose top was lowered, he asked, “How far can you travel?”
She shrugged, watching his eager examination of the automobile. “I am not exactly sure. I use it only around Foxbridge. I can drive myself without tying up the time of one of the workers in the stables. The man who sold it to me told me it has a top speed of nearly fourteen miles per hour, and it can go for thirteen hours before it must be recharged. Of course, on these twisting roads, I must travel much slower.”
“Amazing.” He glanced at her and saw her
knowing smile at his boyish awe. “I am sure you get this reaction wherever you go.”
“All the time.” She looked with affection across the green to the small, white church and the two storied schoolhouse. Grouped around them were small houses much like the parsonage. “Fortunately, the people here in the village are accustomed to ‘Lady Mariel’s contraption.’”
When he stepped closer, he gazed at her with the same intensity he had used to appraise the automobile. She did not back down before his regard. Her eyes appraised his reaction to his inability to intimidate her this way. Slowly, her gaze traced the uncompromising line of his jaw and the firm planes of his face. He was an undeniably handsome man. His clerical collar and the subdued color of his white shirt and black vest flattered his masculinity.
Softly, he asked, “You came to speak with me, Lady Mariel?”
“Although I hate to admit it, I came to apologize.” The words were not as difficult to say as she had feared. “Reverend, I can only hope you will excuse my intolerable actions yesterday.”
“You were bereaved by your loss.”
“Yes,” she whispered, astounded by his ability to discern what she tried to hide. She shook herself mentally. Compelling green eyes could not be allowed to make her forget herself. “Yes, I was,” she continued in a normal voice, “but that was no excuse to act as I did. If you want to learn about the community groups I am involved with, I would be glad to answer your questions.”
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