Grey realized that he'd been leaning forward in the bow-back chair, listening in fascination. "What? Oh—yes. Yes, she is. And she still loves drama. Natalya is... a most unusual woman."
"Ah, how I appreciate a beautiful woman with an agile mind," Stringfellow declared. "This Frances you are looking for is a beauty as well, so it's no wonder I heard about her almost immediately after she came to Philadelphia. Are you going to tell me what the connection is between you, and what she's done to bring you all this way in search of her?"
Grey met Stringfellow's frank gaze, his own eyes momentarily uncertain. "I must ask for your word that—"
"No one will even suspect that I've met you, sir," he interjected, looking a trifle offended. "Anyone in this city will tell you that I am a man of impeccable honor."
"I did not mean to suggest otherwise, I assure you." Grey sighed. Setting down his empty tankard, he began to tell his story. "Frances Wellbeloved is, in reality, Francesca St. James—my wife. We married two years ago, shortly after we met during one of my leaves from the Royal Navy. My father is an earl, and as the elder son, I am a viscount. It was an advantageous match for Francesca, and I—I wasn't quite sane. I thought I'd probably die in the war, and it seemed like the thing to do; try for an heir and all that." He arched an eyebrow and shrugged slightly. "And, as you said, she's beautiful—in a way that creates another sort of insanity in susceptible men. Francesca is also selfish, spoiled, sly, and dishonest. After I escaped from prison last month and returned to London, I discovered that she'd run away not long after our wedding. There were rumors that she'd fled to America with another man, which I was inclined to believe, and the latest gossip indicated that she'd written her father that she was leaving New York to take up residence in Philadelphia. Natalya needed to come here in any case, so I brought her myself. I want to find Francesca and confront her. I don't think I can get on with my life until the book is closed on our marriage."
Stringfellow's brows, like tufts of white fur, bobbed up and down as he pondered this information. "I say, that is quite a tale! But there's more, isn't there?"
Grey gave him a grudging smile. "Your wits are no match for mine, Stringfellow. Yes, there's more. I discovered that Francesca took my mother's jewels when she left London. My father loaned them to her when we were married, but they wouldn't have rightfully passed to us until I assumed the earldom. Quite honestly, I consider titles a bore, but I do place some value on family possessions. Aside from the fact that these pieces are priceless, they are to remain in trust, passed down through the generations from one Countess of Hartford to the next. What Francesca did, stealing them, was unconscionable." His eyes flashed with suppressed anger. "I mean to return my mother's jewels to Hartford House."
"Here, here!" Stringfellow set down his tankard and applauded. "A noble cause indeed! I'll do whatever I can to help, but I must confess that I don't have much information to offer. I've seen the lady, and I've heard her name, which I told your man Speed. She's taken a house on Pine Street and hired servants. I know one or two of them, if that will help you. I believe that she's passing herself off as a widow, but I have heard rumors about a man. My wife mentioned seeing her in a bookshop with some fellow, but Nancy thought he looked a trifle drab. Gray hair and spectacles, she said, and they appeared to be having a tiff in the manner of people who know each other well."
"Interesting," Grey remarked, sifting Stringfellow's revelations.
"We could doubtless gather information from her staff, and it would be easy enough for you to appear at her door and confront her."
"No, I'd prefer to be more creative." When he smiled, his teeth flashed in the shadowy firelight. "I'm not a vindictive man, but I do believe that she ought to suffer a bit. I wouldn't mind giving her a scare; turn up next to her in a crowd and see the horror in her eyes."
"Wouldn't it be jolly if she fainted!" Stringfellow laughed, joining into the spirit of Grey's plans.
"Indeed," he agreed dryly. "I'd enjoy it immensely. I would like to toy with her a bit before I close in. Perhaps I won't even mention the jewels at first. I might play the role of heartbroken husband...."
"How can we arrange such a scene?" asked the older man.
"I wonder if there isn't a way to organize a party—"
"A party for Natalya Beauvisage?" Stringfellow broke in. "Wouldn't that be a brilliant stroke? She's only just returned, and everyone is reading her book and longing to see her, but she's scarcely set foot in the city. It's the perfect solution." In his excitement, he jumped up and paced back and forth in the darkened keeping room. "Who would host such a party? It must be a great hostess, whose invitation your wife would be certain to accept, and it must also be someone who knows the Beauvisage family well. And, someone I know well enough to approach. I'll have to persuade her to have the party, and also make her understand that she must invite both you and Frances Wellbeloved—"
"And the man with the gray hair and spectacles, if possible," Grey chimed in, laughing.
"I have it!" Stringfellow shouted triumphantly. "I'll ask Meagan Hampshire."
"Who's that?"
"She's the wife of Senator Lion Hampshire and an old friend of Caro and Alec Beauvisage's. The Hampshires just happen to be staying at their country house these past few weeks, and I believe they intend to remain until June. Mrs. Hampshire is a treasure. I know I can depend upon her." Stringfellow stopped in front of Grey and announced, beaming, "By jove, I'm brilliant—if I do say so myself!"
* * *
Hyla Flowers DuBois peeled potatoes so fast that it made Natalya feel vaguely dizzy to watch her. The old woman was a marvel. She was fat now—there was no other word to describe her enormous bulk—but continued to paint her mouth and cheeks, and she liked to pin some decoration in her coarse gray hair. Today she wore a bunch of small, waxen cherries next to the coil of hair atop her head. Years ago, during the Revolutionary War, Hyla had earned her way in the world as a prostitute, but hard living had put an end to that career. Instead she'd come to work at the coffeehouse, overseeing the chaos in the public room. Fifteen years later, when Lisette left, Hyla and Pierre married and Hyla took over the kitchen chores: by that time her feet hurt too much to labor in the keeping room from dawn to dark. In contrast with the rigors of the coffeehouse, cooking for the Beauvisage family at Belle Maison was child's play.
"I've a chore for you, sweetheart," Hyla said to Natalya. "It's unlucky to peel potatoes while someone's watching, so here's something to keep your eyes and hands busy." She handed Natalya several bunches of rhubarb, a knife, and a bowl. "Just cut the tender parts into little pieces."
"Are you going to make a pie?" Natalya asked hopefully.
"Shall I? I'd thought about a cobbler...." Hyla feigned indecision.
"Oh, no, please, a pie!"
"All right, then, a pie." She pinched the girl's soft, rosy cheek. "For you, sweetheart."
Natalya hitched her rush stool closer to the worktable, sitting in the middle of a warm sunbeam. Her curls, caught back in a wide aqua ribbon, were burnished with gold dust. Hyla stood for a moment, knife and potato in hand, looking at the middle Beauvisage child. Dressed in a soft, simple gown of white muslin trimmed with aqua ribbons and inserts of Belgian lace, she was truly exquisite. Her skin was creamy, her mouth full and sensual, her eyes alert and curious.
Feeling the older woman's stare, Natalya looked up. "Is anything wrong?"
"Mercy, no! I was just thinking how beautiful you are, sweetheart. You're all soft and curvy and golden, like a ripe peach. Why haven't you gotten married?"
"Well," Natalya replied candidly, "the main reason is that I want to be independent, and now that I've had success with my writing, I can be. I'd prefer not to answer to a husband. I know that Papa doesn't order Maman about, but most men do." She gave a philosophical shrug. "I know myself well enough to know that such an arrangement would never do for me. I couldn't tolerate being dominated...."
Hyla pondered these revelations, smiling. "I
know exactly what you mean, love. Do you know, I was fifty years old before I married Pierre. I always wanted to be on my own, too, but I came to realize that a lady has to make compromises. I never wanted to admit that I liked having a man take care of me, and yet it's true. And, I take care of him, too. The trick is to find a man who can dominate without seeming to, so's you'll find yourself enjoying it." She smiled broadly. "There's no shame in admitting you need what a good man can offer. In feet, there's a sort of joy you feel deep inside; it has to do with accepting womanhood, I think. I finally learned that, and I'll wager that you will, too."
When Natalya left the keeping room and wandered through the gardens to her great-grandmother's cottage, she found herself remembering the thrill she'd known when Grey had taken charge. She reflected on the night they'd escaped from the inn in St. Malo... the way he'd all but physically removed her from the cyprians' ball in London... his commanding resolution of the situation with Adrienne—even their most recent confrontation at the Spruce Street house, when she had intended to bully him into leaving Philadelphia and had ended up in his bed, eagerly returning his kisses. Natalya had to admit that Hyla might be right—an instinctive part of her did enjoy Grey's confident assurance, even when it meant yielding to his strength. The notion that this might be normal was almost revolutionary to her.
Shallow flagstone steps marked the entrance to the cottage, which seemed adrift in narcissus of every variety. Danielle Beauvisage had lived nearly seventy-five years in France before retiring to Philadelphia after the death of her husband and taking up residence here on the grounds of Belle Maison. Natalya had been only four when her great-grandmother died, but she felt as if she knew her intimately, for her spirit was everywhere in and around the cottage. All her favorite flowers and herbs were planted in the tiny garden, which Alec maintained in her memory. The snug cottage was filled with Great-Grandmere's needlework on chairs, cushions, tablecloths, and bed linens, and her paintings of the garden and her loved ones lined the walls. It was a place where Natalya felt at home. Certainly she would be able to create here, she told herself each day.
The morning after her encounter with Grey in the Spruce Street house, Natalya had risen at dawn and come out to the cottage. She'd hated to disturb the familiar furnishings but had moved one drop-leaf table in front of the sitting room window and chosen a curved bow-back chair to go with it. Then, during the next two days, she had found herself occupied with many tasks that had little to do with writing. She'd spent hours poring over the French books that had belonged to her great-grandmother, telling herself that one might provide needed inspiration. She'd written a letter to Nicholai, Lisette, and James, then one to Adrienne. She'd cut yellow, peach, and white narcissus and placed them in vases throughout the cottage. And she'd stared out the windows, searching for diversions.
Natalya had sworn that today would be different, but when she sat down at the table and took quill in hand, Eloise and Charles eluded her again. Hyla's words kept intruding in her mind, followed by scattered memories of Grey St. James. She'd half expected him to turn up these past three days, if only to taunt her, but there was no sign of him. Was he occupying himself with the woman Fedbusk had sighted on the street?
Voices drifted from the garden through the open window, and Natalya looked up to see Kristin and Hollis Gladstone strolling among the beds of tulips. Kristin was a vision in a green-sprigged morning gown, while Hollis looked slightly ill at ease in a dark blue coat and buff trousers. Watching them, Natalya wondered why he persisted in courting Kristin when she clearly wasn't interested. And then she wondered why, if Krissie wasn't interested, she didn't simply say so.
Hollis's bearlike shape and tousled hair appealed to Natalya's tender heart. He was speaking earnestly to Kristin, gesturing with his large hands, apparently to no avail. Kristin smiled, touched his arm, and then walked away toward the house, pausing once to look back and wave good-bye. Hollis continued to stand amid the bright beds of tulips, looking lost.
"Mr. Gladstone?" Natalya called impulsively through the window. "Will you join me for tea?"
She went out to meet him, guiding him back to the cottage, and busied herself for several minutes preparing tea while he wandered around the parlor and sitting room. His expression was both puzzled and bereft. When they were settled at last on the walnut settee, Natalya came straight to the point.
"Mr. Gladstone, I do not mean to pry, but I cannot help noticing that you do not appear to be pleased with the progress of your association with my sister. If there is anything I can do to help, I assure you that I would be happy to do so."
He gazed at her through his spectacles with bewildered green eyes. "I confess that I am in love with your sister, Miss Beauvisage, and haven't even enough pride remaining to hide that fact. I have tried everything, including getting myself up in these fashionable clothes, which she seems to admire on other men."
"They look very nice," Natalya said politely.
He grimaced and shook his head. "I may not be skilled at tying a cravat, but my regard for your sister is sincere, and I feel that we would balance each other's temperaments well. Kristin can be a trifle impractical, even hotheaded, which I say with great fondness. I cannot help but think that marriage to a stable sort of man, like me, would suit her better than a passionate love match—which would doubtless prove far too... incendiary. Furthermore, I do not consider myself to be boring. In ordinary circumstances, I am a cheerful sort who enjoys life to the fullest. I like to laugh, to read, to learn, and to explore the world beyond the confines of Philadelphia." Hollis paused for breath and ran a hand through his sandy hair.
"All traits to be desired!"
"I know that I am not handsome like some of Kristin's other suitors, but I have an open heart. I would take care of her, work hard to provide for her, and show her that I cherish her each and every day."
"An open heart is the most valuable asset any man can claim," Natalya said, with feeling, liking him more and more. "Mr. Gladstone, I think that you should alter your approach in courting my sister. I sense that you are passionate, and you must show her that. Don't follow her like a puppy, begging for her time. Stand up for yourself! Let Kristin see that you are a confident man who has pride. I believe that she longs to be swept off her feet. Show her that you have taken a firm hold on the reins of your involvement with her, and then woo her with strength and tenderness." She gave him a glowing smile. "I agree with you, Mr. Gladstone. I think that you may be the perfect mate for Krissie, and I've a notion she'll come around to the same conclusion if you follow my advice."
Hollis sat up straighter as a gleam of hope crept into his eyes. "You're a writer of novels, aren't you? I suppose that makes you something of an expert on the subject of romance."
"I don't know about that," Natalya replied, blushing as she thought of her own tangled private life." Perhaps I'm learning. And, I am Kristin's sister, which qualifies me as something of an expert on her, I suppose."
Finishing his tea, he put the cup and saucer aside and stood up. "I believe I'll keep my distance from Kristin for a while. Who knows? Perhaps she'll miss me just a little. And then, when we meet again, I shall do my best to put your advice into practice." He walked with Natalya to the cottage door. Standing on the flagstone step, he took her hand and smiled in a way that she found surprisingly winning. "You have given me hope, Miss Beauvisage. I am more grateful for your time than you will ever know."
"It was a pleasure, Mr. Gladstone," she said sincerely. "May I add that you should smile like that more often? I think that you are handsomer than you realize."
Natalya watched him stride purposefully toward the stables, then wandered back inside and sat down to finish her tea. All the things she had said to Hollis Gladstone came back to her, and she realized how closely they resembled Hyla's advice to her. Again, Natalya wondered what had become of Grey. What was he doing at that moment; whom was he with? The fleeting thought that he might have suddenly decided to return to England after a
ll sent an unexpected chill through her body. Realizing that Grey had, almost against her will, become a stimulating, vital part of her life, Natalya decided that the time had come for her to examine her feelings honestly. Running from them only heightened the ache in her heart....
Chapter 22
May 6, 1814
Madame Henricot, a French émigré who had parlayed her skills as a seamstress into a highly successful career catering to Philadelphia's elite, had just delivered Natalya's new wardrobe. Alone in her bedchamber, Natalya gazed upon the delightful array of gowns for morning and evening and walking, the cashmere shawls, spencers, riding habits, and undergarments of fine soft muslin that were spread over her bed and chairs. Tomorrow her mother was taking her into the city to purchase new bonnets, shoes, parasols, and reticules to match Madame Henricot's creations, but Natalya felt little enthusiasm for the project.
Wandering down the corridor, she discovered Caro curled on her favorite window seat in the library. A fine rain misted the glass panes behind her, and My Lady's Heart was open on her lap. Natalya paused in the doorway, smiling. How young her mother looked today—like a girl, really, in her gown of white muslin delicately trimmed in gold. Her curls were pinned loosely atop her head, and stray tendrils accentuated her lovely profile and the line of her neck. At her feet lay a long-stemmed pink tulip, resting innocently against the dove gray cushion that lined the window seat.
"Hello, Maman," Natalya greeted her softly.
"Darling!" Immediately Caro closed the book and got to her feet. "Have you been trying on your new gowns?"
"A few," she lied. They sat down together on the chairs facing the fireplace.
"I must tell you that, in my completely unbiased opinion, My Lady's Heart is sheer delight," Caro pronounced, beaming at her daughter. "I find it every bit as well written as Pride and Prejudice, and not nearly as slow. What a talent you have for dialogue! I'm sure you inherited it from me."
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