Star of the East: A Lady Emily Christmas Story

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Star of the East: A Lady Emily Christmas Story Page 7

by Tasha Alexander


  “Rise, rise,” the maharaja said. “We have found the bangle and I suspect my daughter was more culpable than you for what happened.”

  Ned did as instructed and stood. “I cannot place the blame on her, sir. I ought to have insisted on finding another way, but I was not strong enough.”

  “Indeed you were not,” the maharini said. “I am most displeased.”

  “As am I,” the maharaja said. “I do not want my daughter to think she must lie to me in order to find happiness. You will go to Oxford, Sunita, to this St. Hilda’s, if you wish.”

  “But you will marry the groom of our choice,” the maharini said as her husband nodded in agreement.

  Sunita gasped. “You won’t do that, please tell me you won’t. I cannot marry—”

  “It is all you have ever wanted, is it not?” her mother asked. “I have heard nothing else from you since last summer. Is this not so?”

  “Yes, but—”

  “‘A house of my own! A husband!’ And now you object when we comply with your wishes?” she asked.

  “Mother, I—”

  The maharaja took his daughter’s hand and put his arm around her. “Fear not, my lovely Sunita. You know I have always wanted your happiness. It is possible, is it not, that Mr. Drayton will prove himself a worthy suitor? Ranjit has always spoken highly of him, and we do not need him to bring more wealth to the family.”

  “Father, would you really—”

  “I make no promises, Sunita,” the maharaja said. “But your mother will stay in England until we see you through your first term at Oxford. If Mr. Drayton can prove to her that this incident is not indicative of greater flaws in his character, I may be persuaded to consider him for you.”

  “Your highness, do you really think it wise to reward these young people for their extremely bad behavior?” My mother looked as if she were trembling in horror.

  The maharaja only smiled. “I rule a large kingdom, Lady Bromley, and have always found that my most loyal subjects are those who are happiest.”

  “But bad behavior—”

  “Should sometimes be forgiven, Mother,” I said, and pulled Henry closer to me so that I could kiss his grubby little cheeks.

  “Oh dear,” Nanny said. “If I do not bring the other boys down they will never forgive me. May I, Lady Emily?”

  “Of course,” I said. “We must not let them feel forgot because they are quiet and well-behaved.”

  Ned stood in front of Sunita, who rose and gave him her hand, which he kissed with great tenderness before turning back to the maharaja. “I shall do everything I can to prove to you my worth, sir.”

  “I throw my hands in the air,” my mother said. “I have done all I can.”

  “And then some.” My father, who had uttered not a word during all of this, put a firm hand on his wife’s shoulder. “I forbid you, Catherine, to go forward with your plans for a new portrait.”

  “Lord Bromley!” Sebastian jumped to his feet. “I implore you to reconsider.”

  “The Pre-Raphaelites would never suit you, Catherine. Although I do commend you, Mr. Capet, for the idea of Lady Macbeth. Can’t remember when I last had such a good laugh. Carry on, all of you.” He was chuckling as he crossed the room and opened the door to leave, stepping aside to let Nanny enter, holding Richard and Tom by their hands. “Capital, capital,” he said. “Good boys, all of you.”

  Richard and Tom were perfect pictures of cherubic youth. Colin motioned to them, and they walked slowly—Tom with what could only be described as dignity—to him.

  “Now here are some fine little gentlemen,” my mother said. “Richard in particular. He never speaks unless spoken to.” Her claim was not entirely baseless, but the observation was not quite correct. Richard did not wait to be spoken to before speaking; he almost never spoke, full stop. Until then.

  “Father Christmas?” His words were perfectly pronounced, his voice full of hope, and he looked at the large Christmas tree in the corner. Each of the trees in the house was decorated differently, and for this one, my mother had demanded nothing but red-and-gold blown-glass baubles, red bows, and white candles fastened into golden holders. It was more elegant than the ones covered with tin ornaments of various colors and shapes, but as a result, also less jubilantly festive.

  “Not until next week, my boy.” Colin tousled his hair and then did the same to Tom. “Have you been good?”

  Richard, apparently having decided that uttering two words was enough for probably the next week, only looked at his father. Tom scrunched his chubby face and shook his head. “Not Henry.”

  We all laughed. Not my mother, of course, but she was, as usual, an exception. Nanny gathered up the boys to return them to the nursery, but only after I had covered them all with hugs and kisses, feeling my mother’s disapproving stare all the while. Once they were gone, I returned the bangle to Sunita.

  “Now you can wear your lovely tika again,” I said.

  “Yes,” she said. “Although, if I am to be a woman of science, I can hardly succumb to superstition, can I? Perhaps it is time we abandon this foolish notion of the curse. I am going upstairs right now to put on the tika, but I am going to leave the bangle here with you, Mother.”

  “No!” Her parents, her brother, Ned, and Sebastian all spoke as if one.

  “I must agree with them, Sunita,” Colin said. “The Star of the East has already caused enough commotion. Let us do whatever we must to avoid more.”

  “I thought you consider curses nothing but nonsense,” I said, pulling him aside into a little alcove near a window.

  “I do,” he said.

  “Yet you are counseling Sunita to wear the bangle?”

  “I have already spent significantly more time at Darnley House than I had agreed to, and I cannot risk anything else happening to trap us here even longer. We are leaving here first thing tomorrow morning. I am desperate to get you home and alone.”

  “Except for the boys,” I said. “And the servants.”

  “They are all far more easily managed than your mother. I have done my best to behave in a dignified manner while we are here, but I can only resist you for so long.”

  “Dignified? Is that what you call last night?” I could feel color creeping up my neck and flushing my cheeks.

  “Not at all, I assure you,” he said. “But I am being most restrained right now, wouldn’t you agree?” He tipped my chin up, leaned forward, and gave me the most delicious kiss before almost instantly pulling back.

  “That was too short,” I said.

  “Exactly.”

  “Emily! I would have a word with you.” My mother never missed a thing.

  Sebastian took his leave from us that afternoon, but I was not surprised to find a red rose (that no doubt had been liberated from my mother’s hothouse) on my pillow when I retired that evening. With it was a note, written in ancient Greek. Its contents, however, were more than a little shocking. I turned to my husband, blushing.

  “I hardly know what to say. I do not think I can read this aloud. It is a rather scandalous poem. Truly, Sebastian has overstepped all bounds of decency.”

  Colin took me into his arms. “Sebastian, my dear girl, is not the only gentleman of your acquaintance fluent in ancient Greek. Read the poem aloud and let us see what it inspires.”

  Turn the page for a sneak peek at Tasha Alexander’s new novel,

  The Counterfeit Heiress

  Available October 2014

  Copyright © 2014 by Tasha Alexander

  1

  2 July 1897

  Devonshire House, London

  I raised the long, curved bow and with two fingers pulled back its string, all the while resisting the urge to remove one of the silver-shafted arrows nestled in the quiver slung over my shoulder.

  “It would be so easy,” I said, a sigh escaping my lips as I gazed across the ballroom.

  “Too easy.” My husband, his dark eyes sparkling, lowered my weapon with a single finger. “It w
ould be beneath you, Emily.”

  “It is not often one is permitted to arm oneself at a ball,” I said. “Fancy dress is a marvelous thing, and as such, my taking full advantage of the situation is nothing short of strict necessity. Without seeing an arrow, my prey may not realize she has been made a target.”

  “My dear girl, were you actually planning to shoot the dreadful woman, I would hand the arrows to you myself. As things stand, however, she is far too thick to understand that, by raising your bow, you are putting her on notice.” Colin Hargreaves had no patience for gossips, and I had set my sights on one of society’s worst, the lady whose lack of discretion had caused all of society to learn that Colin had refused the queen’s offer of a dukedom some six months ago. The awkwardness of the incident had been compounded by the fact that my mother had encouraged Her Majesty to dangle the prize before him, and now both she and the queen were embarrassed, put out, and displeased. Not with my husband, however. So far as the two of them were concerned, he was incapable of any wrongdoing. They were convinced that I must have motivated his inexplicable refusal, and forgave him for indulging his wife, although the queen did make some quiet comments to him about how even she had, on occasion, bowed to the will of her dear Albert. My mother was less forgiving. She refused to see me for three months. I bore the loss with what I hope appeared more like reasonable equanimity than obvious relief.

  “I am not certain one ought to take military advice from Beau Brummell,” I said. I could not deny that Regency fashion, with its snug trousers, well-cut coats, and tall, gleaming boots, suited my husband’s athletic form well. Nonetheless, Colin and I had argued about his choice of costume. “You should have dressed as an Homeric hero—”

  “Hector, I assume?”

  “You were perfectly free to go as Achilles if that better suited you,” I said. “All I did was remind you that such a choice would necessitate your sleeping at your club instead of at home. I understand some husbands prefer that sort of arrangement.”

  He put his arm around my waist and pulled me close. “I shall never be one of those husbands. I am, however, stung that you could suggest I would choose Achilles over Hector. You know me too well to make such a monumental error. Did we not cover this ground thoroughly before we were married?”

  “Of course we did,” I said. “I should never have considered your proposal if your views on the subject were not first utterly clear to me. Tonight, though, our hostess instructed us to dress in costumes allegorical or historical—”

  “Dating before 1815,” Colin interrupted. “Yes, I am well aware of the fact. It is why I specifically tied my cravat in a fashion favored by Mr. Brummell prior to that year. My entire ensemble is an exercise in historical dress.”

  “So far as satisfying the technical details of our instructions, yes, but I stand by my belief that you are violating the spirit of the duchess’s request.”

  “Riddle me, my sweet love, what matters to society more than fashion? And who mattered more to gentlemen’s fashion than Beau Brummell? I argue that my choice of costume is of the greatest historical significance to the current gathering.”

  “You are impossible,” I said, standing on my tiptoes to give him a quick kiss on the cheek.

  “Be careful not to take your role as Artemis too seriously, Emily. I have plans for you later that do not include still finding ourselves in this wretched house at dawn. I see Bainbridge making eyes at you from across the room. He looks rather like a sheep, so I shall leave you to deal with it. I am long overdue for a cigar. Make sure to promise no one but me your last waltzes.”

  “I am not about to let you hide out until then,” I said. He took my hand, raised it to his lips, lingering over it too long, just as he had in the days of our courtship, and my body, just as it had then, tingled from the tips of my toes to the top of my head.

  Jeremy Sheffield, Duke of Bainbridge, and one of my dearest childhood friends had not been making eyes at me from across the room or anywhere else. Jeremy thoroughly enjoyed the freedom provided by his status as bachelor duke as much as he thoroughly dreaded the confines of marriage. I might be carrying the bow of the goddess of the hunt tonight, but Jeremy kept himself armed daily with what he viewed as weapons in his fight against matrimony. I was one of them, the girl he could never marry, a semi-permanent distraction that half the mothers in London were convinced kept him from proposing to their extremely eligible—and willing—daughters. They believed I had once spurned him, and that his heart had not yet recovered. The old dragons might sympathize with him now, so long as they believed it could enhance their daughters’ chances with him later, but pining forever would not be allowed. This fit nicely with my friend’s own plans, as Jeremy had no intention of leaving his dukedom forever without an heir. He was simply too committed at present to his love of debauchery and irresponsibility to settle down. Only once he had achieved his oft-stated goal of being recognized as the most useless man in England would he agree to find a wife.

  I waved my bow at him as he started to cross the room in my direction. Devonshire House was crammed full that night, none of the beau monde wanting to miss the masquerade ball Louisa, the Duchess of Devonshire, had planned in honor of the queen’s Diamond Jubilee. Seven hundred of London’s best had received invitations, and I could well believe that number, if not more, had heaved through the entrance gates to the house, eager to show off the elaborate costumes they had ordered for the occasion. It was as if we all had been dropped into a book of the best sort of historical fiction. Napoleon and Josephine sipped champagne while King Arthur and one of the myriad Valkyries (I had counted at least six so far) took a turn on the dance floor. Two Cleopatras did their best to avoid standing too near each other. Petrarch wooed Desdemona, Lord Nelson was in a heated political discussion with a seventeenth-century baron, and the Furies delighted the room with torches illuminated by electric lights.

  Jeremy had made very little progress through the crowd to me, but a gentleman dressed as an ancient Greek from the time of Pericles stepped forward, his face hidden by a theatrical mask depicting tragedy, his flowing robes gathered over one arm. His eyes moved up and down my costume, but when he scrutinized my face, he tilted his head to the side, looked around, furrowed his brow, and sighed.

  “Sleep, delicious and profound…” He let his voice trail.

  “… the very counterfeit of death,” I finished for him, delighted to have found someone at the ball who shared my love of the ancient poet. I had, some years ago, translated Homer’s Odyssey from the original Greek and was often criticized by my mother for quoting all things Homerian. “What a surprise to—”

  He grabbed my arm, wrenched it, and stood too close to me, his eyes flashing. “You are not at all as advertised, madam. I believe my requirements were quite clear. This will not do in the least.” He turned on his heel and tore away from me. No sooner had he departed than Jeremy was at my side.

  “My darling Em, have you scared off another suitor?”

  “I am a married woman, your grace, I do not have suitors.”

  “Except me,” he said, kissing my hand and grinning. “Frightful old bloke, wasn’t he? Was he supposed to be Julius Caesar? Pity I don’t have any knives. Or fellow conspirators.”

  “He was Greek, not Roman.”

  “Never could tell the difference.”

  “I cannot say that shocks me,” I said. “It was very odd, him approaching me like that. He seemed to expect someone else. There must be another Artemis at the ball.”

  “There could be a thousand and yet none could so much as hope to catch the silvery beauty of the moon like you do, Em.”

  I rolled my eyes. “Really, Jeremy. There’s no need to talk like that when you don’t have an audience to witness your mooning. Who are you meant to be?” I asked.

  “Robert Dudley, first Earl of Leicester, another gentleman in love with an unattainable lady. I am quite bent on bringing back Elizabethan fashion. It shows off my fine legs, don’t you think?�
��

  “I am not the proper person to answer such a question, but I see Cécile. She will no doubt have a firm opinion on the matter.” Cécile du Lac, one of my dearest friends, had come from Paris just for the Devonshires’ ball.

  “The duke is in need of a firm opinion?” Cécile asked as she joined us.

  “Thinking about it, more like a firm hand,” I said.

  “I am incapable of giving him either at the moment,” Cécile said. “I have just learned that Estella Lamar is in attendance this evening. Are you acquainted with her?”

  “The same Estella Lamar who is always climbing pyramids and exploring India?” Jeremy asked. “One can hardly open a newspaper without seeing a picture of her somewhere exotic. I am a tremendous admirer of her exploits. Capital lady.”

  “She is the very one,” Cécile said. “I have not seen her in more years than I care to admit and am bent on finding her. Will you help me? She is dressed rather like you, Kallista.” Almost from the moment we had met, Cécile had refused to use my given name. She did not like it and much preferred the nickname bestowed on me by my first husband—a nickname he had never used in my presence and, hence, one I had not learned of until after his death. Cécile felt no compunction in usurping it as her own, but then, Cécile never felt compunction in usurpation when she believed it necessary to her own edification.

  “Madame du Lac!” Jeremy took a step back and gasped. “Or should I say Your Majesty? What a wonderful thing to see Marie Antoinette with her head back where it ought to be.”

  “I have always wanted to have a boat in my hair,” Cécile said. “It is irrational, I know, but I was taken with the notion as a child and thought this the perfect opportunity to play out the fantasy. Now help me find my friend.” The House of Worth had made Cécile’s costume, a fine confection of eighteenth-century fashion, replete with an enormous powdered wig fitted with a delicate model ship. Her silk satin gown, with its wide panier hoop, measured nearly six feet, and the stomacher that peeked through her overgown was covered with embroidered flowers shot through with golden thread.

 

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