Seventeen
Although she had fallen asleep immediately, Elinor arose early the next morning none too rested. She donned one of her serviceable “governess” dresses and said a silent prayer of thanks that she would soon have access to her own full wardrobe. Feeling nervous and uncertain of herself, she made her way to the breakfast room. She was not surprised to find Adrian there before her, but she had not expected her brother to be there as well. Judging by his near-empty plate, he had been there some time.
“Good morning, gentlemen.” She gestured for them to remain seated and leaned over her brother to kiss him on the cheek before turning her attention to the food on the sideboard. She noted Peter’s blush as he and Adrian returned her greeting.
“We have just been discussing details of restoring Peter’s authority in his own domain,” Adrian said. Elinor noted the intimacy between the two men signaled by the casual use of her brother’s given name.
“Trenville is taking me to see his—and our—solicitors this morning,” Peter explained. “Adrian says there should be no problem, given his actions, in having Uncle Brompton declared incompetent to act as my guardian any longer.”
“Adrian,” was it? She noted with amused approval the hero worship in her brother’s eyes when he regarded Lord Trenville. Peter had been too long without responsible, caring male guidance.
“You are still underage, Peter,” she pointed out as gently as she could. “Someone will have to assume guardianship. I would do so, but ...”
“But you are a female,” Peter interjected.
“Yes. And everyone knows what incompetent, featherbrained dolts females are,” she said, unable to hide her bitterness. “Have you and his lordship come up with a replacement, then?”
“Of course,” Adrian said smoothly. “Me. With your approval, that is.”
“The first thing I intend to do is discharge those villains Uncle Brompton foisted on us and bring our old servants back to Ostwick Manor and the house here in London,” her brother said. “And I shall have to take a firmer hand in the management of my own estates.”
At this positively mature announcement, she looked at Adrian and they shared a moment of understanding amusement. Then the true import of what Peter was saying came to her.
“I see,” she said tartly. “And have you and his lordship made any other decisions about Richards family business you might deign to share with me?”
Peter looked uncomfortable and squirmed in his chair. “Ellie, it ain’t like that. He was just helping me sort things out.”
The eagerness had gone out of his voice and he cast an appealing glance at Adrian. Elinor was immediately sorry for taking the air from his sails. She put her plate down in the place next to him, sat down, and patted his hand.
“It’s all right, Peter. I’m sure Lord Trenville has your best interests in mind.”
“You are, of course, welcome to accompany us, my lady,” Adrian said.
Before she could frame a reply, Gabrielle made an unprecedented appearance at the breakfast table. She swept into the room with a swish of petticoats, followed by the ever-present Madame Giroux.
“Adrian! Is it true? The servants are all abuzz. Miss Palmer is a titled lady? And poor Thomas has been arrested as a spy? It cannot be!”
“So much for any thought of slowing the dissemination of this hot topic.” Adrian’s tone was soft and ironic. “Yes, Gabrielle. May I introduce the Earl of Ostwick? You know his sister, Lady Elinor Richards.”
There was some confusion as the marchioness and her companion were made known to the young earl and they gushed over the news of Elinor’s elevation. Then they filled their plates and took seats at the table with Gabrielle talking nonstop.
“I always knew you were above the ordinary as a governess,” said the marchioness who knew little and cared less about her child’s lessons. “Just wait until Lady Vincent hears this news! You
will
join me as I receive callers this morning, will you not, my lady?” She turned a brilliant smile on Elinor.
“I—I think not, my lady,” Elinor said with a pleading look at Adrian. “The children have their lessons, after all, and ... and there many other matters at hand.”
“Ohhh.” Gabrielle pushed her lower lip out in a becoming pout. “Well, then, Adrian, she simply must accompany us to the Sheltons’ ball. They will be glad to honor my request for an invitation, and we can surely find you a suitable gown.” She switched her attention from Elinor to Adrian and back to Elinor.
Although she felt slightly overwhelmed by this torrent of goodwill from a woman who had scarcely noticed her before, Elinor did not give Adrian a chance to reply. “I am sorry, my lady,” she said in a firm voice, “but I am not yet prepared to go on display for the
ton
. I shall, of course, be leaving this household very shortly.” She rose and addressed her brother and Trenville. “No. It will not be necessary for me to accompany the two of you. Please inform Mr. Bascomb that I shall expect my usual allowance to resume. My brother and I will remove to Ostwick House when the Bromptons are gone. Now, if you will excuse me, I have lessons to supervise.”
Adrian stood. “Miss Palmer—uh, I mean Lady Elinor—”
She paused at the door and looked at him questioningly.
“You have not forgotten, have you, that there is an outing scheduled for the children this evening? You will still accompany us, will you not? You and Peter?”
“The fireworks display. Yes, I suppose so ...” she said slowly.
“Fireworks!” Peter’s eyes shone at the prospect—then he apparently decided it was not quite in keeping with his new adult status to show such enthusiasm. “That should be quite interesting,” he added in a more sedate tone.
Elinor smiled at Peter and left the room warmed by the thought of Adrian’s insistence that she join the evening’s outing.
In the early afternoon when lessons were over, Elinor ascertained that Trenville and her brother had not returned yet. She politely refused an invitation to take tea later with the marchioness and her guests. Instead, she called upon Millie to accompany her to visit the modiste once patronized by the fashionable Lady Elinor Richards. Surely, Mademoiselle Violetta would have something made up that could be quickly altered.
Elinor was determined to present herself at her very best tonight, for this would be her farewell to Adrian and the children. Tomorrow she and Peter would remove to their own home and, as soon as possible, Lady Elinor Richards would be on her way to rejoin her godmother in Italy.
She was in luck. Mademoiselle Violetta had on hand a wonderful apricot concoction with a matching cloak. The modiste had fashioned the outfit for a certain member of the
demimonde
who, having lost favor with her protector, failed to pick up the dress. With the addition of some ecru lace at the dangerously low neckline and a few tucks here and there it was perfect for Lady Elinor.
Spying some silk ribbon of the same apricot color, Elinor snapped it up for her hair. If this were going to be her swan song, she would most assuredly look like a swan—not the ugly duckling she had been for months now. And she would leave off those dratted spectacles, too!
“Oh, miss—I mean, my lady,” Millie said that evening as she finished helping Elinor arrange her hair, “you do look most splendid.”
“Amazing, is it not, what a new dress and a different hairstyle can do for a woman’s looks? Not to mention her spirits!” Elinor preened in front of the looking glass. When had she ever felt so confident of her appearance? Would Adrian appreciate the transformation?
Later, as she descended the stairs, she thought he seemed to. There was definitely an approving gleam in his eyes as he stood below with Peter and the three children, waiting for her to join them.
“Ooh, Mith Palmer! You look like a printheth,” Bess said in high-pitched excitement, her words whistling through a front tooth she had lost in the last month.
“She is not Miss Palmer,” Anne said firmly. “You heard nurse tell us to address her as ‘Lady Elinor’ now.”
“ ‘Lady El’nor’? Issat the truf?” Bess wanted confirmation from an adult.
“Yes, darling, it is.” Elinor reached the bottom of the stairs and caressed Bess’s cheek. “But you may call me Miss Palmer as long as you like.”
Peter eyed his sister up and down with a teasingly dubious look, then nodded his approval. “I must say you look better in this outfit than in that rag you had on yesterday—or in
my
clothes the last time I saw you.”
“Peter!” She gave him a quelling look and glanced at Adrian whose grin seemed to mirror her brother’s.
“Come, my lady. We should be off.” Adrian held her cloak and it seemed to her that his hands lingered momentarily on her shoulders before all of them were out the door and in the carriage, “ladies” on one side and gentlemen on the other.
Every time Elinor looked at Adrian, she was aware of his eyes on her. She wanted to allow herself to drown in his approving gaze, but that would definitely be unseemly with her brother and the children present. Once, she looked from Adrian to Peter and found the latter with a huge grin on his face.
“What is that you find so amusing?” she asked, smiling despite herself.
“Nothing,” Peter said airily. But he did not stop grinning at her.
The three children chattered excitedly and seemed thoroughly at ease with Peter whom they had, of course, only met that afternoon.
Arriving at the Ogilvie estate, Elinor was surprised—and alarmed—to find a large number of people there, besides children and young people whom she had expected to see.
“My sister never does anything in a small way,” Adrian said softly as he handed Elinor from the carriage. “There are probably twenty families here.”
“And all of them members of the
ton,”
Elinor said with dismay.
Indeed, it was a lavish party for a young man about Peter’s age. Lady Tellson had arranged to have two large tents erected—one for an elaborate buffet supper and the other open on one side and set as a sort of gallery from which the guests would view the fireworks.
Elinor was decidedly nervous. She knew from Millie’s chatter that distorted tales of her adventure and revelation of her identity would have spread like wildfire throughout London society. How would these people accept her?
“Courage, my dear,” Adrian murmured. He took her hand, put it on his arm, and held it firmly to his side. As usual, his touch was both reassuring and disquieting. He steered her and his group toward his sister, the hostess of this casual party, who was conversing happily with others as they approached.
Lady Tellson turned and her group all stopped talking at once to stare at Elinor on Trenville’s arm. When Elinor would have removed her hand, he refused to allow the separation.
“Caroline,” Adrian said. “You have met Lady Elinor Richards. And this is her brother, Peter, Earl of Ostwick. I think you know my other companions.” He gestured toward the children.
Caroline, Lady Tellson, paused and looked at her brother holding so tightly to the woman he was presenting. As she searched his eyes for a moment, Elinor recognized the concern of a sister for a brother she loved. Then a smile lit Caroline’s face.
“Of course. Though I did not know you as
Lady
Elinor, now did I? Welcome, my lady. And you, my lord,” she said to Peter, extending her hand to both of them and giving Elinor’s a small squeeze. “May I present some of my other guests?”
With Lady Tellson’s greeting setting the tone from the outset, Elinor was welcomed and marveled over in a positive way throughout the evening. One or two who had known her previously made a point of seeking her out. Elinor began to breathe more easily.
Adrian never left her side. Peter happened on some boys from his school, including the guest of honor, and the children were soon frolicking with cousins and friends, but Adrian stayed close to Elinor. When she occasionally had cause to remove her hand from his arm, it was he who always returned it to where it “belonged.”
Her mind was in a whirl. He must know what this public partiality would be signaling to the other guests. Such behavior—on top of the gossip disseminated this day—could prove very harmful to a marquis, heir to a dukedom, a man who hoped to achieve great things for his country. She should separate herself from him, let others see that there was no substance to the gossip. But she could not bring herself to do so. This was perhaps the last time she would be able to enjoy his company—and it would have to last a lifetime. In a few days, she would be gone.
During the fireworks display, Adrian steered her into a chair next to his, with Geoffrey and Peter on the other side of him and Bess and Anne flanking Elinor. Soon Geoffrey was standing between his father’s legs oohing and aahing at the flashes in the sky. It was not long before Bess squirmed her little body onto Elinor’s lap.
“Bess!” Anne hissed. “You’ll wrinkle her dress!”
“Never mind, Anne,” Elinor said. “Why don’t you move over here?” She extended her arm to invite Anne to take Bess’s seat.
When she did so, Elinor put one arm around Anne and hugged Bess with the other. She felt such a rush of affection for these two little girls that she felt tears welling. At a sound from Geoffrey, she looked at him, then at his father. Adrian gave her a smile and squeezed her shoulder gently. He seemed to know exactly what she was feeling.
Adrian tried, without success, to maneuver Elinor into sitting beside him on the journey home. The children seemed to sense some change in these favorite adults—and as children will, they found change disquieting, fearful. They held onto what they knew. Thus it was that the Marquis of Trenville was forced to accept Elinor’s sitting on one side, clutching two sleepy little girls to her, with himself on the other with his son and Peter.
When they arrived at Trenville’s town house, Peter offered to carry Bess up to the nursery as Adrian carried a sleeping Geoffrey.