Amanda was disappointed, thinking her stepbrother would come to town to settle his father's affairs as soon as the funeral was over. Edwin might believe her, might help her, might give her a home with him.
"I do not think the housekeeper knows anything definite," Daniel said. "More what she wants to see happen. She hasn't been paid since the new year."
"But we had new gowns and new upholstery in the drawing room."
"The better to make a good impression on Miss Elaine Hawley's callers, I suppose. Everyone seemed in agreement that she was to marry well-not just a title but money also-to pull her father out of River Tick."
Amanda knew Sir Frederick was miserly, but she thought he had funds enough. "He had my mother's money, and my dowry, plus income from his own estate."
"Well, perhaps he kept a fortune tucked away in his safe or the bank, but he was not generous with his gold."
"No, he was never that."
Daniel suggested perhaps someone was blackmailing the baronet, bleeding him dry.
"And I frightened the extortionist away when I arrived home early," Amanda guessed.
Rex put a stop to their musings. "No blackmailer would kill his source of income. What else did you discover there, coz?"
"The butler gave me itchy feet."
"Ah."
Amanda offered to search the countess's dresser for talcum powder.
Daniel shifted in his chair. Wood creaked, so he stopped his embarrassed twitching. "You see? I'm not fit for polite company. Shouldn't have mentioned my feet."
"Or your itch," Rex added, with a narrow-eyed warning.
Amanda looked from one to the other. "But I am not missish, and we must not stand on ceremonies while discussing my case. We are friends, aren't we?"
Daniel smiled. "I knew you were a right 'un. I just felt he wasn't telling the truth. No, that he wasn't telling all of the truth. I'd wager he knows who hired that valet Brusseau in such a hurry. I never thought Sir Frederick was so well turned-out that his man should be in demand."
Rex made a note in his pad. "I'll try the butler tomorrow. Do you know if he's been paid?"
Daniel shook his head. "Not in a while. I believe he is skimming enough off the household budget to survive, but he will be below hatches if a tenant or the new owner does not arrive soon."
"What about the grooms and the footmen? Did you question any of them?"
"What do you take me for? A novice? Of course I did. The ones who were not attending the ladies at Almack's say they were all in the mews, throwing the dice. It's too far away from the house to hear a pistol shot or a solitary horseman. No one called at the house that they remembered; no one came near with a carriage or a horse needing stabling."
"Drat. Do you think they were lying, too?"
"Unfortunately, no. They knew nothing."
Amanda asked, "You are sure?"
The cousins looked at each other. "We are sure."
"But how?" she wanted to know. "People lie all the time."
"Not to us, they-" Daniel started, to be stopped with a glare from his cousin.
"It's a, uh, a scientific thing."
"It is?" Daniel and Amanda both asked.
"Yes, we made an extensive study in the Peninsula. People who he give clues. Like blinking faster, or shifting their eyes, or breathing hard. Their voices change, too."
Daniel started to rub at his ear.
Amanda was fascinated. "So you did not really torture prisoners."
"Of course not!"
Indignation cured Daniel's itch. "I would challenge anyone who claimed to my face that we did. Can't stop whispers behind our backs, but that's all it is."
"I could not see how such accusations could be true, you have been so kind. But why let the stories of cruelty last?"
Because they had not thought of the Aide's brilliant pretense of research, Rex thought. Aloud he said, "Because the rumors worked in our favor. If enemy prisoners were afraid I would slice off their, ah, ears, or Daniel would sit on them, they were more liable to tell us what we needed to know. Flashing a knife"-he pulled one from his boot in a streak of light-"or swinging Daniel's anvil-sized fists was intimidating enough. They talked. Every minute mattered when the generals were waiting to deploy our own troops or defend a position. They needed to know where the enemy was, what his plans were. If the prisoners knew, we found out."
"I did not believe anything else."
Well, she almost disbelieved the gory tales, Rex could tell from the orangish cast to her words.
"And your mother never credited a single one of the rumors."
Lady Royce knew the truth, but Rex did not wish to think about that.
Amanda was asking, "Can you show me?"
"Show you?"
"How to judge the truth."
"Hmm. The research has not been made public for national security reasons, but perhaps, since we are all friends… Look at Daniel carefully. I am going to ask him simple questions, and he is going to lie sometimes, say the truth sometimes."
"I am?"
"Yes, you are. What is your mother's given name?"
"Cora."
"There, did you see that?"
"What?"
"Watch again, more closely. Daniel, what is your mother's given name."
"C-" He saw Rex shake his head and changed his reply to Carolyn. He scratched his nose.
"Aha! You see, he blinked more."
"I must have missed it. Let me try. Daniel, what is your middle name?"
"I never tell anyone!"
Rex laughed. Amanda pleaded. Daniel looked over at his cousin who silently mouthed, "Lie."
"Ralston."
Amanda set the violets aside. "I cannot tell."
Daniel said "Good," and stopped rubbing at his nose.
Amanda turned to Rex. "Do you like me?"
"Great gods, what kind of question is that?" Rex was blinking. His voice had raised an octave. His eyes were shifting from her to a grinning Daniel to the Staffordshire dogs on the mantel.
"Yes," he croaked. "Do you like me?"
She did not hesitate, blink, or bleat. "Yes."
Blue, and Rex's heart swelled in his chest.
Amanda never knew she could be so forward. The proper young lady she'd spent twenty-two years refining seemed to have disappeared in jail. No female of breeding asked such personal questions of a gentleman she had known for two days, and without a proper introduction, to boot.
Amanda was no longer a lady in the eyes of polite society, whichever direction the trial took, so in a way she was more free to say what she thought, to think what she felt, to feel. Staring at the possibility of a sentence of death, or a short, brutal lifetime in prison, refocused one's sights. Politeness, conventions, missishness-heavens, she had no time for that nonsense.
Lord Rexford-Rex-liked her, which somehow made her less of a burden to him. She could almost believe that a wealthy, well-born gentleman might truly befriend a penniless woman of no distinction but a murder charge and a blackened reputation.
He'd brought her gifts. He'd said he liked her. The world was not entirely bleak; not when violets bloomed and honest blue eyes smiled at her.
Chapter Fourteen
Nanny shooed the gentlemen on their way and ushered Amanda back to her bedroom. Tomorrow, the old nursemaid declared, missy might be permitted downstairs to take luncheon with the viscount and his cousin, although there was no guaranteeing the quality of the meal with the housekeeper doing the cooking.
And tomorrow, Nanny muttered on her way out, the countess had better come home, for all their sakes.
"She's right, you know," Daniel told Rex over a glass of sherry in the formal drawing room.
"That Miss Carville, Amanda, will be vastly improved by tomorrow? She has made a great recovery, hasn't she? The lady looks as if a gust of wind could blow her away, yet she has withstood the storm. I think she is brave, for a female. Don't you?"
Daniel scowled over his wineglass. "I think you aren't thinking with your head. What I meant is Nanny is right that you need a proper chaperone here. Not good for the gal to be alone with us, you know."
"Why? We're here to help her, not destroy her health altogether."
"When did you get so dense? It's the chit's reputation that has Nanny in a swivet, not her health."
"When did you start worrying over the punctilios of polite society?" Rex countered. "And you such a pillar of respectability. Wasn't it you swilling gin in a sty of swine a day or two ago?"
"I never said I was a model of proper behavior, and that's the problem. Neither one of us is fit company for a gently bred female. A young, unmarried female," he added, in case Rex had forgotten.
Rex raised his glass to that. He could barely trust himself not to bash her door in just to see her angel's curls and sweet smile. Of course he wouldn't stop in the doorway; not in his dreams, at least. In reality, he would never step over the line, figuratively or not. He did know the dangers, without any reminder.
Daniel was going on: "Rumors are already starting, that you're setting her up here as your mistress."
"Damnation!" Rex might wish it, but how dare anyone speak so ill of Miss Carville. And of him. "They think I would ruin a lady? And bring my lover here to the countess's house? What kind of loose screw do they take me for?"
Daniel hunched his broad shoulders. "A spy and a slime, same as me. It's a bad reflection on your mother, too, or that's what the clucking tongues will say, with Aunt Margaret turning a blind eye on the situation."
"The countess is not even here!"
"Exactly. I suggest we change a few minds tonight."
Rex squeezed his still-swollen nose. "I am not ready for another bout of fisticuffs. And I do not see how drawing anyone's claret will change the ton's opinion of me or Amanda. Or Lady Royce." Although the last was the last on his list of worries.
"Fighting won't, but if you are seen out and about, at the clubs, a party, something fashionable, people will see that you aren't hiding away, slinking in shadows. You have to assure them that you and Miss Carville are mere house-guests together, strangers under one roof, only until her health is restored and her situation is resolved."
"That is what we are, strangers to each other."
Daniel rubbed at his ear. "Best if you tell people she's been near unconscious, under constant care of nurses and maids, which is almost true. You can spread that around Lady Arbuthnot's daughter's come-out ball tonight. Your mother would have been invited. Bosom bows, don't you know."
How would Rex know the countess's friends? "A ball? You and I?"
"Actually, I thought you'd toddle 'round by yourself."
"Think again. If I go, you go. Or else people might think you are back here, seducing the lady."
Daniel smiled at the idea. "They might, mightn't they?"
Rex vowed not to leave his cousin alone with Amanda ever again. "You are coming. We'll do the pretty, act unconcerned, and tell people that Amanda is sick abed with Nanny watching, without bending the facts. Now that I think on it, going out might serve other purposes. We might learn something about Sir Frederick, too."
"And we might get a better meal than the housekeeper here can provide. I hope your mother gets home soon, with her cook."
Rex was looking forward to the countess's return about as much as he looked forward to putting himself on display at Lady Arbuthnot's. Both were necessary evils.
Daniel was starting to pull at the neckcloth Murchison had tied in an Oriental knot. They were barely through the receiving line where Lady Arbuthnot had lied through her teeth in greeting. The only truth she spoke was that unattached gentlemen were always welcome at debutante balls. Unattached gentlemen of means, they all knew she meant.
She promised to introduce them to suitable partners as soon as the dancing began-not her daughter, of course, whose card was already full. Her regrets for that circumstance were as red in Rex's mind as the rash on Daniel's neck. They, and their titles and estates, were good enough for someone else's daughter despite their reputations, but not her own little chick.
The men murmured their gratitude for the lady's kindness, and promised each other to play least in sight when she came matchmaking for her wallflowers. Rex was all for finding the card room. "It's the men who will know about Sir Frederick's debts."
"But it's the ladies we have to impress with Miss Carville's respectability."
They looked around the crowded, flower-bedecked ballroom, the young women like so many more blossoms in their frilly pastels. They were all fluttering lashes and fans, while their mothers gossiped, relating to each other every bachelor's interests and income. A great many-too many for Rex's comfort-calculating glances were directed at the cousins.
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