Chapter One
Winchelsea
Southeast England
Spring 1803
Patience Mandeley considered the wisdom of her plan,
and determined that either she was very courageous, believed
in guardian angels, or was quite tetched in the head.
At the moment, she leaned toward the latter. But what else
could she do? She could think of no other way to save her
younger brother Rupert from treason charges.
“Miss Patience, quit woolgathering, and let us be off to
the fair,” her companion of two days, Colette, told her, smiling.
“Time enough to worry about your new position later.”
Patience started, suddenly awakened from her reverie.
She slowly rose, gathered her bonnet and matching shawl,
and followed her friend out the door of the inn. Her plan
had to work. There wasn’t much time to help Rupert before
the magistrate found him.
Against her better judgment, Colette had convinced her
to enjoy Winchelsea’s Mop Fair before they began their
work in the morning. Colette, attired in a black walking
dress with light gray mantle, and Patience in deep blue with
a light blue cashmere shawl, strolled down the main street
joining the other fairgoers.
Patience kept watch for her brother, who might be lurking
in the shadows of the lively crowd. She had to get word
to him about her plan that would save him.
The twilight hours of the fair cast a dusky rose on the
street choked full of locals, travelers, merchants, and farmers.
Most of the noisy rumble headed toward the market
square, where a bonfire blazed merrily near rows of oxen on
spits wafting a delicious aroma to the hungry crowd.
The women made their way to the merchants’ tents, hearing
the vendors shouting over each other to entice their customers
with exotic perfume from the Far East, bright-colored
linen, or a sweet orange. The Annual Mop Fair brought a variety
of folk from several miles around who looked forward
to this spring event. Crowded streets slowed the ladies’ walk
as Patience searched and worried about her younger brother
and his troubles.
Examining the softest of silks and delicious gingerbread
occupied the ladies for a time until they heard a loud voice
halloing the multitude to the Wild Beast show. The crowd
surged forward, pulling Colette in its wake. Patience started
after her friend but stopped suddenly.
Someone tugged on her skirts. “Lady, can ye help me
find Bella?” a pitiful little voice asked.
Startled, Patience glanced down to find a forlorn small
child with tear-stained cheeks, clutching a wooden doll.
Four or five at the most, the girl peered at Patience from beneath
her tattered gray day cap. She looked to be a sweet
tyke, dressed in a faded blue frock, well-worn shoes, with
long, disheveled gold curls bobbing down her back. Patience
was always lost when it came to children and animals,
and the little girl caught at her heart.
“Hello, little one. What’s your name?” Patience inquired,
removing a handkerchief from her reticule. She knelt down,
and after wetting a corner of the lacy white square, she
rubbed at the child’s dirty face and wiped away her tears.
“Me name’s Sally, and I need to find me Aunt Bella. Do
ye think she’s lost too?” the girl sniffled.
Patience smiled. “No, your aunt must be very worried
and looking everywhere for you.” Confident they would
find the child’s relative somewhere nearby, she tucked the
handkerchief in her sleeve and held out her hand. “Come,
let us see if we can find her,” she told the small girl as they
walked together toward the bonfire.
“What’s yer name?” the little girl asked, her head cocked
to look up at Patience.
Patience hesitated before revealing the name she had
chosen for this masquerade. It simply wouldn’t do for
anyone to learn Patience’s true identity. Looking down at the
small child, she told her, “Patience Grundy.” She noticed
Sally clutched something to her chest. “Is that your doll?”
Sally’s eyes opened wide and an innocent smile hinted at
missing teeth. “Me baby is Jane. See here, Miss Grundy,”
she said as she held her unclothed wooden doll for Patience
to get a closer look at four sticks and a wooden ball for
a head.
Patience’s eyes widened in consternation. “Does your doll
have any clothes?”
“I couldn’t find any.” Sally shrugged her thin shoulders.
“Someday, I’ll ha’ a baby with lots of clothes and hair. But
me aunt says I ha’ to be a good girl. But I’m always a good
girl.” She frowned, obviously confused by adult logic.
They reached the boisterous crowd in the square who
were enjoying the fiddle music, shared ale, and succulent
dripping roast pig and oxen meat. But though Patience
examined the merrymakers intently, no one appeared to
be looking for lost kin. The tiny little hand in hers firmed
her determination.
She was about to ask Sally to describe her aunt, when
they reached the fiery pier surrounded by those seeking
warmth on this damp spring night. Just as Patience released
the little girl’s hand briefly to adjust her bonnet, a foxed
young man pushed past them and knocked Sally toward
the flames.
Patience uttered a shriek and lunged for Sally but a gentleman
nearby proved faster. He grabbed the child before
she could feel the heat’s sting. As the stranger lifted the child
up and away from the blaze, Sally squealed in delight.
Breathless with relief, Patience watched the gentleman
set the child down safely and told her, “You must be more
careful, little one.”
His concerned voice invoked a warm smile of gratitude
from Patience. Before she could express her appreciation, a
young man interrupted them, handing a black cane with a
gold tip to Sally’s rescuer.
“Lord Londringham, you dropped your cane, over there.”
The pale, pleasant-featured man gestured over his shoulder
to the firepit.
“Thank you, I had forgotten it.”
Patience dropped her jaw.
It was he, Lord Londringham, her new employer—and
her enemy. What was he doing at the fair? Patience had assumed
that nobility would have no interest in local events.
She was obviously proved wrong.
Once in his household as the new still-room maid, she
would need to try to be inconspicuous if she was to complete
her mission. Given her purpose, she wanted to spend
as little time as possible with him this night.
The earl, dressed in black, returned his attention to Patience
with a quick nod. “If you’ll forgive these circumstances, I am
Lord Londringham. Madam, you should watch your daughter
more closely. She could have been seriously injured.” Censure
was implicit in his tone and manner.
Still shaken by his presence, Patience could only manage
to sputter indignantly, “I . . . I assure you, sir, I am in the
habit of taking care of those in my custody, but a man—”
“Where’s Jane?” Sally cried, effectively suspending Patience’s
defense.
Lord Londringham looked inquiringly at Patience.
“Her doll,” she responded flatly as the child tugged on Patience’s
skirts.
With a quick look around, the earl spotted the ravaged
wood figure by the fire. He picked it up and showed it to
the child.
“Was this your doll?” he asked. At Sally’s sad nod and trembling
lower lip, the earl told her gently, “She could not be rescued,
but might your mama allow me to purchase you a new
doll?” He raised his eyebrows at Patience, his gaze inscrutable.
Patience stared in amazement, her lips dry at his intense
stare. The man was a chameleon, either gentle and soft-
spoken or an arrogant toad. He really should tread the boards
with his talent, she thought. He was certainly handsome
enough, with dark brown hair, penetrating blue eyes, a lean
face, and square jaw. Oh, but she was becoming distracted.
She must keep her mind on her plan. Nothing else mattered.
“Madam, do I have your permission?” He threw the
charred remnants of the doll back into the fire and turned to
Patience for acquiescence.
His dark face impassive, she knew why he made such a
good spy. She blinked in confusion. What had he just said?
Something about her daughter? “Oh, but—” belatedly she
began to explain.
“Of course ye may, right Mama?” Sally smiled innocently
up at Patience, who raised her eyebrows and dropped her
jaw. The little minx wanted to pass off Patience as her mama
in order to get a new doll.
She hesitated to admonish the child, then well aware the
earl stood nearby quietly watching, told the little girl
sweetly, “Sally, I told you I would buy you a doll. And we
really must not detain this kind gentleman any further. Remember,
we must search for Aunt Bella.”
His smooth voice disrupted her thoughts, startling her.
“Perhaps I could assist you in purchasing a doll for the child
and your search for Aunt Bella.”
Patience put a hand to her head. How ever was she to
endure his company, even for one moment? He was not
truly considering joining them. Did he not have any spy
work to do?
She hid her trembling hands in her skirts’ pockets. Being
so close to the one who was possibly guilty of causing harm
to her brother, she had to bite her lip to stop from pronouncing
him the rogue she knew him to be. Before Patience
could reply negatively, Sally answered for her, running to
his side.
“Oh, please, me lord. I would really love a new doll. E’en
though I’ll miss Jane. And ye can help us find Aunt Bella
too.” Her sweet supplication would have felled Goliath
faster than David’s stone.
Patience watched in surprise as he bent down toward Sally.
“Then we are agreed.” When the earl smiled at Sally, Patience
saw the child’s face light up.
“Oh, yes, please, sir,” Sally whispered, then turned to Patience
with a smug look. “Coming, Mama?”
Patience uttered, “Of course, sweetheart” through gritted
teeth while following the little lamb leading the big bad wolf
off to find a doll. Patience was beginning to believe Sally
didn’t even have an aunt.
Surely this evening was getting a bit out of hand. Resolved
to once more control the events, Patience hurried after Sally
and the earl, noting they had already exchanged names. She
had to admire the undivided attention the earl showed the
child. But she was not fooled. She knew the man would have
helped sell Joseph to the merchants. Her brother James’s
sermons not forgotten.
After the little girl had tried repeatedly to pronounce his
last name without success, she announced decidedly, “I’ll call
ye ‘Mr. Long.’”
The earl threw Patience in a panic when he turned his
dark blue study in her direction. “Might I know your name,
madam? Surely I cannot call you ‘Mama.’”
She knew his smile was deceptively pleasant for Sally.
Sally cut in. “Me mama’s name is Miss Grundy.”
Trying to remember her “new” last name and hearing the
word “mama” in the same sentence disconcerted Patience
but not as much as the earl’s thorough scrutiny of her before
inquiring, “Should that not be Mrs. Grundy?” in a low voice
that sent warm sparks to her cheeks.
Mortified, her mouth dropped open before she quickly
recovered. “Of course. My husband died, soon after we
married.” She wet her lips in despair. That didn’t sound
right. “Sally is really my stepdaughter.” Yes, much better, she
thought. She really needed to be rid of his presence and to
regain her composure.
Thankfully, he chose not to pursue further inquiry. “Mrs.
Grundy, what does Aunt Bella look like?”
“Look like?” Patience asked distractedly, trying to think
of an answer.
He chuckled softly, causing her to stare at the softening
of his features. “Yes, Aunt Bella. Surely you know what
the woman looks like?”
Shoulders back, she bluffed her way into a response.
“She’s rather difficult to describe, rather ordinary.”
Desperate, Patience searched the crowd looking for
anyone who could pass as Sally’s aunt. She determined to
carry Sally if necessary into the crowd, hoping to lose the
earl and his interest in them behind.
She spotted a middle-aged woman in black and pointed
to her. “Sally, I think I see Aunt Bella over there. Come
along, dear.”
But the child frowned in confusion. “But, Mama, that’s
not Aunt Bella.” Suddenly, the sound of the merry-goround
caught Sally’s attention, and immediately dolls and
aunts became yesterday’s candy. She pulled at the earl’s arm.
“Can we go on the merry? Oh, please! Please, Mr. Long?”
Sally pleaded.
“I don’t see why not, as long as your mama approves,” he
told her, looking back at Patience a few steps behind them.
She stared at him in bewilderment and found herself nodding.
She should have been content to have the opportunity
to study her enemy this closely, but could not quite reconcile
this man with the image of the purveyor of evil. But
what did she really know of him? Unnerved, she could not
suppress a shiver.
Unfortunately, the earl must have seen her tremble, for he
immediately removed his coat and placed it around her
shoulders. “It is certainly a chilly night after the recent rainfall.
Let us take the little one on a ride. Then we will look
for Aunt Bella.”
Sally and the earl walked over to the ride, while Patience
followed slowly, enveloped in a musky cocoon of warmth in
his greatcoat. His strong, clean scent disturbed her, and she
knew not why. It worried her. The sooner she discovered
proof of the earl’s guilt, Rupert could be free of the treason
charges, and they would see the last of this devious man.
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