Rather fitting, that.
Another drink. Nearly finished now. How had that happened? Must ration out the rest, one tiny sip at a time.
What would Isabelle have thought of young Grimsby? She would have liked him, Ashland thought. She liked young people, clever people, and there was no doubt that Grimsby was clever. It radiated from those large eyes of his, covered by his spectacles. What had Olympia written? That he knew no scholar more perfectly grounded in the subtleties of Latin and Greek than Mr. Tobias Grimsby, and that his mathematics were without flaw. Isabelle, who had been well-educated by an exacting governess, would have had Mr. Grimsby to the drawing room for tea every afternoon. She would have taken pleasure in teasing him out, in discovering his opinions and tastes and family history.
Isabelle. If Isabelle were here, Ashland would even now be climbing the stairs to his bedroom. He would even now be changing into his nightshirt and dressing robe, dismissing his valet, knocking politely on the door between their bedchambers.
Ashland tilted his glass and let the last golden drops slide down his throat. A very slight vibration now caressed his brain, the edge of intoxication just perceptible at the rim of his senses. It was all he allowed himself, to head off the lust that assaulted him every evening at this hour, as he prepared to climb the stairs and fill his lonely bed.
Isabelle's body, white and rounded in the candlelight. Isabelle's flesh, yielding to his. Her little sighs in his ear, her fingers on his back, her quickening movements. The drive to climax, the shudder of release, the slow pulse of its aftermath. Isabelle's kisses on his unmarred skin, her body tucking itself in the shadow of his.
Ashland let the curtain fall back.
With exaggerated precision, he placed his empty sherry glass back on the tray and straightened his empty right cuff.
The hall was deserted. The servants had all gone off to bed, knowing the duke's preferences. He climbed the stairs alone, and alone he readied himself for bed, because the challenge of handling his own buttons and sleeves kept his mind fully occupied.
THREE
Emilie awoke from a profound sleep to a familiar sound: the rough, metallic rattle of the coal scuttle as a maid lit the fire in her bedroom.
She opened her eyes, expecting to see worn velvet hangings and rioting unicorns on a medieval tapestry, to see sunlight pouring past the cracks of her sapphire blue curtains and her escritoire covered with books and notes and pencil stubs. She put her hand out, expecting to feel the warmth of her sleeping sister.
But her hand found only the coolness of empty bedsheets, and her eyes found only a thick gray darkness smudged with the shadows of unknown furniture.
She flung herself upright.
"Sir!" A crash sounded from the fireplace, and then the clatter of metal on stone.
Sir.
Emilie covered her cheeks. She had taken off her whiskers last night, because they itched so abominably, but her head was encased in a long woolen nightcap and her body bundled in a purely masculine nightshirt. "I'm sorry," she gasped out, hoping the maid couldn't see her clearly. She brought the bedclothes up to her nose.
"I thought ye was sleeping still, sir," said the maid, turning back to the grate. She was nothing but a pale outline in the darkness; her basket of kindling seemed larger than her body. The grate itself was smaller still, which was of course natural, Emilie reminded herself, since Tobias Grimsby slept upstairs with the servants and not in the grander bedrooms below.
The grander bedrooms, the bedrooms for the duke and his family and their honored guests: paneled and papered and gilded, hung with silk and oil paintings, spacious and well furnished.
Emilie remembered few details from the night before, as she'd readied herself for bed, but she had a general impression of a clean space, plain and pleasant, with a few sticks of necessary furniture and a single window, curtained in striped cotton. The bedclothes beneath her fingers were smooth and woolen and unadorned. Comfort, not luxury.
"Have you the time?" she asked the maid.
"Why, I do suppose it's near enough six," said the maid, straightening. "There, then. Nice and hot afore ye knows it."
"Thank you."
The young woman turned and grasped the handle of her basket. "Ye'd best be up soon for breakfast, sir."
Breakfast? Emilie's mind was still aching with fatigue. Five hours' sleep had not been nearly enough to recover from the drama of the previous day. Breakfast? Her belly echoed with hunger, but she couldn't imagine pushing her heavy limbs out of bed and into her shirt and trousers and plain woolen jacket.
The maid left, banging her basket behind her. Emilie lay back down to contemplate the gray ceiling. Dawn was no more than a rumor beyond the glass. The wind, at least, had stilled for the moment, lulled by the approach of sunrise.
Breakfast. The duke was an early riser, then. And since early risers tended to look with scorn on those who weren't up at the first searing crow of the nearest cock, Emilie had better take the maid's advice and stir herself.
Half an hour later, her trousers buttoned and her whiskers neatly in place, Emilie arrived in the center of the great hallway. Dawn had finally begun to leak through the windows, a dawn of surprising strength and brightness, suggesting actual sunshine. Emilie took absent note of the classical dimensions, the polished marble, the depth and intricacy of the plasterwork. Ashland Abbey had likely been rebuilt a century or so ago, she judged, and at considerable expense. When Emilie was a child, she had been to stay with the Devonshires at Chatsworth (her mother had been a great friend of Lady Frederick Cavendish in her girlhood), and she felt echoes of its formal grandeur here, that sense of scale and proportion. Each gilt-framed painting was mounted in its place, edges exactly squared; each fold of drapery hung downward without a mote of dust to mar its color.
The breakfast room, Emilie knew, would be positioned to make the most of the meager Yorkshire sunrise. She rotated, took note of the angle of the light, and set off to the right: the eastern wing, she supposed.
She passed through one doorway and the next, a succession of impossibly perfect salons, ending in a grand corridor hung with portraits. She paused. A clink of china met her ears, followed by a low and resonant voice.
Emilie straightened her collar and stepped in the direction of the sounds.
"May I help you, sir?"
Emilie stopped and turned. The butler stood before her-what was his name? Simpson?-looking arch, his voice much sterner than his words, his bearing almost painfully correct. His white shirtfront might have been made of plaster instead of linen.
Emilie's back stiffened. She lifted her chin. "On my way to breakfast, thank you. If you'll excuse me."
"Mr. Grimsby," said the butler, laden with ice, "I believe you'll find that the staff breakfasts below stairs, in the service dining room."
The staff.
The blood drained from Emilie's face, and then returned an instant later in a hot flush that made her skin itch beneath her whiskers. She stared into Simpson's impassive dark eyes and willed herself not to flinch, not to betray herself by a single flicker of her eyelids. "Of course," she said, when her throat was calm. "Perhaps you could direct me, Mr. Simpson, at your earliest convenience."
He didn't turn. "Back down the corridor, Mr. Grimsby, and to the right. You'll find the service stairs at the end of the hall."
"Thank you, Mr. Simpson. Good morning to you."
Emilie turned and forced her legs to carry her along the echoing hallway. The service dining room, of course. This grand architecture, this clink of priceless china, was no longer meant for her.
I have dined at Chatsworth! she wanted to shout, over her shoulder. I have sat to table with sovereigns! I am a cousin to the damned Tsarina!
All right, a distant cousin. But nonetheless.
It was better this way, of course. She could conceal herself better below stairs. What if Ashland had noble guests, guests she might have met in some previous stay in Great Britain? At the duke's table, she might be seen and noticed. Questions might be asked. Among staff, she was invisible. Nobody noticed the servants.
And that was the point, wasn't it? To hide.
Emilie's shoes clacked hollowly on the marble tiles. She turned right and found the stairs at the end of the hall, descending into the unknown world below.
* * *
Twenty heads swiveled as Emilie passed through the doorway into the servants' dining hall. She was used to that sort of thing, of course: When a princess of Holstein-Schweinwald-Huhnhof entered the room, people generally noticed.