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Three Weeks With Lady X(24)



The gatehouse has been cleaned, with some very basic furnishings  installed, as I did not know whether you would care to hire a  gatekeeper.

India

Dear India,

I was referring to a man's wish to pleasure himself under the covers in  the dark. Pistlethorpe treated his tool to a vigorous dubbing nightly in  such a manner that every boy in the house knew it. Do women do the  same? Were you sent to school?                       
       
           



       

I suspect that marquess's daughters are too delicate and precious to  leave the parental eye, but I have no idea. My sisters were kept at  home, but then we were all special cases.

Thorn

Dear Mr. Dautry,

You may not write me in this manner or I shall cease to send you notice  of what I am doing with your estate. I will simply forward the bills.

Lady Xenobia India St. Clair

Dear India,

I surmise from the irritation in your letter that ladies do not lie  about at night touching their softer parts, which is a huge loss on  their part. You should try it. It's greatly relaxing, and you seem prone  to vexation.

Thorn

Mr. Dautry,

I enclose the following invoices: £100 for wax candles, £50 for lye soap, and £200 for gold braid.

Lady Xenobia India St. Clair

Dear India,

If you intend to fleece me out of house and home, at least send along a  word or two to blunt the pain. Surely what I wrote was not so  horrendous? I was under the impression that you and I were becoming  friends, in a strange sort of way. But I am sorry if you are genuinely  offended; I suppose ladies don't want to hear of such things, even in  jest. What the hell is all that gold braid for?

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

I have no objection to being friends if you at least attempt to be witty  rather than vulgar. The gold braid trims the dining room curtains. They  were hung today and they are magnificent against the silk walls.

India

Dear India,

I'm not very good at wit. It's probably to do with growing up on the  streets. Can you forgive me? I didn't say that I lie about pleasuring  myself while thinking of you, after all. It was merely a polite inquiry.

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

Why on earth would I share such private information with you? This is a genuinely curious question.

India

Dear India,

I know from the tenor of your letters that you do it. Put the satyr in  whatever room you've chosen. I'm sure he'll be inspirational, and I  don't want him anywhere near me. I've no mind to look at a man's arse.

I wish I was coming to Starberry tonight to see the gold-braided  curtains myself. I would try to get you tipsy again; I have fond  memories of our meals together.

Thorn

India had hired a housekeeper whom she'd had her eye on for some time-an  excellent maid working in a London house where her abilities were  underappreciated. She was younger than most housekeepers, but she had a  stern backbone and would stand up to her new master. And perhaps as  importantly, she would be a warrior on Lala's side.

Over the years, India had realized that servants played an important  part in a marriage, and not simply because a good cook made everyone in  the house happier.

Lala's bedchamber was, in India's considered opinion, precisely what any  lady would want. She had ignored Dautry's instructions and given her a  bed with barley-twist posts, hung in pale yellow silk embroidered with  pansies. There was a graceful desk under the window, where the mistress  of the house could glance out across the back lawn, with a view all the  way to the willow trees that graced the riverbank. The bedchamber was a  refuge, a place that would echo and replenish Lala's sweetness.

She had also purchased a large Sheraton wardrobe, with shelves of  different depths on which to place evening gowns, day dresses, and even a  special shelf for a presentation gown.

Some parts of the estate would necessarily remain untouched, at least  until the house had its own mistress. The dairies and the brewhouse were  still in wretched condition; the nursery was clean, but bare; she had  barely looked at the library, other than acquiring a few comfortable  chairs and a few boxes of books. She meant to organize the shelves, but  that would be all.

The privies were now clean, but even so she had set in motion the  establishment of Bramah-designed water closets, with a float system for  the water tank. She'd never seen one, but she'd read about them, and  although they were very new, and very expensive, she determined they  should be placed throughout the house, even though it would happen after  the house party.

After spending a decade living in the margins between householders and  servants, she had a keen understanding of the fact that life would be  immeasurably better for chambermaids if chamber pots could be retired  forever.

Because Dautry had given her no direction as to livery, she toyed with  the idea of putting his men in a deep red, simply to vex him, but in the  end she chose overcoats made of Italian wool in a blue just a touch  darker than a robin's egg.

Since the gardens had been ruthlessly pruned, they could not furnish  blooms to adorn the house. Her solution was to trade an exorbitant  donation on the part of Mr. Dautry to the parish church, which  desperately needed a new steeple, for the head gardener's freedom to  take whatever he needed from the flowerbeds that stretched behind the  vicarage.                       
       
           



       

Already the house was beautiful: glowing, elegant yet homelike, comfortable as well as luxurious.

Dear Thorn,

I offered the satyr to the village church, as you suggested. The vicar  was so offended that you have had to make a major donation to repair the  church steeple. Perhaps the Cellini should be relinquished to the Bank  of England, where it could wait in a vault for your further  instructions?

India

Dear India,

Is the dower house progressing? I think Rose would like a rocking horse.  She told me today that Antigone does not like the new governess (the  second I hired), and when I found the time to investigate, I learned  that the lady had already given her notice. We shall arrive with a  nursemaid and the much-beloved Antigone.

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

I have completed the mistress's bedchamber, which means the house is  very nearly ready. I was unable to find a rocking horse here; perhaps  you can locate one in London? The dower house awaits Rose.

India

Dear India,

I shall arrive in three days, Rose in tow. I sent my new butler out for a  rocking horse and he found only a rocking cow. Rose thinks the cow is  stupid, and I have similar concerns about the new butler. She named the  cow Buttercup.

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

A good milking cow is never a bad investment; your future offspring might like her.

You will be happy to know that the privies are now functioning, and the  bedchambers furnished. Yesterday Lady Adelaide and I left the Horn &  Stag and moved to Starberry Court.

India

Dear India,

Did I tell you that I've invited my friend Vander, the future Duke of  Pindar, to the house party? I know the two of you are a perfect match in  that you have the bluest of blue blood. Lately, I've been thinking that  I should give him advance warning. It's the least a man can do for the  brotherhood.

Like wearing garlic to ward off a vampire.

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

I'm worried that after Laetitia gets to know you a bit better, she'll  choose the local doctor-a very handsome young man-over you. I summoned  Dr. Hatfield to warn him of Lady Rainsford's imminent arrival. As you  may be aware, her ladyship requires daily medical attention for any  number of ailments. I promised Hatfield two pounds for each day that he  dances attendance on her.

India

Dear India,

That's probably the first expense of which I heartily approve. Here's  hoping that Hatfield can keep the lady in check. I met her only twice,  but I live in fear.

Thorn

Dear Thorn,

You really mustn't speak of your future mother-in-law in such a jocular  manner. Perhaps you should begin an earnest study of polite manners. It  would be a shame to do all this to the house, only to have Lady  Rainsford take a virulent dislike to you. As she is bound to do if you  don't play your cards better.

India

Dear India,

You are my trump card. I expect your next career will be in matchmaking.  At any rate, I am just back from meeting Laetitia in Kensington  Gardens, and I am too much at ease with the world to squabble with you. I  am feeling like a lucky man.

All the best,

Thorn

For some irrational reason, India had kept all of Thorn's notes. She  liked the way his sentences tore across the page in a strong, slanting  hand. By this point, she had a quite a pile, as they'd kept messengers  going back and forth to London for days. But she tossed this letter in  the library fireplace.

Of course, she was glad that he was happy. Thrilled. Lala would be able  to coax him into displaying his dimple on a daily basis. Lala was  adorable, that's what she was. Adorable the way little bunnies and  babies and all the sweet little things in the world were.