In historical society, individuals who appear socially disadvantaged may actually possess significant hidden power or influence, and those who judge others based on surface appearances often discover that their assumptions were fundamentally wrong. The story demonstrates how a woman dismissed as a poor, unchaperoned arrival was actually the powerful administrator of a wealthy estate, and how those who laughed at her arrival were forced to acknowledge her true status when she revealed her connections.
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The Duke Laughed When She Arrived Alone — Then Every Lord at Dinner Stood to Greet HerAdded:
The Duke laughed when she arrived alone.
Then every lord at dinner stood to greet her. The carriage arrived at a4, which was already 20 minutes later than propriety suggested, and far too early for the light to have given up entirely on the day. The winter sky over Ashborne estate was the particular gray of old pewtor, and the torches along the front approach had just been lit, their flames doing their best against a wind that clearly had other plans. The carriage itself was a source of mild entertainment for the footmen stationed at the steps. It was a perfectly serviceable vehicle if one's standard of comparison was 1,740.
The leather of the doors had been restitched at least twice. One of the brass fittings on the left panel had been replaced with something that was almost but not quite the same color. The horses were excellent, which was, all things considered, an interesting set of priorities. Inside, the Duke of Ashbborne was not at the door to greet his guests. He was at the top of the main staircase, which gave him the double advantage of a clear view of the entire entrance hall and the appropriate elevation for looking down at people, which was, his closest friends would have said, very much in keeping with his general approach to other human beings.
Julian Caendish, the fifth Duke of Ashborne, was 28 years old, famously handsome in the sharp-featured way that painters loved and people found slightly exhausting in person, and possessed of a wit that was genuinely clever, and deployed with the discrimination of a man who had learned very young that being funny at other people's expense was a reliable way to keep them at a careful distance. He had been doing it for so long that he had largely stopped noticing he was doing it at all. The carriage door opened. Lady Honora Vain stepped out without assistance, which was the first thing. There was no hand extended from inside the carriage, no maid following behind, no father or brother or husband materializing from the other door. She simply stepped down, adjusted her cloak with one hand, looked up at the front of Ashbborne's winter estate with the clear, unhurried expression of a woman taking stock of a room she intended to stay in, and walked toward the steps. She was perhaps 22, dark hair under a hat that had once been fashionable and still carried itself with considerable dignity. The cloak was good wool, well-cut, worn. The gloves, Julian noticed, because he noticed things and could not stop doing it. The left glove had a repair at the wrist.
The lace restitched neatly in thread that was close to matching, but not quite. He should have said nothing.
There were at least 12 guests arriving this evening, and he had greeted none of them personally, which was his standard approach, and which everyone had accepted as the particular privilege of a man with a dukedom to maintain and 3 years of accumulated social debt to avoid, he said something anyway. The scandalous Lady Honora, he called from the top of the stairs, his voice carrying beautifully across the marble entrance hall. because marble was an unforgiving acoustic surface. Arriving without a chaperon, "Have you finally run out of relatives willing to be seen with you?" Several heads turned. Two of the footmen found urgent business looking at the floor. Lady Honora stopped walking. She stood in the entrance hall below him with her chin level and her gloved hands easy at her sides, and she looked up at him for a moment with an expression he could not immediately categorize, which was unusual. He was generally very good at categorizing expressions. Then she reached up, adjusted the already perfectly positioned lace at her wrist, and said in a voice pitched with the same easy carrying quality as his own, "I find being alone far less exhausting, your grace, than being in the company of a man who enjoys the sound of his own laughter quite this much." Someone in the hall made a small, quickly suppressed noise. Julian looked down at her. She looked up at him. Neither of them moved for the space of perhaps 3 seconds, which was long enough for it to become something other than a pause. He smiled. It was the smile he kept for moments when something had surprised him, and he was aware of it, and he was choosing to let it show before he put the other smile back. "Touche," he said quietly. "Welcome to Ashborne, Lady Honora." She walked toward the stairs and he stepped back from the railing and that was when he saw it. She was passing below the landing torch and her cloak fell open slightly with the movement of the stairs and there tucked into the bodice of her gown with the particular deliberateness of something placed rather than stored was a letter. The wax seal was large and dark, the impression stamped into it visible even at this distance. He knew that seal. Hello, lovely. If you're enjoying this tale of hidden beauty and unexpected love, I'd be so grateful for a like or subscribe.
It helps me bring you more stories where pain shatters and true character shines through. And if you'd like, tell me in the comments where you're watching from.
I read every note, and your presence makes these stories come alive. He had not seen it in 11 years. He had not expected to see it in any number of years that might follow because the man whose seal it was had not to anyone's knowledge sent correspondence to anyone in a very long time or attended any public function or made his existence known in any way that the world could verify. Julian watched Lady Anora reach the top of the stairs, turn calmly toward the east corridor, where a footman was already moving to show her to her rooms, and walk away. He stood at the landing for a moment longer than he intended to. Your grace, his valet, Penworth, had materialized at his elbow with the flask of brandy he carried to all large gatherings against what he described as the inevitability of events. Will you be wanting? Not yet, Julian said. Very good, your grace.
Julian watched the corridor until it was empty. Penworth, your grace. Find out everything you can about Lady Anora Vain. Everything that isn't already in the usual gossip. The other kind. The other kind, Penworth repeated in the tone of a man who has learned not to ask follow-up questions. By dinner. By dinner. R. Dinner at Ashborne's winter estate was served in the great hall, which seated 40 and was decorated in the winter months with enough pine bow and candle light to suggest that the Duke's household had strong opinions about the season and the resources to act on them.
The table was long enough that the guests at the far end had to raise their voices slightly to be heard at the near end, which made the seating arrangements a matter of some social consequence.
Lady Honora had been placed at the far end. This was not an accident. Julian's housekeeper, following the understood preferences of the household, had put the unattached, title adjacent, financially ambiguous Lady Honora at the section of the table traditionally reserved for guests who were present out of obligation rather than desire. She was between a minor baronet from Shropshshire who kept talking about drainage systems and a young woman who appeared to be attending her first formal dinner and was handling this primarily by arranging and rearranging her silverware. Julian at the head of the table could see all of this. He told himself he was not watching her. He watched her anyway in the peripheral manageable way. He watched things he was thinking about while conducting the first two courses of dinner with his usual performance of effortless authority. He spoke to Lord Finchley on his left about the grouse season. He spoke to Miss Alderton on his right about the new assembly rooms in Bath. He laughed at the appropriate moments and asked the appropriate questions and was by any objective measure an excellent host. By the second course he had established to the satisfaction of the table that the season had been poor for grouse, that the bath assembly rooms were considered a success by most who had visited them, and that Lady Honora's posture at the far end of the table was remarkable. She was eating her soup with the straightness of someone who had been taught deport by a person who used books and took the exercise seriously. She was listening to the baronet's drainage commentary with an expression of genuine, if limited, interest. She had said something to the young woman on her other side that had made the young woman stop rearranging her silverware and actually eat. She had not looked at him once. The third course arrived, and Julian made a mistake. He did not, in the private, honest accounting he conducted afterward, fully understand why he made it. Perhaps it was the letter. Perhaps it was the fact that she had not looked at him. Perhaps it was the particular dynamic of dinner tables and the specific quality of attention she was generating at the far end by apparently doing nothing unusual. He made a remark. It was directed to the cluster of younger guests near his end of the table, and it was about independence, and it was about the question of a lady's value in the current season. And it was funny in the way that things are funny when they are pointed and the person being pointed at is not in a position to respond. It was funny the way a stone thrown at a distance is easy to throw. It was about her lack of a dowy. The table had been getting progressively louder through three courses of wine and warmth. It went quiet now with a specific quality of quiet. That means everyone has heard something they are not sure they were supposed to hear. At the far end of the table, Lady Anora set down her spoon.
She did it without hurry. She set it down and picked up her wine glass and took a small considered sip. And then she put the glass down. And then she stood. She didn't push back her chair with drama. She simply stood. And the movement was so unhurried and so certain that three people sitting near her stood partially as well before realizing they had done it and sitting back down. The table was completely quiet now. Honora looked the length of the dining room at Julian with the steady, unreadable expression she had given him on the stairs. And then she said in a voice pitched for the whole room, not just him. I wonder your grace if you've received any correspondence lately from the Earl of Witmore. A different quality of silence. Julian said nothing. His expression did not change because he had very good control of his expression and also because he was not entirely sure what expression was appropriate. He sends his regards, Honora said. And he asked me to tell you something. She paused just long enough. The debt is due. She sat back down and picked up her spoon. At Julian's end of the table, Miss Alderton said very quietly to no one in particular, "Who is the Earl of Witmore?" No one answered her, because most of the people who might have answered were old enough to know who the Earl of Witmore was, and were currently in the process of looking at Lady Onora Vain with expressions that ranged from startled to calculating to something that was very close to respect. Julian lifted his wine glass and drank from it.
His hand was perfectly steady. He had made sure of it. Penworth, he reflected, had not yet returned with his information. This was going to be a long evening. Sen, the fourth course, had just been served a removant and dressed vegetables that no one at the table was currently paying much attention to when the doors opened. Not the service doors at the side, the main doors, both of them, together with the particular weight of old oak moving on well-maintained hinges, which produced a sound that was not loud but was absolute, the kind of sound that stops conversation without trying. Ashborn's butler, a man named Gregson, who had been in service at the estate for 30 years and who prided himself on an expression that revealed precisely nothing, stood in the doorway and announced names. The first name was a Marcus. He had not attended a social dinner in 4 years following a dispute with the prime minister that had resolved itself politically, but not personally. He was 60, silver-haired, and walked with the unhurrieded authority of a man who had been one of the most powerful people in England for so long that the fact had become simply part of the weather. The second name was a baron, then an earl, then two more lords, whose names Julian recognized as men who had served in government roles so senior that their attendance at a private dinner in Derbisher in December was the kind of thing that required an explanation. Then three more. Then two more after that, eight men in total, entering through Julian's main dining room doors at half past the fourth course, none of whom had been invited, all of whom had clearly been expected by someone. Julian sat at the head of his table and watched them enter. They came in with the quiet, deliberate movement of men who knew exactly where they were going and had decided together that it was time to go there. They passed the length of the table, passed the younger guests, passed the baronet from Shropshshire, passed the young woman who had stopped worrying about her silverware and was now worrying about something considerably larger, and they went to the far end. They did not look at Julian. They looked at Honora. And then, with the coordinated dignity of men who had not coordinated it because they didn't need to, every one of them bowed. Not the shallow nod of social acknowledgement, not the polished half bow of a courtesy call. A full deliberate bow heads down, held for a moment. The kind of bow that meant something specific in a room full of people who understood what things meant.
At Julian's end of the table, Miss Alderton had gone entirely still. Lord Finchley was looking at his pheasant as though it might offer guidance. The young debutants who had been laughing quietly among themselves 20 minutes ago were now sitting with the careful conscious posture of people who have suddenly realized they are in a room where the rules are different from the ones they came in with. Honora received the boughs with the expression of a woman accepting something she had earned rather than been given. She inclined her head to each of them in turn, said something quiet to the eldest, who laughed in the way of a man hearing an old joke from a trusted source, and gestured to the chairs that the footmen who had appeared from somewhere with the rapid competence of people receiving instructions through means Julian had not authorized were already pulling out.
Julian sat at the head of his table. He sat there for the specific length of time it took to become entirely clear that he was sitting while everyone around him had either stood or bowed or both, and that the woman he had placed at the far end of his table as a social diminishment was currently hosting a secondary dinner of eight of the most powerful men in England from that position. He stood. It was the only sensible thing left to do. Honora, as though she had been waiting for it, and Julianne had the cold, clarifying suspicion that she had, in fact, been waiting for precisely this moment, looked down the length of the table at him. She raised her glass. You laughed when I arrived alone your grace, she said in the pleasant carrying tone of someone making an observation rather than a point, though it was very clearly both. Do you find it quite as funny now that I've brought the House of Lords with me? The dining room was perfectly crystallinly quiet. Then Lord Finchley at Julian's elbow made a sound that was attempting to be a cough and was not entirely successful. And then from somewhere at the far end the old Marquees let out a full genuine laugh, the kind that comes from the chest, and the tension in the room broke all at once like a window letting in air, and conversations started again everywhere simultaneously. Julian sat back down. He looked at his feeasant. "Penworth," he said very quietly. "Penworth," who had returned from his errand and was stationed 3 ft behind the Duke's chair with the brandy flask and the expression of a man who had just watched something he would be telling people about for the rest of his life, leaned forward. "Your grace, the information now, please."
Penworth leaned closer. He spoke for approximately 90 seconds in a voice intended only for Julian's ears. Julian listened. When Penworth finished, Julian was quiet for a moment. Then he said, "She's been administering the Whitmore estate for 9 years. Your grace since the Earl's health began to fail. All correspondence, all accounts, all land management, all political obligations conducted under his authority but by her hand. A pause. She is by any reasonable reading of the situation. The reason the Witmore estate is the most solvent private holding in Britain. And no one knows. The people who need to know it know it. Your grace.
Another pause. The people who laughed at her arrival did not fall into that category. Julian looked at his wine glass. I see, he said. Shall I have the brandy ready for afterward your grace?
Have it ready now, Julian said. Sue. The library at Ashborne was on the north side of the estate, which made it cold in winter and meant the fires had to be built up by mid-afternoon to be useful by evening. It smelled of old leather and beeswax, and the particular combination of pine resin and dust that accumulates in rooms where books have been living undisturbed for a long time.
300 years of Caendish Dukes had contributed to its collection with varying degrees of enthusiasm and taste, and the result was 16 floor to ceiling shelves that ranged from the excellent to the bewildering. Honora was reading when Julian found her there. She was standing in the far corner with a candle on the shelf beside her and a volume open in her hands. Her head tilted slightly to catch the light. She had changed out of her dinner gown into something simpler, and her hair was down, which he noted, and then deliberately stopped noting because it was the kind of detail that was not useful to him. She heard him come in the floor was old and had opinions about being walked on, and she turned without hurry. "Your grace," she said. "Lady honor." She looked at him for a moment, then looked back at her book, which was either deeply interesting or a useful thing to look at that was not him. The library, she said, is the best room in this house. Whoever chose these shelves had genuine taste, which I hadn't expected. My mother, Julian said. She added most of the east wall. He moved into the room. The rest is inherited mediocrity. That describes a great deal about this house," Honora said pleasantly. He stopped walking. Then, despite everything, he made a sound that was almost a laugh. "You are remarkably direct. I've found that indirect requires more energy than it's worth."
She closed the book, holding her place with her thumb. "What do you want, Julian?" The use of his name was deliberate. He registered it, filed it, and continued. I want to know who you are. Actually, you had the information by the end of dinner. I could see Penworth whispering. I know what you do, he said. I don't know who you are. She looked at him. The candle beside her made the light uneven on her face, one side warm, one in shadow, and she looked, he thought, like a woman who had been asked a question she was considering whether to answer honestly.
I am exactly who I appeared to be when I walked through your door," she said. "A woman alone in a repaired glove who arrived in a carriage that isn't new and doesn't pretend to be with a letter from the most reclusive Earl in England in your bodice." "Yes," she said. With that, he moved further into the room.
The bookshelves on either side of the corner where she was standing made the space narrow, and he was aware of this in the way that you are aware of geography when geography becomes relevant. He stopped when he was close enough that she would have had to step back to create distance. And he noted that she didn't step back. Why come here? He said to Ashbborne. You know my reputation. You knew what to expect. I knew what to expect. She agreed. That is not the same as being afraid of it. You could have simply sent the Earl's message. He asked me to deliver it personally. She tilted her head. He said that you respond better to things you can't ignore, Julian looked at her. And you? I was curious, she said. And there was something in the way she said it, simple, undecorated, that was more honest than most things he had heard in a long time. I had heard a great deal about the Duke of Ashbborne. The wit, the coldness, the way he keeps every room at arms length while simultaneously requiring it to attend to him. She looked at him steadily. "I wanted to see if it was performance or character."
"And the jury is still deciding," Hanora said. He looked at her for a long moment in the candle lit corner of his own library. She smelled of rose water and something underneath it that was parchment and ink and the specific scent of a person who has spent long hours near old paper, which was either the most unusual thing he had found attractive or evidence that he had simply been alone too long. He put one hand on the shelf beside her. not blocking that would have been aggressive, and he was past aggression, had moved through it somewhere between the fourth course and Penworth's 90 seconds, but present, a closing of distance that left the decision of what to do about it with her. "Who are you, then?" he said quietly. under the Witmore correspondence and the Earl's seal and the eight lords who would apparently follow you into a derbashire dining room in December. Her hand resting at her side moved, not reaching, just shifting the way a person shifts when they are deciding something. Her fingers brushed the edge of his waist coat, light and brief, and then her hand was still. I am the woman you laughed at when she arrived. Honora said, "That is what I am under everything else." She met his eyes without apology. "A dangerous person to find attractive.
Wouldn't you agree?" he was going to say something. He had a response assembled.
It was, he thought, a good one. Honest and slightly vulnerable and likely to move the conversation somewhere that wasn't the careful circling they'd been doing for the past 4 minutes. And then from the corridor outside the library door came a sound, a sequence of sounds, to be precise, a foot connecting with something metal, the metallic object, a coal bucket, from the particular resonance of it striking the wall. A voice saying several things in rapid succession that were not appropriate in a ducal household, and were muffled somewhat by the closed door, but not muffled enough. Then silence. Then a careful knock on the library door. Your grace, said Penworth's voice, from the other side of it, with the dignity of a man who has just knocked over a coal bucket and is pretending this is entirely unrelated to anything. Lord Finchley is asking for you in the east drawing room. Julian looked at Honora.
Honora pressed her lips together. The expression on her face was one he had not seen before. It was the expression of a person who is very carefully not laughing which required significant effort and was not entirely successful around the eyes. Your valet, she said, has exquisite timing. He has terrible timing, Julian said. He has always had terrible timing. He knocked over an entire sideboard in 1767 and blamed the cat. Do you have a cat? I did not at the time have a cat. He stepped back. He has been with me 21 years. He is irreplaceable and I intend to tell him so never. Onora smiled. It was the first full smile he had seen from her. And it was in his private assessment worth having arrived at through the exact difficult route they had taken to get here. "Go to Lord Finchley," she said, and opened her book again with the ease of a woman settling back into something comfortable. He went to the door. At the door, he stopped. Lady Anora, "Yes, I owe you a significant apology. I intend to deliver it properly. Tomorrow, if you're willing," she turned a page.
"I'll consider my schedule," she said without looking up. "It's a very good apology," he said. "I've been composing it since the soup course. Then it should be quite polished by morning." Hanora said, "Good night, your grace." Woo! He arrived at her cottage at 10. It was not her cottage technically. It was a small stone house on the eastern edge of the ashborne grounds that had been made available to her for the duration of the house party, and it sat in a garden that someone had planted with the specific English intention of being beautiful in summer and merely structured in winter, which it was bare rose canes along the south wall, dormant lavender and rose along the path, a large oak in the corner that was magnificent, and knew it. Julian came on foot without Penworth, which had taken three separate conversations with Penworth to achieve and had ultimately required the deployment of a direct order, which Julian felt was excessive for what was a simple matter of walking half a mile across his own grounds. He opened the garden gate and stopped. There were six men in the garden. Not six servants, six lords. four from last night's dining room arrival, plus two he hadn't seen at dinner. All of them seated on various pieces of garden furniture with the comfortable familiarity of people who had been there for some time. The old Marquees was in the only chair, which someone had brought out from inside for him, and he was reading a newspaper. Two of the others appeared to be engaged in a quiet argument about land management.
A third was drinking tea. They all looked at Julian when the gate opened.
The Marquees lowered his newspaper.
"Ashborn," he said pleasantly.
"Crestwood," Julian said with equal pleasantness. "Because the Marquest of Crestwood was 63 and had been in government since Julian was 12, and was not a man you addressed any other way if you had the use of your faculties."
"Lovely morning," Crestwood said. "It is," Julian agreed. Come to speak to Lady Honora? That was my intention. Yes.
Crestwood folded his newspaper with the deliberation of a man in no particular hurry. We've developed a fondness for her garden, he said. The air is good, quiet, nowhere near as much noise as last night's dining room. He looked at Julian over the folded paper with the expression of a man who had been making assessments of other men for four decades, and was currently making one.
You're going to apologize?
Yes, properly. I have prepared something, not a prepared apology, Crestwood said with a tone of a man dismissing a flawed proposal. Prepared apologies sound like prepared apologies.
She'll hear the preparation and not the apology. He refolded the newspaper the other way. Say what you mean and leave out everything else. Julian looked at him. Is this? Julian said carefully. A standard part of the process. There's no standard process, said one of the others from behind a teacup. We simply find that it goes better when the Duke hasn't thought too much about it. There have been other dukes then. Oh, several, Crestwood said pleasantly. She's worth the trouble, Ashborn. The question is whether you are. Julian looked at the six men arranged comfortably across the garden of the cottage on his grounds, and he felt something that was not quite humiliation, but was its more useful cousin. The specific feeling of a man who has been weighed in a balance he didn't know existed and is currently waiting for the result. "Right," he said. "May I go in?" Crestwood opened his newspaper again. Doors unlocked. The cottage inside was warm and smelled of tea and wood smoke and the faint underlying scent of rose water that he was apparently going to associate from now forward with libraries and candle light. Onora was at the small writing desk near the window, a letter open in front of her, a pen in her hand. She looked up when he came in. He had planned on the walk over not to plan. He had planned to be honest without architecture.
He was aware this was a slight contradiction. I was a fool, he said.
She waited. Not the ordinary kind, he said. The specific skilled kind that requires years of practice. The kind that builds a perfectly constructed fortress of wit and coldness and then uses it to dismiss things it can't categorize. Because dismissing is easier than not knowing. He looked at her steadily.
You walked through my door and I didn't know what to do with you, so I did what I always do, which is make it small and step back. Honora set down her pen. You were lonely, she said. Not cruy. Simply, "Yes," he said. "For a long time, long enough that I stopped recognizing it as a state that could change and started treating it as a feature." She looked at him for a moment. Crestwood told you to say what you mean and leave out everything else. He did. Yes. And this is you following that advice. This is me trying to Julian said, "I'm not entirely sure I know how. I have spent a considerable number of years being very good at the other thing." Honora was quiet. She turned slightly in her chair toward him, which was something. "What did you mean?" She said by this coming here the apology beyond the apology. He crossed to the chair near the fireplace and sat in it which put them on the same level which was intentional. I meant that I would like to stop performing at you. He said I would like to know what you think about things. The Whitmore estate, the political situation, the book you were reading last night. He paused. I would like to have a conversation where neither of us is trying to win. You haven't tried to win since the library. Honora said, "No," he agreed. I ran out of the inclination around the time the Marcus bowed to you.
Something crossed her face warm, brief.
The expression of a person hearing something that answers a question they had been asking in a different form for a while. The debt, she said. The Earl's message. Do you know what it means? I owe Whitmore a significant favor.
Something from a long time ago that I am not going to explain in detail because some things should stay where they are.
He looked at her. I assume the favor is this coming here. Seeing what I was like, letting me make a fool of myself in front of eight lords and a dining room full of witnesses. He said Hanora told him that you were the most interesting person he'd met in 40 years and also the most cowardly about it and that someone ought to make you stop hiding behind the wit. She tilted her head. He was fond of you. I was fond of him, Julian said. I handled it very badly. You could write to him. I intend to. He looked at his hands then at her.
I would like, if you're willing, to earn the right to come to this garden without needing six lords as a prerequisite.
Hanora looked at him for a long moment.
The morning light through the cottage window was thin and clear and entirely honest. The season is 6 weeks, she said.
I'll be at Ashborne for most of it. I'm aware that 6 weeks of dinners and assemblies and the kind of public company that you find exhausting and I find useful, she held his gaze. You would have to manage it without the frost. I will manage it, he said. Badly at first probably, but I'll manage it.
And if you see me talking to someone you don't know, I'll assume, Julian said carefully, that you have excellent reasons, and that those reasons are none of my business unless you choose to make them my business, and that the correct response is to ask rather than to perform. Onora was quiet. Then she stood and crossed to where he was sitting and stood in front of him. Stand up, Julian," she said. He stood. She took his hand, not romantically, practically, the way a person takes a hand who is about to show another person something, and walked him to the window, where, through the glass the winter garden was visible, and in it the six lords and Crestwood reading his newspaper, and the bare rose canes along the south wall, and the December light coming down thin and clear on everything. This, she said, is what I am. She looked at the garden and then at him, not the estate work, not the Earl's seal. This the people who stayed when everything else fell away.
She looked at him steadily. I need you to understand that that I have never needed to be chosen. I have always simply been worth it and waited for someone who could see the difference.
Julian looked at her. He looked at the garden and the lords and the bare roses.
Then he looked back at her and said, "I see it." The cottage was quiet. Outside, one of the lords appeared to be attempting to explain something to another lord using hand gestures, and the oak tree in the corner was doing nothing at all magnificently. "There is a dance at the assembly rooms on Friday." Julian said, "I will be attending. I will not be mocking anyone's arrival. I will attempt to be at minimum the second most interesting person in the room. Only the second.
You'll be there, he said. I'm working with realistic expectations. Onora's hand tightened slightly in his. Then she let go and walked back to her desk and sat down and picked up her pen. Friday, she said without looking up. Friday," Julian agreed. He let himself out of the cottage, through the garden, past the Lord's Crestwood, did not lower his newspaper, but he raised one hand in something that was not quite a wave, but was acknowledgment, and through the gate, and back across the winter grounds of Ashborne toward the house. The air was cold and smelled of frost and pine.
The morning was very bright. He had not, he reflected, planned any of what he had said. He had simply said it. This was, Crestwood would probably tell him, the beginning of something. He was inclined to agree. On Friday, he arrived at the assembly rooms first. When Honora walked in alone, in the same cloak, the same repaired glove, with the same unhurried certainty she brought to every room she entered. He was already at the door. He offered his hand. She looked at it, then at him, then she took it, and they walked in together. And Julian Caendish, the fifth Duke of Ashbborne, who had not been led in a dance by anyone in 11 years, let her set the steps. He followed without difficulty. It turned out to be remarkably easy once he stopped pretending it wasn't what he wanted. Have you ever watched someone be dismissed and then seen the room shift when the truth came out? Or have you ever been the one dismissed, waiting for people to look again?
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