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Authors: Julie Klassen

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BOOK: The Girl in the Gatehouse
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She stared, stunned at his coldness.

He pinned her with a steely gaze. “Can you think of one reason I should forgo a reasonable income on my own property?”

She swallowed.

“You are no relation of mine,” he continued. “I obeyed my father’s wishes in providing for your aunt after his death, though it galled me to do so. Why do you think I stayed away in London so much of the time? I did not like the woman in my house. In my mother’s rooms. But now she is gone and I am rid of any obligation to her. Extending charity to her wayward niece was never part of the bargain.”

Mariah was horrified to find her eyes filling. “I see.” She bit the inside of her lip to keep the tears in check.

He glanced at her, hesitated, then stared off in thought, his dark eyes speculative, and perhaps, softening. He spread his hands expansively. “If it were only up to me, Miss Aubrey, I might lower your rent, or at least allow an extension. But you see, the new tenant is a hard, unbending man. He shall be in charge for the next six months, though Hammersmith will no doubt administrate the new master’s wishes. You understand, I trust? It is quite out of my hands.”

Oh, to be in England now that April’s there.

– Robert Browning

chapter 6

As the April sun dispersed the morning mist, Captain Matthew Bryant strode across the grounds of Windrush Court, feeling like a man surveying his own land. He wore a new olive frock coat, striped waistcoat, cravat, and beaver top hat. And if the looking glass he’d consulted that morning could be trusted, he appeared every inch the gentleman.

A budding tremble of hope, of eagerness and pride, was growing within him. He could see himself here. Could imagine himself master of a grand estate like this. He wondered what his parents would say to find him living in such a place. What
she
would say. Would her certain surprise be coupled with admiration, with the acknowledgement that she had known he would succeed all along? Would she join him in exalting over the naysayers of his worth and suitability, her own father chief among them?

Ahead of him, Matthew saw a field of bluebells like a purple-blue sea. How lovely. He had spent so much of his life aboard ships that such sights still awed him.

A woman knelt there among the flowers. With her blue dress, he had almost missed her. Her dark hair was pinned in a thick coil at the back of her head. Her long fair neck curved gracefully as she bent over . . . what? . . . a letter? A book?

So still was she that she looked like a figure in a painting, a landscape of vivid green stems reaching up, her blue frock surrounded by bright bluebells nearly to her waist, her head bowed like the head of a lovely flower.

He stared, moved by the scene. Was she praying? Weeping? He stepped forward and a twig snapped. Her head turned at the interruption, mouth ajar.

Her profile was delicate, feminine – upturned nose, high cheekbones – and somehow familiar. Who was she? Prin-Hallsey had not mentioned a wife or sister.

“I beg your pardon,” he said, feeling sheepish to be caught spying. “I did not intend to trespass on your solitude.” He walked closer with hand extended to help her up, but she ignored it and rose to her feet unaided.

She gave her dress an ineffectual swipe with one hand. In her other, she held a folded letter. Her bearing, her gown, bespoke the lady, though her hands, he noticed, were less than pristine. Her complexion was fair. Her features finely formed. When she looked up at him, her eyes were large, amber brown, and fringed with dark lashes. He had spent so many years on ships filled with men that the sight of a beautiful woman still awed him as well.

Then he recognized her with a start. The girl from the gatehouse, who had assisted him in recapturing his horse. He was embarrassed to recall his ineffectual behavior that night, his display of timidity. But he was also grateful for her help all over again.

“It is you,” he began foolishly. “I almost did not recognize you. Without the cap, I mean, and . . . well, you were dressed so . . . That is, I thought you were . . .”

“A maidservant?” she said easily.

He winced. “Forgive me.”

“There is nothing to forgive. You came upon me in my jam-making attire.” She smiled. “Yet I recognize you out of uniform, Captain Bryant.”

What a charming smile she had. Such perfect teeth. He smiled in return, gratified she had remembered his name.

“And how is your horse?” she asked. “No worse for the experience, I hope?”

“No, he seems fine. Thanks to you.”

“I am glad to hear it.”

“And I am glad to happen upon you, so I might thank you again.” He gave her a deep bow, and she curtsied in return.

“I was happy to help,” she said, all warmth and friendliness. “I have always had a tender spot in my heart for horses.”

“Have you? I own I am still growing accustomed to the creatures.”

Her head tilted to one side. “You did not ride a great deal in your youth?”

“Not at all. I was sent to naval academy as a boy and have spent the greatest portion of my life aboard ships since.”

“Ah.” She nodded her understanding. “May I ask what brings you to Windrush Court? I had not expected to see you again.”

“Then you don’t know. I am letting the place for six months with an eye toward owning it one day.”

Her smile fell. “You, sir?
You
are the new master?”

Her tone rankled. Did she, like so many others, believe navy men had no right to an estate like this? “I suppose I am. What about that, madam, strikes you as so farfetched?”

An angry flush marred her fair cheeks. “I would not have thought it of you.”

“Why not?”

She stammered. “Because I thought you . . . I thought you a . . .”

His anger kindled. “Unworthy? Poor? A nobody?”

“No. I thought you a
gentleman
.” Her dark eyes flashed. “I see I was wrong.”

She turned and ran headlong across the field, unconcerned for the flowers she was crushing beneath her slippers. Yet, why did he feel as though he were the one who had just crushed
her
? Had she some designs on Windrush Court herself ? Why was she so angry?

Matthew sought out Hugh Prin-Hallsey inside the house and found him shooting a solitary game of billiards.

“The girl in the gatehouse,” Matthew began, still irritated. “Who is she?” He realized he had once again failed to ask her name. What an idiot he was. Especially where women were concerned.

Prin-Hallsey took his shot, then straightened to his full height, cue stick cradled in both hands.

“The lovely Miss Mariah Aubrey. The soon-to-depart tenant of the gatehouse, as I believe I mentioned. Some niece of my late father’s wife, by her first marriage. The woman let Miss Aubrey have the old place for nothing, though she had no business doing so.”

“Had she not some right, as your stepmother?”

Hugh grimaced. “You risk my sword, Captain, saying that. She was no mother to me. She managed to bewitch my father and seduce him into matrimony late in his life. Baleful woman. Never understood what the old man saw to admire in her.”

Matthew was surprised Hugh did not plan to honor the woman’s wishes in regard to her niece. “But she was his wife.”

“Yes, and had her widow’s jointure to prove it.”

Matthew pondered this. “Is there some reason Miss Aubrey would not want me here? We crossed paths a short while ago, and she seemed quite vexed with me for no reason I could fathom.”

Hugh gave him a wry glance. “Told her you were the new master, did you?”

“I may have done. She asked what brought me here, after all.”

Hugh nodded. “I recently gave her notice of increased rent.”

“What has that to do with me?”

“I may have let on it was your doing. Sorry to relegate blame, old boy, but you did say you wanted the gatehouse for a friend, if it could be had. And I didn’t think you would mind the misapprehension. You two are strangers, after all, whereas I cannot abide having a beautiful girl cross with me.”

“But . . . ” Matthew began. “We have met twice now. She did me a good turn at our first meting, and I should like to return the favor. What would it hurt to allow Miss Aubrey to stay as she is? At least until another tenant might be found to pay the higher rent.”

“It might hurt more than you think. Your reputation, for example.”

“How so?”

Hugh eyed him curiously. “What do you know of Mariah Aubrey?”

Matthew shrugged. “Nothing. Only that she has a way with horses and is a well-spoken young woman.”

“Then you are correct; you know nothing.” Hugh drew himself up officiously. “But the letting of the gatehouse is not your concern. I need all the funds I can raise at present. She can pay up, or she can go.”

Worried as she was about the future, Mariah warmly welcomed Jeremiah Martin as he entered the kitchen, still dressed in black. Without a word, he stepped to the kettle on the sideboard and spooned modest portions of mutton and potatoes onto his plate. He tucked fork, knife, and table napkin into his pocket, and then picked up his plate and carried it outside with him. She noticed he had left the door slightly ajar so that he could open it with his hook on the way out, as his lone hand was full.

When the door closed behind him, Mariah whispered to Dixon, “Did you tell him he could not take his meals with us?”

“Didn’t have to. He certainly never ate his meals with Mrs. Prin-Hallsey – that I can tell you.”

“But I don’t mind. I am no fine lady that – ”

“Of course you are, Miss Mariah. It is bad enough that you eat here in the kitchen with me.”

It was an argument they’d often had last autumn, until Dixon finally conceded to Mariah’s wishes. How ridiculous Mariah would feel eating alone in the drawing room.

Mariah stood at the window, watching as Martin placed his plate and himself on the garden bench, spread his napkin on his lap, and set his plate atop it. She wondered how he would manage to cut Dixon’s tough mutton chop. She observed with admiration as he lanced the meat with his fork, propped up the utensil with the inner forearm of his hook hand, and then commenced to take up his knife with his good hand and saw at the mutton with vigor. She wondered why he did not simply impale the meat with his hook, undignified as that might appear. Did he realize she was watching?

Suddenly self-conscious, she turned her attention to her own bland meal and left him to his.

A few minutes later, Martin stepped inside once more and glanced about. “Might I trouble you for the salt cellar? I don’t see it.”

“And why should you need salt, Mr. Martin?” challenged Dixon.

“Ahh. You see, I am accustomed to food having, mmm,
flavor
, Miss Dixon. A weakness in my character, no doubt.”

Dixon frowned darkly.

Oh dear
. Mariah rose swiftly and retrieved the salt cellar from the cupboard. “Here you are, Martin.”

While her back was to Dixon, Mariah spooned salt into her own palm before handing it to him.

He gave her a conspiratorial wink. “I shall do the washing up after, all right?”

“Thank you, Martin.”

Though Dixon would have scolded had she known, Mariah stayed behind to dry while Martin managed the dishes. His hook seemed to hinder him only when it came to the silverware. These he swished about the dishwater with one hand. Mariah checked each piece carefully before drying it.

“Did you know our neighbor enjoys a bit of fame?” Martin asked.

She glanced at him. “Hugh Prin-Hallsey?”

“I said fame, not infamy,” he huffed. “I meant Captain Bryant.”

She was instantly alert, though she tried not to show it. “How so?”

Martin braced a carving knife against the basin with his hook arm and scrubbed at it with the cloth in his hand.

“Mrs. Prin-Hallsey let me have the newspapers after she was finished with them. I’ve saved all the interesting articles about the navy and the war in general. There were several about Captain Bryant.”

“Really?” she murmured, hoping to sound nonchalant.

Apparently she failed, because Martin wiped his hands on the apron and pulled a piece of newsprint from his pocket. “Here’s one that might interest you.” Unfolding it, he read, “ ‘Captain Matthew Bryant, recently of the frigate
Sparta
, has lately returned to England after an absence of four years. Not only has Bryant achieved the rank of captain at a relatively young age, but he has also made a tidy fortune by the war. The reckoning of his prize money is said to surpass twenty thousand pounds. . . .’ ”

BOOK: The Girl in the Gatehouse
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