The Escapement of Blackledge: a novella (5 page)

BOOK: The Escapement of Blackledge: a novella
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The hired carriage stopped in front of the Sanderson home on one of the more fashionable streets in London. Mama Agnes peered out of the window. “Well. This should be a delight.” Her voice sounded as posh as anyone’s and dyed hair had been hidden beneath a fashionable turban
a la Orientale

“Indeed.” Helena clutched the invitation that Papa Fred had charmed out of Sanderson’s social secretary when she came to see the circus. The grounds of the home were lit with lanterns and filled with pleasure seekers. It would have been nearly impossible to sneak across it, even in her blackest suit. Camouflage came in many forms though.

Tonight she was disguised as a young lady of quality. It was a disguise made bitter, because that is what she should have been, had her family’s fortunes taken a different turn. Had her aunt not robbed them of their fortune. Helena shook it out of her head and followed her “cousin” from the carriage. Of course, no young lady of quality could show up to a ball on her own. Papa Fred, dear though he was, would never have been able to mix in this company.

And yet, even as she had that thought, a young lady of Indian descent dressed in the best fashion climbed the stairs in front of her. They passed the footmen, who did not even glance at their invitation, and then were within the house. It was a magnificent structure, with marble and gilding that would have made many a prince envious. The most stunning part though awaited them in the ballroom. The glamural that had been woven for the occasion made the entire room appear to be clouds floating in a night sky. The illusion made her expect to find the floor soft as wool, but beneath the drifting expanse Helena could feel the hard wooden boards of the dance floor.

At her side, Mama Agnes sighed. “My… This is worth seeing.”

Couples were lined up in a long row, dancing among the drifting clouds like angels. The musicians were hidden from view, no doubt in one of the cloud banks at the far end of the room. On either side of the room, rosy arches of clouds framed wide doorways. One let out into a dining hall, where a buffet was just in view. The other opened onto the balcony and the pleasure grounds.

Helena squeezed Mama Agnes’s hand. “I am going to step outside for a breath of air.”

“Very good, my dear. I shall explore the buffet.” With a pat of Helena’s hand, Mama Agnes wove through the crowd with the grace of a gentlewoman.

Helena made her way around the end of the dancers, admiring the grace of their figures. She could just remember one of the Christmas balls that her parents had thrown when she was a little girl. Mama had twirled like a top, laughing as she danced with Papa. She would have loved to see this glamural.

“Pardon me…” The Duke of Blackledge stepped in front of her. “I do not believe we have been formally introduced.”

Helena’s lungs seemed to shrivel in her chest. His eyes were every bit as blue as she remembered. It took all her will power to inhale at all, much less calmly. She lifted her chin. “If we have not been introduced, then I think you impertinent for speaking to me, sir.”

“Oh, but we are acquainted, I think.” With a bow, he said, “I am Weatherby Kendall, the Duke of Blackledge.”

A slender young man, with a shock of dark curls, appeared at Lord Blackledge’s elbow. “Good lord! You’re speaking to a lady, voluntarily.”

A flush appeared on the Duke’s cheeks momentarily. “Ah— May I present my good friend, Mr Corke.”

‘You look shockingly familiar. Have we met before Miss…?”

“Troyes.” Helena winced internally, but she was so startled that she had forgotten the name on her invitation. At least she had not given him her real surname. She offered her hand to Mr. Corke, and bent in a courtesy. “A pleasure.”

“Troyes?” Mr. Corke bent over Helena’s hand, his dark eyes twinkling. “Are you any relation to Frederick Troyes?”

“Only very distantly and he would not know me.” Helena withdrew her hand, stealing a glance behind her to see if Mama Agnes was in view.

“Good enough for me to claim an acquaintance. May I have the honor, unless you are already spoken for…?” Mr. Corke gave the duke a sidelong glance, with his brows lifted.

The Duke cocked his head and smiled a little, but the color was still high on his cheeks. “I am afraid that Miss Troyes has already promised me the next dance.”

Which put Helena in the awkward position of being unable to refuse. It was absurd, but the least conspicuous way to escape his attention was by submitting to it. Once they danced, she could claim being overheated and send him off in search of some punch. “Yes, I want nothing more.”

“Well, then you must come to my card party on Thursday. Nothing formal, just a small gathering of friends, but we might have enough to stand up a small dance.” Mr. Corke smiled at her, all charm. “My sister plays the pianoforte beautifully. Do say you will. You can dance with Blackledge again.”

It was difficult not to laugh in response to his manner. “Let me see how the first dance goes.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER EIGHT

Knowledge of Clockworks

 

As Weatherby stood opposite Miss Troyes, waiting for the dance to process to them, he racked his brain for what to do next. He had expected to find her committing a crime and yet, here she was, dressed for a ball. He had been upstairs and seen Lady Sanderson’s chamber — or rather, he had seen the door to it, which was guarded by two stout footmen. Was she planning to charm her way through. With her abundance of golden curls and her figure--

He was staring.

Weatherby lowered his eyes to the floor, feeling his cheeks heat. He cleared his throat and sought for some avenue of conversation. “I still have your glove.” Truly? That was what he chose to say to her.

She laughed, and the sound bounced like sleigh bells through the music. “I must say, you are not at all what I expected from a Duke.”

“So my mother tells me at frequent intervals.” The couple above them lead down the set and they countered by moving up.

“There are worse things than to be the unexpected.”

“Agreed. For instance, you surprised me with your knowledge of clockworks.”

“That
is how I surprised you?” She turned from him to trace a winding hay with the two gentlemen of their set.

“Among other—” Before he could complete his thought, Weatherby was likewise obligated by the forms of the dance to pay attention to both other women in their set. He danced a hay around them, but could not be said to pay attention. He could not simply ask her if she were here to rob the house. In these circumstances, she would say “no” and then complain and he would appear very much in the wrong. When the set revolved again and he found himself with Miss Troyes, he was no closer to an answer. Weatherby offered his hand to lead down the set.

“The weather is fine tonight, do you not think?” It was what all the young ladies at his coming out had talked about, but Weatherby was fairly certain that if George were here, he would be making mock at that very moment.

Her hand was small and warm within its white kid glove. “Indeed. Do you think we shall have rain?”

“Tomorrow, around three in the afternoon.”

“Oh? So specific. Do you take the Almanac?”

“No. I made a weather…” He cleared his throat and tried to return to the business at hand “How do you know Lady Sanderson?”

“My cousin is an acquaintance of the family.”

“Frederick Troyes?”

“Mm.” She turned with him to promenade back up and left him uncertain if that were a yes or a no. “And how do you know them?”

“Went to university with their youngest son.” She couldn’t very well be planning on robbing the place dressed like that, could she? He tried to picture her executing the movement required to vault out of his window and missed the next section of the dance. “Sorry. Terribly sorry.”

“You’ve gone red again.”

His cheeks warmed further. He touched his hair as they turned allemande. “That is a constant state for me.”

“I find it charming.”

She left him for a moment to trace the hay with the new top couple. Really, she was uncommonly graceful. She must be a dancer or, recalling her movement out of his skylight, an acrobat. To replicate that movement with clockworks would require a weighted pendulum action combined with— He missed the next step and had to jog to keep up. “Bother. Sorry. This is why I never dance.”

“Never? Then I shall count myself flattered. What distracted you?”

“I was thinking about how to make a clockwork automaton of you— Not, make you into one. I mean, one that could… That could move like you do.” The music blessedly came to an end and Weatherby gave her a bow, not disguising his sigh. “It is not hyperbole to say that I have never met anyone like you, Miss Troyes.”

She stared at him, head tilted a little to the side, with her generous lips parted. Miss Troyes took a step closer and lifted her chin to look up at him. The iris of her right eye had a speck of gray amid the blue. “Was I… Was I your first kiss?”

The room became unbearably hot. Weatherby coughed and looked at the floor. “That bad?”

“No… No, it was sweet.”

Sweat ran down his back, and not from dancing. He squeezed his eyes shut. What did one say to that?
I should like to kiss you again?
Or perhaps
Please come rob my home at any time and perhaps we could have tea?
Or— he opened his eyes, “Thank yo…”

She was gone.

Weatherby spun, rising onto his toes to see over the crowd. The ballroom was awash with gentlemen and ladies in their finery amid the apparent clouds of the glamural. Ostrich plumes stuck up above the crowd here and there, as if they were cloudlets. How could a woman with such vivid hair simply disappear?

He dropped back down to his heels and grimaced. If she were here to rob the Sanderson home as he believed she was, then she would either have been put off by his presence, in which case she was likely no longer on the property, or she was attempting to proceed with her plan.

If he was correct that she had been entering the rooms through their windows then that meant he would most likely find Miss Troyes under it. Weatherby headed for the door that opened onto the veranda. The intelligent thing to do would be to alert the household staff and have someone waiting upstairs.

He had absolutely no cause to be pursuing her. She might be a great beauty, and witty, and know something of clockworks, but that was not a reason to follow her himself. Weatherby jogged down the stairs of the veranda and onto the pleasure grounds of the house.

The window in question was at the back of the house. Of course, if she had departed, alerting the staff would cause a ruckus for no good cause. Better to make certain she was there first. And if she was, then surely he could subdue such a mite of a woman.

Weatherby rounded the corner to the back of the house. He stopped on the grass as the dew crept in through his dancing slippers. The grounds were empty. Weatherby sighed. Well, then. She must have departed, which was the best possible outcome.

Against the wall of the house, a shrub rustled without a breeze to move it.

Weatherby jogged forward and pushed himself behind the plant. Miss Troyes stood there in little more than her stays.

“Oh!” She snatched her dress from the branch she had hung it upon and held it in front of her.

“I—” He turned his head, lifting his hand to mask his eyes. “My apologies. I only…”

“Only what?”

Only wanted to see if she were committing a burglary. “Why have you taken your dress off?”

She sighed and the branch rustled again. The mulch crunched underfoot as she moved closer. Even with his eyes shielded, her bare legs were still visible. No— not bare. She was wearing buckskin trousers.

He jumped when she put her hand on his arm. “Lord Blackledge… I admire your modesty, but there is no need for it.”

Weatherby swallowed. Her hand was warm upon his arm. “It… I am— Whatever you are planning to do tonight, I beg you not to.”

She chuckled and slid her hand up his arm to his shoulder, then traced a line across it and up his neck. Weatherby’s heart was racing like one of George’s horses. He swallowed again as her featherlight touch brushed his cheek. “Please do me the courtesy of looking at me when you beg.”

By the warmth flooding his body, Weatherby thought that he must be very red indeed. He lowered his hand, glancing at her bosom and then down.

“Oh God.” The state of his breeches made the focus of his…attention painfully obvious, which only made him blush the more.

“Oh, my sweet, sweet man.” Miss Troyes laughed and rested her golden head against his chest. “How is it that you are such an innocent?”

“I doubt that question is sincere. And I am not an innocent, just merely… principled.”

She snorted. It was such an unladylike sound that Weatherby laughed with her. Her head was still bent, creating a spot of warmth on his chest. The curls had been pinned into a confection, threaded through with a delicate ribbon. Weatherby stared at his own hand, knowing it was a terrible idea, and yet… he touched one of the curls.

Miss Troyes raised her head, looking up at him with a crooked smile. She slid a little closer so that her body pressed against his in several interesting ways. “I have always believed that one should periodically examine one’s principles.”

BOOK: The Escapement of Blackledge: a novella
10.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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