Lady of Spirit

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by Edith Layton




  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Also by Edith Layton and Untreed Reads Publishing

  Lady of Spirit

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  About the Author

  Lady of Spirit

  By Edith Layton

  Copyright 2016 by Estate of Edith Felber

  Cover Copyright 2016 by Untreed Reads Publishing

  Cover Design by Ginny Glass

  The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.

  Previously published in print, 1986.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher or author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This is a work of fiction. The characters, dialogue and events in this book are wholly fictional, and any resemblance to companies and actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Also by Edith Layton and Untreed Reads Publishing

  The Duke’s Wager

  The Disdainful Marquis

  The Mysterious Heir

  Red Jack’s Daughter

  Lord of Dishonor

  Peaches and the Queen

  False Angel

  The Indian Maiden

  www.untreedreads.com

  Lady of Spirit

  Edith Layton

  1

  It was not quite the meanest street of the lowest slum in London town. After all, the crowd of humanity that thronged the street, impeding traffic and overspilling from the crowded pavements into the cobbled road, clearly had change to jingle in their pockets and were obviously intent on buying some of the many goods and services being loudly hawked all about them.

  No, it wasn’t quite the meanest street. For even though the used dresses on the carts, loudly touted as having once adorned titled ladies, looked so well worn and weary that those noblewomen must have existed three centuries before, still their potential purchasers fingered the garments with a confident proprietary air, and made shrewd offers that never rose from empty purses or idle speculation. Similarly, those carts filled with thrice-descended gentlemen’s garments, the barrows loaded with displaced, chipped, and strangely mated sets of china, the wagons brimming with hats that had known so many heads that they had quite lost their own and sported mad and mischievous shapes, and the lines hung with quilts that had covered so many sleepers that now it took three of their number to comfort one, were all surrounded by interested, eager, possible customers.

  It was not the most degraded slum. There, there would be apathy and despair; here, there was custom and trade. It was also evident the citizens here had the money to eat. The scents that arose from the pavements even managed to transcend the natural ones emitted by such a press of closely packed humanity so clearly unacquainted with soap, so plainly unfamiliar with any quantity of water.

  However, the stench was not quite so unpleasant that the young servant in livery who rode on the side of the gentleman’s sporting curricle really had to hold his nose so high in the air as his master’s two chestnuts picked their way down the road. He certainly didn’t need to hold his free hand over that freckled protuberance as though he’d never encountered the like, especially since he’d been raised in just such a district himself. But now he wore a uniform, and acted in the heady position of tiger, or postboy, to his employer when he went out driving, and so rejoiced in the exalted duties of holding his lordship’s reins and watching his carriage whenever asked. And he had to have some response for the jeering, taunting, snickering packs of children who hooted and catcalled as they saw the expensive equipage creeping down their streets, and knew that his employer certainly wouldn’t countenance his doing what he itched to do, which was to leap down and plant each and every one of them a facer they wouldn’t forget.

  His master, driving the equipage, had no expression but cool polite amusement on his dark handsome countenance. But there was no way his tiger could hope to emulate that—his master was, after all, an original, a man among men, a complete object of worship to his youthful employee—and a fellow couldn’t mimic a god; it was enough that he was noticed by him. His master, after all, was the reason why no more than taunts reached the carriage, and no physical thing had touched them at all, although they’d traveled this day through districts where most men of property seldom returned with as much as they had set out possessing, in property or in person.

  For his master had more than a cold dark eye and a knowing manner, and any wise man would note it. He might only be in his third decade of life, and dressed in the latest fashion of closely tailored jacket, tightly knit buckskin inexpressibles, and high polished boots. But he wore an air of experience as well, and the garments were well cut enough to show the long lean body was thoroughly muscled everywhere, more than padding could simulate, and from far more than the gentlemanly pursuits of dancing, riding, or even sparring could account for. The hands on the reins were broad and strong, and though well tended, their clearly marked sinews and long thick traceries of veins showed that they were no strangers to hard work. His thick straight jet hair might be swept back from his high forehead in Corinthian fashion, the clear skin on his clean-shaven dark face might be scented with bay rum, his decisive chin might be graced with a deep cleft in the ball of the center of it to tempt the ladies to lose their good sense, but one look into the obsidian eyes beneath their strongly inverted V’s of black brows would warn any man to think twice about attempting to divest him of anything he wished to keep. No, his tiger thought proudly, a fellow wouldn’t fear driving through the teeth of hell with this master.

  But the other gentleman could not be more of a contrast to the vehicle’s driver. He was a young man, and the tiger, though several years younger, knew he had never been so young himself. For the curricle’s passenger, sitting straight on its high seat and looking with awe about him, made no attempt to disguise his blatant wonderment and enthusiasm as he watched this enthralling new world swirl past him.

  The young gentleman was either nearing adulthood or had already entered it—one could decide which was true from whatever expression his open countenance wore at the given moment. From the way he carried himself it was clear that he hadn’t had the time to grow used to his new-size lanky body and long limbs as yet. He was slender with fine straight light brown hair arranged fashionably about a long, pale, even-featured face that obviously had only recently lost the last of its spots. His eyes were a light pale blue and they gazed with wide unconcealed fascination on the crowds that milled about him.

  “I dislike ruining your pleasures, Theo,” the older gentleman said softly as he slowed his horses even more to avoid their marching over a merchant who took it into his head to follow a potential customer out into the road, waving a pair of striped trousers as an inducement to lure him back to his stall, “but I begin to think we should head back. I doubt you can find your needle in this haystack, especia
lly since your recollection of her is sketchy at best.”

  “No, no,” the young gentleman replied enthusiastically, “I recall very well. Anyway, she don’t look anything like anyone I’ve seen here yet. She’ll stick out like a sore thumb, ’pon honor, I promise you.”

  A trio of brilliantly dressed young women chose that moment to shriek and pout and blow kisses and curtsy to the dashing gentlemen they suddenly spied on the high seat of the curricle, and then each decided to outdo the others in her entreaties to the fine gents to come down and have a closer look—by pulling up skirts, lowering bodices, and showing generous peeks of ankles and thighs. They drew an amused crowd of onlookers to watch their attempts at public seduction, and the driver’s face assumed an expression of sardonic resignation. But he flashed a white-toothed smile of regret to the trio, and though seated, made a sketch of a bow to them, which pleased the crowds enormously, and there were cheers of “Well down, guv,” and “’E’s a man of taste, all right.” As his equipage passed them by, the trio of flyblown sirens was even louder in their own regrets.

  “Theo,” the driver said coolly to the back of his young passenger’s head as they left the young women behind and the crowd dispersed again, “put them out of your mind and be grateful fleas can only jump, not catapult. Now, set your eyes back into their sockets, take a breath to get your heart started again, and tell me how any female could stick out like a ‘sore thumb’ in this place.”

  “That’s just it,” the young man said cheerfully, “she don’t look nothing like that. She’s old, for one thing, and her hair’s always all skinned back, and devil take it, Cole, she looks like what she is, a governess. Now, wouldn’t a governess stick out in a place like this? No one here even knows what a governess is,” he continued blithely, sweeping his hand to encompass the scene, “so since her landlady said she’s out shopping, why, let’s have a look about before we go home, since we’ve come this far. There’s a few more streets to go yet. And you were right, Cole: now I feel a dog for having reduced her to this. So let’s give it a try. I don’t see how someone like her can get on here. She’ll starve—why, this is the meanest slum.”

  The young tiger smiled when he heard that, because it was absurd to imagine this might be the meanest slum. For there wasn’t anyone in the crowd who didn’t have at least the price of a meal or the coins for one of those heavy, succulent meat pasties, for example, which could see a fellow though an entire day, and half the night as well if he didn’t chew it well enough.

  It was true. A street away, the young woman who stood, irresolute, to the side of one of the barrows, locked in place even though she was continually buffeted by hurrying passersby, staring at a beef pasty as though the baker had miraculously heaped the crust up in such a way to spell out her own name, certainly had the money in hand to purchase one as well. But she held the coins in her hand until they grew as warm as the piping crust on the little meat pie, and yet made no move to let them cool in the baker’s wide stained apron pocket. For the rent, she was thinking despairingly, the rent surely needed the coins equally as much as she needed that pasty.

  When the baker turned to her with a wide gray-toothed smile, having let her look her fill until he decided it was time to make a sale, she smiled back and stepped back, and then melted away to be lost in the swirling crowd as though she’d never stood there longing so long for his wares. By the time he’d shrugged and turned to a livelier customer, who joked with him and gave him smiles and an opportunity to pinch her cheeks or any other portions of her dimpled person he chose, for a penny off a pie, he’d almost forgotten her, although he’d been plotting a way to give her a more extravagant discount. As a businessman he thought it only fair, since after all, she’d been more extravagantly lovely.

  He’d noted her all the while she’d thought herself unobserved, for he prided himself on being wide-awake, and never let an opportunity slip past him. She’d had masses of thick, wavy hair the color of his richest beef gravy, with bits of gold glinting in it in the sunlight, just the shade, he thought hungrily, of his own best chicken stock. Her eyes were huge and clear and of the lightest brown, near to almost gold as well. She’d been dressed soberly in blue, not expensive like a lady, he’d decided, but well, like an upper servant, almost prim. But she didn’t put off a fellow even when she didn’t smile, for her cheeks were jolly, round and pink, her lips pink and curved as well. Her figure was so trim, yet lavish where it ought to be, where he most liked it, that he quite willingly would have closed his stall for the entire quarter-hour, just as he’d planned, despite the trade lost as he made the trade he’d planned. But she was gone, and as a businessman he absorbed the loss, took stock of his less desirable new opportunity, and got on with business.

  The young woman appeared from out of the crowd again, quite unnoticed by the baker, for now she was all of three barrows down the street from him and so was obscured from his view by all the people walking, eating, and browsing at the other food stands. This time she looked quite wistful as she wishfully gazed upon a different vendor’s tray of mutton pies, still bubbling with juices as they simmered down to an edible, salable temperature on their rack. But this time too, she reckoned their cost, and knew again that they cost too dearly for her to contemplate buying.

  Still, she had to eat, that was clear. For, she argued silently with herself, what was the point of having two weeks’ rent money in hand if she couldn’t live to enjoy the rental of her room for that space of time? And she might find a position this very day, she thought, and so by the time that second week was done, she’d laugh thinking back on her unnecessary frugality today. Then, she suddenly decided, unconsciously stepping closer to one particularly nicely browned and softly puffing little pie, certainly there would be coins and to spare for such a treat.

  But though she withdrew her hand from a pocket of her skirts, it froze closed over her coins as she tore her gaze from the pasty and waited for the proprietress of the stall, a thick red-faced female, to finish with a customer, notice and then serve her. For, she then realized, she might not get a position this day or the next or the next, and those two weeks would come and then pass, whether she did or not. And, a silent voice scolded, she’d certainly be able to live out those weeks on her usual one meal a day. Then too, she well knew that by this evening, as usual, whatever was leftover merchandise would go far cheaper, since no butcher or baker fancied carrying home broken, stale, and unsold goods.

  The young woman sighed and put her hand back into her pocket, her resolute fingers still knotted tightly around the coins so that they wouldn’t be tempted by her frivolous nose or eyes to open up for such a strictly self-indulgent treat. So when the proprietress of the stall finished her transaction and turned around at last, pushing damp strands of hair away from her overheated face so as to better see her next customer, the young woman, in her embarrassment, dropped her gaze to the street at once, hoping she’d look as if she were searching for something she’d dropped there as well.

  And then she found it.

  It was as though she’d found a pirate treasure, and she stood quite still, not believing her eyes. It wasn’t a coin, which would have presented her with more of the problems she already had with those few coins she did possess, causing her to debate whether to spend it or hold it against the day when she had no more of its fellows. It was both more valuable and desirable to her just now than that. For what she saw was one orphaned, broken pasty that must have fallen from the rack and then rolled halfway under the rumpled meat-juice-stained cloth that hung over the table. Only one golden end of it peeked out from under the cloth, to hint at its presence, and it seemed no one knew of it but herself.

  It would be a simple matter, the work of a moment, to stoop, as though taking a pebble from a slipper, or picking up a dropped coin, or straightening a stocking. Then, casting one’s own shawl negligently over it, just as though the shawl had happened to slip off one’s shoulder as one bent down, one could scoop it up and carry it, stil
l unnoticed, away.

  Had she done it at once, she would have done it. But her second’s hesitation brought the word “thief!” to her mind, and while she argued with herself that it was not theft to take something broken and forgotten, and that it was, moreover, foolishness to ignore such a gift from the gods, another self shrieked that it was her stomach making such ludicrous claims, for her conscience, which had been to Sunday school, knew better. Nothing was ever free here; anything dirty might be dusted off, anything damaged might be marked down a few pence. In a district where some squeezed out livings by culling burnt coal from the gutters, and others by foraging for cast horseshoe nails among the cobblestones, anything might be sold, whatever its condition. Anything free, like charity, was not only incredible, it was instantly suspect. Torn by such reasonings, she was, of course, immobilized.

  While a worn matron bought three pies with carefully counted pennies, and an old toothless fellow squabbled with the proprietress, claiming similar treats could be gotten at tuppence less each just up the aisle, and a bright-eyed young boy eyed the pies and the altercation knowledgeably, the young woman still stood quite still, and with the scent of pasties adding their own pertinent argument, debated the exact meaning of “theft” over and over with herself.

  No one noticed her, save for the bright-eyed boy, who was in the habit of noticing everything. That wasn’t strange, for lovely as she was, the young woman was only one of the hundreds of persons loudly going about their business this pleasant spring morning. Food, clothing, furnishings, pets, papers, pots, rags, and even persons—everything was being vended on this teeming street. All manner of humanity pushed and paraded past. A wise man kept one hand on his pocket and the other over his heart, for if it were true that there was nothing new under the sun, certainly all of it could be seen here, and most of it was for sale. But still, it was decidedly odd to see the two elegant gentlemen in their dashing high curricle pulled by two blooded chestnuts, as they slowly turned the corner and hove into plain sight.

 

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