The Golden Season
Page 2
“They showed me some extremely convincing evidence that points to the site of the fabled lost continent,” she said primly. “Pray, continue.”
“And need I mention the full staffs kept at three separate houses, the horses, gowns, bonnets, jewelry, the weekly salon you host, the parties and balls—”
“No,” Lady Lydia cut in smoothly. “You needn’t. But you misunderstand me, Terwilliger. I do not want to know how I exhausted my funds, as you so picturesquely put it, but how exhausted my funds are.”
At this, Terwilliger made an exasperated sound. “They have expired.”
She scrutinized him closely and seeing no wavering said, “I will sell the Derbyshire farm.”
“It’s already been sold.”
She frowned. “It has? When?”
“Three months ago. I wrote you and asked you how you intended to fund the Atlantis expedition and you wrote back saying I should sell whatever was necessary. I did so. I sent you the contracts by messenger and you signed them.”
“Oh. Yes. I recall. But surely there’s something left from that sale?”
He shook his head.
“Sell one of the houses.”
“They are all on the market and no one has made an offer and I doubt anyone will. There are few people these days looking to purchase properties without acreage.”
“The coal mine, then,” she said decisively. “I have never liked owning—”
“It is no longer producing.”
“All right,” she said in the tone of one capitulating to an unreasonable request. “Sell some stocks.”
He shifted uncomfortably. “Since the war ended, the stock market has collapsed. I have tried to be prudent, but I have failed you here. Your stocks currently have no appreciable value.”
Now, finally, he’d breached the wall that wealth and entitlement had built around her. Her smile wavered.
“Tell Honeycutt to sell my shares of Indian Trade fleet,” she said, naming the man who oversaw the shipping venture that to the greatest part had financed the Eastlake empire.
Terwilliger stared at her.
“Well?”
“But . . .” he stammered, flummoxed. “There is no fleet.”
She frowned. “Of course there’s a fleet. At last word, they were preparing to return from India fully laden.”
“Two weeks ago, all five ships were captured by pirates off the east coast of Africa.”
“What?”
“I wrote you about this. Twice. I sent word seeking an interview, but you—”
“The crews!” she interrupted, blanching.
“Your shipping company had just enough available capital to pay the ransom demanded,” he hastily assured her, and she drew a relieved breath. “No lives were lost. But the ships and their cargo are gone. I wish you had read my letters,” he finished fretfully.
“So do I,” she murmured. “I would never have purchased that barouche.”
He watched her, miserable, and told himself he had done his best, that he could only offer advice, which Lady Lydia oft ignored, and while he was willing to admit that his advice had been bad of late, every one of the financiers and bankers and investors he knew had been just as culpable in their failure to predict the country’s current financial predicament.
In great part, her situation was of her own making. Then why did he feel terrible? He hadn’t captained the fleet, spent the money, or ruined the stock market.
He felt terrible because he sincerely liked Lady Lydia. She was a flame, a life force who burned brilliantly, fascinated, warmed and, yes, was possibly destructive, but still one would hate to see a fire such as hers extinguished.
“I see,” Lady Lydia finally murmured. “What can I do?”
No good would come of equivocating. “Your property, both real and intangible, is gone. When liquidated, your personal assets may pay off those debts you have incurred and leave you enough so that, if carefully managed, you might live adequately.”
“Adequately? That sounds encouraging,” she said, brightening. “What exactly does that mean?”
“I estimate two hundred fifty pounds a year. Enough for a small town house, a maid, and a cook. Perhaps a butler.”
“Dear God,” she breathed, collapsing back in her chair. “I am destitute.”
She meant it and he conceded that in her world, the only one she’d ever known, the uppermost strata of the ton, she might as well be. Her life as hitherto known was no more. Even in Sir Grimley’s house she’d lived like a small princess, surrounded by every conceivable comfort and luxury.
“And Emily, too?”
“I’m afraid not. Perhaps she can return to wherever you found her,” Terwilliger suggested, smiling apologetically at Emily Cod.
She blinked at him, her fingers twitching in her lap.
“Good Lord, Terwilliger, you make it sound as if I overturned a rock one day and there she was. I didn’t and she can’t.” There was finality in her voice, a hint of the iron will few would warrant as belonging to the laughing Society beauty. Beside her, Emily Cod relaxed, her fluttering fingers stilled.
“Then there will be no butler,” he said.
Lady Lydia considered this edict a moment before saying, “I do not think I can live like that.”
He didn’t, either. Still he said, “Many people make do without a butler.”
“No,” she said, shaking her head. “I’m sorry. I can’t be poor. Too many people depend on me. Craftsmen and merchants, artisans and wine brokers, tradesmen and such other businesses.”
This was doing it a bit brown. “They do have other clients,” he said.
She frowned, more annoyed than offended. “I do not think you properly appreciate my position, Terwilliger. I am not just another member of the ton. I am”—she cast about for the appropriate word—“I am an industry.”
Was she twitting him? She’d always had an odd sense of humor.
“Terwilliger,” she said with a touch of exasperation, “I dine at an establishment and its reputation is made. I import a certain varietal wine for a dinner party and within a week the vintner has orders for the next five years and the vineyard where the wine comes from is secure for a decade. I wear a perfume and not only is that fragrance’s popularity guaranteed, but the perfumery’s, too. The same can be said of the mill that produces the silk for my gowns, the musician I hire for an afternoon salon, the composer I employ to write a new sonata, the cheese makers whose products appear on my sideboard, the milliner and horse breeder and the cabinetmaker and the carpet weavers . . .” She trailed off, studying him to gauge whether he understood.
He recognized in surprise that she was right and once again was visited by the uncomfortable notion that behind all her frivolity, Lady Lydia understood very well the world in which she lived. She was an industry. True, the ton was filled with fashion makers, but no one save Beau Brummell had captivated the public imagination like Lady Lydia Eastlake. She drew crowds wherever she went. People stood in line outside the shops she frequented and lined Rotten Row each afternoon hoping to get a glimpse of her riding past in her barouche.
It wasn’t just that she was pretty or witty; there were plenty of pretty, witty women in the ton. It wasn’t just her extravagant lifestyle. It was that she was all these things and independent. And happily, successfully so, for all appearances. Small wonder she fascinated Society both high and low. Her like was as exotic and rare as mermaids.
“Well, Terwilliger?”
“The only counsel I can give is that you find a very wealthy husband.”
“You mean marry?” She sounded as though he’d just suggested she sell flowers in Covent Garden.
He nodded. “As you should have done years ago. You should have wed your fortune to another of equal stature and yourself to a man devoted to the concept of economy. A temperate, conscientious, careful fellow with an impeccable pedigree who could have multiplied your net value while still allotting you a generous allowance.”
 
; “An allowance. Someone to portion out to me that which is already mine.” She gave a delicate shudder. “But, yes, I suppose I might have to consider marrying,” she finished.
“Surely things have not come to that?” Emily cried softly.
“I’m afraid so, Emily.” Lady Lydia nodded. “We must face facts and the fact seems clear: I must wed,” she finished in sepulchral tones.
Easier said than done, Terwilliger thought unhappily.
“What is it now, Terwilliger?” Lady Lydia demanded, seeing his glum expression. “Has the earth opened up and swallowed my town house?”
“May I speak frankly?” he asked, certain he was about to overstep himself. But he had three daughters, all of whom he’d successfully married off, and he was confident he knew something about matchmaking. Even though he did not belong to the exalted ranks to which Lady Lydia did, he surmised that when all was said and done the concerns and requirements of the ton’s bachelors were simply amplifications of those from his own strata. But most of all he felt compelled to offer advice because he felt partially responsible for her current predicament.
“By all means.”
“Lady Lydia, for years you have been turning down marriage proposals from the finest and wealthiest gentlemen of the ton. I do not think of an eligible bachelor who would risk humiliation by tendering a second offer.”
“I am sure there exist a few men who have not yet proposed marriage to me.” Her tone was dry.
“True,” Terwilliger said slowly, “but given the quality of those whom you’ve already turned down, I doubt someone with a lesser pedigree would think he would receive a different answer than his betters. You are famously unattainable, I am afraid.”
“You don’t think anyone will offer for me?” The idea clearly startled her.
He cleared his throat, trying to find the line between candidness and delicacy. “I think that the men who would suit your particular requirements are just as famously proud as you. Once it is known that you are in financial straits, the reason for your accessibility will be evident.”
“But everyone marries to better their situation,” she said. “Either financially or socially. I may not bring wealth to the union, but I still have an ancient and honorable name.”
“Very true,” he said. “But the manner in which you have deported yourself these last years has given the polite world reason to believe that you consider yourself above dynastic politics. You have made a reputation as someone who need only please herself and does not concern herself with the choices of others.”
“And so I am. Or rather, have been,” she corrected herself.
“Exactly. Have been,” he said. “There are those who will take malicious delight in the necessity that drives your marital ambitions. Including former suitors and rivals.” He sought for some nicer way to phrase the next, but in the end, Terwilliger proved himself a banker. “They might seek to decrease your value in the eyes of potential suitors.”
Such smallness not only repelled her but fascinated her. “In what way could they do this?”
“By mocking your past refusal to marry as pretentious and suggesting that you are desperate.”
“I am.”
“Such ruthless honesty. Few men would want their future wife to be the subject of their friends’ derision or consider themselves the only choice left to a desperate woman.”
She inhaled at the ugly words. “No. I can see that they would not.”
“Don’t misunderstand me, Lady Lydia,” he hurried on. “I have no doubt you will entertain many offers once it is known you are interested in matrimony, but those gentlemen who come up to scratch might not be of the sort you could have chosen had you done the responsible thing and married years ago.”
“And just what sort of gentlemen do you imagine now will be paying me court?”
“Well,” he said, picking his way carefully. “I would expect them to be either men who would be happy with the name and cachet you bring to the union or men who feel the press of time in which to produce heirs.”
“I see,” she said. “In other words, social climbers who will not care that I am desperate or old men as desperate as I.”
“In the greater part,” he admitted uncomfortably.
“I’m afraid that won’t do,” she said.
“No. It won’t do,” Mrs. Cod inserted, head bobbing in agreement.
“What do you mean?” he asked.
“I refuse to marry a mushroom for the manure from which he’s sprung. Nor shall I marry an old man to be his broodmare.”
“I don’t think things are quite so grim as that. Doubtless there are healthy young heirs to lesser fortunes who will be thrilled should you show them some encouragement.”
“How much of a lesser fortune do you suggest I must consider?”
He would not lie. In the upper echelons of Lady Lydia’s world, marriages were contracted to bolster foundering empires or grow them. It was a rare case for two people to wed for other reasons. “Substantially less.”
“That won’t do, either. If I must marry, I expect at the very least to continue on in a situation akin to the one I now enjoy.”
He had no idea how to respond. She sounded as though she thought she had a choice.
“Who knows the extent to which I am in debt?” she asked.
Terwilliger lifted a hand. “It is generally assumed that everyone in Society is in debt. It isn’t as if you had lost a fortune gaming in one evening. You do not have any single outstanding debt. You have dispersed your fortune over a large field, Lady Lydia. Deeply and widely.”
“And enjoyed every moment of it, Terwilliger,” she said with another smile. “How many are privy to the information about the fleet?”
“None as yet. Once it gets out, there will be nasty financial repercussions for all involved, including this bank. I shall, of course, remain discreet, but the rumor mill will begin to turn soon enough.”
“When do you expect the crew to return?”
“Well, we have to send ships for them and then return them here. The journey around the cape is a long one. I should say three to four months.”
She thought a minute. “I need this Season, Mr. Terwilliger, the entire Season without being hobbled by suggestions that I am in desperate straits.”
“Why is that?”
She rose to her feet. “Because before my future husband learns of my poverty he must be so convinced that I am his perfect mate, the news will cause him nothing more than slight disappointment.”
He gazed at her in bemusement. “And who is this future husband?”
“Good heavens, Terwilliger,” she said, motioning for Emily Cod to rise, too. “I will only know that after I have met him.”
Chapter Two
At the same time, one hundred and twenty-three miles northeast of London on the Norwich coast near the small town of Cromer, a similar meeting was taking place at Josten Hall.
Captain Ned Lockton, recently retired from His Majesty’s naval service at the age of twenty-eight, sat in the library of his ancestral home facing his family: his brother, Marcus Lockton, the Earl of Josten; Nadine, the earl’s wife; and his widowed sister, Mrs. Beatrice Hickston-Tubbs. Also in attendance were two eighteen-year-old, sullen-looking Pinks of the ton whose resemblance declared them kin: Josten and Nadine’s son and heir, Harry, and Beatrice’s Phillip, fondly known as Pip to the family. Though no one was feeling very fond of either young man at the moment. The rest of the children, Beatrice’s twenty-year-old daughter, Mary, and Josten’s fifteen- year-old twin boys, being unimplicated in the current crisis, had elected not to attend the family meeting, already showing more sense than both boys combined.
Beatrice regarded her tall, redheaded son worriedly, then glanced with similar concern at Harry, who was blond and elegant. They were such handsome, angelic-looking lads. How could simple high spirits have led to such a pass?
Because Lockton men were passionate and proud and, mayhap, a bit overly confident.r />
Now she glanced at her brother Ned, two decades her and Josten’s junior. Luckily, he had been the family changeling, born without any of the famous Lockton passion or conceit. Lucky for them, too, for if he had any of those family traits, he would never fall in with their plans for him.
“There is nothing else for it. You shall have to find an heiress and wed her as soon as possible,” Josten said to Ned in his most commanding voice, which was impressive, indeed.
Unless, that is, one happened to be Captain Ned Lockton, who did not look the least bit awed. Not, unfortunately, because Ned owned any of the cool, imperious unflappability of, say, a Beau Brummell or Lord Alvanley. No, thought Beatrice, Ned simply looked genially oblivious. His handsome face held not a whit of annoyance or affront. He seemed much more interested in the apple he was peeling than the conversation.
“Do you hear me, Ned?” the earl asked, his ruddy, equally handsome face set into the stern lines of a born patriarch.
A smile curved Ned’s well- molded lips, briefly scoring his lean, tanned cheek with the dimple. It was a very nice dimple, Beatrice thought with more relief than approval, one that would soon hopefully play havoc with the ladies’ hearts. Having popped off to join the navy fourteen years ago, he’d never had the opportunity to take his rightful place as one of the ton’s most eligible bachelors. Instead, taking his godfather Admiral Lord Nelson’s advice, Ned had joined the navy rather than have purchased a commission. It still annoyed Beatrice.
If a fellow must indulge his patriotic fervor he might as well look good doing it, in a lovely red coat and scarlet sash. Naval officers didn’t even get to wear their uniforms ashore. In Beatrice’s opinion, a terrible mistake on the part of the admiralty. Ned would be downright dashing in uniform.
Beatrice studied her younger sibling critically. She wasn’t as familiar with him as one might guess a sister should be. He’d been home only a week, and in the preceding years she’d seen him but a handful of times, on those occasions when he’d been home awaiting a new assignment. And, to be honest, at those times she hadn’t paid much attention to his looks. All Lockton men were ridiculously good- looking. She took it for granted. But now she was gratified to see that a hot Barbary sun had only burnished his tousled locks to a brighter gold and rather than scalding his complexion permanently red, the sun had left him tanned. Not stylish perhaps, but better than boiled.