Chapter Four

Relieved that Clowance’s letter contained no hint of bad news, Luke took his time reading it for a second time smiling. All was well in Cornwall, so that was one huge weight off his mind. Tregally Slate was apparently still thriving without his guiding hands on the tiller—he had Clowance’s son to thank for that—and his mother was still coping surprisingly well with his absence. He hoped that lasted. At least until he was able to bring her here where he could watch over her himself—if he was ever able to bring her here. He was still in two minds about that, but until he understood all the complications of his inheritance and decided what to do with it, he had no choice.

He had long given up trying to predict the twists and turns of her illness. What he did know was that, despite her near three years of uninterrupted wellness she was never good with sudden change, so if moving her here for an indefinite stay proved impossible, he would have no choice but to continue to divide his already overstretched time between London and Cornwall for the foreseeable future and lose valuable weeks in the process.

But there was no point thinking about all that now. He understood she needed the constant reassurance of his presence despite her protestations that she really didn’t, and the only way he could make that happen at the moment was to bring her here. And that couldn’t happen until he had hired a couple more servants, a decent cook and had redecorated the master suite upstairs in readiness.

Whoever had lived here last had quite a bawdy taste in decor if the strategically placed mirrors were any gauge, and the less said about the crimson walls and jet-black plaster mouldings and skirting boards, the better.

However, finding suitable and reliable tradesmen to carry out the work was easier said than done. Back home, he knew every reputable trade, merchant and shopkeeper necessary for every conceivable eventuality. There, he could easily separate the wheat from the chaff and negotiate reasonable prices. He would solve the problem—but here, he had no contacts and nobody he knew well enough or trusted enough to recommend someone. Which meant a simple task like repainting a bedchamber was suddenly an onerous one which would take up more time. Although where he would find that time was another matter.

With a weary sigh, he glanced out of the window, the sight of pavements, buildings and carriages still an unfamiliar surprise when he was used to staring at nothing but the trees and sky. London was a different world from the one he came from and the busy city felt as alien to him as this new, sparse but gawdy sitting room. But at least the sun was shining and that made him yearn to be outside in the fresh air instead of cooped up inside.

Yet he was resigned to the fact that nowadays, even a walk was a luxury. The mountain of correspondence piled on the side table still demanded his attention, making him wince when he realised that even after two hours of diligent reading and responding he had barely made a dent in it. He swore blind the damn things multiplied whenever he turned his back. Letters of condolence from complete strangers, invitations to everything from week-long house parties to afternoon teas and speculative letters of introduction fishing for his business, or patronage or charity, arrived by the sackload every day, reminding him that he ought to hire a secretary on top of everyone else simply to avoid drowning in it.

Frustrated, he tossed the nursemaid’s letter on top of them. All this additional work and the late nights spent trying to make sense of all the new responsibilities which had been thrust upon him were taking their toll. Owning a marquessate was a darn sight more convoluted and complicated than owning a slate business and selling it all—if that was indeed what he decided to do with it—wasn’t going to be concluded swiftly.

To say he was swamped was an understatement.

Today, as he had for the last four weeks, Luke had spent the morning with one of his brother’s overseers. Not including the crusty solicitor he had inherited alongside the myriad unwanted extra complications and responsibilities, there were three employed managers in total, each tasked with running separate aspects of the extensive investment portfolio. The personable and cheerful Mr Lessing oversaw the Thundersley ancestral estate several miles from London as well as the many farms and tenants within it. He was both approachable and helpful and, on first impressions at least, seemed to run a tight ship which Luke couldn’t offload if he had wanted to because it was entailed, so he was content to leave the man in charge.

The less cheerful but still personable Mr Dent managed all the swathes of London property which were rented out for eye-watering sums but which could easily be sold on, and Mr Waterhouse, the least personable and most supercilious of the three was in charge of the stocks and shares, of which there were hundreds, and they apparently made most of the money. Those were the biggest mystery and the thing he knew the least about.

Luke’s head was spinning with the scale of it all and he suspected he had barely scratched the surface. Perhaps he should do as the solicitor suggested and leave it all to the three men who had managed it all very competently for his brother while he hotfooted it back to Cornwall and forgot about it, but that didn’t sit right. His own business back home might be small by comparison, but because he had built it, he understood every nut and bolt of it, and he would understand this too, damn it!

One day.

Maybe.

This place, this new life which fate had foisted upon him, was suffocating him and he already felt like an old man under the weight of it all. A very tired, very burdened and very overwhelmed old man.

He stood with all the energy of an arthritic octogenarian, feeling every single one of the unwanted and heavy burdens resting upon his shoulders, and wandered to the window intending to open it and let some of that elusive fresh air in, but as he lifted the gauzy lace curtain he saw her.

Hope was arm in arm with another young lady chatting amiably. Both were wearing pretty summer dresses and enormous straw bonnets which hid their faces, but he knew it was her by her statuesque height, the curvaceous shape of her body which filled the demure dress so perfectly it rendered it effortlessly seductive, and simply by the way that she moved. Even flustered, as she had been yesterday on the balcony, she moved with overtly feminine grace. Those generous hips undulating in a manner so sensual, she would probably work hard to alter her gait if she knew the alluring effect they created.

She was uncomfortable with her physical attractiveness. He understood enough about her already to know she would much prefer not to be a living, breathing, walking male fantasy—and who could blame her? If the behaviour of that oily, panting lecher Harlington was any gauge, she must be sick to the back teeth of being treated so superficially. Although how that idiot had missed her fascinating intelligence and dry wit was a mystery to him, as they were even more alluring than her obvious physical enticements. But then everything seemed superficial here in the capital and people only cared about the finished, polished surface of the diamond and not the clarity and purity beneath.

He watched her walk towards the little park that was Russell Square before turning back to stare mournfully at his pile of correspondence again—his never-ending pile of unwanted correspondence and ledgers and papers—and spontaneously decided that for now at least, it could all go to hell. Instead, without analysing the overwhelming and compulsive need to get to her, he grabbed his coat and shrugged it on as he dashed out of his new front door. Then skidded to an abrupt stop on the bottom step when she miraculously appeared right in front of him.

‘Hello, Hope.’ Instantly, the world was brighter. Especially as she appeared to have misplaced her companion and he had her all to himself. ‘What a pleasant surprise.’ Although she didn’t seem the least bit pleased by it. Or comfortable.

‘I absolutely do not know you!’ The low hiss came through obviously gritted teeth.

‘I’m sorry?’

‘You—me—we’ve never met.’ Her panicked eyes darted to her front door. ‘At least that is what my family think.’ Then she rose herself up to her full height and pasted a bland expression on her face as the door flew open and the blonde tumbled out of it doing up the ribbons of a different bonnet.

‘See! I told you the blue would suit this...’ The blonde paused mid-step and smiled at him, her expression instantly curious as her eyes boldly swept him up and down.

‘Charity, this is our new neighbour.’ Hope gestured towards him with a stiff wave of her hand. ‘As you can see, we just this second collided on the steps.’ An unnecessary clarification when they were both standing parallel to their own front doors. ‘This, sir, is my sister Miss Charity Brookes and I am Miss Hope Brookes. We live here with our parents.’

‘I am delighted to make your acquaintance, ladies.’ Feeling his way and desperately trying to read the stark warning message in Hope’s lovely eyes, he inclined his head politely. ‘I am Lucius Nathaniel Elijah Duff.’ Or at least he had been until a few months ago, but actual names here weren’t as important as titles. ‘The Seventh Marquess of Thundersley.’ The ill-fitting addition felt awkward on his tongue. Probably because he still felt like an impostor in the role and would much rather be plain old Luke Duff again.

Miss Charity’s eyes widened. It was the typical reaction he had come to expect, though he couldn’t say he blamed everyone for reacting with disbelief at the news when he scarcely believed it himself. He most definitely was not marquess material and likely never would be.

‘Lord Thundersley?’ Her eyes slanted to Hope’s, amused. ‘What an intriguing coincidence. The same Lord Thundersley, I presume, who took a dip in the Earl of Writtle’s fountain the other week?’

As there was no denying that, he nodded and offered her his best sheepish smile. ‘Guilty as charged, Miss Charity... Sadly. Though in my defence, while not my finest hour, it was an accident.’ At least the kissing had sort of been accidental even if his subsequent swim had been deserved. Of their own accord, his eyes wandered to Hope’s lips before he ruthlessly dragged them back to the young lady he was talking to. A very pretty young lady indeed, beautiful if your taste ran to fashionable blondes, but nowhere near in her sister’s league. Even suddenly mute and doing her best to blend into the railings, Hope dazzled.

‘The same Lord Thundersley that the gossip columns linked to my sister?’

Hope stiffened and then quickly forced her shoulders to relax a split second before Miss Charity glanced at her, the unconvincingly baffled expression on her lovely face as hollow as the flimsy lie they were apparently constructing.

‘They did?’ He had to work hard not to allow his pasted smile to slide off his face under the blonde’s suddenly intense scrutiny. She smelled a rat.

‘Hope is the Miss H. from Bloomsbury. Miss Hope Brookes...the exact same woman they suggested was responsible for your being in that fountain in the first place, my lord. Isn’t that a strange coincidence?’

‘Good gracious? Is she really? Then I am doubly pleased to finally make her acquaintance as I did wonder who the notorious Miss H. was.’ And now he was over-explaining things too. ‘Alas, as I hail from Cornwall, Miss Charity, I am grossly unfamiliar with the capital and its inhabitants. Where I come from, gossip is so thin on the ground, the newspapers make no attempts at disguising the names of those being gossiped about with complicated secret codes. There would be no point, as everybody knows everybody anyway.’

‘It is much the same here, my lord, because the code isn’t that complicated any more than it is secret.’ He couldn’t tell if the blonde was convinced of his sincerity or not. ‘Whenever the Miss is followed by the pertinent words from Bloomsbury, the entire world and his wife knows they mean one of us. My sisters and I tend to feature in them with alarming regularity.’

An interesting titbit Luke would have explored further had another, older woman not appeared at the doorway.

‘Is everything all right, girls?’ She eyed him dubiously as if he were some sort of pillaging marauder come to kidnap her daughters.

‘Mama, this is our elusive and mysterious new neighbour... Lord Thundersley.’

‘Oh... Oh!’ The older woman’s defensive expression instantly turned curious as she glided down her steps, as she doubtless recalled every bit of rot written about him in the last few weeks and was deciding if he were capable of it. Which clearly she did. Her eyes narrowed as they wandered to her daughter. ‘I thought you had never met him, Hope?’

‘Until this moment they hadn’t.’ It was Charity who quickly answered. ‘So this bizarre coincidence has caused them both quite a shock. Poor Lord Thundersley wasn’t even aware that the Miss H. from Bloomsbury was even a Brookes. Isn’t that funny?’ The sunny smile she shot him suggested that while she was determined to have her mother see it as coincidental, she wasn’t similarly convinced.

The older woman smiled tightly. ‘Then welcome to Bloomsbury, my lord. I am Mrs Roberta Brookes.’ Then she stopped and posed regally as if that in itself were a great achievement.

‘I am delighted to meet you, Mrs Brookes. I have been meaning to call to introduce myself properly but the last few days have been hectic as I am sure you can imagine.’

The suspicion had now been replaced by politeness. ‘Indeed I can, my lord. Moving house is such an ordeal and there is always so much to do. My poor nerves were shot to smithereens when we moved in here five years ago, so you have my sympathies.’ Her eyes flicked to her youngest and paused while they conveyed a silent message he couldn’t begin to decipher. ‘But where are my manners, my lord? You must come in and join us for tea.’

Backed some way away from the human barricade which was Mrs Brookes and Miss Charity, Hope pulled a face and shook her head, her eyes pleading before she covered it with an expression of polite blandness. ‘The poor man was on his way out when I collided with him, Mama, and clearly in a rush to be somewhere.’

Luke nodded like a deranged woodpecker. ‘Sadly, that is true. I have urgent business with my solicitor this afternoon, so I must decline your kind invitation for now.’ Which oddly disappointed him.

‘Oh, that is a shame!’ Mrs Brookes took a determined step closer. ‘Another day then? Tomorrow perhaps? Which will likely be better as my husband will be home and I know he will want to meet you and welcome you to Bedford Place properly. Our cook bakes the most delicious cakes if you have a sweet tooth. Her queen cakes in particular are splendid, my lord, and she has such a way with the batter, they come out as light as a feather. I shall have her bake a batch first thing. Does around three suit?’

Behind her Hope rolled her eyes before she nodded so he bobbed his head as well. ‘I shall count the hours, Mrs Brookes.’ And likely would too, though worryingly not for the light-as-a-feather queen cakes.