her long nose into her hand. Concordia gingerly patted her.
âI want to keep my boyâs clothes, too.â Hannah stood up in the back of the cart, hooked her fingers into the waistband of her trousers and struck a jaunty pose. In the blink of an eye she metamorphosed into a youth who would not have looked out of place selling newspapers on a busy street corner. âThey are ever so much more comfortable than skirts and petticoats. I feel like a different person in them.â
Edwina looked down at her own rough costume and wrinkled her nose. âThey may be comfortable but they certainly are not very fashionable.â
âIt was rather fun masquerading as a boy, though,â Theodora said, allowing Oates to help her down from the cart. âDid you see the way people got out of our path in the shopping arcade?â
âI think that is because they were afraid we might try to pick their pockets,â Hannah said wryly.
Ambrose looked amused. âYou are correct, Hannah, and that is a tribute to your acting skills. I was very impressed.â He vaulted easily to the ground and surprised Concordia with a brief, wicked smile. âAnd that includes you, Miss Glade. I have never seen a more convincing flower seller.â
âHeâs right, Miss Glade,â Phoebe said. âYou look ever so much older in those poor clothes.â
Concordia sighed and unknotted the tattered scarf she had used to cover her hair. âThank you, Phoebe.â
âHow in blazes did ye come by this old cart and that broken-down nag?â Oates muttered to Ambrose.
âA helpful farmer loaned them to me.â
Oates looked skeptical. âLoaned them, eh?â
âNo need to look at me like that, Oates.â Ambrose clapped him on the back. âI made it worth his while. Heâll be wanting his fine equipage back, however. Will you take care of the matter for me? I told the man Iâd leave his horse and cart in Brinks Lane near the theater.â
âAye, sir.â Oates climbed up onto the box and flapped the reins.
He did not appear even mildly astonished by the unusual nature of Ambroseâs arrival, Concordia thought. She got the feeling that Oates was accustomed to such eccentricities.
âCome, we will go inside and I will introduce you to Mrs. Oates,â Ambrose said. âShe manages the household and will show you to your rooms.â
Before Concordia realized his intent, he took her arm and drew her toward the kitchen door. She was very conscious of the feel of his strong fingers. For some ridiculous reason she wished very badly that she was not dressed in such ragged, unfashionable clothes.
To distract herself from that depressing line of thought, she examined the exterior of the big house as they moved toward the door.
The mansion was a handsome building in the Palladian style with tall, well-proportioned windows and fine columns. It was surrounded by high stone walls and well-tended gardens. The effect was quite elegant, but she could not help but notice that the big house possessed, in a subtle, understated manner, the air of a secure fortress. Dante and Beatrice added the final touch.
The excited, chattering girls rushed enthusiastically into the back hall accompanied by the dogs. Concordia watched them, her insidestightening. Had she done the right thing by bringing them here? Had there been any better choice?
She hesitated briefly before stepping over the threshold of the mansion.
âThis is a very grand home, Mr. Wells,â she said, keeping her voice low so the girls would not overhear. âI assume it belongs to you?â
âAs a matter of fact, it does not.â
She stopped quite suddenly. âWhat on earth do you mean?â
âIt is the property of a man named John Stoner.â
She frowned. âIs he here?â
âNo,â Ambrose said. âAs it happens, he is not in residence at the moment.â
It seemed to her that
Antony Beevor, Artemis Cooper
Jeffrey Overstreet
MacKenzie McKade
Nicole Draylock
Melissa de La Cruz
T.G. Ayer
Matt Cole
Lois Lenski
Danielle Steel
Mark Reinfeld, Jennifer Murray