A Lily Among Thorns, page 19
“Very well,” Serena said. “You may leave the matter in our hands. Now, what would you like served at your breakfast? As you know, our chef has a number of specialties. I have a printed menu here.” She leaned over to get it out of her desk drawer.
“Lord Brendan always loved your asperges à l’italienne—” There was a choked noise, and when Serena looked up Lady Brendan’s clear gray eyes were filled with tears. “I’m sorry—only—they will cut off his head, and he has been good to me.”
Serena said nothing. What was there to say? If—when they arrested René, he would not even receive the peer’s privilege of a quick beheading.
Luckily, Solomon was there to fill the breach. “How dreadful for you,” he murmured, handing Lady Brendan his pocket-handkerchief.
She disappeared behind it for several seconds. “You must think I’m very weak and foolish,” she said finally, looking up at him.
Serena did rather, unless it was all a lie and Lady Brendan the traitor after all, but Solomon replied warmly, “Not at all. I think it’s very courageous and noble of you to risk everything for England this way.”
Serena felt an unpleasant pang. She knew he thought she ought to have turned René in years ago.
“You’re being a regular Trojan,” he continued. “I am sure your stepson will look out for you, but if you find yourself in any financial difficulty—”
“Oh no, I couldn’t,” Lady Brendan broke in hurriedly. “I would prefer anything to accepting charity. I had enough of that when I was small.” Her hands fluttered emphatically in her lap.
Was that a flash of annoyance in Solomon’s eyes? No, it couldn’t be, because he was reaching out to clasp her hand and smiling. “I wasn’t speaking of charity. But I daresay I could find you a position as a seamstress if you wanted, or perhaps Lady Serena could find you a job, couldn’t you, Lady Serena?”
Serena felt that she ought to be moved by all this, but she wasn’t. The more sympathetic Solomon became, the less she felt anything at all—the colder, in fact, she found herself becoming. “Of course, if I find you have any useful talents.”
Solomon glanced at her. That was definitely a flash of annoyance.
“Now I’m afraid I must go,” Serena continued. “If you’re going to cry any more, you’d better do it here where your husband can’t see you, and wash your face before you go, too. I’ll have some tea brought—”
“Free of charge,” Solomon interjected.
“Free of charge, naturally,” Serena agreed, “and I’m sure Mr. Hathaway would be delighted to bear you company.”
“Thank you,” Lady Brendan said with a sort of gracious, wounded misery, “but I don’t like to trouble you.”
“It’s no trouble,” Serena said, suddenly perversely determined to be troubled. “But let me show you to a private parlor.” She was damned if she would leave a woman alone in her office whom only half an hour earlier she had believed a traitor.
Solomon offered Lady Brendan his arm, and when they had ensconced her in a private parlor, he pressed her hand before taking his leave. “If you need anything, just let us know.”
When they were out the door and heading toward the kitchen, Solomon looked at Serena. “I can’t believe you were so unfeeling to that young woman.”
She had been, of course. “I am simply an unfeeling woman, I suppose. Perhaps that explains why I’ve never cried on anyone’s shoulder or required free tea of utter strangers.” She had cried on Solomon’s shoulder, though, only a few nights ago in the laundry tunnel. She wished she hadn’t.
“Very true,” said Solomon. “Neither have you ever risked your all for the safety of English soldiers and the liberty of English citizens.”
Serena clenched her jaw and said nothing.
“Not everyone can be such a Spartan as you. I think she’s holding up remarkably well under the circumstances.”
What circumstances? Being on the brink of seeing a man she cares about brutally executed and not knowing if she’ll find herself on the streets? What would I know about that? It’s not as if it were easy to be a Spartan, she wanted to yell. But she knew how these things worked. Lady Brendan, with her wet lashes and fluttering hands, would get nothing but sympathy, accolades, and male admiration for her courage. Serena, if the past were any indication of the future, would be termed a cold bitch.
Instead she said something nearly as ill judged. “You’re right, of course. And then she is very pretty, isn’t she?”
Solomon smiled suddenly. “I thought so,” he agreed. “But then, I have an especial fondness for gray eyes.”
Serena’s mouth curved reluctantly. “Oh you have, have you?” They reached the kitchen before he could reply. “Antoine, can you have someone make up a tea tray, please?” She turned back to Solomon. “You’ll take it in to her, won’t you?”
“Not likely,” he said with a grin. “She’s unchaperoned, and anyway, you’re raving if you think I’ll listen to more of that ‘my father’s blood was the bluest in France’ drivel.”
She looked at him in surprise.
“I say it to you,” Solomon said, speaking very slowly, as if to a small child who was just learning English. “I don’t say it to her. She’s doing her best. Besides, if we don’t calm her down and she breaks down at home, it’s all our necks. Figuratively speaking.”
And so it was Serena who carried in the tea tray, a small phial of rosewater perched on the edge. Lady Brendan was sitting where Serena had left her, staring out the window with swollen eyes. She started when Serena, both hands full of tray, let the door bang shut. “I brought your tea,” Serena said, awkwardly.
“Thank you,” Lady Brendan mumbled, and sniffled.
“You’re welcome. I brought some rosewater too. Dab it around your eyes. It’ll make them less red.”
“Thank you.” Lady Brendan essayed a weak smile. “I’m surprised you even know that. You don’t seem as if you would ever cry.”
Serena didn’t know whether to be gratified or annoyed. “Concealing tears is only one of the many useful skills one learns in a brothel.”
“Oh.” Lady Brendan looked mortified.
Serena sat beside her on the sofa. “Did you marry him for love?”
“No. But after twelve years—I am fond of him.”
Serena nodded. “It’s hard. I’m rather fond of that fraud of a marquis, myself.”
Lady Brendan’s gray eyes darkened with sympathy. “Oh, were you two—”
“No!” Serena took a deep breath, and continued, “We were friends. Are friends. But he was using me for his own ends.” She thought of the parish register, forged years ago against the day when it would be needed. “Always. And your husband used you. Remember that. Who do you think he intended to take the blame for his crimes? Why do you think he sent his foreign wife to pass along coded messages without her knowledge?”
For a moment Serena thought that that insight might be more than Lady Brendan could handle. Her hand flew to her mouth and her eyes widened. But then she straightened, and a martial light came into her face. “He was using me, wasn’t he?”
“I’m afraid so.” Serena sighed. “Here, have a ratafia cake. They were delivered this morning still hot.” Both women looked at the airy, golden biscuits without appetite.
Lady Brendan gave her a forced smile. “No, thank you. I should be going.”
“If you’re sure you won’t break down again.”
“I’m sure.” Standing reluctantly, Lady Brendan took up the rosewater and went to a small mirror that hung from the wall. She began dabbing it around her eyes with a perfectly clean handkerchief she pulled from her own reticule. She hadn’t needed Solomon’s at all.
“Just remember, lives could depend on how well you hold up when you go home.”
Lady Brendan examined her eyes in the mirror. “I will.”
“And let me give you a word of advice. If someone offers you charity, take it. Because ‘anything’ can be pretty dreadful.”
Lady Brendan glanced at her and shuddered. Sometimes Serena felt like a walking morality play.
Lady M., for whose heirs Solomon had prepared two batches of black dye, had died the night before. Solomon was summoned to Hathaway’s Fine Tailoring to help fill the massive order. The inevitable could be put off no longer, and that afternoon Elijah reluctantly followed Solomon to Savile Row to explain to his uncle why everyone had thought he was dead.
“And what you put your brother through—the poor lad was wasting away—” Uncle Hathaway was still saying twenty minutes later. Elijah and Solomon were flushing uncomfortably, Uncle Hathaway was gesticulating wildly, and a large group of interested seamsters had gathered.
“Uncle,” Solomon interrupted firmly, “we don’t need to go into all that.”
Uncle Hathaway looked at Solomon, and his face softened. “Well, I suppose you look all right now. No thanks to this young scapegrace. Do you need a place to stay, Elijah? Arthur can sleep on the sofa.”
“Thank you, but I think I’ll be staying at the Ravenshaw Arms with Sol.”
Mr. Hathaway frowned. “Thank God you’re back, Elijah. Talk some sense into your brother, will you? That girl is bad news.”
“Stop it, Uncle,” Solomon said sharply. Elijah didn’t appear to think Serena was such bad news, anyway.
At that point one of the younger seamsters, whom Arthur claimed wanted to be Solomon when he grew up, said, “That’s enough, everyone,” and began shepherding people out of the room.
“You created a scandal! You punched a customer, Sol! Braithwaite was a large account, and while I may not like him—”
“He called her a whore. What was I supposed to do?”
“She is a—” Uncle Hathaway stopped at the look on Solomon’s face. “Do you know why she left home?” he demanded instead.
“Yes,” Solomon said shortly. “She told me herself. May I ask where you got your information?”
“Our second seamster at the time had a cousin who worked at Ravenscroft.” Hathaway’s lips tightened. “He lost his job for her, and she hasn’t even the grace to be ashamed of it.”
Solomon’s brows drew together. “I assume my own job isn’t in danger?”
Hathaway looked taken aback. “Of course not.”
“Not that it’s any of your business, but she bitterly regrets what happened to H—her lover. And if I ever hear you’ve broached the subject with her, I—”
Hathaway waved his hand in a gesture of comprehension.
“Besides,” Solomon went on, “we should be the last people to criticize a girl for dallying with the servants. After all, my father was Uncle Dewington’s tutor.”
“Yes, and your father never got another tutoring job, I promise you!” Hathaway said sharply.
Solomon knew that already. He knew that his father had lost his job. He knew that Uncle Hathaway had supported the young couple until his father finished divinity school and a small living was found for him back in Shropshire by a patron of the family—a much more modest living in a much smaller parish than William Hathaway’s brilliant academic career had foreshadowed. He knew, too, that Uncle Hathaway did not quite approve of their mother. Uncle Hathaway had always tried to hide it, but over twenty-six years, things slipped out.
In the past, Solomon had always shrugged and ignored it. His mother had explained once that Uncle Hathaway just didn’t like the gentry, because he dealt with them so much in his shop. Suddenly, Solomon wasn’t sure that was the reason. And if it would make things easier for Serena, he wanted to know what the reason was.
“Father likes being a pastor,” he said neutrally. It was true. His father had never seemed anything but content living on three-hundred pounds per annum in their little house—anything but completely happy with his titled wife and his three half-breed children.
“Your father could have done anything, Sol,” Uncle Hathaway said wearily. “Everyone said he was brilliant, an orator, destined for great things. The whole family was sure he would make something of himself. I always knew I would be nothing but a tailor, but Will—there was talk of his one day going into Parliament. And after he eloped with your mother and the Dewingtons wouldn’t receive them, it was all over. His fine patrons dropped him like a hot potato.”
“But—what does that have to do with Serena?”
“Don’t be dense, Sol,” Elijah said, an edge in his voice that Solomon didn’t understand. “He means you’re the family’s hope for greatness now.”
“Me?”
“You’re just like him,” Uncle Hathaway said. “Always such a clever boy. Your uncle gave you an education. You could invent great things, be a famous scientist, lecture all over the world to admiring crowds. But you never will if you attach yourself to a scandal like that.”
Solomon’s jaw dropped. After he got over how unlikely a portrait of himself it was, however, many things were suddenly very clear. He said the most important thing first. “My uncle did give me an education. You did, here at Hathaway’s Fine Tailoring. You taught me everything. Uncle Dewington just paid for me to learn about chemistry.”
Uncle Hathaway pressed his lips together. “You could do so much better.”
“There is no better. Not for me. I always wanted to be just like you.” He had always thought his uncle was the interesting brother. Uncle Hathaway lived in London and could add a row of figures in his head. He threw Hannah More in the fire.
But now it appeared that Solomon was more like Uncle Hathaway than he had supposed, and it made him rather uncomfortable. However touching it was that his uncle had somehow decided that he, and not Elijah, was the brilliant one, he hoped that in thirty years he would not be making an idiotic speech like this to Elijah’s son.
“He did,” Elijah confirmed. “He asked for half-spectacles for his seventh birthday.”
Uncle Hathaway laughed at that.
“How long have I been working here, anyway?” Solomon asked.
“Sixteen years,” Uncle Hathaway said promptly. “Every summer since you were ten, and full time for four years.”
“With you fighting him every step of the way,” Elijah said.
“Do you want me to leave?” Solomon knew the answer, but even so he held his breath.
“Oh, Sol, I don’t know what we’d do without you,” Uncle Hathaway said. “But you’re throwing yourself away here.”
“Don’t you like being a tailor?” Solomon asked, exasperated.
“Of course I do,” Uncle Hathaway said. “But the people who come through that door—they ought to look at you with respect.”
Solomon laughed at the absurdity of it. “Well, I like it too. And I don’t care about the respect of people like our customers. So go easy on Serena, all right? I don’t know where things are going with her, but if we do—what’s more natural than a tailor and an innkeeper?”
It probably wasn’t over, but Uncle Hathaway looked like he’d think about it. Apparently standing your ground really worked. Solomon decided that next week, he’d ask for a few shifts behind the counter.
That night in Serena’s office, Elijah told them that Elbourn and Sir Nigel had both been arrested. Like lambs to the slaughter, Solomon thought rather triumphantly. But Serena and Elijah both looked so bleak he held his tongue. He had thought they would be pleased at their success—but of course in the end it wouldn’t make any difference. Things were moving so fast. The Pursleighs’ masquerade was tomorrow, and the Brendan breakfast the morning after, and then there’d be no one between Sacreval and the gallows.
“Did you discover anything useful at Sir Nigel’s house?” Serena asked.
“Nothing as useful as what my colleagues discovered when they interviewed the servants. Apparently the information was hidden in the pack of cards Sacreval and Sir Nigel played with. A parlormaid said she’d seen him marking a deck, very carefully and thoroughly. Since Sacreval hasn’t been able to hold menu consultations with Brendan and Pursleigh as he used to, he may be using something similar with them.”
There was silence for a moment.
“When we’ve got them all,” Elijah said, “that will leave only Sacreval.” He looked at Serena. “Are you sure you don’t want to talk to any of my superiors about your marriage problem?”
Serena laughed bitterly. “I don’t think any of your superiors will be particularly eager to help me.”
“The regent is head of the Church of England, you know. I’m sure he has the influence to see the marriage annulled.”
“I’m sure he does. I’m also sure he’ll think the situation is a very great joke. I would prefer your superiors didn’t know the problem even exists until it is absolutely necessary.”
“You’re hoping it won’t become necessary, aren’t you?”
“Aren’t you?” Serena said sharply.
Elijah met Serena’s eyes with perfect understanding for an instant, then looked away. “I will do my best to see the enemies of England brought to justice.”
Solomon hoped for both their sakes that the marquis showed a little sense and fled the country. Maybe Solomon could suggest it if he proved reluctant. It certainly appeared the only way to make himself useful at present. Serena and Elijah did all the talking and planning, with their underworld experience and their cool demeanors and their dratted unspoken bond.
“Oh, and Elijah?” Serena said.
“Yes?”
“Do you have the schedule of payments René gave his contacts? I want to confirm that Brendan’s our man and this isn’t some ruse by his wife.”
“I think Varney at the Foreign Office might have that, but how will you get hold of Brendan’s financial information?”






