“I’m glad you’re here. We need to speak about —”

“Can I offer Mademoiselle some chocolate? Or a bun?”

“No, thank you, Mrs. DuPont. And please refer to me as ‘Miss Tulman.’ Tonight I will —”

Mrs. DuPont drew herself up tall in the square frame of the doorway, the grim reaper in a nightgown. “Have we not served you well?”

“I —”

“Do we not keep our peace?”

“You —”

“Do you not eat the hearty, English breakfast?”

I sighed.

“And where will you find such clean windows? Such shining glass —”

“Tais-toi!” I said. “Please,” I added. Mrs. DuPont closed her mouth. “I am not asking you to leave. Or at least not yet. But I am asking you to leave the house for tonight. Do you have somewhere you can go? For one night?”

She looked at me for a moment, then her eyes slid toward the hallway, where Henri Marchand had gone, and back to my frankly bizarre choice of clothing. And she smiled. It was not a nice smile. “As I said, Mademoiselle, we can keep secrets. You will find no others that can keep secrets so well.”

“Napoleon est —”

“Tais-toi!” she hissed. “Perhaps Mademoiselle would like to give us some money,” she said, still smiling. “For the hotel?”

A small silence fell, and Mrs. DuPont’s black eyes stared back significantly into mine. I had no time for this. Or funds.

“Actually, Mrs. DuPont, perhaps you would like to tell me what you are selling at my back door? That is what you’re doing, is it not? I would think those profits might be plenty for one night at a hotel.”

All I could hear was the bubbling of the chocolate. One of Mrs. DuPont’s bone-white hands crept up to adjust the shawl around her shoulders.

“I think you’ll find that I can keep secrets, too, Mrs. DuPont. Do we have an understanding?”

The quiet in the kitchen stretched until there was one tiny nod from Mrs. DuPont’s chin.

“Good. Please be out of the house by the time the sun goes down, and you may come back in the morning. Maybe at that time we can continue the discussion about your future arrangements.” I wondered if it was too much to hope that we’d be gone from Paris by then. “Thank you very much, Mrs. DuPont. Good day, Mr. DuPont. Have a lovely morning, Marguerite.” I started to the leave the kitchen. “Oh, and I would happily accept your offer of chocolate and buns. If you could bring them into the dining room, as soon as is convenient? There is no hurry.”

I glanced at the clock in the corridor, feeling satisfied as I walked down the hall.

We had nineteen hours, forty-two minutes until Ben Aldridge came.

Five men came at intervals during the day, Jean-Baptiste and four of his cousins, all entering through the courtyard with milk or bread or some other supply to “deliver,” and then never actually leaving again. The day had turned gray and cool and there was a fine rain falling, darkening the house stones. If anyone was observing the courtyard, it was from the interior of one of the other houses. The last to come was Joseph, a bag of tools at his side and a hammer in his belt for a disguise. Mary spirited him up to Mr. Babcock’s room, where his male family members awaited, well provisioned with the remnants of the ridiculously vast breakfast Mrs. DuPont had prepared. I really should have known better when I asked for “chocolate and buns.”

Mary had been very somber as she packed our things. She’d said nothing of it, but I’d seen her in the garden again with the boy Robert, and I felt rather sorry about it. She scowled at the little bottle Joseph had supplied me, green instead of brown, sitting next to its fellow on the chimneypiece of my bedchamber.

“Are you thinking that will be enough, Miss?” she asked. “Last time it was taking ever so much more.”

“Yes, there will be enough,” I replied grimly. I had more stashed away for Uncle Tully. The ones over the fireplace were for someone else.

When I came through the shelf door, Uncle Tully was waiting for me in his favorite frock coat, rocking back and forth on his heels. He looked almost like his old self standing there, the white beard spreading wide when he saw me.

“Little niece!” he shouted at me. “You are two minutes not late for playtime!”

Which meant I was one minute early. I smiled absently, coming back to the reality of the coat that hung loose on his frame and the space he had been confined to. So much had been taken from him. But tonight he would sleep, and when he woke we would be back at Stranwyne with Lane, and he would play and we would find a way to keep up the illusion that my uncle’s only home was now the cemetery on the hill. Heaven knew what I was going to say to Mrs. Cooper, though surely bringing Lane with me would help. I saw that Uncle Tully was now plucking at his coat.

“You are not ready,” he said. “You are not thinking of clocks.”

I snapped back to attention and smiled at him. “Of course I am, Uncle. I came especially to help you wind them.” Nothing could have induced me to miss my uncle’s clock-winding, not when I was about to spin his carefully constructed world out of balance yet again. The clocks chose that moment to strike four times. Eight more hours until Ben Aldridge came. “See, they have said it’s time. Which shall we do first?”

We began, alternating the privilege of turning the winding key, always clockwise, of course; my uncle would not have had a clock that wound otherwise, if such a thing existed. He knew precisely how many turns each one of them required. The last clock fell to me and, as it was on the floor, we sat there, too, my uncle cross-legged and me in a poof of skirt, both of us mentally calculating the turnings.

My uncle shook his head and said, “There are not enough, Simon’s baby.” I paused in my twisting of the key.

“Is this one not thirty-seven?”

“No, no! Not windings! Clocks!”

I turned the key again, the tick of the mechanism soft in the sound-deadened room. The clock room of Stranwyne had held hundreds of clocks, the ticking alone a noise one almost had to swim through. We had only brought ten of those clocks to Paris, all we’d had room for, small ones, chosen in haste. It would give me much joy to see my uncle back with his clocks. Uncle Tully was still shaking his head, muttering.

“Shall I? Shall I tell her a secret? Should I? Shall I?”

I finished the thirty-seventh turn, returned the key to its place inside the clock, shut the glass door, and then folded my hands to wait while Uncle Tully argued with himself. This was a common enough debate, and one that almost always meant he told. He lifted his bright blue eyes to me for the briefest moment and then whispered, very loudly. “I went down the stairs.”

I nodded, thankful it was nothing worse. “I know you did, Uncle. It’s all right this time, but we —”

“No, no!” he said, voice rising. “It is not right! No!” He pulled on his coat sleeves. “The rooms were wrong, and the floors did not squeak where they should, and there were things outside, not the right things. …”

“What things? You didn’t go outside, did you, Uncle Tully?”

His head was in a permanent state of shaking back and forth now. “No, no. Not outside. They were all the wrong things. There were other places, not hills, not grass, and there was no Mrs. Jefferies. Where has Mrs. Jefferies gone, little niece?”

I kept my voice calm. “Mrs. Jefferies is Mrs. Cooper now, do you remember, Uncle? She is at Stranwyne, keeping your things tidy, just as Marianna told her to.” He rocked slightly in his position on the floor. “Just like we are doing what Marianna told us. Do you remember? But, Uncle, I want you to think about something. Sometimes we like one thing better than other things, isn’t that right? I like the flower best, and Marianna liked her piano, and you like your bells and the box with the lightning right now. Isn’t that so?”

He frowned, mulling this over, and I continued before he could find an objection.

“And sometimes we like one place better than another place, yes? We both like to be at Stranwyne, and

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