his attention to her.
“Your bonnet and your spencer are the exact color of your eyes,” he said. “You look lovely, Anne.”
She was wearing one of her new outfits. Her dress was a shade paler than the spencer. She remembered the pleasure of their shopping expedition in Bath and smiled at him.
The carriage drew to a halt, and as soon as the steps were put down Sydnam descended. But he was given no chance to turn to hand Anne down. His brother must have seen him through the window and had already stridden across the terrace to catch him up in his arms.
“Syd, you old devil!” he exclaimed, laughing. “What
He was not as tall as Sydnam, and his hair was fairer. He was not quite as handsome either, in Anne’s opinion, though he looked fit and lithe and had a good-humored face.
But before Sydnam could answer, his mother came hurrying up and took him from his brother’s arms into her own.
“Sydnam,” she said, her voice bright and glad. “Sydnam, Sydnam.”
“Mama.” He patted her back with his one hand.
David hid his face against Anne’s arm.
Sydnam’s father stood in the background, beaming genially, and his sister-in-law came into view, the curly- haired little girl astride her hip, the young boy holding her hand, the wide brim of her straw hat flapping in the breeze-a beautiful dark-haired violet-eyed lady.
“Sydnam,” she cried, “what an absolutely wonderful surprise!”
Ah, yes, indeed, they were a close and happy family.
None of them seemed aware of her presence or David’s inside the carriage. But Sydnam soon extricated himself from his mother’s embrace and turned to smile up at Anne.
“There are two people here I want you all to meet,” he said, reaching out his hand to help her down. It closed warmly about hers, and everyone turned to look at her with surprise and curiosity. “May I present Anne, my wife, and David Jewell, her son? Anne, David, I wish you to meet the Earl and Countess of Redfield, my father and mother, and Kit and Lauren, Viscount and Lady Ravensberg, my brother and sister-in-law. And Andrew and Sophia Butler, their children, I assume.”
Anne curtsied. David, who had scrambled down the carriage steps on his own, bobbed his head in a jerky bow and moved closer to her until the side of his body was pressed to hers.
“Your
“You
“You are
“Oh, Sydnam, how
They all spoke at once. But surprised, even shocked, as they undoubtedly were, they did not look horrified. Not yet.
The little boy stared at Sydnam and then patted his father’s leg insistently until Viscount Ravensberg swung him up into his arms. The little girl hid her face on the viscountess’s shoulder.
The countess, regal and handsome, turned her full attention on her new daughter-in-law and smiled.
“Anne, my dear,” she said, taking both of Anne’s hands in her own and squeezing them tightly, “my son has married you and did not even inform us? How
“Ramshackle doings, Syd, old chap,” the viscount said. “Anne-may we call you that? I am delighted to make your acquaintance.” He smiled at her too so that his eyes crinkled attractively in the corners, and held out his free hand to shake hers.
“And I yours,” Anne said, taking it.
“Do you not remember Uncle Syd, Andrew?” he said, looking down at his son.
“The army surgeon chopped your arm off with a big knife,” the boy said, peeping at Sydnam and making a slashing motion with the side of one hand. “Papa told me.”
“And I am delighted too,” the viscountess said warmly, stepping forward to hug Anne and set one cheek against hers while she still held Sophia. “More than delighted. And how do we know, Mother, that Anne and Sydnam did not have a grand wedding? Or an equally beautiful
“You are very welcome indeed to this family, Anne,” the earl said, stepping forward and offering her a large hand. “But Sydnam has some explaining to do to his mother. Why have we known nothing at all of you until this moment?”
“We were married quietly in Bath yesterday by special license, my lord,” she said.
“By special license?” The earl frowned at Sydnam. “But why the great hurry, son? And why Bath of all places?”
“I was teaching at a girls’ school there until two days ago,” Anne explained, relaxing just a little. It looked as if after all his family was prepared to take her to its bosom. “Sydnam did not want to delay the wedding.”
“I did not,” he agreed, laughing. “I am s-”
“My mother is going to have a baby,” David said quite distinctly in his treble voice, drawing everyone’s shocked attention his way.
There was a very brief silence, during which Anne closed her eyes and then opened them again to find David looking uncertainly up at her. She tried to smile at him.
“In a little more than six months’ time,” Sydnam told his family. “We are enormously happy about it, are we not, Anne? I am going to be a
The atmosphere had undergone a distinct change in less than a minute. The chill of autumn seemed to have sliced through the unseasonable warmth of the day.
“And Mr. Jewell passed away how long ago?” the countess asked, her manner suddenly stiff and formal.
Ah. All hope of a gradual introduction to Sydnam’s family was dashed.
“I have not been married before yesterday, ma’am,” Anne said.
“David Jewell!” the viscountess exclaimed suddenly. “But of course!
There was a short, awkward silence, during which they must all have realized that the two of them had been more than just friends during the summer.
“Well,” the viscount said with false heartiness, “if we stand out here on the terrace much longer, darkness will be falling. I am for my tea, and I am sure Anne and Syd must be after the long journey from Bath. Shall we go inside? David, my boy, would you like to come with Andrew and me and we will find you a room close to his? How old are you?”
“Nine, sir,” David said. “Going on ten.”
“Nine going on ten! An elder cousin indeed,” Kit said. “And I had better be
He set Andrew down and took Sophia from his wife’s arms. David laughed and detached himself from Anne, leaving disaster behind him, and went off with them, a new spring in his step. Andrew was gazing worshipfully up at him.
The viscountess linked an arm through Anne’s and led her up the steps into the house. Sydnam followed, between his mother and father.
There was a horrible, heavy silence to succeed the loud delight with which they had all greeted Sydnam’s return home just a few minutes ago and his announcement that he was married.
“Children!” the viscountess said softly and with apparent sympathy. “They would hang one every time, would they not? Even when they are nine years old. Or perhaps especially when they are nine years old.”
The rest of the day did not get any easier for Anne.
It continued with her second quarrel with Sydnam-one day into her marriage.
“If only I could have been swallowed up in a black hole out there on the terrace and never been heard from again,” she said after they had been taken up to his old suite of rooms and left alone there to freshen up before