An excerpt from my current work-in-progress.
On Monday, ten minutes before the appointed time, dressed in his finest, Snowy presented himself at the London home of the Duke and Duchess of Winshire. It took most of that time to be passed from the footman who opened the door to the butler who sent a message for yet another footman who conducted him up the opulent stairs and along elegant passages to Her Grace’s private sitting room.
“I do appreciate punctuality,” said the duchess. “Come in, my dear.” The room was like the lady herself, elegant and beautifully presented, but with a warmth about it that drew a person in.
Snowy took the chair she indicated, on the other side of a low table from the duchess herself. She busied herself with the tea makings and then dismissed all the servants, leaving the two of them alone.
“Being alone with a young man without facing untoward accusations is one of the benefits of advancing age and high social position, Lord Snowden,” she said. “They are fewer than you might think.” She handed him his cup of tea.
“Your Grace is a beautiful woman,” Snowy told her, ignoring the way she had addressed him. He had a feeling she used the title to unsettle him, and was determined not to show how well it was working.
“For an old lady.” The duchess’s eyes twinkled. “I have grandchildren, Snowden.You wince. If you plan to take the title, you had better get used to it.” With the precision of a needle, she added, “Do not think of it as your step-father’s name, my dear. Think of it as your father’s, God rest his soul.”
The woman read his mind like a witch. Or Lily. How his foster mother would laugh at being compared to a duchess!
“I will try, my lady.”
“Good. I knew your mother.” She took a sip of her own tea. “I owe you a debt, Snowden. When your mother disappeared from Society, I took your grandfather’s word that her mind was turned by your death and she was living retired while she recovered. I obeyed my husband’s command to stay out of your family’s private business. I should have insisted on visiting. Perhaps there is something I could have done.” She shook her head, sadly.
The duchess had previously been married to the Duke of Haverford, of whom Snowy had heard nothing good. “You could not have helped her, Your Grace.”
“I can help you, Snowden,” the duchess retorted. “What is it that you need?”
“I appreciate the thought, ma’am. I am not sure that anyone can give me what I really need.”
The duchess tipped her head to one side. “Tell me what that is, and we shall see.”
“Information, mostly. I believe we’ll find most of it. Lord Andrew has put me on to an enquiry agent. A man called Wakefield. He is apparently very good.”
“I can vouch for him,” her grace agreed. “He and his wife are connections of my family, and very good at their work. But tell me what information you are looking for, my dear. I have sources of my own.”
“I want the whole truth, Your Grace. I want to know if Snowden was behind my kidnapping. Whether it was attempted murder, as my mother and my foster mother believed. I want to know whether my father was murdered, what happened to my mother, everything about my past I should have grown up knowing. I will settle for evidence of two things. That the boy Aunt Lily found in that alley is the same boy that was stolen from a garden in Mayfair two days earlier. And that my mother’s second husband was responsible for my disappearance.”
“I see.” The duchess proved that she did see by adding, “The first will make it easier for you to claim the viscountcy. The second will allow you to seek justice.”
In truth, Snowy would settle for the first. He could leave seeking justice until Snowden tried to kill him again.