An Innocent Deceit. Gail Whitiker
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‘And what if he doesn’t cancel them, miss?’ Mr Bingham persisted, having more insight into the Earl’s mercurial personality than this young lady ever would. ‘What if the Earl not only wishes Lady Clara to continue with her lessons, but insists on coming down to watch?’
‘Ah, now that is a problem, Mr Bingham,’ Antonia admitted, ‘and one with which I am going to need your help. It may be necessary to…vary the timing of Lady Clara’s lessons, if you catch my meaning.’
‘I’m not sure that I do, miss.’
‘Well, the Earl is hardly going to spend all of his time waiting for me to come and give Lady Clara her riding lesson,’ Antonia said, ‘therefore, if you can keep me apprised of his timetable, and we can schedule Lady Clara’s lessons at a time when you know he is going to be away, Lord Carlyle and I need never actually…meet.’
‘I see. And if he asks to see you at some other time of the day?’
‘You shall have to tell him that I have secured…other employment which occupies the remainder of my time,’ Antonia said, rapidly thinking it through. ‘You can tell him that…I am not available to meet with him at any other time. I am quite sure that he will accept that. And besides, if the Earl knows that you are satisfied with my work, surely there will be no need for me to meet with him personally. After all, I shall be nothing more than a paid employee in the Earl’s household.’
Mr Bingham winced sharply. That nearly made him call the whole thing off then and there. It was madness to think that this scheme could work. There were just too many holes in the fabric of the deception.
‘There’s one other thing you don’t seem to have taken into consideration, miss,’ Mr Bingham said, the grooves in his forehead deepening.
‘Oh?’
‘What if Lord Carlyle happens to pass by when you’re giving Lady Clara a lesson? It won’t take him long to realise that you’re no gentleman.’
Antonia nibbled at her bottom lip. As much as she hated to admit it, this time Mr Bingham had a valid point. What good would all of their planning do if all Lord Carlyle had to do was catch sight of her? She had already attempted to disguise her looks by wearing a boy’s clothing, and it hadn’t worked. Catherine had told her as much—
Abruptly, Antonia stopped. Yes, Catherine had told her that the disguise would not work. But she had also said that it could work, if she was only to be seen from a distance!
‘I think I can take care of the matter of my appearance, Mr Bingham,’ Antonia said slowly, ‘and since I can ride side saddle or astride equally well, my presentation on horseback should not prove to be an obstacle either for the brief period of time required. After all, we both know that the Earl seldom spends more than two or three days here, and I feel confident that we can foo—that is, make…alternative arrangements for the brief time necessary. What do you think?’
Mr Bingham sighed. ‘I think I must be dicked in the nob for even thinking this will work. If the Earl should stumble on to any of this, you’ll likely be dismissed, and me right after. I suggest you be very careful that no one, and I do mean no one, hears about it.’
‘I shan’t tell a soul, Mr Bingham,’ Antonia promised. ‘Other than my father, of course. And my dearest friend, Miss Catherine Shand.’
Mr Bingham looked pained. ‘That’s two more than I was hoping for. Do you absolutely have to tell them?’
Antonia blushed. ‘I am afraid they already know. I could not proceed without my father’s consent, and it was Miss Shand’s idea to give me the fictitious address. I do, of course, live with my father at Buntings Hill.’
Mr Bingham shook his head again. ‘This will never work. Mark my words, it’ll never work. I’ll be looking for a new position, and with not a reference to be had.’
‘Now, Paddy, of course it will work,’ Antonia said, not sure why she suddenly felt compelled to address him by his Christian name. ‘With my planning, and your invaluable help, I do not see how it can fail. And you have to believe me when I say that we are not doing this to deceive the Earl. We are doing it to help Lady Clara. Oh, please say that you will help me, Paddy,’ Antonia said, bringing all of her persuasive powers to bear. ‘Are we in this together?’
She turned her most dazzling smile on the Earl’s steward and, hardened campaigner though he was, Paddy Bingham was lost. He had never been the recipient of female cajolery before and, coming now as it did from the beautiful and sweet Antonia Hadley, he didn’t stand a chance.
‘We are, though Lord knows I must be cork-brained for saying so. All right, we’ll give it a try, miss. Can you be here at quarter past ten next Monday morning?’
Antonia thought for a moment, and then nodded. ‘Yes, I’m sure I can be but…why are you waiting a week before we start?’
‘Because the Earl doesn’t usually spend more than a few days in the country, and I want to make sure he’s gone before you conduct your first lesson.’
Antonia nodded happily. ‘All right. Then quarter past ten next Monday it is. Thank you, Paddy. Thank you very much!’
‘Don’t be thanking me just yet, miss. If his lordship should chance to find out about this, there’ll be the very devil to pay,’ Mr Bingham said ominously. ‘And don’t say that I didn’t warn you!’
As it turned out, Sebastian was still in Upper Tipping on Friday, though his reluctance to leave was due more to the presence of the beautiful Miss Antonia Hadley than it was to any matters of business. He was aware of a growing feeling of curiosity about the young woman he had chanced to meet in town, and had been unable to forget the striking loveliness of her face.
He was also hopeful that he would be able to breach the wall of reserve which seemed to have sprung up between them. It had been clear from the tone of her voice that he had offended her by his careless remark about her mother, and he truly wished that he had known of the situation beforehand so that he might have avoided it. But Sebastian refused to believe that Miss Hadley would continue to hold a grudge against him. If he took pains to call upon her and her father, and to make his apologies in a sincere and meaningful way, surely she would relent. He did not like to think that the lady held him in any personal dislike. They had not known each other long enough for that kind of enmity.
The ride to Buntings Hill was not a long one, but Sebastian’s thoughts were suitably occupied the entire way there. There were a number of matters which he needed to review in his mind: the cost of improvements to several of the older tenant cottages, the wisdom of clearing another field for the purposes of increased crop production and, of less importance, the commencement of Clara’s riding lessons with Mr Tony Davlin.
Bingham had informed him of his decision with regard to the riding master that morning, in fact. He had said that, after watching both of the applicants at work, there had been no doubt in his mind that Davlin was the one more suited to the post. It