knowingly. âWho am I to judge?â
Jack glanced around the room. Heâd only ever seen more books in Claybourneâs library. If he read one book every day for as long as he lived, heâd never get to them all. The leather-bound books alone were worth a fortune.
Jack returned his attention to the man sitting calmly at the desk. Nothing seemed to unsettle him. He was a man who took his power from those he served. âIn the second will, what does he leave to the widow?â
âIâm not at liberty to say.â
âDamn it, man, at least tell me if it favors her more than the first.â Which Jack had thought were pitiful leavings to a wife, truth be told. Even for the hoyden whoâd been traipsing along behind him.
âWhat does it matter?â Beckwith asked.
Jack rubbed his thumb along the line of his jaw. Heâd not let the keys to a kingdom far grander than anything he presently owned slip through his fingers. He picked up the leather-bound ledger that Beckwith had given him earlier and bestowed upon the man the infamous cocky grin for which Jack was so well known.
âHow do I signify that I accept the terms of the will?â
Chapter 3
W ith the fog swirling around him, Jack walked along the quiet street. Heâd taken a hansom cab to the dukeâs residence. He could find another to take back to his place, only he no longer needed it. He had a carriage and horses. He had a residence and servants and doubts. With misgivings, heâd signed the document Beckwith had laid before him. In spite of his attempts to question and convince himself otherwise, heâd known from the moment Beckwith read the terms of the will that heâd not walk away from everything heâd been given.
Heâd not expected the duchess to be gracious when told the news heâd accepted the terms. Surprising him, sheâd simply nodded at Mr. Beckwith and said, âThe servants will need to be informed.â
Sheâd called them into the foyer. With Jack standing at the bottom of the stairs, she stood partway up, with all the regal bearing of a queen. He thought he now knew what a warrior looked like at the end of the day when the hard-fought battle had not gone his way, when he had to look into the eyes of those heâd sent onto the battlefield and convince them that honor wasto be found in simply surviving. Sheâd been elegant and eloquent as she explained the residence was now Jackâs and that they all served at his pleasure.
Not one word had been uttered by the staff. Jack imagined theyâd have questions aplenty once the shock wore off. But heâd been content to leave them and the duchess while he adjusted to his change in fortune in solitude.
While he admitted that he didnât consider himself the best choice to serve as guardian to her beloved and overprotected son, he could certainly think of worse. Perhaps the duke himself had fallen into that category.
Jack often walked along streets with grand houses, trying to remember what heâd thought heâd never forget. The first fancy house in which heâd livedâheâd been five. The man had promised his mother heâd take good care of Jack. Sheâd seemed to know him and trust him. Maybe heâd been one of her customers.
All Jack remembered was that the man had fed him and bathed him and put him to bed. Crawled beneath the covers with himâ¦done thingsâ¦
Jack quickened his steps as though he were five again, running away.
The man had wept afterward, said he was sorry, promised to never do it againâ¦
Jack detoured by a towering elm and pounded his fist into the trunk, relished the bite of the hard bark, and felt the pain ricochet up his arm. He didnât want to go there again, didnât want to return to being frightened and hurting. And ashamed.
Although heâd run away, a terrified cadence to his steps, heâd thought heâd always remember
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Orson Scott Card, Aaron Johnston