âI know you do,â she said softly. âAnd I, you.â Then she squared her shoulders and assumed her usual stance. âI should be quite incorrigible without you, you know. My mother often says you are the only reason I have not committed some irredeemable offense.â
It was probably for that reason, Miranda reflected, that Lady Rudland had offered to sponsor her for a season in London. Upon receiving the invitation, her father had sighed with relief and quickly forwarded the necessary funds. Sir Rupert Cheever was not an exceptionally wealthy man, but he had enough to cover a season in London for his only daughter. What he did not possess was the necessary patienceâor, to be frank, the interestâto take her himself.
Their debut was delayed for a year. Miranda could not go while in mourning for her mother, and Lady Rudland had decided to allow Olivia to wait, as well. Twenty woulddo as well as nineteen, sheâd announced. And it was true; no one was worried about Olivia making a grand match. With her stunning looks, vivacious personality and, as Olivia wryly pointed out, her hefty dowry, she was sure to be a success.
But Leticiaâs death, in addition to being tragic, had been particularly ill-timed; now there was another period of mourning to be observed. Olivia could get away with just six weeks, however, as Leticia had not been a sister in blood.
They would be only a little bit late in their arrival for the season. It couldnât be helped.
Secretly, Miranda was glad. The thought of a London ball positively terrified her. It wasnât that she was shy, precisely, because she didnât think she was. It was just that she did not enjoy large crowds, and the thought of so many people staring at her in judgment was just awful.
Canât be helped , she thought as she made her way down the stairs. And at any rate, it would be far worse to be stuck out in Ambleside, without Olivia for company.
Miranda paused at the bottom of the stairs, deciding where to go. The west sitting room had the better desk, but the library tended to be warmer, and it was a bit of a chilly night. On the other handâ
Hmmmâ¦what was that?
She leaned to the side, peering down the hall. Someone had a fire burning in Lord Rudlandâs study. Miranda couldnât imagine that anyone was still up and aboutâthe Bevelstokes always retired early.
She moved quietly along the runner carpet until she reached the open door.
âOh!â
Turner looked up from his fatherâs chair. âMiss Miranda,â he drawled, not adjusting one muscle of his lazy sprawl. â Quelle surprise.â
Turner wasnât certain why he wasnât surprised to see Miss Miranda Cheever standing in the doorway of his fatherâs study. When heâd heard footsteps in the hall, heâd somehow known it had to be she. True, his family tended to sleep like the dead, and it was almost inconceivable that one of them might be up and about, wandering the halls in search of a snack or something to read.
But it had been more than the process of elimination that had led him to Miranda as the obvious choice. She was a watcher, that one, always there, always observing the scene with those owlish eyes of hers. He couldnât remember when heâd first met herâprobably before the chit had been out of leading strings. She was a fixture, really, somehow always there , even at times like these, when it ought to have been only family.
âIâll go,â she said.
âNo, donât,â he replied, becauseâ¦because why ?
Because he felt like making mischief?
Because heâd had too much to drink?
Because he didnât want to be alone?
âStay,â he said, waving his arm expansively. Surely there had to be somewhere else to sit in here. âHave a drink.â
Her eyes widened.
âDidnât think they could get any bigger,â he muttered.
âI canât