married!â
âThen donât go,â I said. âDo something else when Grandmama and I leave. Get another job.â
She shook her head. âI signed the contract. And what can I do? Iâm not like you, my lady. I canât just walk away. I donât have the means, and no other noble families are hiringâat least not at this level. Iâve looked.â
Walk away? Did she really think
I
could? Ada looked at my ancestry and wealth as if that was power, but really, a commoner had more freedom than me. Which was why, perhaps, I needed to become one.
âYouâre the Countess of Rothford. Someone with a name like that canât move among the nameless.â
âWhat would you do then? If you had the means?â
âIf I wasnât working here?â She paused to wipe her nose. âIâd go to my family in Hadaworth. I have cousins there. They have a nice dairy farm.â
âHadaworthâs as far north as you can get,â I reminded her. âThatâs not an easy journey either.â
âThereâs no ocean!â she exclaimed. âItâs still in Osfrid. And there are no savages there.â
âYouâd rather work on a dairy farm than marry an Adorian adventurer?â Admittedly, this played into my plans better than Iâd expected. But it sounded so comical, I couldnât help but ask, âHow did you even end up being referred to this Glittering Court?â
âLady Bransonâs son John attends the university with himâMaster Cedric. Lord John heard him talking about how he needed pretty girls for some task his father had set him. Lord John knew you were disbanding the household and asked his mother if there were any girls who needed a place to go. When she approached me . . . well, what could I do?â
I took her hand in an unusual show of informality between us. âYouâll go to Hadaworth. Thatâs what youâll do.â
Ada gaped, and I led her up to my bedroom where other maids were sorting clothes. I sent them off to new tasks and then produced some topaz earrings from my jewelry box.
âHere,â I said, handing them over to Ada. âSell them. More than enough to buy passage with a reputable group traveling to Hadaworth.â Iâd expected her to have some greater lifelong dream, one I might not be able to afford. This was a bargain.
Her eyes widened. âMy lady . . . I . . . I canât. I canât take these.â
âYou can,â I insisted, my own heart racing. âI, uh, canât bear the thought of you being miserable. I want you to be with your family and find happiness. You deserve it.â That wasnât entirely a lie . . . but my true motivations were hardly so altruistic.
She clutched the earrings in her hands, and hope started to bloom on her face. âIâno. I canât. That contract! Thatâs binding. Theyâll find me andââ
âIâll take care of itâno need to worry. Iâll get you out of it. I can do those kinds of things, you know. But to make sure it will all, um, work out, you need to leave now. Right away. Itâs just after midday. Most of the traveling merchants will be finishing business and heading north soon. And then you need to disavow all knowledge of the Glittering Court. Never, ever tell anyone they approached you.â
Her eyes were huge. âI wonât, my lady. I wonât. Never a word. And Iâll go nowâas soon as I pack.â
âNo, donât. I mean, donât take too much. Pack lightly. You canât look like youâre leaving for good. Act like youâre just going off on an errand.â I didnât want anyone noting her departure, possibly stopping her and asking her questions.
She nodded at the wisdom of my words. âYouâre right, my lady. Of course you are. Besides, with these, I can buy new clothes when I
Carmen Caine, Madison Adler