âShall I tell your estate manager to rest while he awaits your leisure?â
Marcus stopped in his path to the stairs. He turned to face Gibbons, trying to ignore the knot forming in the pit of his stomach. But Gibbons wasnât smiling, smirking or doing anything that suggested he was joking.
âGrimshaw is here?â he asked.
Gibbons nodded. âHe arrived twenty minutes ago.â
What could his estate manager want? Marcus knew that whatever had happened, Grimshawâs coming to see him in the middle of the night was an ill omen. Anxiety momentarily banished his fatigue, and the earl nearly sprinted to the salon.
âGrimshaw? What are you doing here?â Marcus asked as he entered the room. Any thought of exchanging pleasantries faded at the sight of his employeeâs haggard expression.
âMy lord,â the older man said, rising from the chair. He took a step forward as though to shake Lord Westinâs hand but then quickly stepped backward. âIâm sorry to have woken you.â
Marcus could have corrected him, but he didnât bother to. âIâm only surprised to find you here so early,â he said instead.
Grimshaw nodded. âForgive me, my lord. I wouldnât have intruded were it not of the utmost importance. But once I received the news, I left immediately for London.â
âWhat news?â Countless possibilities paraded through his mind, each one more dire than the one before.
âYou made an investment with Lord Rutherford for some American timber,â Grimshaw said slowly.
Marcus nodded. He only vaguely remembered the investment itselfâGrimshaw handled those detailsâbut he did recall the estate manager mentioning it to him several months ago. The investment seemed sound, and Marcus had authorized the man to deal with it accordingly.
âWhat about it?â Marcus prompted when Grimshaw hesitated.
âThe ship transporting the goods has been in a storm. We canât say for certain, but Iâve received some information that the ship and the merchandise â¦â Grimshaw trailed off, obviously unableâor afraidâto say anything else.
âThe ship and the merchandise, what?â Marcus pressed.
âWell ⦠they might have ⦠itâs not certain, you understand ⦠really, we wonât know anything further until more information surfaces â¦â Yet Grimshaw still didnât get to the crux of the matter.
âGrimshaw, itâs much too early in the morning to be playing guessing games.â
âThe ship has most likely sunk,â the estate manager blurted.
Marcus thought through the ramifications for a few moments before he said anything.
âItâs certainly a tragedy if thatâs the case, Grimshaw. But Iâm more concerned about the crew and any other people who might have been aboard the ship. We can only pray that the reports are untrue.â
âBut the merchandise, my lord?â
Marcus waved the concern away with a negligent slash of his hand. âUndoubtedly, it would be unfortunate. But itâs hardly worth traveling across the country before dawn. I appreciate your diligence in keeping me informed, but I donât see that this is a matter of any urgency. Surely nothing can be done until the reports have been confirmed.â He made a move toward the door to call Gibbons to ready a room. âStay here tonight and get some sleep before you return to Westin Park.â
âYou donât understand, my lord â¦â
Marcus sighed and paused in his trek. âIâm not pleased to have possibly lost the funds. But that is paltry in light of the other concerns if the ship has indeed sunk. Thatâs why Iâve never gambled much money in schemes. They all have the potential to fail.â
At this, Grimshaw lowered his gaze to the floor.
Marcus noticed the change in his demeanor. âWhat is it, Grimshaw?â
âYouâve trusted me for years with your estates and with your investments, have you not, my lord?â
Marcus nodded. Nothing about the shift in conversation inspired confidence in him.
Grimshaw nodded almost reflexively. But he still wouldnât meet Marcusâs eyes. âAnd youâve given me the liberty to handle the funding as I saw fit, for the most part.â
âYes?â More a question than an answer.
âI might have funded the investment from the Americas with a larger than usual portion of your ready funds.â
The knot of worry in Marcusâs gut grew and twisted his insides until they felt like mush. âHow much?â he managed.
âIn hindsight, more than I should have,â Grimshaw hedged.
âWhat does that mean?â
âBad news ⦠if the ship has sunk ⦠which of course we donât know for sure â¦â Grimshaw added hastily.
Marcus didnât want to ask this next question, but he had to. âIf it has sunk, what does that mean?â
The time it took his estate manager to answer was grossly exaggerated by the fear gripping Marcus. âIt means youâve lost most of your fortune.â
Even though Marcus had been bracing himself, the news still hit him hard. He raised a hand to rub his weary eyes and flinched when he pressed on the growing bruise. It was almost laughableâearlier that evening, he had fancied himself a heroic rescuer, sweeping in to save the fair maiden.
But who was going to ride to his rescue?
Chapter Two
Across town, Emma Mercer found herself occupied with her own need for rescue. As expected, sheâd entered the Roth residence to find herself summarily dismissed from her position. To make matters worse, Lady Roth had not even allowed her a nightâs rest before setting her on the street, with her belongings already stowed in her valise by a maid. Notably missing among those belongings was any type of letter of reference.
Emma couldnât return to her parents.
Yes, sooner or later, sheâd have to tell them she had lost her position, but she couldnât bear to wake them with that dreadful news so soon. Not until she devised a plan to find different employment and provide them with the income on which they depended.
That left her with only one place to goâOliviaâs house.
At Oliviaâs, the butler, an imperturbable man by the name of Mathis, showed her immediately into the drawing room as though there was nothing unusual about a predawn visitor. Olivia joined her there minutes later, still in her nightclothes but with an alert and determined expression. One lookâplus whatever information Mathis had given herâwas apparently all it took for Olivia to understand exactly what had occurred.
âI never liked you working for that puffed up snob anyway,â Olivia, the Marchioness of Huntsford, announced as she entered the room, talking over Emmaâs attempts to apologize for the early hour. âYou are far too good for those terrors she calls children, and besides, she gave you scarcely any time at all to come by and visit me.â
âThis isnât exactly good news, Olivia.â Emma felt compelled to interject. Although her friendâs enthusiasm had a grudging smile tugging at the corners of her lips.
âNonsense, this will be like a holiday, having you hereâbecause, of course, youâll be staying.â Olivia continued. âAnd none of your protests about it being extra trouble, or me being too kind. Iâm being entirely selfish in looking forward to having you stay with me. Mathis will have a maid prepare you a room in no time at all, wonât you, Mathis?â
âCertainly, my lady,â the butler replied with such assurance that one might have supposed he always kept rooms at the ready for newly dismissed governesses.
âThere, you see?â Olivia said as she seated herself on a sofa. âNow, while Mathis takes care of that, why donât you sit down here with me and tell me all about it?â
Relief and gratitude poured over Emma in a wave as she all but collapsed onto the seat next to her friend. Soon, the whole story had come outâoversleeping at her parentsâ house, rushing back to the Rothsâ, the confrontation with Lady Roth ending in her swift but final exit. The only thing Emma left out was her meeting the manâMr. Fairfax. But surely she could be forgiven for glossing over that. It had, after all, been merely a chance encounter with a gentleman sheâd likely never see again.
Olivia listened with her usual amount of patienceâwhich was to say, none whatsoeverâinterrupting frequently with exclamations of surprise and outrage on her friendâs behalf. Emma was used to constantly having to bite her tongue around Lady Roth and the little terrors masquerading as children, and around her parents. Frankness was a sure way to offend the former and hurt the latter. Despite the bleakness of the situation, it was relaxing to finally say exactly what she thought without fear of the consequences. If Olivia were the type to be easily offended, they never would have become friends in the first place.
Granted, a marchioness and a governess were an odd pairing for a friendship. The origins of the friendship had been equally unique. During a walk through the park a few months earlier, David, one of the Roth children, had flung a handful of mud at his sister, Marieâonly to have it miss and hit the unsuspecting Marquess of Huntsford as he and his wife were strolling. Emma had been suitably mortified, but the Huntsfords had been cheerful and gracious.
Since then, Olivia had been a stalwart friend. A stalwart friend who was now entirely too eager to find a silver lining in Emmaâs situation.
âWe just need to build the proper strategy,â Olivia continued.
âFor what?â Emma asked, her dread rising as she wondered how much of the conversation her reminiscing had caused her to miss.
âFor finding you a husband.â
âOlivia,â she said in a warning voice. Considering the evening sheâd had, and the early hour, Emma could think of a hundred reasons not to have this conversation. Maybe a thousand reasons.
Her friend paid her no mind, which wasnât surprising at all. âEmma, itâs a good plan.â
âYour suggestion hardly constitutes a plan,â Emma argued. âBesides, who would have me?â
The question was met with a blank stare. âYou must be joking, Emma. There are no end of eligible bachelors in Town for the Season. It will be a small matter to make one of them fall in love with you.â
âBut do you think Iâm going to find it that easy to just fall in love with someone myself?â And Emma prepared herself to receive a lecture on how she shouldnât be choosy. Not only was it much too early for the plan, but for lectures, as well.
But Olivia didnât chide. She looked rather crestfallen. âIâm sure thereâs someone out there who you might find â¦â
âNever mind, Olivia. I know,â Emma said gently because she couldnât stand how her friend looked when she thought her brilliant planâthat wasnât so much of a planâwasnât going to work. âBut I still donât see how I can be expected to compete with the other eligible ladies.â
âTheyâll be foolish to try to compete with you,â Olivia insisted. âYouâre beautifulâno, donât shake your head, itâs nothing more than the truthâyouâre kind, generous, practical, good with children and youâre from a highly respectable family.â
âA highly impoverished family, you mean. Uncle is the one with money, and he doesnât speak to Papa.â
Olivia waved the problem away. âHeâs a recluse. He doesnât speak to anyone. No one will expect you to be his closest correspondent. Simply the fact that you are his niece and therefore, eventually, his heir will earn you entrance into many circles.â
âBut my uncle wonât be the one to provide me with a dowry.â
âSo weâll find you suitors who donât need to gain money from marriage.â Olivia reached out to take hold of Emmaâs hands. âTruly, Emma, a husband is what you need. As a governess, you will always be subject to your employerâs whims. Youâll never have security, never have stability, never truly be able to help your parents in any lasting way since youâll never be able to guarantee your income from one month to the next.â
The last bit was a low blow, but Emma had to admit everything Olivia said was the truth.
âI know this may not be exactly what youâd planned for your life, but can you at least try?â Olivia asked. âIf it doesnât work, weâll figure out something else.â
Olivia looked so hopeful, Emma could only nod. âI suppose I can try,â she said grudgingly.
âWonderful!â Olivia exclaimed. And her mouth quirked into a smile, and her eyes sharpened. âIt really would be the perfect solution. A handsome, wealthy, godly gentleman will fall madly in love with you and all of your problems will disappear.â
âBut I wouldnât get my hopes up, Olivia.?⦠My agreement to try doesnât mean â¦â
It was no use; her friend was hugging her as though Emma had fulfilled her most earnest desire.
âIâll put together a list of the most suitable gentlemen, and weâll go from there.â
âAnd how am I to meet these suitable gentlemen?â Emma couldnât help but ask. She covered her mouth to hide a yawn.
âLeave that to me,â Olivia insisted. âI have just the man in mind to help.â
Two days after the incident in Cheapside, Marcus wasnât in any better mood. There had been no further news on the status of the ship, so heâd spent his time reviewing his accounts, trying to determine just how badly heâd be impacted if the ship was truly lost.
Very badly indeed, as it turned out.
âSo youâre convinced the ships are lost?â Marcus asked during his morning meeting with Grimshaw and the Fairfax family solicitor, Mr. Wilbanks.
âIâm afraid so, my lord,â Grimshaw said with a sigh.
It was clear that this financial struggle concerned Grimshaw just as much as Marcus. Marcus had learned that his estate managerâs cousin was one of the timber merchants involved with the investment. That explained why so much had been funneled in a single projectâGrimshaw had seen the opportunity to help his cousin and benefit his employer with a potentially highly profitable venture. Heâd acted with only honest intentions, but his family loyalties had made him disregard the risk.
The guilt over acting with so little foresight was clearly weighing on him now.
âWhat can we do if the ships are gone?â Marcus asked. He was unwilling to give up hope that everything might, in fact, turn out fine.
However, his solicitor, Mr. Wilbanks, an older gentleman who had served Marcus and his father before him for years, was silent; obviously, he thought the worst.
âThe numbers arenât good, my lord,â Wilbanks said with the same dejected manner as Grimshaw. âIn your grandfatherâs time,â he explained, âthe entirety of the familyâs income came from the rents on your estates. It was your father who made the decision to begin investing in various enterprises with the surpluses from the estate fundsâa practice which you have continued, and which has doubled your income.â
Marcus already knew the familyâs financial history, and he wanted to tell Wilbanks to speed up the explanation. But instead of barking at the solicitor, he tried to wait patiently.
Wilbanks took a steadying breath before continuing.
âBut all of the monies in the investment accounts were used for this timber project of Lord Rutherfordâs. If the ships are lost, that portion of your income is gone. It will take years of surpluses from the estates before you would be able to build those accounts up enough to begin investing again.â
âHow much is going to be left?â Some claimed Marcus was rich as Croesus, which might have been an exaggeration, but the truth of the matter was that his accounts had been quite large. And now they were emptyâand would remain so, unless the ship and its merchandise could be recovered.
All was not lost, Marcus supposed. He did still have a vast amount of property at his disposal. Property that earned a fair amount of incomeâenough so he would hardly have to worry about starving, or lacking a roof over his head.
But all the other uses he made of his moneyâthe charitable donations, the investments into facilities to help the underprivileged, all his plans to use his wealth and position to drive interest in generating labor and housing reforms ⦠it would all have to come to a halt. The very thought was appalling.
Wilbanks fumbled, but Grimshaw seemed to take pity on the solicitor, naming a number that made Marcus wince.
âItâs enough to maintain your estates until the next round of rents come in,â the estate manager continued, trying to be consoling. âAnd to cover moderate personal expenses. Not much more than that, though. No lavish living,â he finished.
âMr. Wilbanks,â Marcus said, turning toward the solicitor, who looked like he might rather be having his teeth pulled out one by one and without any numbing effect than to be sitting in the room with them. âIs that right?â Marcus didnât care so much about the not living lavishly part ⦠but it would have been nice if there had been something other than eking by on the horizon.
âFrom what I can tell of the paperwork â¦â Wilbanks sighed. âYes. It is, unfortunately, true.â
âHow long?â Marcus croaked, his throat and mouth parched.
âHow long until what precisely, my lord?â Wilbanks asked. He looked twitchy and uncomfortable. Grimshaw didnât look much better.
Marcus scrubbed a hand down his face. âHow long until we can recoup?â
The solicitor consulted some papers in front of him. âIt is difficult to say. The estates generate sufficient funds to cover most living costs. Unfortunately, most of the income from the recent rents collection went into the investment funds. The estate expenses are, of course, paid first, so there are no outstanding costs there, but the monies in your personal funds will have to last you until the next rent collection date. At that point, the situation should become more stableâand if you are careful with your expenses, then you may still have some surplus to go back into the investment accounts.â
After Marcus muddled through the headache-inducing explanations, he decided that at least that was a bit of heartening news.
âI will also see about possibly leasing out some of your secondary estates to bring in some more funds,â Wilbanks continued, âbut any significant expenditureââ Wilbanks tiptoed carefully around the reform investments Marcus had discussed with him so many times ââwill have to wait for ⦠Iâd say six or seven years, at the least. If you begin to conserve, make cutbacks, then the funds will, of course, accumulate fasterââ
âI donât care about whether or not Iâll be able to go purchase a new pair of boots every week,â Marcus interrupted.
âWould you be willing to temporarily raise the cost of rent from your tenants?â Wilbanks asked bluntly.
âNo,â Marcus said before the man even had time to close his mouth on the question.
âNot even to helpââ
Marcus slashed his hand through the air. âI said no.â He wasnât going to burden his tenants to fund his own social-reform agenda. âWeâll find another way.â He didnât know whom he was trying to convinceâthe two downtrodden men, or himself. âAnd I wonât abandon all hope that the ship is, indeed, safe.â
Grimshaw opened his mouth to speak then promptly closed it again. Another time or two of the same routine, and the estate manager finally found his voice. âI wouldnât get my hopes up, my lord. No one has heard from the ship. Nor have any of the rescue ships sent out located any sign of it.â
âIâll continue to pray,â Marcus said.
The two men stayed for only a few more minutes. Really, there was nothing left to discuss. And when Marcus was left alone in his study, he felt the weight of his predicament bearing down on him.
What was he going to do? The urge was strong to stay in his study and keep searching his finances for answers. Pouring over ledgers and account books wouldnât make a difference in the reality of the situation, however. He trusted Wilbanks and had no reason not to take the older man at his word. If anyone knew the state of the familyâs coffers, it was the solicitor whoâd been serving the Fairfaxes for years.
Marcus was trying to devise an outing that would occupy his mind for a bit when his butler brought in a letter from his sister, Olivia.
Drop whatever youâre doing. I urgently need to see you.
Less than half an hour later, his sisterâs butler, Mathis, barely had time to open the front door of the house before Marcus was pushing his way in. In the time it took him to ride to the Huntsford town house, heâd had ample opportunity to envision what might be wrong. After Wilbanks and Grimshawâs ill tidings, the earl was primed to expect the worst.
Mathisâs stoic exterior should have given Marcus some reassurance that things were fine, but the butlerâs expression never changed. A thief could have a gun trained on him, and the most the older man might do was blink.
And because of his completely unflappable nature, Mathis didnât say a word about seeing the Earl of Westin with an eye that was an impressive display of mottled blues and purple.
A butler who didnât feel the need to offer unsolicited commentary on everything ⦠it was a refreshing change.
âYour sister will meet you in the yellow parlor, my lord,â Mathis said.
Without asking the location of the yellow parlor, Marcus headed down the hall. In the months since his sisterâs marriage, Oliviaâs new home had become as familiar to him as his own.
Marcus paced the length of the room while he waited for his sister to appear. Just when he was seriously beginning to contemplate going and finding her, the door opened.
âGood morning, Marcus,â Olivia said cheerfully.
âWhat is it? Whatâs wrong?â Marcus asked, taking a few steps toward her.
Oliviaâs brow furrowed in confusion as she hugged him. âNothing,â she answered.
Marcus still wasnât convinced. âHas something happened?â
âNo.â She paused. âWhy would you think so?â
âYour letter said to come immediately. It sounded ⦠frantic.â
âI think you probably read too much into my request,â Olivia said with a shrug.
âWhen your request contains the word urgently, I donât really have to read into it much.â
âWeâre not here to discuss your overly active paranoia,â his sister returned. âBesides, Iâm in no mood to argue with you. I need your help,â Olivia said, taking a seat and offering to ring for tea.
After declining the tea service, Marcus relocated to a chair, curious to hear about Oliviaâs problem ⦠hopefully, it would distract him from his own. Whatever was wrong with his sister was consuming enough that she had yet to ask him about the injury to his eye.
Not that he minded that omission from the conversation, of course. Olivia would be much too amused by the story. Not to mention when Nickâher husband and Marcusâs best friendâfound out, Marcus would be lucky if he ever lived down the humiliation.
âWhat do you need my help with?â
He was pleased Olivia had come to him for assistance. Since sheâd married, she hadnât seemed to need her older brother anymore. And as someone who had spent his entire adult life caring for his sister, the sudden change after her marriage made Marcus feel a little bereft.
âIâve a made a list,â Olivia said, digging in the pocket of her skirts and finally producing a folded-up slip of paper.
âA list?â he echoed, taking and unfolding the paper so he could read it.
His sister sat quietly while he scanned down the rather long collection of names.