Five
Several hours later, Vivian was debating her fate from the soapy, fragrant confines of a steaming-hot bath.
The bath Darius Lindsey had ordered for her.
The knowledge he had of women was… disquieting. Vivian considered his insistence that she join him here in Kent as her menses began, and realized from the moment she’d laid eyes on him, he’d known something more personal about her than her sister generally knew. More personal than William ever knew, except this once.
From the moment Darius had laid eyes on her, the exact cycle of her body had been shared between them. Such knowledge was appallingly intimate, the sort of thing Vivian suspected Jared and Angela might both know but never discuss.
With Darius Lindsey, whom Vivian had known less than a week, the topic had been discussed. Everlasting God.
She rinsed her hair a final time and stood, letting the water sluice off her body as she reached for a thick, warm bath sheet.
He understood a lady’s comforts, and the idea made her shiver in anticipation. She hadn’t known this about him when she’d chosen him. She’d known he was fierce, discreet, and in need of coin. William hadn’t questioned her choice though, and that had to mean something.
A knock on the door as Vivian shrugged into a dressing gown had her heart speeding up, but it was only Gracie, the maid of all work. She seemed to manage easily despite a slightly withered arm, balancing a tray on her hip while she pulled the door closed.
“Master Darius sent you up a toddy,” Gracie said. “I’m to brush out your hair so it dries before bedtime. If you’re decent enough, I’ll have the tub taken away.”
Vivian took a seat at the vanity, trying to recall the last time somebody else had brushed out her hair. Her lady’s maid—formerly Muriel’s maid and not a young woman—had never volunteered for the task. “Why do you call him Master Darius?”
“Habit,” Gracie said, turning down the sheets on the bed to warm, then going to the door. “Come on, you lot, and step quick, as there’s leftover toddy still on the hob in the kitchen.”
A procession of servants—the scullery maid, the boot boy, a footman, and the groom from the stables—made quick work of removing the tub, buckets, and screens, leaving Vivian to sip her toddy before the fire.
“Let’s get you seated,” Gracie said, pulling the dressing stool over by the fire. “And my heavens, you’ve more hair than I’ve seen in a while.”
“Are there footmen in this household?”
“Oh, sometimes.” Gracie started gently toweling Vivian’s hair dry. “Master Darius hires us and gives us coin for our labor. We don’t fret too much about who wears which jobs when the work piles up. The grooms will help out with the chimneys. The footmen will muck a stall come summer. We do pretty much as Pitt directs us.”
“Mr. Pitt is the butler?”
“On his good days.” Gracie switched to brushing, starting with the ends of Vivian’s hair. “Pitt used to work at Wilton Acres, but he got too old, and Lord Wilton turned him off, so here he is.”
The toddy was wonderful, another comfort, courtesy of her… of Darius Lindsey. “Wilton turned off a loyal retainer without a pension or character?”
“Wilton’s like that. We’re not to speak ill of our betters, but that Wilton is a scandal. Let’s turn you a bit, shall we?”
“What about the other brother, Lord Amherst?”
“Master Dare dotes on him,” Gracie said, expression brightening. “Loves those kiddies, too. A child never had a more devoted uncle than Master Dare.”
“John loves him,” Vivian said, sipping her toddy.
“And we all love our Master John. Turn again, milady.”
“Did you all work at Wilton Acres?” This was prying, shameless, unladylike prying, but no more personal than having to tell a man about the very rhythms of one’s body.
Gracie paused to work at a tangle. “We don’t all come from Wilton, but we worked somewhere, and most of us were let go through no fault of our own. Word gets out, though, when a man’s willing to take a chance on people. Master Dare puts us to work, and if we’ve a mind to move on, he writes the best characters and lets us know he appreciates our loyalty.”
This toddy had a particularly lovely mixture of spices—something blending the cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg together. Something subtle and exotic—cardamom? Allspice? An extravagance, surely, and one Darius Lindsey had expended on her. “How long have you worked here, Gracie?”
“Years. Most wouldn’t hire me, ’cause of me arm, but it hardly slows me down a’tall, and Master Dare knows that. Turn.”
Vivian sipped her drink in silence, considering what Gracie had said. It was true. Servants in the better homes were expected to be attractive—whole, fit, and comely. She’d not considered this before, because William’s residences had been fully staffed before she’d married him.
But in five years they’d had some turnover—and the butlers or house stewards had hired the men, while housekeepers hired the maids.
And the lady of the house did exactly… what?
“There you go.” Gracie stepped back. “Can I fetch your book, milady, so you can stay here by the fire while your hair finishes drying?”
“I’ll get it.” Vivian took one last, scrumptious whiff of the dregs in her glass and stifled a yawn. “Are there really leftover toddies in the kitchen?”
“Master Dare’s toddies are legendary. I had a taste as he was putting in the spices, to make sure he got it right.”
“It was lovely,” Vivian said, handing over the glass. “No more for me, or I’ll be asleep on my feet.”
“Good night, then, milady. Pleasant dreams.”
“Thank you, but, Gracie?” Vivian hoped neither her tone nor her expression gave away the depth of her curiosity.
“Milady?”
“Does Mr. Lindsey have other guests here, other ladies?”
Gracie met her gaze for the merest instant. “Never overnight, milady. You’d best be asking him about that directly.”
Vivian nodded, understanding that Gracie had just passed along a tidbit, one woman to another, that came up against but did not cross the boundaries drawn by a devoted employee. Vivian was still sitting on the hearthstones, trying to puzzle out if she wanted to know of Darius’s other associations, when he knocked once and stood in her doorway.
“You’re letting in the cold air,” she said.
He pulled the door closed behind him. “Your hair is even more lovely than I’d imagined, and longer.”
“You’re not supposed to see it down,” she groused, stifling another yawn. “And the toddy was a masterful touch. Should I take my clothes off? I’d rather climb under the covers first.”
He smiled slightly as he prowled into the room. “Are you tipsy?”
“Maybe a little. I drank it quickly. I don’t do this sort of thing, ever, you see, and… what are you doing?”
He’d picked up the hairbrush and was advancing on her, but she kept scooting around to face him.
“Vivvie, I can’t brush your hair if you won’t give me your back.”
“Oh.” She angled slightly so he could sit behind her on the raised hearth.
“One braid or two?”
“One, over my left shoulder. How did you bathe if I had the use of the tub?”
“You can tell?” He smoothed her hair over her shoulders, and Vivian shuddered at his touch. He repeated the gesture, making it even more of a caress.
“Your hair is damp and you smell good,” she said. “Maybe I am tipsy.”
“You’re nervous.” His hands settled on her shoulders and kneaded slowly. “It’s too soon to be nervous, Vivvie. Nobody will be taking any clothes off tonight except possibly myself.”