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Outside there were no streetlights, no lights on the front of the house—no wonder a girl wasn’t allowed to roam at this hour. A few torches, though, burned in front of the main door. Opting not to break a leg, she decided not to jump out the second-story window. Instead she waited for all the women’s doors to click shut, and stocking-footed, shoes in hand, she sneaked down the servants’ staircase all the way to the basement kitchen. Cook’s eyeglasses, she noticed, were lying on the pine table. Chloe put them on in hopes of bettering her disguise. For a moment the glasses blurred her vision, but then the fuzziness cleared. She slipped out the kitchen door without anyone noticing. Once she was outside, the cool evening air sobered her, but only for a minute. She pulled on her shoes and groped her way toward the torches.

As she followed the stone wall of Bridesbridge Place, feeling her way toward the light, she saw a candle appear in a window on the second floor, then the window opened, and whoosh—a chambermaid dumped a washbasin of water out the window. Chloe jumped back, but it splashed on her calfskin walking shoes. Dots of mud sprayed onto her white tights. The window slammed shut.

“Damn!” Chloe whispered to herself. “Talk about getting cold feet.” She stepped around what she’d bet was the cold water Grace had just washed her face in. “Forget this.” So much for bending the rules. She decided to shelve this idea.

“Who’s there?” A night watchman raised his torch, pacing atop the steps of the main entry.

Too late to go back now.

Chloe lowered her voice. “Hullo! Just a footman out for a walk.” She yanked on one of the torches, and finally, like the sword in the stone, the thing came out of the ground. It was taller than she was, and heavier than she thought. She almost fell over.

“Here now!” the watchman called out, squinting his eyes to see her better. “Since you’re out, you may as well deliver this to Mr. Sebastian Wrightman.” He handed her a letter and a lantern, and took the torch. Now she had a mission and she considered this to be a sign.

As the watchman came closer, he screwed up his mouth and squinted at her. “Promise me you’ll bring it directly, no stopping for a thimbleful of drink along the way?”

“Promise.” Chloe spun around, wanting to say as little as possible, and headed toward Dartworth before the watchman had a chance to question her further.

Her shoes sank into the mud as she pointed herself toward the flickering torches in front of Dartworth Hall far off in the distance. Her shoes made a slight squishing sound in the mud. Despite her nerves and her shaking hand, she tried to enjoy her newfound freedom without a chaperone. And she was out after dark. She hoisted the lantern high, but it didn’t feel right. She wasn’t like Grace. She couldn’t break rules any more easily than she could break hearts.

The lantern helped her see, but the light it cast was limited at best. She’d never take streetlights for granted again. She almost turned back because the darkness scared her, but she knew that the night watchman had his eye on her and there was no going back. Trees creaked, owls hooted, and something rustled in the woods along the path. The footpath to Dartworth Hall certainly was a lot longer than it looked from her bedchamber window. Just then a nearly full moon burst from behind a cloud and shed a blue light on everything.

When she looked back over her shoulder to see how far she’d gone—wham! She slammed right into a panel of glass and her tricornered hat almost fell off her head. Her shoulder hurt, but at least the glass wasn’t broken. She raised her lantern and discovered she’d bumped into a greenhouse, a massive greenhouse from the looks of it. The glass felt warm and moist on her palm. She wiped away the condensation and shone her torch on strawberries growing on a vine inside. Standing back, she looked up, hoisted her lantern, and made out leaded-glass windows.

After days of forcing down mutton, rubbery little potatoes, and peacock presented with the head still on, she’d been craving fruit. Forbidden fruit!

She heard hurried footsteps and a night watchman from Dartworth Hall came running up with his lantern. “Hullo there,” he called. “What is it, boy? Come from Bridesbridge at this hour? On foot?”

Chloe bowed her head, lowered her voice, and presented the letter. “I—I have a letter for Mr. Wrightman, sir.”

“Do ya now?” The watchman looked at her askance. “You don’t look familiar to me, boy.”

“I’m new at Bridesbridge.”

“You’ll have to bring the letter in yourself. The front-door footmen have gone to bed. He’s in the billiards room. Catty-corner from the main dining room. Follow the large hall and stay right.”

Chloe’s shadow, with her thin legs and ankles, did look rather boylike and the coat hid her hips better than any slimming underwear ever could, although, as a result of the rigors of a Regency diet, she’d already lost the seven pounds she’d been needing to lose for quite some time.

She set her lantern down and bounded up the marble steps—the hundreds and hundreds of steps shining in the blue moonlight. It was too delicious to be true. She’d have Sebastian all to herself—dressed in her cute little footman outfit! And as an added bonus, she could find Henry and apologize to him. She skipped through the open doorway and into the foyer, dimly lit by a few sconces on the walls. The candled chandeliers were out for the night, but a candelabrum stood on the foyer credenza and she picked it up.

She hurried past the dark library, dining room, and drawing rooms and followed the sound of men’s laughter in the distance.

As she approached a brightly lit doorway in front of which a footman sat slumped in a chair, apparently sleeping, Chloe saw a massive mahogany pool table. Sebastian was sprawled in a chair, cognac in hand, smartphone in his lap—smartphone!? Henry was reading a book. George paced back and forth with his hands on his hips.

She lunged toward the door, hoping to hightail it out of there, but the footman chose that moment to wake up and blocked her with his arm. “What do you want?” he demanded.

Chloe handed him the letter, but he didn’t take it. “Delivery from Bridesbridge.”

“Sebastian, finish tweeting!” George commanded from behind the doors.

The footman shoved Chloe back into the dark hall and into his wooden chair, where she couldn’t see anything. He clicked the double doors shut behind him and left her in the dark.

She heard muffled voices. What the hell? She didn’t even have a toilet and they were tweeting?

One of the double doors suddenly swung open, casting light on Chloe’s mud-spattered tights.

“You may come in,” the footman announced, and he spun off. Like in a bad dream, Chloe wanted to move but couldn’t. Finally, she took a deep breath and stepped into the room. The stench of snuff filled the air. Under a high rococo ceiling, a claw-footed pool table dominated the interior. The side tables were littered with wine decanters, snuffboxes, and chocolates. Her eyes scanned the room for the phone and George, but both were gone.

“Well, my boy,” Sebastian slurred as he leaned against his pool cue. “What brings you here at such an ungodly hour?”

The vodka, Chloe realized, was starting to wear off, and goose bumps were beginning to pop up and down her arms. Thank God there weren’t any cameramen around. Maybe the camera crew had turned in for the night.

Sebastian’s eyes looked a little glassy. He had been drinking, and this bolstered her courage. “A delivery.” Chloe handed him the letter.

Henry closed his book and furrowed his brows at her.

Chloe stepped back, wary.

Then Henry’s lips curled into a smile. If he’d seen through her disguise, he didn’t seem upset at her. “What is your name—boy?” he asked.

“Charles—sir.” Chloe bowed her head and pushed Cook’s glasses up the bridge of her nose.

“Charles. Right. Do take off your hat, Charles.”

“No—no, thank you, sir, I cannot stay.”