“Almighty God gave us the example of resting on the Sabbath.” Ethan ambled over to her escritoire and peered over her shoulder. “Because I am the almighty lord of this property, I condone the notion. What are you about?”
“Making a list of Latin aphorisms,” Alice said as Ethan leaned over and scanned her work. Her imagination suggested he inhaled through his nose, but then, so had she.
“Why do you laugh?” Ethan quoted. “Change the name and the same can be said of you.”
“That one’s too long, though your boys do a great deal of laughing.”
“More lately.” He remained half-bent over her while Alice tried to lecture herself into ignoring him. “This is an interesting collection, Alice Portman. Is Hazlit’s Latin as facile?”
Ethan straightened and crossed to sit on her bed. The door was open, and nobody was about, but still, sitting on her bed was intimate, and Alice liked the look of him there—heaven help her.
“It is not, and neither is Vim’s.”
“What of your sister, the one you haven’t seen for five years?”
“Avis.” Alice’s smile dimmed. “She was neither a bluestocking nor given to competing with our brothers.” She did, however, run the entire estate of Blessings so their brothers could lark about all over the realm.
Ethan ran a hand over her pillow, and Alice’s insides became muddled. Just like that, drat him. “Have you made up your mind about going to visit her?”
“You were serious when you said I might?”
He did it again—ran his palm over the linen and wreaked havoc with Alice’s composure. “We can agree, I think, I am generally serious.”
Not as serious as he wanted people to think. “I’ve written to Avis, suggesting she might come south, and I could come north, and we’d meet in the Midlands, but there hasn’t been time for a reply.”
Another stroke over her pillow, over the very spot where she laid her head. “Can’t your brother send one of his famous pigeons? He must have some flying between Blessings and his southern residence.”
“I hadn’t considered Benjamin’s pigeons. Even if he has such, they can carry only very brief messages.”
He rose and turned to smooth over the covers where he’d sat, and the back of him was no less unsettling to look upon than the front. “You should send such an invitation. I am here, in fact, to issue a summons to you.”
“To me?” Alice tidied her papers and set her pen in its stand. “It’s Sunday. One may not be summoned.”
“Nicholas has taken it into his head to make muffins and has asked you to attend him and the boys in the kitchen.”
Alice rose, relieved—truly and honestly relieved—to be getting Ethan out of her bedroom. “If I have to go, then you have to as well.”
“Nick didn’t include me on the writ,” Ethan said as they made their way down the back stairs. “You are female, so he assumes you will know where things go in the kitchen.”
“I avoid the kitchen. Your cook is a cantankerous and territorial old dame. Mrs. Buxton made it clear Cook is not to be trifled with.”
“Valid point, but Cook also consumes a fair amount of the cooking sherry and takes her Sundays off to heart.” Ethan lowered his voice and bent near as they walked along. “I think she has a follower.”
“Or a drinking companion.”
“Who has a drinking companion?” Nick asked. He stood at the kitchen counter, a towel around his waist as an improvised apron. “If there’s any drinking going on, I’d like to be informed. Joshua, stop kicking the drawer and find us three clean spoons. Jeremiah, we’ll need some mugs of cold milk to sustain us.”
Ethan quirked an eyebrow at his brother. “Perhaps we, who have been mucking around the stables, ought to wash our hands, hmm?”
Nick’s expression was arrested. “Good idea. Boys, wash up, and then step lively. Uncle Nick is hungry for muffins.”
Ethan scanned the counter, where ingredients were lined up in recipe order. “You’re not going to drown the apples in cinnamon, are you?”
To the ears of any governess, the question was laden with challenge from one boy to another.
Nick propped his fists on his hips. “You blaspheme on the Lord’s day, Ethan Grey. I do not drown my apples in spices, but I am not stingy with cinnamon or cloves.”
“So you completely overpower the equally worthy, less pungent flavors,” Ethan scoffed. “As usual.”
“You could do better?” Nick glowered at him, the boys watching the exchange with round eyes.
“I always have.” Ethan’s smile appeared exactly designed to goad a younger brother.
“You’re on.” Nick slapped his towel against the counter. “Alice and the boys will judge, and may the best muffin win.”
“Muffin him silly, Papa,” Joshua said.
“Make yours double enormous, Uncle Nick,” Jeremiah joined in.
“Joshua Grey!” Nick turned to his smallest nephew in mock offense. “How can I name you one of my seconds if you’re rooting for the other team?”
“I can root for Papa and be your second. Miss Alice can be Papa’s second.”
“Alice?” Ethan crossed his arms over his chest. “This is a matter of honor, and my sons are turncoats. That leaves me you or the pantry mouser.”
Alice plucked the towel from Nick’s hands. “I’m your man, Mr. Grey.” She gently whapped the towel across Nick’s chest, while the boys hooted and shrieked with glee.
When she was left alone in the kitchen an hour later, and the boys had dragged the men out to the garden, Alice did not immediately start to clean up. Instead, she sat down with a cup of hot tea and enjoyed the silence. If anyone had told her two weeks ago she’d be participating in a duel-by-muffin between two grown men, she would have laughed.
And this afternoon, with Ethan, his brother, and his sons, she had laughed. That set her to thinking about the recipe that was her life—too much caution and observation, not enough participation or spice.
She was thinking so hard she didn’t hear the door open or the footsteps behind her. A pair of lips settled on her cheek, and her first instinct was to melt into the kiss, except…
“Nicholas, behave yourself for once.”
“I was thanking you.” Nick smiled at her and slid onto the bench across the table from her. “You looked so serious and pretty sitting there, staring at your teacup as if it held the answer to all life’s mysteries.”
“I’m English. A good cup of tea does hold the answer to many of life’s mysteries. That doesn’t excuse your kissing me, Nicholas, and I’ll thank you to keep your lips to yourself in future.”
“Or what? You’ll paddle my backside?”
“As if you’d mind.”
“Did I truly offend?” Nick asked, his smile fading. “If I did, I do apologize.”
“You nearly did, except I know you are harmless. You left Ethan outside with the boys?”
“I did.” Nick rose. “I am off to fetch some paper and pencils from the library. Ethan suggested we sketch designs for a tree house. When will the muffins be ready?”
Alice rose, because dishes had never once in the history of kitchens washed themselves. “The muffins won’t be ready until Wednesday next. Shoo, or I’ll issue another edict.”
Nick scampered out of the kitchen, his hands playfully covering his behind, so Alice had to snap a towel at him for good measure. She turned around, intent on piling dishes in the sink, only to find Ethan lounging against the hallway door, observing her with a slight smile.
“Forgive my brother his airs. The title weighs on him heavily.”