The Balfour Series: Books 1 - 4 Read online

Page 5

Father fired Christiana Compton. I will speak to him first.

  “Please, Miss Balfour,” Joshua called out in a loud whisper. “I know I have broken the rules but he seems genuinely concerned for his wife’s welfare.”

  A wave of solid ice fell over Emmeline and she pivoted to look into Joshua’s face.

  “His wife?” she echoed. “Christiana is his wife?”

  A perplexed look crossed over Joshua’s face and he nodded slowly.

  “Did I not mention that previously?”

  “You did not.”

  “Oh…well, yes…does that much matter?”

  Emmeline regained her composure and shook her regal head quickly.

  “Of course not,” she replied crisply. “I will tend to this matter at once, Josh. You need not mention this to another soul.”

  “I will not,” Joshua agreed, breathing audibly in relief. “Thank you, Miss Balfour.”

  Swallowing the lump growing in her windpipe, Emmeline walked slowly toward her father’s office where Xavier still remained with Charlton.

  “…Greene, Father? Truly? She is worthy of no less than a duke,” Emmeline heard her brother growl. “You know as well as I do that Walter Greene has quite the unsavory reputation.”

  “His reputation is the least of my concerns,” Charlton barked. “I will not have you question my decisions in this hotel. When I die, you may run the Balfour Hotel any way you deem fit. Until then—”

  “By then it will be too late to save my sister from marriage to a despicable scoundrel!”

  Emmeline waited, her heart hammering. She ignored Matthew who stared at her with disapproval as she listened.

  “When you are manager of this hotel, Xavier, you will realize that there are many choices to be made, most of which are unpleasant. You and your sister have been fortunate enough to escape the dirt and grime involved with running such an operation but I cannot shield you forever.”

  “What does that mean, Father?” Xavier snapped. “What has Walter Greene done for you that you owe him your best asset in appreciation?”

  Emmeline’s heart thudded so loudly, she was shocked the men could not hear it.

  “Leave it be, Xavier and mind your sister. If you suspect she is becoming unruly, I expect you to tell me at once.”

  “I will not spy upon Emmeline.”

  Xavier has always been my protector.

  “You almost ruined everything by telling her of this engagement,” Charlton hissed. “If you wish to remain inherited, you will do precisely as you are told.”

  Xavier scoffed and stormed from the office before Emmeline could make herself scarce. He paused to look at her with regret but moved away again without another word.

  “Father?” Emmeline called after a moment. She did not want him to know she had been listening.

  “What is it now?” Charlton grumbled.

  “This matter is not pertaining to the engagement,” she assured him, re-entering the office.

  “Do be quick about it, Emmy. I have other matters to attend today, ones which do not include placating your ego.”

  Emmeline bristled but wisely said nothing to the rebuff.

  “I was told that you terminated Mother’s abigail. Christiana Compton?”

  Her father’s head jerked up from his pile of papers and his eyes narrowed into slits.

  “What is the meaning of this now?” he growled. Emmeline blinked in surprise at his reaction.

  “Did you relieve her for stealing?” Emmeline asked, noting the tight expression on her father’s face.

  “I do not recall,” he retorted, shifting his gaze away, but it was clear to Emmeline that he was being far less than truthful.

  “Antoinette claims you did, Father.”

  “Then she must be correct. What have you to do with this matter?”

  The brusque tone was laced with something harder.

  Suspicion. He sounds rife with suspicion.

  “Father, you do not intermingle with the affairs of the staff. Why did you terminate Christiana personally?”

  Charlton grunted and raised his head again, casting Emmeline a stony look.

  “Perhaps because she was your mother’s abigail. I genuinely do not recall the circumstances, Emmeline. Why are you asking about this? It was months past.”

  “I would like to speak with Christiana,” Emmeline told him flatly. “Yet no one seems to know where she has gone.”

  “Back home,” Charlton replied without hesitation and it gave Emmeline a deeper suspicion.

  “How can you be sure?” she asked slowly.

  “She wailed about it when she left here, sobbing that she would need to return to…wherever it was she was from.”

  “Cambridge?” Emmeline asked softly.

  “Yes! Yes, that is it. Good riddance, if you ask me. Why would you wish to communicate with riffraff like that? I forbid it. You will not contact that woman.”

  Emmeline stared at him, her mind whirling.

  He is lying to me but why? What has he to do with Christiana’s disappearance?

  “Is there another matter?” Charlton demanded as he realized that his daughter remained.

  “No,” she murmured. “That is all. Good day, Father.”

  With her pulse racing, Emmeline rushed out of the office and made her way toward the staff quarters, her head low.

  What became of Christiana Compton? What is Father hiding?

  She stopped before Joshua’s chambers and rapped gently on the door. There was no response.

  “Elias?” she whispered. “Are you in there?”

  The door opened in a whoosh, startling her and Elias gaped at her in puzzlement.

  “He told you I was here?” he demanded, shocked, but Emmeline shook her head and pushed her way inside, closing the door at her back before they could be noticed. It was midway through the daytime shift but there was still a chance they might be seen.

  “It is not how you think,” Emmeline assured him. “Joshua only wishes to help you. He told me you were here, but your secret is safe.”

  Elias eyed her warily and backed toward the bed, sitting on the edge, deep concern etched in his features.

  “I mean no harm by being here,” he told her. “I will be on my way when I learn where Christiana may have gone.”

  “You should not have been terminated. Was it Honor who released you?”

  He nodded, his lovely, bright eyes fixed on her face in such a way that it made her tingle with warmth.

  “Why? For what cause?” she asked, remaining by the door. She knew how inappropriate it was for her to be in the closed room with a male servant. She could only imagine the chaos which would ensue if anyone were to see them sneaking about in such a fashion, but in that moment, Emmeline did not care.

  Being proper has earned me a louse of a fiancé and no respect. If I can reunite this man with his wife, perhaps I shan’t care about improprieties…

  Again, small ripples of unhappiness flowed through her.

  He is already married, Emma.

  “He learned that Christiana and I…that…” He seemed to have difficulty saying what Emmeline already knew.

  “That you are married,” she sighed. “He should not have terminated you. I will have him reinstate your position at once.”

  “I do not think that is wise, Miss Balfour,” he told her quietly. “I have the distinct impression that there is much more happening here than I am meant to know.”

  He sighed and shook his head, staring down at the splintered floor beneath his feet.

  “Did you know Christiana when she worked here?”

  “Not well,” Emmeline confessed regretfully. “She was always pleasant.”

  “She does not always have her wits about her, but I assure you, Miss Balfour, she is no thief.”

  “May I ask…” Emmeline bit her lower lip, unsure if she was breaching discretion.

  “You may ask me anything.”

  Emmeline met Elias’ steadfast gaze with her own. The mer
e statement had a profound effect on her and she was once again surprised that a stranger could arouse such emotions in her as Elias had managed in mere hours of knowing him.

  What would it be like to spend weeks or months in his presence?

  She forced herself not to indulge in such thoughts. Elias was a married man and she was as good as engaged.

  Not to mention the fact that we are classes apart.

  Queer how those elements seemed unimportant in that moment.

  “It is a peculiar arrangement you have with Christiana. Why did you not come to Luton with her for work?” Emmeline asked. “Clearly you would have been hired.”

  A mirthless smile spread across his lips and a darkness shadowed Elias’ features.

  “I am afraid that is a tale which is long and sordid,” he muttered. “One which I would not offend your ears to explain.”

  “Did she abandon the martial home?” Emmeline asked before she could consider the crassness of her query, but to her surprise, Elias laughed.

  “In a manner of speaking, yes,” he replied vaguely. “But ours is not your usual marriage.”

  “I can see that,” Emmeline muttered. “Forgive my intrusive questions. I am merely hoping to help you better in your quest to find her. If she does not wish to be found…”

  She trailed off, hoping he understood the implication of her words.

  “I can see why you might think such a thing,” Elias sighed. “Yet I know Christiana. I am the only person whom she trusts implicitly. She would not vanish without sending word. You must believe me in this matter. Something untoward has happened to her, I am certain of it.”

  Emmeline did not pretend to understand his faith in his words but she did believe him.

  “I will help you find your wife, Elias,” she promised him quietly. “I do believe you.”

  His eyes shone with gratitude and, if she was not mistaken, admiration.

  “Thank you, Miss Balfour,” he breathed. “I assure you that I will not be here a moment longer than necessary.”

  She offered him a stiff smile, but her heart was heavy.

  When he finds his wife, he will leave and I will remain here with Walter Greene. Which one of us is the poorer?

  6

  Tears streaked her face and she collapsed into his outstretched arms in a heaving sob.

  “Good Lord, Christa! What has happened?” Elias choked, pulling his friend to her feet. He looked about the narrow street, expecting to see someone on her trail but there was no one but the usual passersby going about their daily business.

  “My life is ruined!” Christiana wailed. “It is over!”

  “Hush now,” Elias told her worriedly, steering her stumbling form inside. His parents were in the shop and for that, Elias was grateful. He did not wish them to see Christiana in such hysterics. They already had a lowly opinion of his childhood companion and he did not need to fuel their distaste.

  “I cannot!” Christiana moaned. “I must leave Peterborough, Elias. I am damned!”

  “Lower your voice,” Elias told her with soothing exasperation. Her shrill tones could carry easily in house and he did not want the servants to overhear whatever it was this time with Christiana. The scene was commonplace enough, after all, the young woman running to his home with some woe or another and as she had since they were mere children. Elias would simply placate her until she was no longer a sobbing mess.

  “I cannot!” she howled. “My life is…”

  She buried her face into her hands and shook her dark hair so that the strands fell about her round face in a mess of tangles. She looked as though she had not slept in days.

  “Come along,” he told her, guiding her into the front room to sit upon the settee as he fetched her a glass of sherry.

  Eagerly, Christiana took it with trembling hands, downing it in one smooth gulp before nodding toward it, signaling for another.

  My word, Elias thought, gritting his teeth. If I return her home drunk, I will never hear the end of it.

  “Perhaps you should tell me what the matter is before I indulge you with another.” He sat by her side on the sofa. As she turned toward him, her face was waxen.

  “You will loathe me,” she moaned. “You will dismiss me as quickly as the townsfolk when you hear of this.”

  “Christa,” he sighed. “I have been your friend since we were wee. I have seen you through some trying affairs and yet I still remain, do I not?”

  “This is quite different, Elias. This is…” She sobbed again and Elias produced a handkerchief from his breast pocket for her to dab her eyes.

  “I will not know if you do not tell me,” he cajoled gently. “Surely you came here because you trust I am your friend.”

  She looked up at him with glazed eyes, horror below their surface.

  “I have sprained my ankle, Elias.”

  He reeled backward as though she had physically struck him and gasped in shock.

  “Christiana!” he rasped. “Are you certain?”

  She lowered her gaze and nodded shamefully.

  “I am.”

  Rage replaced the surprise and Elias leapt to his feet, his face growing hot with fury.

  “Who is this dastardly urchin?” he yelled, forgetting his desire to keep the conversation quiet. “Tell me who he is and I will see him do right by you!”

  “You cannot,” Christiana moaned.

  “Does he know?” Elias demanded and she shook her head miserably.

  “You must tell him, Christa. For all you know, he will marry you well before anyone knows you are with child.”

  “I cannot tell him,” she mumbled and blood pumped through Elias’ veins like lava.

  “This is not the time to entrench yourself in pity, Christiana. What will you do without a father for the child? You will be ridiculed, condemned.”

  “You think I do not know that?” she mewled. “I am well aware.”

  “You give me his name at once. I will see him do right by you!”

  “He is gone, Elias. He left town to be with another woman.”

  “Tarnation!”

  She dropped her head again and for the first time remained quiet as tears silently zigzagged down her cheeks.

  Slowly, Elias returned to sit at her side and wrap an arm around her shoulders.

  “You must not fret now, Christa,” he told her with more confidence than he felt. “All will be well.”

  “What is the meaning of this now?” Rose Compton snapped, stalking into the front room, pulling her gloves from her hands as she glared at the two. “This is inappropriate, Elias. I need not tell you that!”

  At his side, Christiana tensed but Elias did not remove his arm of comfort from her shoulders.

  She is my friend, he reminded himself. Since childhood. She is the closest I have to a sister and she is in trouble. I cannot turn her away.

  “I was leaving, Mrs. Compton,” Christiana murmured, wiping the tears from her face as she moved, but Elias rose with her.

  “We are happy you are here, Mother,” Elias told Rose. “Christa and I have an announcement.”

  Christiana’s face was nearly ashen as she stared at him in disbelief.

  “N-no,” she gasped but he squeezed her hand gently to reassure her, keeping his eyes fixed upon his mother’s annoyed face.

  “What announcement would that be?” Rose asked coldly.

  “We are getting married. Immediately.”

  Both women choked and coughed but Elias did not falter.

  “You will ruin your life binding yourself to this wench!” Rose howled. “I forbid it!”

  “You have no say in the matter, Mother,” Elias assured her, casting Christiana a sidelong look. “The matter is done.”

  “She is with child!” Rose breathed with realization, her hand over her heart as she began to swoon.

  “She is with my child,” he conceded.

  As the door to Joshua’s chambers swung inward, Elias opened his eyes, the memory of that fateful da
y fading yet leaving a melancholy taste to linger.

  “You remained!” Joshua cried, appearing very relieved. “I feared that Miss Balfour may not have honored her promise, but of course she did. She is nothing if not honorable.”

  The younger man smiled warmly at his new friend and Elias righted himself.

  “She is many noble things,” Elias agreed, thinking about the generous-hearted woman who had left hours earlier after her vow to help him find Christiana.

  She does not know me. She has no reason to help me and yet she does not hesitate. She is truly a fine lady.

  He had considered that perhaps there was more to her offer, and that maybe she, too, felt the immense connection between them.

  Nonsense. She is an heiress to a hotel and to her you are a married, lowly waiter.

  “I have a matter to discuss with you,” Joshua told him, plopping into the single chair next to the scarred writing desk. “However, I must warn you that it may be something you will not like to know.”

  “Is it a matter regarding Christiana?”

  Joshua nodded, his boyish smile fading slightly but holding.

  “It is.”

  “Then I do not care how unpleasant it may be. What have you learned?”

  Joshua leaned forward and met Elias’ eyes intently.

  “I have been asking the other members of the staff about her. I knew her somewhat, you understand, but I did not fraternize with her outside of the hotel.”

  “I did not realize that much fraternizing was done outside of the hotel,” Elias muttered. Joshua seemed embarrassed.

  “Well…ah, in Christiana’s case, it seems she did leave with some frequency. More than the others. She had been reprimanded by Antoinette for being late twice in the week which she was terminated, both times were shifts in which she worked the night.”

  Elias was pensive.

  “That was not commonplace for her? To be late?”

  “Apparently not. She was known to be dutiful and the guests liked her…”

  Joshua stopped speaking and Elias could see that he was attempting to gather his words before he continued.

  “Elias, there is gossip that she had a lover.”

  Wind whooshed out of Elias’ lungs and he closed his eyes.

  Of course she did. That makes the most sense.