carefully, Miss Amanda,â he warned. âThereâs a patch of ice on the top stepââtis a damp winterâs day.â
âThank you, Charles.â Amanda appreciated the footmanâs solicitude. Although he lacked the usual height required of a footmanâmost fine families preferring to hire only those who were at least six feet tallâCharles made up for his lack of physical stature with sheer efficiency. He had given the Briars familyâand now Amanda herselfâthe benefit of loyal and uncomplaining service for nearly two decades.
Weak morning sunlight did its best to illuminate the narrow terraced houses of Bradley Square. A little iron-fenced garden was set between the two rows of homes that faced one another, and frost clung stubbornly to the dormant plants and trees set between the graveled walkways. At the hour of ten in the morning, many of the town homesâ upstairs windows were still shuttered, as occupants slumbered to atone for the previous nightâs amusements.
Aside from a rag-seller walking along the pavement leading to the main road, and a long-legged constable with his baton tucked smartly beneath his arm, the street was quiet and still. A chilly but clean-smelling breeze rattled along the house-fronts. Despite Amandaâs aversion to the winter cold, she appreciated that the odors of refuse and sewage were far less acute than in the warm summer months.
Amanda stopped midway down the flight of six steps that led to the street level when she saw the carriage that Devlin had sent. âMiss Amanda?â the footman murmured, stopping with her as she stared at the vehicle.
Amanda had expected a carriage as well used and serviceable as her own. She had never thought that Devlin would send such an elegant conveyance. This was a glass-quartered coach, plated in lacquer and bronze, with steps fashioned to open and close automatically with the door. Every inch of the vehicle was polished and perfect. The beveled windows were framed with silk curtains, while the interior was upholstered in cream-colored leather.
A team of four perfectly matched chestnuts stamped and blew impatiently, their breaths puffing white in the frosty air. It was the kind of equipage that well-heeled aristocrats owned. How was it that a half-Irish publisher could afford such a carriage? Devlin must be even more successful than the rumors had led her to believe.
Marshaling her composure, Amanda approached the vehicle. A footman jumped from his carved standard and quickly opened the door, while Charles assisted Amanda up the carriage steps. The well-sprung vehicle barely jostled as she settled into the leather-upholstered seat. There was no need for the lap shawl Charles had brought, as a fur-lined carriage blanket had been provided for her. A foot warmer stocked with coals caused Amanda to shiver pleasantly as waves of heat rose beneath her skirts to her knees. It seemed that Devlin had remembered her dislike of the cold.
Almost dazedly, Amanda settled back against the soft leather upholstery and stared through the steam-fogged window at the blurry outlines of her terraced house. The door closed smartly, and the carriage rolled gently away. âWell, Mr. Devlin,â she said aloud, âif you think that a mere foot warmer and a blanket will cause me to soften toward you, then you are sadly mistaken.â
The carriage stopped at Shoe Lane and Holborn, where the massive white five-story building awaited her. Devlinâs was swarming with customers, the jaunty glass doors swinging in constant motion as a steady stream of people entered and exited. Although she knew Devlinâs was a successful establishment, nothing had prepared her for this. It was clear that Devlinâs was far more than a storeâ¦it was an empire. And she had no doubt that its ownerâs keen mind was constantly devising ways to extend his reach.
The footman assisted her from the carriage and rushed to
Henry James, Ann Radcliffe, J. Sheridan Le Fanu, Gertrude Atherton