Chapter 9 #2
He gave her the perfect lever, the very tool she needed to compel cooperation with her work. She watched him shrewdly for a moment and savored the thought.
Questions about their past sprung to her lips, but she bit them back. Not now, she thought. That particular business would have to wait until they took time to get reacquainted.
The work mattered more.
“As a matter of fact, Mr. Mallet, there is a way you can help me. I have a proposition for you.”
* * *
A “simple business matter” she called it. Andrew thought the woman should be in the Exchequer if this “simple matter” demonstrated her negotiating skills.
“First of all, Mr. Mallet, you are aware that I have been able to provide you with some assistance. There were the premises near Magdalene College, the nursing staff,”—he glared at Harley but didn’t interrupt— “some other minor details that don’t require enumeration, and, of course, the redesign of one of my better traveling carriages for your transportation. ”
Harley avoided his glare by making himself busy in the sleeping chamber. Eunice pretended to be deaf and dumb.
“Since you returned home, I have been able, as you yourself pointed out, to be of assistance to your staff.”
My staff? Harley? he thought. Doing it up a bit too fancy there.
“You can’t help but be aware that your diet has improved considerably due to my involvement.” She went on without waiting for a reply. “I am prepared to ensure that you continue to enjoy the services of a decent cook and household help. Mr. Harley will, of course, see to your personal needs.”
He could do all that for himself; he could certainly afford it. She failed to mention that, but since she well knew that he hadn’t, in fact, actually done any of those things, he conceded the point.
“Do you wish payment, my lady?”
“I most certainly do not!”
He expected her indignation. He shouldn’t goad her, but she looked magnificent when riled.
He watched her pace his study and wring her hands as she often did when deep in thought or caught up in uncomfortable emotion.
He wondered how she would feel if she became aware that he recognized such a revealing little trait.
“What I require in return, Mr. Mallet, is the assistance of a respected scholar.”
“If I knew any, I would refer you. As it is, I don’t.”
“Don’t be obtuse!” She resumed pacing and went on. “I have been engaged for some years, as you know, in a work of locating and translating works from the Greek that haven’t been readily accessible in English.”
“The works of women.”
She looked at him without flinching in that frank and open manner of hers. If she waited for him to say more, in protest or derision, she wouldn’t hear it. She resumed pacing. “The poets, as you pointed out, are all women. None has the respect and few have received the attention of scholars.”
She meant to say that none have the respect of male academics. Watterson, for example. Or Dunning. Obviously there was another sort of scholar. He listened while she went on.
“I have made it my life’s work to ensure that their voices are heard.”
Life’s work! How lucky she is to have one.
He didn’t try to interrupt her. On the contrary, the movements of her body while she described the breadth and scope of her project fascinated him.
Her enthusiasm, as powerful as a force of nature, enraptured him.
She gestured with graceful hands, and an inner glow transformed her animated face while she described research that was thorough and comprehensive, far beyond what he had guessed.
Distracted by the sway of her hips, Andrew caught few of the names she mentioned.
He knew most of the ones he heard but not all of them.
The number far exceeded his expectations.
He could hear pride rise in her deep, throaty voice and became fascinated with the pulse that beat in the curve of her neck.
Passion for her work threatened to break out in an emotional outpouring; he watched her struggle to hold it in check.
He felt as if she stripped herself naked before him, and his mind filled with images of other passions, other nakedness—Georgie there before his fire, her hair down on her shoulders, her skin warm and rosy, asking him for a very different sort of help.
His body responded, and he allowed a moment of full rein to the fantasy of her naked before him.
“Andrew? Did you hear me? My translations!”
Abrupt descent to reality and the direction of his mind and body shamed him. She didn’t notice the desire he thought must be obvious. Look at me, Georgie. Take a good look, he thought, but she went on without seeing him.
“The translations are serviceable. I know that my work is accurate and precise, but it is not...” Her even white teeth caught her lower lip. She sought the right word. “It isn’t subtle or stylistically sophisticated enough to give the writers their due.”
She looked at him finally. “What I need, Mr. Mallet, is a mentor or, barring that, a tutor. Your assistance would be of great value to me.”
She held her breath. The same Georgie he found behind the palms in her father’s orangery, who struggled alone through her brother’s schoolboy Plato, stared out at him and defied him to criticize or laugh.
Humiliation made him mute. Caught up in her own objectives and how he might suit her purpose, she didn’t see him. His feelings, his desires meant nothing. His instincts longed to refuse her, shut her out, and remove her from his house.
He opened his mouth to do so, but he watched her stand her ground while every nuance of her fear and uncertainty radiated from her posture and face. He could no more resist her courage now than he could when they were young. He drew a slow, deep breath.
“Let me recapitulate,” he said. “You, for your part, are prepared to feed me, assist with the housekeeping, and relieve my man of his nursing duties—things which, you must be aware, I am perfectly capable of providing for myself. Is there anything else you can offer me?”
She looked dumbfounded. She opened her mouth as if to speak and shut it again.
“No?” He leaned back. “Then I, for my part, am to give you the benefit of my training, share the subtlety of my mind, and jeopardize my respect in the classics community of Cambridge, for your sake. Does that summarize your proposal?” All benefit to you at great cost to me.
He watched her chin rise in the characteristic Hayden gesture of superiority. In Georgiana the expression represented her armor, her shield against hurt. He had loved her for it. She didn’t speak. Neither did she back down.
“Well, then, your proposal seems fair enough,” he said with obvious sarcasm. “I am afraid, however, that I’m not up to the labor today.”
“Of course not, I—” Her words came in a rush but not fast enough.
“I shall have to sink deeper into your debt, my lady,” he said with finality. “Shall we begin at the beginning of next week? Some rest and I believe I will be ready.”
“As you wish, Mr. Mallet. Do we have a contract?” He could tell she didn’t know whether to believe him. Hope lurked in her eyes.
“Yes, my lady, I believe we do.”
“Shall I take my leave for today?”
“Please.” No demurring. “I will come to you when I am able.”
“No.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“No. No, you will not come to Helsington. It will be a long time before you can come with some frequency, and make no doubt, Mr. Mallet, I will require your assistance with frequency. I’ll arrange for my work to be transported here. Shall we say one week?”
The condition worried him, but he rapidly lost strength to protest. He would figure a way out when he recovered.
“Very well,” he said. “One week. But there is one more thing.”
He had her attention.
“Hire whomever you will, but under no circumstances do I wish to eat your cooking. It will increase my debt to you if you wouldn’t force me to do so.”
The raised chin appeared again. She was fierce, his Georgie.
“Very well, Mr. Mallet. Very well. I agree to your terms.”