Chapter 6
The morning solarium was a prison of glass and glaring light.
The sun, filtered through the broad leaves of a hundred potted plants, dappled the tiled floor in shifting, restless patterns.
It was hot, the air thick with the scent of damp earth and something cloyingly sweet from a nearby pot of jasmine.
Propped on a wicker chaise, her arm strapped to her chest in a linen sling, Emma felt like a specimen pinned under a naturalist’s glass.
She had been staring at the same page of a book for a quarter-hour, the words dissolving into meaningless black marks.
Her mind was not on the page. It was in the pre-dawn garden, caught in the memory of a kiss that had tasted of berries and recklessness.
Her lips still felt bruised. Her skin still remembered the feverish pressure of Amélie’s hands through a silk robe.
The recollection was a physical thing, a hot coil tightening in her gut, making the throb in her shoulder a dull, distant complaint by comparison.
A soft knock at the door made her start.
Lord Bainbridge stood on the threshold, a handsome wooden box tucked under one arm and a small stack of books in his hand. He offered a smile that was both polite and genuinely concerned.
“I was told the patient was accepting visitors,” he said, his voice a low, pleasant baritone. “I come bearing distractions. I find a war on sixty-four squares is often preferable to the one waged against boredom.”
He advanced into the room, his presence a calm, steadying counterpoint to her inner chaos. He placed the books on a nearby table and opened the box, revealing a set of carved ivory chess pieces.
“My wits are not at their sharpest, my lord,” Emma said, her voice sounding unused and raspy to her own ears. “You may find it a hollow victory.”
“The best victories are the quiet ones,” he replied, setting up the board on a small table between them. His movements were deft and economical, careful not to disturb her. “White or black, Miss Goode?”
“Black,” she answered automatically. She preferred to counter, to react. To let the other player reveal their strategy first.
They began to play. The familiar click of the ivory pieces on the board was a comforting sound.
For the first several moves, the game held her.
It was a problem of logic, a fortress of rules and consequences that left no room for the bewildering disorder of her feelings.
Their conversation remained in the shallow waters of pleasantry.
He inquired after her shoulder; she replied that it was a nuisance.
She asked if he was enjoying Brighton; he confessed a preference for the country.
But the fortress could not hold. Her focus began to fray at the edges.
She found herself staring at the white queen, at its elegant, carved lines, and seeing not a chess piece but a woman’s throat, the way candlelight had caught on the curve of it.
Her fingers, reaching for a pawn, hesitated.
In her mind, she felt the ghost of a different touch—Amélie’s thumb tracing a circle on her skin, a motion so small and yet so momentous it had redrawn the map of her world.
“Your move, Miss Goode,” Bainbridge said gently.
Emma blinked, the solarium snapping back into sharp, unwelcome focus.
She looked down at the board, realizing she had no idea what her last move had been, nor what his was.
Her knight was threatened, a simple, obvious trap she had walked directly into.
With a flicker of irritation at her own foolishness, she moved her bishop to defend it. A clumsy, defensive posture.
Bainbridge captured her knight without comment. He did not seem triumphant, only patient.
A few more moves passed in silence. The ticking of a tall case clock in the hall became a leaden metronome marking her agitation.
He had her cornered now, his pieces advancing with quiet purpose while hers were scattered and reactive.
He was a good player, but she was playing badly, her thoughts a tangled mess of shame and a strange, thrilling memory of a mouth on hers.
She reached for her rook, then stopped, her hand hovering in the air.
Because you want, and you do not know how to say it.
Amélie’s voice was a whisper in her mind, as clear as if she were in the room.
“Miss Goode?”
Bainbridge’s voice was soft, pulling her back from the precipice of memory.
She looked at him, truly looked at him, for the first time since he’d entered.
His hazel eyes, so like her own, were not judging.
They were watching, and they were kind. The same kindness she had felt on the cliffside when he had lifted her as if she weighed nothing.
She let her hand fall to her side. “I forfeit, my lord. You have me beaten.”
“The game is far from over,” he protested mildly.
“Forgive me.” Her voice was tight. A hot, miserable pressure was building behind her eyes. “I cannot think.”
He did not argue. He simply leaned back in his chair, regarding her with that same calm, steady gaze. “Your mind is on a different field of battle, I believe. One with fewer rules.”
The observation was so astute, so close to the heart of her turmoil, that it broke through her defenses. The polite facade crumbled. She looked away from him, at the fronds of a fern that brushed against the glass, trapping a fat, buzzing fly.
“Have you ever met someone,” she began, the words coming out in a halting whisper, “someone who…renders you a stranger to yourself? Who looks at you and sees…something you did not even know was there?”
She did not dare look at him. She stared at her own hands, twisting a loose thread on the cushion. The confession, vague as it was, felt like leaping from a cliff.
“When you are near them,” she continued, the words now tumbling out, quiet and desperate, “the entire world seems to tilt. Nothing is solid. And you are…undone. You do not know your own thoughts, your own mind. It is the most terrifying…and not entirely unpleasant…feeling in the world.”
She stopped, her breath catching in her throat.
She had said too much. Far too much. She braced herself for his reaction—confusion, perhaps disgust, or the polite, dismissive pity of a man confronted with a woman’s hysteria.
The silence stretched, filled only by the ticking of the clock and the frantic buzzing of the trapped fly.
Lord Bainbridge did not move. He simply watched her, his expression giving nothing away. The silence amplified the frantic beating of Emma’s heart. She had exposed a raw, vital part of herself, and now she waited for the blow.
Then, he leaned forward, placing his elbows on his knees.
His gaze flicked toward the solarium doors, a quick, assessing glance to ensure their privacy.
When his eyes returned to hers, his carefully constructed gentlemanly charm had been set aside.
In its place was a startling vulnerability, a quiet solemnity that met her own.
“The person who tilts the world, Miss Goode,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper. “Does their rank on the board truly matter? King…or queen?”
The question hung in the hot, still air. It was not an answer, but an opening. A key turning in a lock she hadn’t known was there. Emma could only stare, her throat too tight to form words.
He offered a small, sad smile that did not reach his eyes.
“My world was set spinning a long time ago. By a lieutenant with eyes the color of the sea off the coast of Greece.” He looked down at his own hands, at the strong, capable fingers resting on his knees.
“We are not so different, you and I. We have simply learned to play the game on a different board, with rules most people do not know exist.”
Relief washed through Emma with the force of a physical wave.
It was so potent, so absolute, it left her dizzy.
The hand that had been clenched in her lap, white-knuckled and trembling, slowly uncurled.
A breath she had been holding escaped her in a long, shaky sigh.
Her widened eyes fixed on his, and in their depths, she saw not a stranger, but a reflection of her own secret, terrified heart.
“You’re…” She couldn’t bring herself to say the words as the pieces clicked into place.
Bainbridge gave a single, slow nod. “There are more of us than society would have you believe. We learn to live in the margins. To speak in a language of shared glances, of careful omissions.”
He leaned back, the wicker of his chair creaking in the quiet room. The chess game sat forgotten between them, a tableau of a conflict that no longer mattered.
“In London,” he continued, his voice regaining some of its easy rhythm, now colored with the warmth of sharing a precious secret, “there are places…clubs, where women may dance with women, and no one thinks to comment. I know of two ladies in Sussex, spinsters to the world, who have run an estate together for thirty years. They are more married than any couple I have ever met. Their happiness is a quiet, sturdy thing, built far from the judging eyes of the world.”
Emma listened, rapt. Each word was a revelation, dismantling the lonely prison she had built around herself.
She was not a monster. She was not a singular mistake of nature.
She was…part of a hidden country, a citizen of a place she had never known existed.
The tight knot of shame in her stomach began to loosen, thread by painful thread.
“But how?” she asked, her voice small, tentative. “How does one…navigate? The danger…the possibility of ruin or arrest.”
“Carefully,” he said simply. “And with trusted allies. You find your own people. You learn who is safe. You build a world within the world, a place where you are not required to be less than what you are.” He paused, his gaze thoughtful.
“Your sister, Mercy, for instance. She sees more than she lets on. She is a safe harbor, I would wager.”
He was giving her a map, charting the reefs and the safe passages of a life she had thought impossible.
The oppressive heat of the solarium no longer felt like it was suffocating her.
It felt cleansing, a hothouse where something new and fragile might actually grow.
The color returned to her cheeks. Her breathing, which had been shallow and tight, deepened.
She looked at this man, this practical stranger who had rescued her from a fall and was now rescuing her from a far more profound isolation. “Thank you,” she said, the words inadequate but deeply meant.
He just smiled, that quiet, knowing smile again. “We must look out for one another. It is the first rule of our particular game.”
He reached out and began to slowly, deliberately, reset the chess pieces.
The white king in one square, the black queen in another.
The sound of the ivory touching the board was the only sound in the room, save for the steady ticking of the clock.
Each piece returned to its starting position, ready for a new contest.
Emma watched his hands, her mind racing.
The world had not stopped tilting, but her place in it felt less precarious.
She was still on a cliff edge, but for the first time, she was not alone.
The duchesse’s kiss was no longer a mark of shame, a terrifying aberration.
It was…a move. A bold opening in a game she was only just beginning to understand.
Bainbridge finished setting the last pawn in its place. He did not ask if she wished to play again. He simply left the board reset between them, a silent invitation. The game was the same, but the player had been irrevocably changed.