Chapter Three #2
“That isn’t necessary—,” she started, ready to refuse his invitation.
“Have you lads been to the Clarendon Hotel?” he interrupted her, brazenly taking the argument straight to her children.
“The what?” Christopher asked. His older brother looked to their mother, not answering Neal without her approval.
Neal lowered himself to their level. “They have a French chef at the Clarendon who truly is a marvel. And there is nothing more fun than a small outing.”
Jonny had placed his arm around his younger brother as if holding him back. Neal pressed his case. “Jacques makes a poulet en croute that is food of the gods.” His mouth was watering just thinking of it.
Thea laughed, the sound bitter. “They don’t know what you are talking about, my lord. They’ve been raised on my meager cooking. Talk to them of a rarebit and they’ll understand.”
“You cook?” Neal repeated in surprise and then realized it was a ridiculous question. All of this—the boys, the squalor, the married name Mrs. Martin—was a surprise. The girl he’d known had been raised in luxury.
It was Christopher who saved him. “Do you have a horse?”
“Chris, stop talking,” Jonny said, giving his younger brother’s shoulder a jerk.
Neal put out his hand to steady the boy and said, “I have many.”
Now he had Jonny’s attention as well.
“How many horses do you have?” Christopher asked.
“More than I can ride by myself,” Neal assured him. “And my brother is in the Horse Guard.”
“Horse Guard?” Jonny repeated with the same awe that pilgrims reserved for a religious shrine.
“He’s one of the barracks officers,” Neal said.
“What color is his horse?” Christopher demanded.
“A bay,” Neal said. “His name is Ajax.”
Christopher broke free of his brother’s hold and ran to the cupboard for his horse. He held it up. “This is my horse. His name is Regal. My mother had a horse named Regal.”
“Yes,” Neal said. “I remember Regal. He was a good pony.”
“Mother says he was very fast.”
“She and Regal beat me and my pony in every race,” Neal confirmed.
Jonny glanced at his mother as if trying to picture her flying along the ground in a race.
Thea came over to her sons. “Please, boys, we need to let Lord Lyon leave—”
“What are the names of your other horses?” Christopher cut in as if he hadn’t heard her speak, and he might not have. Neal remembered a time when he was that enthusiastic about life.
“It would take a while for me to tell you all of them,” Neal said. “However, I have two waiting outside that you lads should meet. Would you like to see them?”
“Yes.” The word practically burst out of Jonny. Christopher nodded his head vigorously. He started toward the door, holding his wood horse in front of him.
“Wait,” Neal cautioned. “We need permission from your mother. We could even have a ride in my coach, if your mother would let us go to the Clarendon for our dinner.”
Two pleading sets of eyes turned as one toward Thea, not, she knew, because of the treat of patronizing one of the finest public dining rooms in the city but because of the opportunity of a coach ride.
“Please, Mother,” Jonny whispered.
“I want to go,” Christopher said with his delightful candor.
Thea stood in indecision. Neal had circumvented her wishes by catering to her horse-mad sons, and he was unrepentant.
“I don’t know,” she hedged. “I don’t know that it is proper for a lady to go to the Clarendon with a man who isn’t her husband.”
Neal made an impatient sound. “Women dine at the Clarendon. You shouldn’t feel uncomfortable. Yes, they are accompanied by friends or their husbands, but you have two of the most upstanding chaperones of all. Your sons.” Her boys stood up a bit straighter at his words.
Thea’s gaze met his, and he saw that she really did want to go. He wondered how long it had been since Thea had participated in society for the pleasure of it and not as a means to help her small family survive.
She breathed deep to register her annoyance, then released it before saying, “Very well. This one time. Go don your hats and coats.”
She didn’t have to repeat the order. Her sons charged off with cheers of excitement.
Thea retied the bonnet ribbon beneath her chin. “Unfair,” she said to Neal.
“But necessary,” he assured her, quite proud of himself. She needed this outing. He knew it. “We will talk, Thea.” He paused and then added quietly, “You were important to me.”
She looked away.
The boys joined them. They had matching coats and wide brimmed hats that were exactly the sort any child of the gentry would wear. Christopher was so excited that he was having trouble putting his coat on. Neal helped and then opened the door. The boys fairly ran down the stairs.
“Wait,” their mother warned them. “You know the rules.”
Her sons came to a halt and stood like two racehorses anxious to take off out of the gate.
“You must be gentlemen at all times,” Thea chided and, after locking the door, went down the stairs to take their hands.
Neal followed, rather enjoying the boys’ excitement.
On the street, Thea kept a firm hold on her sons. There was much activity, mostly neighbors sitting on the stoops and in the doorways of surrounding buildings. Christopher tried to gallop, and Jonny had to try it a step or two.
Harry and Neal used to play that game of horses when they were the ages of Thea’s boys. Margaret had played too when the nanny would let her. They had spent hours at Morrisey Meadows, the family’s country estate, setting up jumps and then trotting or galloping over them.
Funny, but it had been years since he’d thought of the good parts of his childhood.
“Which way shall we go, my lord?” Thea asked.
“My coach is at the end of the street. This one was too narrow for it to travel down,” Neal said, pointing to the right.
He saw his coachman waiting for him. “Let them go,” he said to Thea.
“Bonner is there waiting for them.” Bonner was the name of his coachman, and he already had a small audience of children around him.
She ignored him, but her sons did not. They were both pulling on her now, anxious to have a look at his coach. She still held fast, until their excitement overcame them. They were pulling too hard, and when they were fifty feet from Bonner, she took Neal’s advice and let them go.
They ran to the coach. Their first stop was Neal’s matched grays.
The coach itself was Neal’s pride and joy.
His father had designed it out of burled wood.
The seats were covered with tufted red velvet.
The overall vehicle was smaller than most coaches and very comfortable for town riding.
It was so distinctive that his father had never bothered placing a coat of arms on the door.
It was unnecessary. Everyone recognized the Lyon when he traveled.
“They are horse mad,” Thea admitted to Neal, who fell into step beside her, “and I don’t know why, because they haven’t been around many. They’ve always been that way.”
“We all are at that age,” Neal answered. “And remember, their mother was a bruising rider.”
She glanced at him from the corner of her eye. “I did outride you on more than one occasion.”
“Yes.” He paused a moment and then said, “How was your money stolen?”
She looked to her sons. Bonner was telling the boys the horses’ names: “Blen and Cully.”
“Why did you name them that?” Christopher wanted to know.
“Lord Harry named them, laddies, after famous battles.”
“He is the one in the Horse Guard, isn’t he, sir?” Jonny asked.
“Aye, he is,” Bonner answered.
“Don’t worry about them,” Neal told Thea. “They are in good hands. Bonner will have them feeding the horses molasses bits.”
She crossed her arms. He sensed she wanted to tell him that how her money was stolen was none of his business.
And then she surprised him by saying, “I didn’t leave them alone if that is what you suspect.
I would never do that. Those boys mean more to me than my own life.
When I received Sir James’s request for an interview, I went to see if Mrs. Hadley upstairs would watch them.
She wasn’t at home, but her sister-in-marriage was.
I didn’t know Mrs. Gray, and now I feel foolish.
Mrs. Gray’s husband had been a vicar. I assumed .
. .” Her voice trailed off. She was not happy with herself.
“I didn’t know the vicar had been a thief and a drunkard, two traits that have obviously been carried on by his widow.
When I returned home after our interview, I discovered the door was open and the boys left alone. ”
“And the box empty.”
“She took all the money I’d saved,” Thea said. “Every penny. Mrs. Hadley doesn’t know where she is. Apparently Mrs. Gray has a fondness for drink. She could be anywhere right now.”
“And what of your marriage?” he asked, pressing his luck. “I hadn’t heard that you had married.”
Thea’s lips quirked into a smile. “Aren’t you being nosey, Neal?”
She’d called him by his Christian name, certainly a sign of a truce growing between them. “I am, but only because I care.”
She shook her head, humming her disbelief. “No, we shall not go there.”
Neal tamped down the desire to argue. He really was curious about what path her life had taken. If she’d been in trouble, she could have contacted him—but then she was right. He had abandoned her all those years ago. He had turned his back on her.
Regret was an uncomfortable emotion.
“Come, Thea. Let us have a good dinner and rekindle our friendship.”
“You just want me to find a wife for you,” she argued, but her words lacked their earlier heat.
“Aye, I do. I want what you have, Thea. I want children.”
She nodded her understanding and gave her sons a pensive touch on the shoulders as they clambered into the coach.