came to help her in, grinned at her and stood back as Ted whipped up his horse.
âShe looks a proper treat,â he remarked to Betty as they drove off. âAnyone would think she were quality.â
âWell, she is and better than most,â Betty said. âThanks for your help with the trunk but you had better get off now or they will be looking for you at the stables.â
âYeah. Ainât got a piece of yer gingerbread, âave yer?â
âI might have,â Betty said and smiled. âCome into the kitchen and Iâll see what I can find.â
She cast one last regretful glance at the dogcart and went back into the cottage.
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âWell, here we are then, Eliza,â Ted Wright said as he pulled the cart to a halt in the busy market square. He glanced round and nodded as he saw the carriage waiting close by the clock tower. The driver seemed to be looking about, as if expecting someone. âIâll just go and ask if thatâs the transport for Miss Eliza Bancroft.â
âSurely it canât be? A carriage like that for me?â Eliza protested, but the groom was getting down and coming towards them.
âWould you be Miss Bancroft?â he asked, tipping his tall crowned hat respectfully.
âYes, I am. Did Lady Sarah send you to fetch me?â
âI was sent to take you to Lady Sarah Manners in Bath,â he said, an odd look on his face. âCanât exactly say as she sent me. This carriage belongs to the marquis, miss.â
âThe marquis?â Eliza was puzzled. âI donât understand. You have it rightâyou are to take me to Lady Sarah, my employer?â
âThose are my instructions, yes. Is that trunk all you have with you?â
âAnd my portmanteau,â Eliza said. âI shall carry thatâif you would help Mr Wright with the trunk, please?â
âYes, of course.â
The man turned away. Together, he and Ted strapped the heavy trunk on the back of the carriage and then Ted came back to her. He held out his hand, placing his other hand over hers as she took it.
âDonât forget, you can come home any time you like, Miss Eliza.â
âThank you,â she whispered, glancing at the groom as he stood with the door open, waiting for her. She climbed in and waved to her friend from behind the window. Her mouth felt dry as she settled back against the comfortable squabs and her throat was tight. She was certainly to travel in luxury and that made her a little apprehensive. Why would the marquis send his carriageâwhoever he was? For a moment she wondered if she were being abducted and then the absurdity of such a notion made her smile.
The groom knew the name of her employer. It was quite possible that the marquis was a friend of Lady Sarah and that he had agreed to bring her companion to her.
Feeling relieved to have settled the thing in her mind, Eliza sat back and took out the battered copy of a book she had bought from the second-hand stall at the market. It would serve to pass the time as they traveled, for she knew they would be some days on the road. She would need to take a room at more than one inn and she wouldhave to rely on the coachman to find a decent house that was not too expensive for her purse.
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Eliza looked out of the inn window and smiled as she saw it was yet another clear fine day. They had already been three days on the road and she would be glad when they reached Bath, which should not be more than another day at the most, for they had made good time. The Marquis of Cheadleâs carriage was well sprung and the journey had been less tiresome than it might have been had she travelled on the mail coach. She had been surprised to find herself staying at the finest inns on the road; when she tentatively asked how much she owed the first morning, she was told that the Marquis of Cheadleâs groom had settled the account.
Eliza had immediately tried to