goes against her ladyship, never.” She nudged Polly with a salacious grin. “Given ’im a bit o’ the other, ’ave ya? Aren’t ye the lucky one, takin’ ’is fancy like that!”
Polly frowned, thinking of last night and his refusal of the offer of her body. “I don’t think I have taken his fancy,” she replied honestly, not a whit put out by the girl’s manner or a conclusion that she could see would be the only reasonable one. She was perfectly at home in the kitchen; which, in all its essentials, except for the extraordinary degree of cleanliness, resembled her usual haunts, and perfectly at ease with Lord Kincaid’s servants for much the same reasons. “I did save his life, though,” she confided, her frown clearing at this happy truth. Just in time, she stopped herself from continuing blithely that in exchange he had promised to help her with her life’s ambition. It would take a much less astute mind than Polly’s to have missed the significance of Lady Margaret’s dress and bearing and pronouncements on the devil’s vanities. She was in the house of a Puritan.
She had scrambled into adulthood in a land ruled by the Lord Protector, where all forms of entertainment and gaiety were forbidden as the devil’s work. Color and adornment in dress were held sinful vanities, punishable by stocks and pillory. Only in the last five years, since Charles II had been brought triumphantly from exile, had the Puritan rule lost its sway. Indeed, the pendulum had swung to the opposite extreme, and there was little extravagance in dress or behaviorthat was now considered impermissible. It was a matter of some interest, she reflected, that his lordship, whose dress and bearing bore ample witness to his allegiance to the courtly norms, should share houseroom with such a stickler for the sober and divine. But then, kin had claims upon kin, and not since the reign of Henry VIII had there been anything unusual in two members of the same family holding opposing views on the manner in which the worship of God should be conducted. The present rule of the land was much more tolerant of differences in religious conviction and lifestyle than the Lord Protector’s.
Polly dismissed the matter as being of little importance and turned her attention to the immediate issue—that of a visit to the hothouse. The gentleman—she still could not think of him in any other way—had told her last night that she would be required to do certain things that she would not wish to do, but that it was all part of some plan that would enable her to achieve her object. If immersing herself in hot water would draw her closer to her goal, then she supposed she would have to submit. At least she would do so in friendly company.
“’ow d’ye save his life, then?” asked Susan, rummaging in a cupboard. “’Ere, these’ll do you.” She handed her a pair of wooden pattens. “Ye’d best borrow Bridget’s cloak, for I’ll have need of mine.”
“Carriage is ’ere!” Tom appeared breathless in the door. “’is lordship’s coolin’ ’is heels abovestairs, and bids ye both come straightway.”
Polly smiled her thanks as she took the cloak of coarse homespun handed her by the cook. The smile, did she but know it, did much to reconcile Bridget to the loan of such a precious garment.
“We must make haste.” Susan pranced in the doorway, in her anxiety and excitement quite forgetting that she had not received an answer to her question.
Nicholas, while he was resigned to the task ahead, was also regretting his impulse until Polly appeared, wrapped in the ample folds of the cook’s cloak. She turned the full sun ofthat glorious countenance upon him and smiled—a smile that carried a hint of shyness behind its gratitude. He ceased to regret the impulse, accepting that it had been as inevitable as the sunrise. Clean, groomed, not at a disadvantage, who would she not entrance? He would welcome De Winter’s second opinion, and such an