Ivy and Intrigue: A Very Selwick
Christmas
Chapter One
Deck the hall with boughs of holly,
Fa la la la la la la la la.
‘Tis the season to be jolly,
Fa la la la la la la la la.
-- “Deck the Hall”
“Darling, you’ve already had three,” said
Amy, scooping her new nephew away from the buffet table before
he could hook another mince pie in his grubby little fingers.
It was mince with which his fingers were grubby, but that
was beside the point.
“Four!” said Peregrine proudly. He had just learned
to count and he was justifiably pleased with the new skill.
He looked expectantly at Amy. His new party trick had already
garnered a proven record of tangible rewards from impressionable
adults. Auntie Amy was no exception.
“All right,” Amy capitulated. She scooped up
the slice of pie and offered it down to him. “’Tis
the season, after all.”
“Mmmph,” agreed Peregrine, mashing a large quantity
of mince against his face and a very little bit of it in his
mouth. At least that way, thought Amy optimistically, he had
small odds of stomachache, even if his velvet suit wasn’t
likely to survive until Christmas Day.
All around her, Uppington Hall was decked for Christmas.
Greenery dripped from balustrades and portrait rails, from
moldings and doorframes. Irreverent crowns of prickly holly
perched on the heads of marble busts of past monarchs, visual
symbol of the Uppingtons’ favor at court over the generations.
Even the paired blackamoor candelabra positioned on either
side of the door bore belts of red ribbon around their waists.
Only the painted deities on the ceiling had been spared decoration,
and that, Amy, was sure, was only because her mother-in-law
couldn’t reach them.
It was Amy’s first Christmas as Uppington Hall, principal
seat of the Marquesses of Uppington, her first Christmas as
part of the Uppington clan, her first Christmas as a married
woman. In grand seigneurial fashion, the Uppingtons were holding
open house for Christmas Eve, with all of the local gentry
invited to partake of mince pie, Christmas pudding, and a
variety of less seasonal delicacies. The air smelled delightfully
of cloves and orange peel and the boys of the local church
choir were singing away in the corner of the room, their pure,
high treble voices lifted to the heavens in a song of praise.
A gloved finger tapped her on the shoulder. “The season
for what?”
“Jane!” Amy launched herself at her cousin.
Fortunately, Jane was accustomed to Amy’s ways. She
braced herself in preparation for just such a move and so
was spared careening into a bust of the first Marquess of
Uppington. The marble marquess had suffered indignities enough
for one holiday season. In addition to his habitually disgruntled
expression, he wore a chaplet of holly from which the berries
were already beginning to fall. Lady Uppington believed in
leaving no unmoving surface undecorated.
Amy had her suspicions about the moving ones as well, but
since she seldom stayed still, she assumed she was safe.
Amy gave an extra little bounce as she gave her favorite
cousin an exuberant hug. “When did you get here? I didn’t
hear you arrive.”
Jane smiled the enigmatic smile she appeared to have perfected
during her time abroad. “You weren’t meant to.”
Amy rolled her eyes. “You can’t claim to be here
incognito. Not with the whole family in tow.”
Uncle Bertrand and Aunt Prudence had arrived the night before,
in an antiquated carriage laden with assorted offspring, Aunt
Prudence’s embroidery bag, and one agitated sheep. The
sheep, apparently, was a Christmas present. Amy only hoped
it wasn’t intended for her. She had had enough of her
sheep in her upbringing in Shropshire, when the French Revolution
had exiled her to the care of her aunt and uncle.
It had been Amy’s mother-in-law’s idea to invite
Amy’s family to join them all for Christmas at Uppington
Hall, the official seat of the Marquesses of Uppington. It
was, Amy had to admit, a very thoughtful notion. She was more
pleased than she cared to admit to have familiar faces around
her.
Well, maybe not all the familiar faces.
A sharp object was doing its best to make a dent in Amy’s
left side. It turned out, upon inspection, to be a fan.
Only one woman carried a fan that pointy and wielded it with
such deadly precision.
“Incognit<em>a</em>,” snapped Amy’s
former chaperone, Miss Gwendolyn Meadows, driving the point
home with another jab of her fan. “Incognita, not incognito.
Despite a masculine occupation, one need not abandon the feminine
persona.”
Jane’s lips turned up at a private joke. “Except,
perhaps, when it might be expedient so to do?” she suggested
demurely.
Miss Gwen sniffed. “Expedient,” she allowed,
“but never ungrammatical.”
There had been an untold story in that sniff. Perhaps more
than one.
Amy looked quizzically from Jane to Miss Gwen, trying not
to look as left out as she felt.
Only eight months ago—not that she was counting—they
had been a team, the three of them. She was the one who had
started it all, after all. It had been her idea to track down
the Purple Gentian, her idea to join the ranks of those cunning
men who slipped from shadow to shadow, outwitting Bonaparte
at every turn. But she hadn’t managed to stay quite
shadowy enough, and in the space of one fatal evening, everything
had changed. Now it was Jane staying with her brother in her
old house, Jane outwitting Bonaparte, Jane getting written
up in the illustrated papers as the most daring thing to enter
the scene since espionage went botanical.
Amy knew she shouldn’t resent Jane for carrying on
with their plans. The point was the goal, not the individual
agent.
But she did resent it. It wasn’t logical, and she didn’t
like it, but there it was. <em>She </em>wanted
to be the one making daring midnight raids on the Tuileries
Palace and composing insulting little notes to leave on Bonaparte’s
pillow. She had spent years plotting and scheming to find
the Purple Gentian and join his League. It was ridiculous
beyond all things that the very accomplishment of that goal
should have been the cause of both of them being barred from
Paris and espionage altogether. It was like of the Greek tragedies
her father had loved so well, where the accomplishment of
a wish led to its own destruction.
Not that Amy was complaining, she told herself hastily. If
she had to choose between her husband and another season’s
spying in France… well, Richard was solid and real and
kept the bed warm on cold nights and never once thought it
was odd or unladylike when she wanted to practice shooting
at targets or climbing over fences or other skills that might
just come in handy again. There were many spies in the world
but only one man she could imagine spending the rest of her
life with.
They were happy, really they were. And no one could say they
hadn’t made good use of their exile. Together, they
had cobbled together a comprehensive curriculum for the training
of secret agents, combining Richard’s experience in
the field with some of Amy’s more inventive ideas to
produce a program that purported to plan for every possible
contingency. They were still working out some of the kinks
in the curriculum, but their first batch of pupils were coming
along quite nicely.
But teaching wasn’t the same as doing. If she minded
it, how much more must Richard?
She had caught him, more than once, plotting out routes on
the atlas that he would never again follow, and, when he didn’t
know she was looking, she had seen him staring broodingly
at his old cloak and mask, tokens of the work that was lost
to him.
No matter. It was Christmas; they were together; and they
were happy. ‘Twas the season. It was practically mandatory
to be happy at Christmas. She was happy. She was, she was,
she was.
Even if she was just a teeny tiny bit jealous of Jane.
“How long are you back for?” Amy asked her cousin.
“Just past Christmas,” said Jane. “I don’t
like to leave our affairs unattended for that long.”
“I’m glad you were able to get back at all,”
said Amy, trying to sound enthusiastic.
Jane smiled down at her. “You made it very easy for
me. How clever of you to find relatives with an estate so
near the coast.”
Despite herself, Amy grinned back. She knew better than to
ask Jane exactly how Jane had made her way from Paris or how
she intended to return. Jane kept her own counsel on such
matters. It was a trait Amy had found maddening while they
were working together. One could never tell quite what Jane
was planning until she had done it.
Discretion was something Jane had always done very well.
She, on the other hand….
It was her indiscretion that had bollixed Richard’s
career as the Purple Gentian.
“Well, happy Christmas!” she said, so forcefully
that Jane blinked and Miss Gwen frowned. But, then, Miss Gwen
always frowned. It was when Miss Gwen smiled that one had
to worry.
“Hmph,” said Miss Gwen. “Christmas hasn’t
happened yet. We have no idea if it will be happy or not.”
“Spreading good cheer as always, I see?” Richard
strolled over to join them, accompanied by two women.
One of the ladies was roughly his own age, with pale blonde
hair clustered in curls around a china oval of a face. The
other, her mother by the look of it, had the determined look
of the faded beauty, trying to make up in too-rich fabric
and jewels what she could no longer accomplish with her face.
Her white hair had been swept into an elaborate coiffure topped
with a diamond parure. A very silly thing, Amy thought, to
be wearing to a county affair, even one at the home of a marchioness.
The older woman clung very determinedly to Richard’s
arm.
Detaching her without visible sign of effort, Richard moved
in a touching show of husbandly devotion to his accustomed
place by Amy’s side.
It was, thought Amy, rather clever of him. It put her in
between him and Miss Gwen’s fan. He was no fool, her
husband. He smelled rather nice, too. Like citrus. With a
hint of cloves. He must have been raiding the gingerbread
again.
Quick to deflect any accusations of good cheer, Miss Gwen
favored Richard with her steeliest stare. “Don’t
expect me to start spreading goodwill towards men. Useless,
the most of them.”
“What about peace on earth, then?” inquired Richard
blandly.
“Bah,” said Miss Gwen.
“Bah?” inquired the older of the women Richard
had brought with him, in tones of frigid disbelief. “<em>Bah</em>?”
Miss Gwen looked down her nose. “One bah was entirely
sufficient. There is no need to imitate a herd of sheep.”
“Sheep?” Uncle Bertrand might be slightly deaf
when it came to social niceties, but any mention of his favorite
subject brought him bounding to his feet. He crossed the room
in record time. “Did I hear sheep?”
“Ah,” murmured Richard. “The pitter-patter
of playful sheep.”
“I had a lamb once,” said the blonde woman helpfully.
“But it was a very long time ago.”
“Never too late for another,” said Uncle Bertrand
heartily, clearly empathizing with her plight.
Amy hastily intervened. “I don’t believe we’ve
been introduced,” she said, forestalling Uncle Bertrand
before he could inquire after the name, age, and cause of
death of the late, lamented little lamb.
“Forgive me for neglecting my duties,” said Richard.
“Allow me to present Mrs. Ramsby and her daughter, Lady
Jerard.” He carried on with the introductions, presenting
Miss Gwen, Jane, and Uncle Bertrand in turn, but Amy heard
nothing after that second name.
Baroness Jerard. Here. Now. For Christmas.
Why hadn’t anyone warned her?
Amy must have said the civil thing. She must have bowed or
curtsied. Early training did win through, even when one’s
mind was entirely elsewhere.
No one had told her that Lady Uppington had invited Richard’s….
Oh, heavens, Amy didn’t even know what to call the dratted
woman. First love? First disappointment? Careless betrayer
of valiant English agents?
There wasn’t an exactly a one word tag for the-woman-who-broke-his-heart-and-caused-the-death-of-his-second-closest-friend.
At times, the English language was sadly lacking in crucial
terms. |