The Fourth Chapter part.4

intensely observed, and the whole room gave her a sad
and queasy sensation in her tummy.
“Tenderhearted, eh? Pity,” Lord Fredrick said.
“Hunting is a marvelous pastime. Communing with
nature and all that! Although it can be dangerous. In
my own family there have been some—unfortunate
accidents.” He jerked his head behind him in the direc-
tion of the portraits. “They met gruesome ends, all
of ’em. Positively gruesome! All killed while hunting.
Except for my father, Edward—although his end was
most gruesome of all, in its way. Never even found the
body. Anyway, that’s how I caught ’em—the children,
I mean. It was on a hunting expedition, right here on
the grounds of Ashton Place. You can see for yourself;
the Ashton Woods are very large indeed. I’ve hunted
in that forest my whole life, and still, there are corners
I’ve never seen.”
He paused to chew the end of his cigar. “It was ten
days ago. I was out stalking with a pair of my favorite
hounds and Old Timothy, the coachman—you’ve met
him, I take it? He’s a trusted family servant and knows
how to keep quiet in the trees. I often take him out
with me, to carry water for the dogs and so forth.”
“I have met him,” she replied. “He picked me up at
the station.”

Lord Fredrick nodded and went on with his tale.
“We’d ventured deep into the woods, deeper than
usual, until we wandered into a clearing and star-
tled some birds into the air. I’d gotten off a shot at a
good-sized something or other, maybe a pheasant. Old
Timothy was certain I’d hit it, but neither of us saw
where it fell, so we set the dogs loose to find it. Instead,
they flushed those three ragamuffins out of the under-
brush, naked as the day they were born and yapping
and howling like a litter of wolf cubs.” Lord Fredrick
took a deep puff on his cigar. “If Old Timothy hadn’t
seen what they were in time to stop me, I might have
gotten off a shot or two.”
“A ‘shot or two’—you mean, at the children?” The
queasy feeling in Penelope’s tummy was growing
worse, and she wished she had something safe and
familiar to hold: her poetry book, perhaps, or the small
pillow cross-stitched with one of Agatha Swanburne’s
sayings—“Complaining Doesn’t Butter the Biscuit”—
that her school friend Cecily had made in sewing class
and given her for a birthday present two years before.
“I can’t see for toffee at distances, I’m afraid,” Lord
Fredrick confessed, although he did not sound the
least bit apologetic. “I can read the newspaper as well
as the next man, if I hold it close, but more than twelve

The Fourth Chapter part.3

narrow nose, sloping forehead, and prominent, some-
what pointed ears depicted in the ancestral portraits
that hung on the wall behind where he sat. Penelope
could read the names off the engraved brass plaques
mounted below each painting: Admiral Percival Racine
Ashton. The Honorable Judge Pax Ashton. Lord Edward
Ashton. The one of Lord Edward was her least favor-
ite of the paintings (although she could not honestly
say she liked any of them); he was a very rotund man
and even the painted-on buttons of his coat looked as
if they wanted to pop off the canvas. She found his
expression decidedly unpleasant and made a point of
averting her smoke-stung eyes from that harsh, heavy-
lidded gaze.
“Of especially naughty children, it is sometimes
said, ‘They must have been raised by wolves,’” Lord
Fredrick finally remarked, tapping his cigar into a
bronze ashtray shaped like a fox. “And, by Jove, these
rascals actually were!”
“I take it,” Penelope said, blinking, “that they are
not your own natural-born children, then?”
“Mine? Certainly not. I don’t know who in blazes
they belong to, nor do I much care to know.” His eyes
glinted with pleasure. “A fascinating trio they are,
though. Suitable for scientific study, what? I suppose

you want to hear the story of where I found ’em.”
“It may be useful in explaining their current con-
dition,” Penelope said, unflinching. She could forgive
the enigmatic coachman, Mrs. Clarke, and even silly
Lady Constance for concealing the truth from her
until after she had accepted the position, but she really
was quite furious that the children had been locked in
the barn. Mrs. Clarke assured her that food and water
was brought in daily and that they had plenty of hay
and the saddle blankets for warmth—but no watercolor
paints? No decks of cards? Not a single book to pass
the time? Granted the children could not yet read, but
surely they could turn pages and admire the illustra-
tions? To Penelope’s way of thinking, it approached the
barbaric.
“Very well, but I warn you, it’s a most unbelievable
tale.” Lord Fredrick leaned back in his armchair. “Miss
Lumley, have you ever gone hunting?”
“No,” she said quickly. “I am rather tenderhearted
about animals, in fact.” She fixed her eyes straight
ahead as she spoke. Except for where the paintings
hung, the walls of the study were completely covered
with stuffed and mounted heads of every imaginable
type of beast—from tiny rabbits to a massive, antlered
elk. Their sightless glass eyes made Penelope feel

The Fourth Chapter part.2

Discouraged but hardly defeated, Penelope felt she
had no choice but to plead with Lady Constance in
person. Mrs. Clarke looked ready to object, but Penel-
ope laid a hand on her shoulder. “Remember Silky!”
she said with feeling, and after that Mrs. Clarke could
only nod and wish her Godspeed.
Penelope marched straight to Lady Constance’s
chambers. Her knock received no answer. She knocked
again and called through the door.
“Lady Constance, it is Miss Lumley, the govern-
ess! I must have your ear for a moment regarding the
children. Their current accommodations are quite
unacceptable.”
There was a thud and a small crash from inside.
After a moment, Lady Constance opened the door a
crack and immediately began to wail. “You gave me
your word,” she cried. “You signed a contract! Oh,
please, Miss Lumley! Do not leave us before you begin!
I am beside myself. It is only six months since Lord
Fredrick and I were married. I am not fond of children
in general, and to suddenly become the foster mother
to three—and to three such wild, dirty, incorrigible
creatures—well, I am quite over my head!”
She popped a small chocolate into her mouth,
clutched at her temples, and swooned. Luckily

Penelope’s reflexes were swift, and she caught her new
mistress before she hit the floor.
“Lady Constance,” Penelope said, putting her back
on her feet, “you must give me leave to settle the chil-
dren in the nursery. After all, they are in your care.”
Wisely, Penelope chose not to offer her opinion of the
care they had received so far.
“You will need to speak to Lord Ashton about that.
I am much too ill to make any decisions,” Lady Con-
stance replied, retreating back inside her private parlor.
“He will be home within the hour.” With that, she
slammed her door shut and could not be persuaded to
converse any further.
Penelope used the hour wisely; she made up the
children’s beds, tidied the nursery, and cleared it of
breakable objects. She also instructed the kitchen to
bake plum cakes, and the scent of fruit and cinna-
mon was already wafting through the house. It had
even permeated Lord Fredrick’s study, where she now
sat across from the man himself, waiting for him to
speak.
Sadly, the sweet cake-baking smell could not mask
the far less delicious odor of Lord Fredrick’s cigar. The
current master of Ashton Place had the same long and