She handed him the paper. He scanned it quickly, passing by bits about the Duke of Ashbourne, the Earl of Macclesfield, and Penelope Featherington before he reached the section about what had to be Sophie.
“Jail?” he said, the word mere breath on his lips.
“We must see her released,” his mother said, throwing her shoulders back like a general girding for battle.
But Benedict was already out the door.
“Wait!” Violet yelled, dashing after him. “I’m coming, too.”
Benedict stopped short just before he reached the stairs. “You are not coming,” he ordered. “I will not have you exposed to—”
“Oh, please,” Violet returned. “I’m hardly a wilting flower. And I can vouch for Sophie’s honesty and integrity,”
“I’m coming, too,” Hyacinth said, skidding to a halt alongside Francesca, who had also followed them out into the upstairs hall.
“No!” came the simultaneous reply from her mother and brother.
“But—”
“I said no,” Violet said again, her voice sharp.
Francesca let out a sullen snort. “I suppose it would be fruitless for me to insist upon—”
“Don’t even finish that sentence,” Benedict warned.
“As if you would let me even try.”
Benedict ignored her and turned to his mother. “If you want to go, we leave immediately.”
She nodded. “Have the carriage brought ‘round, and I’ll be waiting out front.”
Ten minutes later, they were on their way.
Chapter 22
Such a scurry on Bruton Street. The dowager Viscountess Bridgerton and her son, Benedict Bridgerton, were seen dashing out of her house Friday morning. Mr. Bridgerton practically threw his mother into a carriage, and they took off at breakneck speed. Francesca and Hyacinth Bridgerton were seen standing in the doorway, and This Author has it on the best authority that Francesca was heard to utter a very unladylike word.
But the Bridgerton household was not the only one to see such excitement. The Penwoods also experienced a great deal of activity, culminating in a public row right on the front steps between the countess and her daughter, Miss Posy Reiling.
As This Author has never liked Lady Penwood, she can only say, “Huzzah for Posy!”
LADY WHISTLEDOWN’S SOCIETY PAPERS, 16 JUNE 1817
It was cold. Really cold. And there was an awful scurrying noise that definitely belonged to a small, four-legged creature. Or even worse, a large, four-legged creature. Or to be more precise, a large version of a small, four-legged creature.
Rats.
“Oh, God,” Sophie moaned. She didn’t often take the Lord’s name in vain, but now seemed as good a time as any to start. Maybe He would hear, and maybe He would smite the rats. Yes, that would do very nicely. A big jolt of lightning. Huge. Of biblical proportions. It could hit the earth, spread little electrical tentacles around the globe, and sizzle all the rats dead.
It was a lovely dream. Right up there with the ones in which she found herself living happily ever after as Mrs. Benedict Bridgerton.
Sophie took a quick gasp as a sudden stab of pain pierced her heart. Of the two dreams, she feared that the genocide of the rats might be the more likely to come true.
She was on her own now. Well and truly on her own. She didn’t know why this was so upsetting. In all truth, she’d always been on her own. Not since her grandmother had deposited her on the front steps of Penwood Park had she had a champion, someone who put her interests above—or even at the same level—as their own.
Her stomach growled, reminding her that she could add hunger to her growing list of miseries.
And thirst. They hadn’t even brought her so much as a sip of water. She was starting to have very strange fantasies about tea.
Sophie let out a long, slow breath, trying to remember to breathe through her mouth when it came time to inhale. The stench was overwhelming. She’d been given a crude chamber pot to use for her bodily functions, but so far she’d been holding it in, trying to relieve herself with as little frequency as possible. The chamber pot had been emptied before it had been tossed into her cell, but it hadn’t been cleaned, and in fact when Sophie had picked it up it had been wet, causing her to drop it immediately as her entire body shuddered with revulsion.
She had, of course, emptied many chamber pots in her time, but the people she’d worked for had generally managed to hit their mark, so to speak. Not to mention that Sophie had always been able to wash her hands afterward.
Now, in addition to the cold and the hunger, she didn’t feel clean in her own skin.
It was a horrible sensation.
“You have a visitor.”
Sophie jumped to her feet at the warden’s gruff, unfriendly voice. Could Benedict have found out where she was? Would he even wish to come to her aid? Did he—
“Well, well, well.”
Araminta. Sophie’s heart sank.
“Sophie Beckett,” she clucked, approaching the cell and then holding a handkerchief to her nose, as if Sophie were the sole cause of the stench. “I would never have guessed that you would have the audacity to show your face in London.”
Sophie clamped her mouth together in a mutinous line. She knew that Araminta wanted to get a rise out of her, and she refused to give her the satisfaction.
“Things aren’t going well for you, I’m afraid,” Araminta continued, shaking her head in a parody of sympathy. She leaned forward and whispered, “The magistrate doesn’t take very kindly to thieves.”