“John, let your sister finish,” Grace said, almost automatically. It was a sentence she uttered several times a day.
John smiled at her. Meltingly. Good gracious, Grace thought, it would not be long before she’d be beating the girls away with a stick.
“Mother,” he said, in exactly the same tone Jack used when he was trying to charm his way out of a tight spot, “I would not dream of interrupting her.”
“You just did!” Mary retorted.
John held up his hands, as if to say-Poor dear.
Grace turned to Mary with what she hoped was visible compassion. “You were saying, Mary?”
“He smashed an orange into my sheet music!”
Grace turned to her son. “John, is this-”
“No,” he said quickly.
Grace gave him a dubious stare. It did not escape her that she had not finished her question before he answered. She supposed she ought not read too much into it. John, is this true? was another of the sentences she seemed to spend a great deal of time repeating.
“Mother,” he said, his green eyes profoundly solemn, “upon my honor I swear to you that I did not smash an orange-”
“You lie,” Mary seethed.
“She crushed the orange.”
“After you put it under my foot!”
And then came a new voice: “Grace!”
Grace smiled with delight. Jack could now sort the children out.
“Grace,” he said, turning sideways so that he might slip by them and into the room. “I need you to-”
“Jack!” she cut in.
He looked at her, and then behind him. “What did I do?”
She motioned to the children. “Did you not notice them?”
He quirked a smile-the very same one his son had tried to use on her a few moments earlier. “Of course I noticed them,” he said. “Did you not notice me stepping around them?” He turned to the children. “Haven’t we taught you that it is rude to block the doorway?”
It was a good thing she hadn’t been to the orangery herself, Grace thought, because she would have peened him with one. As it was, she was beginning to think she ought to keep a store of small, round, easily throwable objects in her desk drawer.
“Jack,” she said, with what she thought was amazing patience, “would you be so kind as to settle their dispute?”
He shrugged. “They’ll work it out.”
“Jack,” she sighed.
“It’s not your fault you had no siblings,” he told her. “You have no experience in intrafamilial squabbles. Trust me, it all works out in the end. I predict we shall manage to get all four to adulthood with at least fifteen of their major limbs intact.”
Grace leveled a stare. “You, on the other hand, are in supreme danger of-”
“Children!” Jack cut in. “Listen to your mother.”
“She didn’t say anything,” John pointed out.
“Right,” Jack said. He frowned for a moment. “John, leave your sister alone. Mary, next time don’t step on the orange.”
“But-”
“I’m done here,” he announced.
And amazingly, they went on their way.
“That wasn’t too difficult,” he said. He stepped into the room. “I have some papers for you.”
Grace immediately set aside her correspondence and took the documents he held forth.
“They arrived this afternoon from my solicitor,” Jack explained.
She read the first paragraph. “About the Ennigsly building in Lincoln?”
“That’s what I was expecting,” he confirmed.
She nodded and then gave the document a thorough perusal. After a dozen years of marriage, they had fallen into an easy routine. Jack conducted all of his business affairs face-to-face, and when correspondence arrived, Grace was his reader.
It was almost amusing. It had taken Jack a year or so to find his footing, but he’d turned into a marvelous steward of the dukedom. His mind was razor sharp, and his judgment was such that Grace could not believe he’d not been trained in land management. The tenants adored him, the servants worshipped him (especially once the dowager was banished to the far side of the estate), and London society had positively fallen at his feet. It had helped, of course, that Thomas made it clear that he believed Jack was the rightful Duke of Wyndham, but still, Grace did not think herself biased to believe that Jack’s charm and wit had something to do with it as well.
The only thing it seemed he could not do was read.
When he first told her, she had not believed him. Oh, she believed that he believed it. But surely he’d had poor teachers. Surely there had been some gross negligence on someone’s part. A man of Jack’s intelligence and education did not reach adulthood illiterate.
And so she’d sat with him. Tried her best. And he put up with it. In retrospect, she couldn’t believe that he had not exploded with frustration. It was, perhaps, the oddest imaginable show of love-he’d let her try, again and again, to teach him to read. With a smile on his face, even.
But in the end she’d given up. She still did not understand what he meant when he told her the letters “danced,” but she believed him when he insisted that all he ever got from a printed page was a headache.
“Everything is in order,” she said now, handing the documents back to Jack. He had discussed the matter with her the week prior, after all of the decisions had been made. He always did that. So that she would know precisely what she was looking for.
“Are you writing to Amelia?” he asked.