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am a selfish blackguard, however, I intend to take full advantage of your lowered circumstances.”

      There, now. He had her buttoned, and he stood back to look at her. She looked like a sausage roll.

      A soggy sausage roll.

      A soggy, confused sausage roll with slick ebony hair that would feel like satin ribbons between his fingertips.

      Right. He dragged himself back to the point.

      “I need a governess. Not just any governess, Miss Mountbatten. I need you. Which is why I will not have you walking home in the rain and catching the grippe.”

      “But it isn’t—”

      “I insist. Most insistently.”

      She blinked at him. “Very well.”

      Finally, she heeded his demands. She walked down the pavement and turned the corner, disappearing from view.

      As he returned to the house, Chase took note of an unexpected sensation. Or rather, the lack of an expected sensation. Miss Mountbatten had appeared at his front door soaked to the skin, and he hadn’t yet felt a single raindrop.

      He tipped his head to the sky. Strange. Nothing overhead but the periwinkle and orange streaks of twilight.

      It wasn’t raining.

      In fact, now that he thought of it, it hadn’t rained all day.

      At home, Alexandra unwrapped herself from Mr. Reynaud’s coat and hung it on a peg. She’d likely ruined the thing. The garment had smelled deliciously of mint and sandalwood when he’d wrapped it about her shoulders. Now it reeked of the Thames.

      After bathing and changing into a clean shift and dressing gown, she followed the scent of baking biscuits down to the kitchen. Thank heaven for Nicola and freshly baked biscuits.

      She sat down at the table and laid her head on folded arms. “Hullo, Nic.”

      Nicola whisked a tray of biscuits from the oven. A sweet, lemony steam permeated the kitchen. “Goodness, has the day gone already?”

      “It has, I’m afraid.” And what a day it had been. Alex lifted her head. “Do you remember the Bookshop Rake?”

      “The Bookshop Rake?” Nicola frowned. “It’s not a poem or limerick, is it? I’m useless at those.”

      “No, it’s a man. We met with him in Hatchard’s last autumn. I was carrying a stack of your books in one arm, and reading one of my own with my free hand. He and I collided. I was startled, dropped everything. He helped me gather up the books.”

      Nicola piled the biscuits onto a plate and carried it to the table, setting it between them.

      “Tall,” Alex prompted. “Brown hair, green eyes, fine attire. Handsome. Flirtatious. We all decided he must be a terrible rake.” And we didn’t guess the half of it. “Penny teased me for months. Surely you must remember.”

      Nicola lowered herself into a chair, thoughtful. “Maybe I do recall. Was I buying natural history books?”

      “Cookery and Roman architecture.”

      “Oh. Hm.” Biscuit in one hand and book in the other, Nicola was already absorbed in other thoughts.

      Alexandra reached for a biscuit and took a resigned bite. That was Nicola for you. She jettisoned useless information like ballast. She needed the brain space to cram in more facts and theories, Alex supposed. And to come up with her ideas.

      When Nicola was concentrating, she set aside everything else. She would neglect the passing of hours and days, if not for the odor of burnt cakes coming from the kitchen, or the clamor of the twenty-three—

       Cuckoo! Cuckoo!

      The twenty-three clocks.

      So it began. The chiming, ringing, chirping, and bonging from timepieces that stood, hung, sat—even danced—in every corner of the house.

      Alexandra couldn’t complain about the noise. Nicola’s clocks were the only reason she could afford to live in a place like Bloom Square. In exchange for a room in her friend’s inherited Mayfair house, Alex bartered her timekeeping services. The din was loud enough when they all struck the hour in unison . . . but if they fell out of synchrony, the noise went on for ages.

      After the last chime sounded, Alex spoke to whatever fraction of her friend’s divided attention she could command. “He offered me a post. The Bookshop Rake.”

      “The Bookshop Rake?” Lady Penelope Campion burst through the kitchen door, flushed and breathless, holding a flour sack in one hand and clutching a bundle to her chest with the other. “Did I hear mention of the Bookshop Rake?”

      With a soft moan, Alex laid her head on the table again.

      “Oh, Alexandra.” Penny dropped the sack, sat down beside her, and clutched her arm. “You’ve found each other at last. I knew you would.”

      “It wasn’t like that. Not in the slightest.”

      “Tell me everything. Was he just as handsome as he was in Hatchard’s?”

      “Please, Penny. I beg you. Hear me out before you start dreaming up names for the children.”

      “Oh!” Penny snapped her fingers. “I nearly forgot the reason for my visit. It’s Bixby’s cart. He was chasing after the goslings, and he popped the axle out of place.” At the sound of his name, the rat terrier poked his head out from the blanket. Penny clucked and fussed over him. “What a little scoundrel you are. If you had all four legs, I shouldn’t know what to do with you.”

      Nicola reached for the sack and withdrew the contraption inside—a tiny cart she’d rigged up to serve in place of Bixby’s hind legs. She turned it over, inspecting the axle. “Won’t take but a moment.”

      “There, now. Alex, you were saying . . . ?”

      “She was saying he offered her work.” Nicola retrieved her little caddy of hand tools and sorted through the wrenches and pliers. “That’s all.”

      “Of course he offered her work,” Penny said. “As a pretext. That way he can see her once a week. He’s taken with her.”

      Alex placed both hands on the table. “If you’re going to make up your own tale, I can retire to bed.”

      “No, no.” Penny fed Bixby a biscuit. “We’re listening.”

      Alexandra poured herself a cup of tea and began at the beginning. By the time she reached the end of her tale, the plate of biscuits had been devoured to crumbs and Bixby was racing circles around the table with the aid of his cart.

      “He ran after you and gave you his coat.” Penny sighed. “So romantic.”

      “Romantic?” Nicola made a face. “Did you miss the bit where he keeps two little girls locked in the attic and feeds them nothing but dry crusts?”

      “Not at all,” Penny returned. “It’s one more reason to accept. Just think of how much those orphaned girls need her.”

      Alex rubbed her temples. How she missed Emma. She adored all three of her friends, but Emma was the most understanding among them. A former seamstress, she’d once worked for her living, too. At the moment, however, both Emma and her heavily pregnant belly were happily ensconced in the country.

      Nicola tsked. “Alex, I can’t believe you accepted the post.”

      “I couldn’t say no. He offered me an astronomical sum. I will make more in two months than I could hope to make in two years of clock setting. Besides, after what happened at the dock, I didn’t have a choice.”

      “Of

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