A Wicked Conceit Anna Huber (learn to read activity book TXT) đ
- Author: Anna Huber
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âAre you here with Alana and Philip?â Morven asked, threading my arm through hers and pulling me toward the door before I could answer. âIâll accompany you to their box. I havenât yet had a chance to respond to your sisterâs invitation to dine tomorrow evening.â
An impromptu dinner party sheâd insisted on arranging for my and Gageâs benefit, regardless of my feelings on the matter.
âDid I divine that situation correctly?â she leaned closer to murmur, her dark hair brushing my shoulder. âLady Wilmot and her companions appeared bent on making trouble.â
âYes, thank you.â
We paused before Gage, so that he and Morven could exchange greetings, and then he fell into step behind us as we made our way down the corridor toward Philipâs private box.
âMorven,â I murmured, waiting for her to glance at me. âCould you not mention Lady Wilmot to Alana?â
Morvenâs topaz eyes turned shrewd, deducing why I wished to keep it from her. âI know how much sheâs always hated seeing you taunted and belittled.â
âYes, but thatâs no longer her responsibility.â
Morvenâs smile turned gently reproving. âKiera, we never outgrow an obligation to defend our family. You, of all people, know this.â
I sighed, conceding her point. âYes, but you canât deny that Alana takes greater offense than most.â I scowled. âAnd sheâll only see it as another stick to beat me with.â
We reached our destination before Morven could reply, but I trusted she would abide by my wishes. She might be closer in age to Alanaâafter all, theyâd debuted togetherâbut they had never deliberately allied against me. Perhaps because Morven also knew what it was like to be the youngest child. Her two older brothers had been protective of her throughout their childhood and, at times, still were.
I looked on as the two of them embraced and then teased each other mercilessly, as theyâd always done. They tweaked each otherâs curls and laughed over something one of their children had said.
Perhaps feeling they were leaving me out of the discussion, Morven turned to draw me closer. âWell, Iâm glad to see Kiera looking so radiant. Iâm sure I was never so in the pink when I was entering the final weeks of my confinements.â She smiled approvingly at Gage. âYou must be taking good care of her.â
âYes, but I do wish she would take it easier,â Alana interjected. âThereâs no reason to go traipsing about town on walks as she does. Not with the cholera in the air.â
I frowned. âI hardly think a stroll through the Queen Street Gardens or a trip to the theater would be considered âtraipsing about town.ââ Particularly as those gardens were located less than a block from our town house. âIn any case, Dr. Fenwick said physical activity is good for me and the babe. That there is no reason to fear catching the disease in a place like Queen Street, so long as Iâm temperate and consume the correct diet.â
Alanaâs mouth pursed. âYes, well, of course I esteem Dr. Fenwick. He attended at the birth of my wee Jamie.â
And likely saved Alanaâs life after a fraught and difficult delivery. Dr. Fenwick wasnât considered one of Edinburghâs finest physician accoucheurs without good reason, after all.
âBut that doesnât mean he knows everything.â
I bit my tongue, holding back an acerbic response. I knew Alana was merely apprehensive for me, especially after the trials sheâd endured bringing her last two children into the world. It was the manner in which she was expressing those concerns that rubbed me raw. Iâd grown tired of her brusque and disdainful comments, and if not for the flicker of the lights signaling the beginning of the third act, I might not have restrained myself.
But my nerves began to flutter in my stomach, recalling me to my dread of what was to come. I offered Morven a distracted farewell, then gripped Gageâs hand tightly in mine as the murmur of voices throughout the theater softened and the curtain began to rise.
Chapter 2
When the actress playing Lady Dalby strode onto the stage, I found myself holding my breath. Despite all the thrilling events that had come beforeâchases across rooftops, daggers drawn at a whisky drop, fisticuffs, and even a scene where Bonnie Brock and his men had eluded capture by wearing womenâs clothingâthis was the moment I was most anxious about. As the scene played out, I could feel some of the audience members in the boxes across the theater dividing their attention between watching me and watching the play. Thus I was determined to display no discernible reaction.
I was relieved to discover that the actress sported flaming red hairânothing like my own more muted chestnut tresses. She also spoke with a slight Scottish brogueâone which I had never possessed. Mr. Gale, likewise, looked unlike Gage, with dark hair and a sartorial style that was far more ostentatious than my husband would ever adopt. I assumed that once again the theater was wisely observing their bottom line, eager to avoid any potential defamation lawsuits we might bring against the play.
Lady Dalby brazenly waltzed into Grassmarket seeking Bonnie Brock and demanding he answer her questions about his involvement with an investigation she and Mr. Gale were conducting. I found it curious that both the author and playwright had made this error, that neither knew that Bonnie Brock and I had first met when he had abducted me in my carriage. An event they would surely have made use of had they known. But that they did know our meeting had
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