171222.fb2 A Stranger in Mayfair - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 3

A Stranger in Mayfair - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 3

Chapter Two

It was fortunate that the man who had designed and built the ten houses along Hampden Lane in 1788 had built them to the same scale, albeit in different configurations. Lenox’s and Lady Jane’s houses both had twelve-foot-deep basements where the staff could work and live, eight-step front stairs that led to broad front doors (his was red, hers white), four floors of rooms, and a narrow back garden. It meant they fit together.

Still, to join them had taken a great deal of ingenuity on the part of a young builder named, aptly enough, Stackhouse. On the first floor he had knocked down the wall between their two dining rooms, creating a single long hall, which could now entertain fifty people or so. More importantly, it had left intact the two most important rooms in the house: Lady Jane’s sitting room, a rose colored square where she entertained her friends and took her tea, and Lenox’s study, a long, lived-in chamber full of overstuffed armchairs, with books lining every surface and a desk piled under hundreds of papers and trinkets. Its high windows looked over the street, and on the opposite end its fireplace was where Lenox sat with his friends.

Upstairs there was a large new bedroom for them, and on the third floor two small parlors became a very nice billiard room for Lenox. In the basement the builders only made a slim hallway between the houses, firstly so as not to tamper with the foundation and secondly because the couple didn’t need as much space down there. They were reducing their staff. They only required one coachman now, two footmen, one cook (Lenox’s, Ellie, was foul-mouthed but talented), and one bootboy. Lady Jane’s cook gave notice, explaining that it was excellent timing, since she and her husband had always hoped to open a pub and now had the money. Still, it would leave four people out of work. Fortunately Lady Jane’s brother always needed servants, and those who wanted to move from London to the country received their new billets happily. Three of them took this offer, and the fourth, a bright young lad who had been Lenox’s coachman, took two months’ pay and set out for South Africa to make his fortune, with a letter of introduction from his now former employer.

All of this still left one enormous problem: the butlers. Both Lenox and Lady Jane had long-serving butlers who seemed half part of the family. In fact it was unusual for a woman to have a butler rather than a housekeeper, but Jane had insisted on it when she first came to London, and now Kirk, an extremely fat, extremely dignified Yorkshireman, had been with her for nearly twenty years. More seriously, there was Graham. For all of Lenox’s adult life, Graham had been his butler, and more importantly his confidant and companion. They had met when Lenox was a student and Graham a scout at Balliol College; special circumstances had bound them there, and when Lenox left for London he had taken Graham with him. He had fetched Lenox his morning coffee, yes, but Graham had also helped him in a dozen of his cases, campaigned for him in Stirrington, and traveled with him across Europe and to Russia. Now all that might change.

So when Lenox returned to London, he went over the new house with an awed, pleased eye-it was just as he had imagined it being-but with the consciousness as well that he had to confront the problem of Graham. The next morning he had a rather radical idea.

He rang the bell, and soon Graham appeared with a breakfast tray laden with eggs, ham, kippers, and toast, a pot of fragrant black coffee to the side. He was a compact, sandy-haired, and intelligent-looking man.

“Good morning, Graham.”

“Good morning, sir. May I welcome you back less formally to London?” The previous night the servants had lined the hall and curtsied and bowed in turn to the newlyweds, then presented them with the wedding present of a silver teapot.

“Thanks. That’s awfully kind of you-it’s a wonderful pot. Graham, would you sit down and keep me company for a moment? You don’t mind if I eat, do you? Fetch yourself a cup to have some of this coffee if you like.”

Graham shook his head at the offer but sat down in the armchair across from Lenox, an act that would have drawn gasps from many of Lenox’s acquaintances for its familiarity. They made idle chat about Switzerland as Lenox gulped down coffee and eggs, until at last, sated, he pushed his plate away and sat happily back, patting the crimson dressing gown over his stomach.

“How long have we known each other, Graham?” asked Lenox.

“Twenty-one years, sir.”

“Is it really that long? Yes, I suppose I was eighteen. It scarcely seems credible. Twenty-one years. We’ve grown middle-aged together, haven’t we?”

“Indeed, sir.”

“I just got married, Graham.”

The butler, who had been at the wedding, allowed himself the ghost of a smile. “I heard something of it, sir.”

“Did you never consider it?”

“Once, sir, but the lady’s affections were otherwise engaged.”

“I’m sorry to hear it.”

“It was many years ago, sir, when we still lived in Oxford.”

“Have you been happy in your employment?”

“Yes, sir.” Graham was an understated man, but he said this emphatically. “Both in my daily duties and in the less usual ones you have asked me to perform, Mr. Lenox.”

“I’m glad to hear it. You don’t fancy a change of work?”

“No, sir. Not in the slightest.”

“You mustn’t look so stony-faced, Graham. I’m not firing you-not by a long shot. Remind me, what papers do you read?”

“Excuse me?”

“What newspapers do you read?”

“The house subscribes to-”

“No, Graham, not the house- you.”

“Below stairs we take the Times and the Manchester Guardian, sir. In my spare hours I usually read both.”

“Does anyone else read them downstairs?”

Graham looked discomfited. “Well-no, sir.”

“You know as much about politics as I do, or very nearly,” murmured Lenox, more to himself than his companion.

“Sir?”

“May I shock you, Graham?”

“Yes, sir.”

“I want you to come work for me.”

The butler very nearly laughed. “Sir?”

Lenox sighed, stood up, and began pacing the study. “I’ve been troubled during all my time on the Continent about the business of a secretary. I interviewed eight candidates, all young men just up from Cambridge or Oxford, all of them of excellent family and eager to be personal secretary to a gentleman in Parliament. The trouble was that I felt that each one of them was sizing me up to decide when he could have my seat. They were all too ambitious, Graham. Or perhaps that’s not it-perhaps it’s simply that I didn’t know them, and I didn’t want to risk getting to know them as they worked for me.”

“You cannot be suggesting, sir-”

“You read more than half the men sitting in Parliament, Graham. More importantly, I trust you.” Lenox walked up to the study’s row of high windows, his slippers softly padding the thick rug. He stared into the bright, summery street for a few moments. “I want you to come be my secretary.”

Graham stood up too now, quite clearly agitated. “If I may speak freely, sir-”

“Yes?”

“It is an utterly impossible request. As gratified as I am at your consideration, Mr. Lenox, I am in no way suited to such a role-a role that belongs to someone-someone from the great universities, someone with far more education than I possess, and…if I may speak frankly, sir, someone of your own class.”

“I’m not trying to change the world. I simply want someone I can trust.”

Graham swallowed. “As a solution to a simple staffing problem, sir, I must say I find it exceedingly inelegant.”

Lenox waved an irritated hand. “No, no. I want both you and Kirk to be happy, of course, but it’s more than that. For one thing, you’ve been overqualified by your natural merits for years. More to the point-more selfishly-I’m new at this. I need help.”

At last Graham was silent. Finally, he said, “I’m honored, sir.”

“Will you do it?”

“I cannot say, sir. May I have time to consider the proposal?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Would I still live here?”

“If you liked, yes. You shall always have lodging while I draw breath, as you well know.”

“And if I say no, sir? What will become of me then?”

Grumpily, Lenox said, “Well, we’d keep both of you, of course-and we’d hire five more butlers, just to make sure we had one in every room.”

Now Graham did laugh. “Thank you, sir.”

“Before you get above your old station, would you mind helping me with this painting?”

It was the one from the Salon, the blurry one. The two men pried its crate open, took its wrappings off, and then walked it down to the dining hall. There they hung it, tilting it imperceptibly back and forth until it was just level.

“May I ask who painted it?” Graham asked.

“A chap named Monet,” said Lenox. “Rhymes with bonnet, I think. I never heard of him myself. Funny, the picture looked better over in Paris.”

“Such is often the case with these flashy Continental objects, sir,” said Graham with evident disapproval.

As they got the picture hung just right, there was a knock at the door. Through the troubling weeks that followed, Lenox sometimes wished he and Graham had ignored that knock and the ominous events it portended.