Chapter Two

' Victoria, are you certain your mother never mentioned either the Duke of Atherton or the Duchess of Claremont to you? '

Victoria tore her thoughts from aching memories of her parents ' funeral and looked at the elderly, white-haired physician seated across from her at the kitchen table. As her father's oldest friend, Dr. Morrison had taken on the responsibility of seeing the girls settled, as well as of trying to care for Dr. Seaton's patients until the new physician arrived.

' All Dorothy or I ever knew was that Mama was estranged from her family in England. She never spoke of them. "

' Is it possible your father had relatives in Ireland ?"

' Papa grew up in an orphans ' home there. He had no relatives . ' She stood up restlessly. ' May I fix you some coffee, Dr. Morrison ?"

' Stop fussing over me and go sit outside in the sunshine with Dorothy, ' Dr. Morrison chided gently. ' You're pale as a ghost.'

' Is there anything you need, before I go? " Victoria persisted.'

I need to be a few years younger, ' he replied with a grim smile as he sharpened a quill. ' I'm too old to carry the burden of your father's patients. I belong back in Philadelphia with a hot brick beneath my feet and a good book on my lap. How I'm to carry on here for four more months until the new physician arrives, I can't imagine. '

' I'm sorry, ' Victoria said sincerely. ' I know it's been terrible for you. '

It's been a great deal worse for you and Dorothy, ' the kindly old doctor said. " Now, run along outside and get some of this fine winter sunshine. It's rare to see a day this warm in January. While you sit in the sun, I'll write these letters to your relatives. "

A week had passed since Dr. Morrison had come to visit the Seatons, only to be summoned to the scene of the accident where the carriage bearing Patrick Seaton and his wife had plunged down a riverbank, overturning. Patrick Seaton had been killed instantly. Katherine had regained consciousness only long enough to try to answer Dr. Morrison's desperate inquiry about her relatives in England. In a feeble whisper, she had said, ' . . . Grandmother ... Duchess of Claremont. '

And then, just before she died, she had whispered another name Charles. Frantically Dr. Morrison had begged her for his complete name, and Katherine's dazed eyes had opened briefly. ' Fielding, ' she had breathed. Duke ... of ... Atherton.'

'Is he a relative ? ' he demanded urgently.

After a long pause, she nodded feebly. ' Cousin- ' To Dr. Morrison now fell the difficult task of locating and contacting these heretofore unknown relatives to inquire whether either of them would be willing to offer Victoria and Dorothy a home - a task that was made even more difficult because, as far as Dr. Morrison could ascertain, neither the Duke of Atherton nor the Duchess of Claremont had any idea the girls existed.

With a determined look upon his brow, Dr. Morrison dipped the quill in the inkwell, wrote the date at the top of the first letter, and hesitated, his brow furrowed in thought. ' How does one properly address a duchess ? " he asked the empty room. After considerable contemplation, he arrived at a decision and began writing.

Dear Madam Duchess, It is my unpleasant task to advise you of the tragic death of your granddaughter, Katherine Seaton, and to further advise you that Mrs. Seaton's two daughters, Victoria and Dorothy, are now temporarily in my care. However, I am an old man, and a ba Therefore, Madam Duchess, I cannot properly continue to care for two orphaned young ladies.

Before she died, Mrs. Seaton mentioned only two names - yours and that of Charles Fielding. I am, therefore, writing to you and to Sir Fielding in the hope that one or both of you will welcome Mrs. Seaton's daughters into your home. I must tell you that the girls have nowhere else to go. They are sadly short of funds and in dire need of a suitable home.

Dr. Morrison leaned back in his chair and scrutinized the letter while a frown of concern slowly formed on his forehead. If the duchess was unaware of the girls ' existence, he could already foresee the old lady's possible unwillingness to house them without first knowing something about them. Trying to think how best to describe them, he turned his head and gazed out the window at the girls.

Dorothy was seated upon the swing, her slim shoulders drooping with despair. Victoria was determinedly applying herself to her sketching to hold her grief at bay. Dr. Morrison decided to describe Dorothy first, for she was the easiest.

Dorothy is a pretty girl, with light yellow hair and blue eyes. She is sweet - dispositioned, well-mannered, and charming. At seventeen, she is near an age to marry, but has shown no particular inclination to settle her affections on anyone young gentleman in the district …

Dr. Morrison paused and thoughtfully stroked his chin. In truth, many young gentlemen in the district were utterly smitten with Dorothy. And who could blame them? She was pretty and gay and sweet. She was angelic, Dr. Morrison decided, pleased that he had hit upon exactly the right word to describe her.

But when he turned his attention to Victoria, his bushy white brows drew together in bafflement, for although Victoria was his personal favorite, she was far harder to describe. Her hair was not golden like Dorothy's, nor was it truly red; rather, it was a vivid combination of both. Dorothy was a pretty thing, a charming, demure young lady who turned all the local boys ' heads. She was the perfect material for a wife: sweet, gentle, soft-spoken, and biddable. In short, she was the sort of female who would never contradict or disobey her husband.

Victoria, on the other hand, had spent a great deal of time with her father and, at eighteen, she possessed a lively wit, an active mind, and a startling tendency to think for herself.

Dorothy would think as her husband told her to think and do what he told her to do, but Victoria would think for herself and very likely do as she thought best.

Dorothy was angelic, Dr. Morrison decided, but Victoria was ... not.

Squinting through his spectacles at Victoria, who was resolutely sketching yet another picture of the vine-covered garden wall, he stared at her patrician profile, trying to think of the words to describe her. Brave, he decided, knowing she was sketching because she was trying to stay busy rather than dwell on her grief. And compassionate, he thought, recalling her efforts to console and cheer her father's sick patients.

Dr. Morrison shook his head in frustration. As an old man, he enjoyed her intelligence and her sense of humor; he admired her courage, spirit, and compassion. But if he emphasized those qualities to her English relatives, they would surely envision her as an independent, bookish, unmarriageable female whom they would have on their hands forever. There was still the possibility that when Andrew Bainbridge returned from Europe in several months, he would formally request Victoria's hand, but Dr. Morrison wasn't certain. Victoria's father and Andrew's mother had agreed that, before the young couple became betrothed, their feelings for one another should be tested during these six months while Andrew took an abbreviated version of the Grand Tour.

Victoria's affection for Andrew had remained strong and constant, Dr. Morrison knew, but Andrew's feelings for her were wavering. According to what Mrs. Bainbridge had confided to Dr. Morrison yesterday, Andrew seemed to be developing a strong attraction to his second cousin, whose family he was currently visiting in Switzerland.

Dr. Morrison sighed unhappily as he continued to gaze at the two girls, who were dressed in plain black gowns, one with shining golden hair, the other's gleaming pale copper. Despite the somberness of their attire, they made a very fetching picture, he thought fondly. A picture! Seized by inspiration, Dr. Morrison decided to solve the whole problem of describing the girls to their English relatives by simply enclosing a miniature of them in each letter.

That decision made, he finished his first letter by asking the duchess to confer with the Duke of Atherton, who was receiving an identical letter, and to advise what they wished him to do in the matter of the girls ' care. Dr. Morrison wrote the same letter to the Duke of Atherton; then he composed a short note to his solicitor in New York, instructing that worthy gentleman to have a reliable person in London locate the duke and the duchess and deliver the letters to them. With a brief prayer that either the duke or the duchess would reimburse him for his expenditures, Dr. Morrison stood up and stretched.

Outside in the garden, Dorothy nudged the ground with the toe of her slipper, sending the swing twisting listlessly from side to side. ' I still cannot quite believe it, ' she said, her soft voice filled with a mixture of despair and excitement. ' Mama was the granddaughter of a duchess! What does that make us, Tory? Do we have titles? '

Victoria sent her a wry glance. ' Yes, ' she said. " We are " Poor Relations. "

" It was the truth, for although Patrick Seaton had been loved and valued by the grateful country folk whose ills he had treated for many years, his patients had rarely been able to pay him with coin, and he had never pressed them to do so. They repaid him instead with whatever goods and services they were able to provide - with livestock, fish, and fowl for his table, with repairs to his carriage and his home, with freshly baked loaves of bread and baskets of juicy, handpicked berries. As a result, the Seaton family had never wanted food, but money was ever in short supply, as evidenced by the oft-mended, hand-dyed gowns Dorothy and Victoria were both wearing Even the house they lived in had been provided by the villagers, just as they provided one for Reverend Milby, the minister. The houses were loaned to the occupants in return for their medical and pastoral services.

Dorothy ignored Victoria's sensible summation of their status and continued dreamily, ' Our cousin is a duke, and our great-grandmother is a duchess! I still cannot quite believe it, can you ? '

' I always thought Mama was something of a mystery, ' Victoria replied, blinking back the tears of loneliness and despair that misted her blue eyes. ' Now the mystery is solved. '

' What mystery? "

Victoria hesitated, her sketching pencil hovering above her tablet. ' I only meant that Mama was different from every other female I have ever known. '

' I suppose she was, ' Dorothy agreed, and lapsed into silence.

Victoria stared at the sketch that lay in her lap while the delicate lines and curves of the meandering roses she'd been drawing from her memory of last summer blurred before her moist eyes. The mystery was solved. Now she understood a great many things that had puzzled and troubled her. Now she understood why her mother had never mingled comfortably with the other women of the village, why she had always spoken in the cultured tones of an English gentlewoman and stubbornly insisted that, at least in her presence, Victoria and Dorothy do the same. Her heritage explained her mother's insistence that they learn to read and speak French in addition to English. It explained her fastidiousness. It partially explained the strange, haunted expression that crossed her features on those rare occasions when she mentioned England.

Perhaps it even explained her strange reserve with her husband, whom she treated with gentle courtesy, but nothing more. Yet she had, on the surface, been an exemplary wife. She had never scolded her husband, never complained about her shabby-genteel existence, and never quarreled with him. Victoria had long ago forgiven her mother for not loving her father. Now that she realized her mother must have been reared in credible luxury, she was also inclined to admire her uncomplaining fortitude.

Dr. Morrison walked into the garden and beamed an encouraging smile at both girls. ' I've finished my letters and I shall send them off tomorrow. With luck, we should have your relatives ' replies in three months, perhaps less. ' He smiled at both girls, pleased at the part he was trying to play in reuniting them with their noble English relatives.

' What do you think they'll do when they receive your letters, Dr. Morrison ? ' Dorothy asked.

Dr. Morrison patted her head and squinted into the sunshine, drawing upon his imagination. They'll be surprised, I suppose, but they won't let it show - the English upper classes don't like to display emotion, I'm told, and they're sticklers for formality. Once they've read the letters, they'll probably send polite notes to each other, and then one of them will call upon the other to discuss your futures. A butler will carry in tea- '

He smiled as he envisioned the delightful scenario in all its detail. In his mind he pictured two genteel English aristocrats - wealthy, kindly people who would meet in an elegant drawing room to partake of tea from a silver tray before they discussed the future of their heretofore unknown - but cherished - young relatives. Since the Duke of Atherton and the Duchess of Claremont were distantly related through Katherine they would, of course, be friends, allies…