An Offer From a Gentleman (Cinderella)

Chapter 38



Chapter 38

“I do indeed,” Lady Bridgerton said. “I haven’t been, but I’ve heard that it is a lovely building.”

Sophie nodded. “It is, quite. Of course, I’ve never been inside. But the exterior is beautiful.”

“Where did your mother work?”

“Blackheath Hall,” Sophie replied, this lie slipping easily off her tongue. She’d been asked that question

often enough; she’d long since settled upon a name for her fictional home. “Are you familiar with it?”

Lady Bridgerton’s brow furrowed. “No, I don’t believe so.”

“A bit north of Swaffham.”

Lady Bridgerton shook her head. “No, I do not know it.”

Sophie gave her a gentle smile. “Not many people do.”

“Do you have any brothers or sisters?”

Sophie was unused to an employer wanting to know so much about her personal background; usually

all they cared about were her employment record and references. “No,” she said. “There was only me.”

“Ah, well, at least you had the company of the girls with whom you shared lessons. That must have

been nice for you.”

“It was good fun,” Sophie lied. In all truth, studying with Rosamund and Posy had been sheer torture.

She’d much preferred lessons when she’d been alone with her governess, before they’d come to live at

Penwood Park.

“I must say, it was very generous of your mother’s employers—I’m sorry,” Lady Bridgerton interrupted

herself, her brow furrowing, “what did you say their name was?”

“Grenville.”

Her forehead wrinkled again. “I’m not familiar with them.”

“They don’t often come to London.”

“Ah, well, that explains it,” Lady Bridgerton said. “But as I was saying, it was very generous of them to

allow you to share in their daughters’ lessons. What did you study?”

Sophie froze, not sure whether she was being interrogated or if Lady Bridgerton were truly interested.

No one had ever cared to delve so deeply into the faux background she had created for herself. “Er, the

usual subjects,” she hedged. “Arithmetic and literature. History, a bit of mythology. French.”

“French?” Lady Bridgerton asked, looking quite surprised. “How interesting. French tutors can be very

dear.”

“The governess spoke French,” Sophie explained. “So it didn’t cost any extra.”

“How is your French?”

Sophie wasn’t about to tell her the truth and say that it was perfect. Or almost perfect. She’d gotten out

of practice these past few years and lost a bit of her fluency. “It’s tolerable,” she said. “Good enough to

pass for a French maid, if that’s what you desire.”

“Oh, no,” Lady Bridgerton said, laughing merrily. “Heavens, no. I know it is all the rage to have French

maids, but I would never ask you to go about your chores trying to remember to speak with a French

accent.”

“That’s very thoughtful of you,” Sophie said, trying not to let her suspicion show on her face. She was

sure that Lady Bridgerton was a nice lady; she’d have to be a nice lady to have raised such a nice

family. But this was almost too nice.

“Well, it’s—oh, good day, Eloise. What brings you up here?”

Sophie looked to the doorway and saw what could only be a Bridgerton daughter standing there. Her

thick, chestnut hair was coiled elegantly at the back of her neck, and her mouth was wide and

expressive, just like Benedict’s.

“Benedict told me we have a new maid,” Eloise said.

Lady Bridgerton motioned to Sophie. “This is Sophie Beckett. We were just chatting. I think we shall

deal famously.”

Eloise gave her mother an odd look—or at least Sophie thought it was an odd look. She supposed that

it was possible that Eloise always looked at her mother with a slightly suspicious, slightly confused,

sideways glance. But somehow Sophie didn’t think so.

“My brother tells me you saved his life,” Eloise said, turning from her mother to Sophie.

“He exaggerates,” Sophie said, a faint smile touching her lips.

Eloise regarded her with an oddly shrewd glance, and Sophie had the distinct impression that Eloise

was analyzing her smile, trying to decide whether or not she was poking fun at Benedict, and if so,

whether it was in jest or unkindness.

The moment seemed suspended in time, and then Eloise’s lips curved in a surprisingly sly manner. “I

think my mother is correct,” she said. “We shall deal famously.”

Sophie rather thought she had just passed some sort of crucial test.

“Have you met Francesca and Hyacinth?” Eloise asked.

Sophie shook her head, just as Lady Bridgerton said, “They are not at home. Francesca is visiting

Daphne, and Hyacinth is off at the Featheringtons. She and Felicity seem to be over their row and are

once again inseparable.”

Eloise chuckled. “Poor Penelope. I think she was enjoying the relative peace and quiet with Hyacinth

gone. I know I was enjoying the respite from Felicity.”

Lady Bridgerton turned to Sophie and explained, “My daughter Hyacinth can more often than not be

found at the home of her best friend, Felicity Featherington. And when she is not, then Felicity can be

found here.”

Sophie smiled and nodded, wondering once again why they were sharing such tidbits with her. They

were treating her like family, something even her own family had never done.

It was very odd.

Odd and wonderful.

Odd and wonderful and horrible.

Because it could never last.

But maybe she could stay just a little while. Not long. A few weeks—maybe even a month. Just long

enough to get her affairs and thoughts in order. Just long enough to relax and pretend she was more

than just a servant.

She knew she could never be a part of the Bridgerton family, but maybe she could be a friend.

And it had been so long since she had been anyone’s friend.

“Is something wrong, Sophie?” Lady Bridgerton asked. “You have a tear in your eye.”

Sophie shook her head. “Just a speck of dust,” she mumbled, pretending to busy herself with the

unpacking of her small bag of possessions. She knew that no one believed her, but she didn’t much

care.

And even though she had no idea where she intended to go from this moment on, she had the oddest

feeling that her life had just begun.

This Author is quite certain that the male half of the population will be uninterested in the following

portion of the column, so you are all given leave to skip to the next section. However, for the ladies, let

This Author be the first to inform you that the Bridgerton family was recently sucked into the battle of

the maids that has been raging all season between Lady Penwood and Mrs. Featherington. It seems

that the maid attending to the daughters Bridgerton has defected to the Penwoods, replacing the maid

who fled back to the Featherington household after Lady Penwood forced her to polish three hundred

pairs of shoes.

And in other Bridgerton news, Benedict Bridgerton is most definitely back in London. It seems he took

ill while in the country and extended his stay. One wishes that there were a more interesting

explanation (especially when one is, like This Author, dependent upon interesting stories to earn one’s

living), but sadly, that is all there is to it.

LADY WHISTLEDOWN’S SOCIETY PAPERS, 14 MAY 1817

By the following morning, Sophie had met five of Benedict’s seven siblings. Eloise, Francesca, and

Hyacinth all still lived with their mother, Anthony had stopped by with his young son for breakfast, and

Daphne—who was now the Duchess of Hastings—had been summoned to help Lady Bridgerton plan

the end-of-the-season ball. The only Bridgertons Sophie hadn’t met were Gregory, who was off at Eton,

and Colin, who was off, in Anthony’s words, God-knows-where.

Although, if one wanted to put a fine point on it, Sophie already had met Colin—two years earlier at the

masquerade. She was rather relieved that he was out of town. She doubted that he would recognize This belongs to NôvelDrama.Org: ©.

her; Benedict, after all, had not. But somehow the thou

ght of meeting him again was quite stressful and unsettling.

Not that that should matter, she thought ruefully. Everything seemed quite stressful and unsettling

these days.

Much to Sophie’s extreme lack of surprise, Benedict showed up at his mother’s home the following

morning for breakfast. Sophie should have been able to avoid him completely, except that he was

loitering in the hall as she tried to make her way down to the kitchen, where she planned to take her

morning meal with the rest of the servants.

“And how was your first night at Number Five, Bruton Street?” he inquired, his smile lazy and

masculine.

“Splendid,” Sophie replied, stepping aside so that she might make a clean half circle around him.

But as she stepped to her left, he stepped to his right, effectively blocking her path. “I’m so glad you’re

enjoying yourself,” he said smoothly.

Sophie stepped back to her right. “I was,” she said pointedly.

Benedict was far too debonair to step back to his left, but he somehow managed to turn and lean

against a table in just the right way to once again block her movement. “Have you been given a tour of

the house?” he asked.

“By the housekeeper.”

“And of the grounds?”

“There are no grounds.”

He smiled, his brown eyes warm and melting. “There’s a garden.”

“About the size of a pound note,” she retorted.

“Nonetheless . . .”

“Nonetheless,” Sophie cut in, “I have to eat breakfast.” He stepped gallantly aside. “Until next time,” he

murmured.

And Sophie had the sinking feeling that next time would come quickly indeed.

Thirty minutes later, Sophie edged slowly out of the kitchen, half-expecting Benedict to jump out at her

from around a corner. Well, maybe not half-expecting. Judging from the way she couldn’t quite breathe,

she was probably whole-expecting.

But he wasn’t there.

She inched forward. Surely he would come bounding down the stairs at any moment, ambushing her

with his very presence.

Still no Benedict.

Sophie opened her mouth, then bit her tongue when she realized she’d been about to call out his

name.

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