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  "Isobel!" he chimed in his distinctly Germanic accent, his words lifting; his voice hoarse. He coughed and wheezed loudly. Isobel sighed. Gudheim had always had such a pleasant singing voice, in her youth. "I was so enthused when you requested I play the old organ again. It is only regrettable it comes in such sad times," he lamented. Many would struggle to understand his English through the marred and uneven German accent, but Isobel grew up listening to the old man; she could decipher it easy enough. "Oh, how I missed the organ. It plays as beautiful as ever. We in the village, we missed hearing it, too."

  "You missed hearing it?" Isobel's voice caught in her throat. "Have religious services here in the estate gone quiet, of late? I had assumed father had stopped holding them due to his ill health."

  "Oh, no, not in years," Gudheim shook his head. "Your father was... well, over the years, he began to... retreat. Retreat, yes, back in to the estate. He no longer came down from the hill to share bread with us, or drink... at the pub. Then, some years back, after you had left, he stopped holding service." Isobel noticed the changes in her father when she returned, but she had assumed it stemmed only from his illness.

  "Why do you suppose that is?" Isobel asked, trying to be cheery. "I know he always loved Ms. Brackwell's delicious bread, and the stout that Porter served at the pub."

  "Oh, it could have been a great many things. Stress, stress sat upon Lord Reginald's shoulders," Gudheim recalled with sorrow in his tone. "He could never speak to us of it, as he would wear only smiles to the people of Upton. But, the dam to the river broke, and the estate lost a great many servants... and when Mr. Steward's children fell seriously ill, your father, he paid for doctors from across England to help. The people of the village, we grew needy, and your dear father... I think, the bandit attacks, they worried him too," Gudheim recalled.

  "Bandits? In this day and age?" Isobel scoffed in disbelief. "Bandits plagued my father?"

  "In the last two years, or thereabouts. He spoke often of them. They fancy themselves heroes, of some sort, but he worried their heroics would end," Gudheim recalled. "The Merry Bandits, they called themselves. They strike on wealthy caravans, noble drivers... and," he lowered his voice, "I'm not too proud to say, it's mighty kind, what they did, feeding the whole village when your father couldn't afford to."

  "They fed—" Isobel cleared her throat, the confusion in her rising; her nerves on edge. "They fed the village, because... father couldn't?"

  "Oh, dearest Isobel, he did try," Gudheim reassured her, sorrow filling the hoarse old man's throat deeply. "Your father tried so hard, but a hard winter and a shortage of grains across northern England made it hard. He did not fancy accepting help from criminals, and nor did we. Upton is our home, after all. We would rather not invite roustabouts," Gudheim snarled.

  "I had believed, the... family coffers, that we'd have no trouble protecting the people of Upton should a shortage come," Isobel said, her voice faint. What had happened, she wondered, in those interim years? What state had the manor and her father fallen in to?

  "Oh, I'm..." Gudheim cleared his throat nervously. "I'm certain, that the lord, he did everything..."

  "Gudheim," Isobel asked starkly, her voice frail, "are you being paid for playing the music today? Have you spoken to Deaton?" Gudheim glanced to the floor, expression reserved.

  "Lady Duskwood, I would expect no such thing. Your father, he was a good man, he deserved to be consigned to Heaven appropriately."

  "But father would always pay you, no matter what, and you know that," Isobel insisted.

  "I'm not..." Gudheim stammered.

  "Lady Isobel?" the heavy doors to the chapel swung open; in the doorway stood a slight man in a suit that had seen better years. A thick beard at his chin, unkempt, and his voice a shrill squeak, Isobel recognized the short steward as Deaton, her father's trusted assistant and trustee - and now, the executor of her father's estate. Her young eyes fell on him, wracked in confusion.

  "Deaton, I'm glad you're here," she said, her voice shivering; she tried to sound as authoritative as she could, using her new position as Lady of the hall, but it scarcely fit her. "Have we not disbursed some sort of payment to Gudheim for playing his music? He helped to make the day better, and deserves something for it."

  "Mr. Gudheim is already deeply in debt to the estate," Deaton observed with a razor-eyed glare. "And in the matter of debts, we have much to discuss about the nature of your father's business, Lady Duskwood. Please, if we could—"

  "Gudheim has been a loyal client and friend to this family since I was a little girl, Deaton," Lady Duskwood insisted. Her voice cracked and shook as she tried to boom at the trustee. "As I'm now the executor of this estate, I demand an accounting made of his debts so that we might relieve him of that particular burden." Deaton's snakelike glare turned to Isobel instead; she always hated that look. Deaton's stern, businesslike demeanor had always startled the poor girl.

  "Lady Duskwood, if we are to forgive everyone in Upton who owes us a debt, we may very well not have a single shilling, parcel of land or title to our name by nightfall," Deaton growled cuttingly. "And we will need every shilling we can, in fact, get our hand on, to sort out financial matters. Now, please, follow me," Deaton beckoned her into the hall. She shook weakly; what had father done? What had he gotten the village in to?

  "We... we will discuss this sometime soon, okay, Gudheim?" she spoke softly to the organist, who nodded in a gesture of silent thanks. Carrying her gown with her Isobel rushed along the dusty carpet, kicking up a small cloud of the stuff at her feet as she ran into the hall. She remembered this hall, too - a grand hall, with a grander staircase, which in her youth had always basked in afternoon light streaming through the foyer's grand, stained-glass windows. One window had been broken; a sheet wafted in the wind over where it had once been. The other, most likely, had been sold, replaced by a cheap pane of misshapen glass that let a draft flow through the room. Shadows now clung to every corner, keeping Duskwood Manor in a state of decaying disrepair.

  Isobel followed Deaton up the stairs, along a twisting side hallway and down a dark corridor she had always known in her childhood as the 'business hallway'. Where men like Deaton - there used to be many more than just he - buzzed about all through the afternoon, negotiating trade deals and debts and profits and merchant caravans and issues like these 'Merry Bandits' that Gudheim had mentioned. She approached hesitantly; she had never felt comfortable in this wing of the manor, and the dark oak-paneled business hall felt even more oppressive now, with the knowledge humming in Isobel's troubled mind that now she had to deal with whatever troubles emerged from the studies and smoking rooms behind these dusty, darkened doorways.

  "Here, please?" Isobel's nerve-wracked trance faded as Deaton's voice startled her out of it. His head poking from a corner door, he beckoned her to follow. Isobel had never been in these rooms. She had never even snuck in as a child, when her father forbade her from disturbing the great minds within. She entered, taking a deep breath, finding heavy, high-backed leather chairs arrayed around a long table covered, nearly to the ceiling, with books and books; stacks upon stacks of papers, many of them sorted haphazardly. More papers litter the floor, to the point each of Isobel's hesitant steps crunched and crunched atop parchment below. She stepped lightly, eyes wide as Deaton collapsed grumpily into the chair at the far end of the room, near a dead fireplace, coated in soot, which looks to have not been used or even cleaned in years.

  "Deaton," Isobel sighed, shivering, "why is the estate in this manner of disrepair? Truly? I had imagined my father's declining health had contributed to our estate's issues. But I've noticed the lack of servants. The state of the foyer. The state of the chapel, the—"

  "M'lady, Isobel," Deaton exhaled sharply. "We have a lot to discuss. In the time you were away—"

  "Please, Deaton... I've no mind for business. I've no husband, yet, to help me. Be plain in your words," she requested, with a harsh edge. Deaton sucked in a deep breath, cons
idering the Lady Duskwood for quite a long moment, his nose curling in distaste.

  "Very well, Lady Duskwood. The estate is a last priority, at the moment. Your father, may he rest peacefully - left us in a very difficult place."

  "Deaton, please," she clasped her fingers to her forehead.

  "Our coffers are empty. Your father, the dear man, had an obsession with fixing everything for the people of Upton. It's left us not only destitute, but deeply in debt," Deaton summarily announced, thumbing through a book at the table. "The last few years' accountings have been numerous. Endless, even. Each subject in Upton owes us considerable amounts of money - and we owe everything, our entire land, estate, the manor - everything, in debt, to the Duke of Norbury."

  "The Duke of Norbury?" Isobel's face lit up. She recognized the title - though, not the man. The man, whom she had never seen, had requested to be married to her a great many times. Her father had always resoundingly denied the request, and she never quite understood why. "I've heard that name before, Deaton. The suitor, who had sought my hand, through my teenage years."

  "Lord Brighton did indeed aggressively pursue your hand," Deaton lamented. "The truth, is that while your father despised the man, the man's father and yours had long-standing ties. Upton had produced great wealth for Norbury, and Lord Brighton's father always worked with yours. It was not until the... younger, Lord Brighton, took hold that Upton fell upon difficult times. Lord Brighton honored his father's dedication to yours, and to Upton... though I've no doubt he did it for his own, selfish reasons," Deaton hissed. "The man is a dissolute animal. Your father was right to turn away his hand in marriage for you, for so long. He was protecting you, and protecting our family name, by keeping you clear of that man."

  "And so what can we do, Deaton?" Isobel asked, worry in her voice.

  "It's quite simple," Deaton nodded, "we simply request all the debt we are owed, be paid. Here, in these books, is an accounting of every shilling the people of Upton owe us. For simple things - food, repairs, medicine - but for a great many other things, as well. If we call back those debts, we'll—"

  "Deaton," Isobel interrupted, horrified, "those are our people. Men like Gudheim, and Porter, at the pub. Shaking these men's pockets for repayment of debt is not exactly the way to endear ourselves to Upton."

  "M'lady, we are not a charity, nor are we about endearing ourselves to the citizenry. We need to come up with these debts in the year, lest we put ourselves at risk of losing everything we have," Deaton insisted angrily.

  "Where do you think a man like Gudheim, or any of the dozens like him down the hill, are going to cobble together the coinage to pay off what they owe? Do you think my father gave to the people of Upton, expecting repayment on his investment? You knew my father better than perhaps anyone. You know that's not what he wanted, or why he gave them what he gave," Isobel scorned the trustee with her young, naive idealist viewpoint. Deaton grumbled, running his hands across the books stacked high.

  "Whether your father expected payment, or not, he certainly did not expect the debts of Duskwood Manor would consume all of our family, or ruin us forever, Lady Duskwood."

  "There has to be another solution. The people of Upton can hardly feed themselves," Isobel sighed. "What of this Lord Brighton? His father and mine worked together. They clearly respected one another. Perhaps this younger Lord Brighton shares that respect. Certainly, a man like that - an English gentleman, he can be reasoned with."

  "M'lady, the Lord Brighton is anything but a gentleman," Deaton seethed. "I appreciate your approach, but there's little else we can do, if we are to keep our name and your dignity intact."

  "Why are you so certain? This man is clearly enamored with me," Isobel admitted. "I'm certain he would listen to reason. Perhaps relieve our debts, or assist us in payment. Come now," Isobel beamed. "I do need to be putting myself out there for a husband after all, don't I? It's what father would want."

  "You will not marry that man, not while I still live. Your father would have sent me to suffer in a desert in New South Wales if I'd allowed you to even consider courting him," Deaton's small voice roared.

  "I didn't say courting! We're simply going to meet, to discuss this issue," Isobel blushed. "Could you arrange for a carriage for me, Deaton?"

  "It'll be one from the village. Don't expect luxury," he grudgingly agreed.

  "I'll be quite fine, Deaton. Set a carriage to be sent tomorrow evening," Isobel laughed precociously. "And don't worry."

  "It's my job to worry," he snorted with finality.

  CHAPTER THREE

  "We're coming up on the estate now, m'lady!" The carriage bobbed and bounced along the scattered cobblestone road, Mr. Trevingham calling through the small wooden window to his passenger, announcing their arrival. Immediately, what had been rough and rugged roads calmed; the wild bouncing stopped, and the rattling clop of horse hooves grew slow and easy. Isobel glanced through the carriage window at the rolling hills without; when the carriage passed from the lands of the Duskwood family, and in to the Duke of Norbury's sprawling lands, Isobel noticed immediately a change, as if clouds had rolled away from the face of the sun overhead. The grass seemed brighter, more alive; the distant fields rolled calmly, as opposed to the stormy shade gathered like roiling darkness over top of Duskwood Manor. Hopeful, Isobel felt a weight lift from her shoulders. She bargained with herself - she would only need a short conversation, she thought, to charm the Lord Brighton in to seeing her point of view. Certainly he would understand, wouldn't he? A village starved, hard winters - her father's failing health, and their families' long and fruitful relationship would certainly help her in negotiating some sense of security for her family, her estate, and the people of Upton.

  The ride calming and the sun falling along the horizon, Isobel yawned and relaxed in the ramshackle carriage. Set upon a rough wooden bench, with cobbled axles squeaking along Norbury's flattened stonework, it didn't feel an appropriate form of transportation for the Lady Duskwood. She began to imagine how she would fix Upton, and the manor, after successfully negotiating the loosening of debts from the Lord Brighton. She would fix up the window in the foyer landing; she would restore both windows to their former glory, so that sunlight tinted in brilliant reds and greens could shine across the manor's marbled tiles and violet rugs. Exhaling with a small smile curling along her lips, young Isobel pondered the nature of this mysterious man whom her father had so vehemently rejected for years. A man who had constantly sought her - what could he be like? She imagined a fine gentleman, tailored in a quaint suit; perhaps he would have a nice hat he could tip to her as they met. Perhaps a sprawling feast, laid out on the dinner table; maybe her father had simply been over-protective. Maybe the Lord Brighton would wind up a perfect gentleman - and not the sort, like the Duke of Thrushmore, with that eerie edge of 'too good' about him.

  She closed her eyes; the sun had begun to shimmer near the end of the day, and it had been a long day. Deaton would not budge on his insistence on taking money from the locals to pay the Manor's debts. Isobel felt a revulsion in her stomach at the very suggestion; she knew her father would not have it, and no doubt silenced all of Deaton's insistence on this matter until the day he died. Certainly Deaton had a great fondness for her father, but he was too often driven by his own sense of businesslike duty. And certainly ever had their duties - but it was Isobel's duty now to look after Duskwood Manor and Upton's people, in much the same way that her father had. She resolved to carry on her father's legacy just as she imagined he would want it.

  The carriage hit a steep hill, and Isobel felt her back pressed against the back of the carriage. She yelped quietly, surprised by the sudden ascent.

  "Apologies, m'lady," Mr. Trevingham called back to her. "It's a rough road out here, it is."

  "Th-thank you, Mr. Trevingham, I'm q... quite fine, just—how far from the estate, are we?" Isobel asked tensely, holding herself steady against the carriage.

  "Just over this hill!" the driver s
houted back to her. Mr. Trevingham had always provided horses to the family estate - though he, too, had fallen into difficult times during Isobel's absence, many of his prized horses dying in a rough winter. He, too, owed the family estate money... as most of Upton did.

  "Th-thank you, much, Mr. Trevingham," Isobel's voice stammered as the carriage nearly slowed to a crawl along the steep road. She heard the horses whinny, and Mr. Trevingham gave them a rough shove. Finally the vehicle made it past the difficult hump; the sun began to glimmer and set near the horizon, and Lady Duskwood calculated that it had taken her nearly an entire afternoon to make it here, to the estate.

  "Alright, m'lady! Pulling up now!" Isobel could hardly deny that she had a nagging curiosity on the nature of this mystery man, the Lord Brighton, and of the estate in which he lived. She snuck a gaze out the front window, and though she could not see very much, she made out a dominant palace on the edge of a hill, the orange sun's rays bouncing against a facade of ruby-red and deep gray. It looked like a castle of old, only fashioned in the regency style; curtains in tall and dominating windows; black iron-wrought fences trimming beautiful foliage. With a tall flat roof, it bore all the hallmarks of stylish, fresh regency construction, though it carried with it in hue and nature an allure of foreboding. The tall windows cast long shadows; the black of imposing iron and the red of vivid paints mesmerized the onlooker. Isobel swallowed, unsure what sort of man would have such decadent and curious tastes in the architecture of his estate.

  The carriage swung around a grand turnabout; at its center stood a marbled fountain, though no water flowed from the piece; it stood, its cherub bearing an empty pot, tears stained on its sullen eyes. Isobel stepped out of the carriage as it came to a stop; surprise struck her. The estate looked so, so much larger, so much more imposing, up close; its colors, fences, grates, and shapes bore down oppressively on the small woman, who took a deep breath to try to steady fraying nerves. The looming estate cast grand shadow across her; bound in a soft lilac dress of simple design and modest cost, she felt terribly underdressed, now, for her meeting. A man like this certainly must be accustomed to grand flowing gowns, majestic accessories and the finest sort of manners. She could at least provide him with all the feminine charm she could muster, which Isobel decided would need to be enough to negotiate.