She was silent, uncertain how to reply. She lowered her gaze to avoid looking into the duchess’s perceptive eyes.
“You’re not very good at hiding your feelings,” the other woman remarked. “If you’re in some kind of trouble, child…I hope you’ll decide to confide in me. I may be able to help.”
“I can’t think why you would be so kind to a stranger,” Madeline said.
“You seem so very alone,” the duchess murmured. “There were times in my past when I felt that way. No matter what you’re running from, the situation may not be as dire as it seems.”
Madeline nodded, although she had no intention of confiding in anyone. After thanking the duchess sincerely, Madeline left the theater and summoned a hack to take her to Somerset Street.
Mrs. Nell Florence was an elderly woman with silvery-peach hair that must have been a vivid shade of red in her youth. Her skin was pale and gently worn by time, her bone structure elegant. She seemed warm and kind, with a charming touch of vanity.
“So my dear Julia sent you to me, did she?” Mrs. Florence asked, welcoming Madeline into her home. “I’m certain we’ll get along famously. You’re an actress, I take it? No? I can’t imagine that, not with a face like yours. If I’d possessed half such beauty when I was your age…but then, I did quite well with what I had.”
Busily she showed Madeline around the two-story house, each room filled with mementos from her acting career. “I was the toast of London,” Mrs. Florence declared, taking her past a wall of portraits done some thirty years earlier. Each painting depicted her in a different pose or costume, some of them shockingly revealing. She seemed to take great satisfaction in Madeline’s blush. “You’re an easy one to read, aren’t you? What a refreshing quality.”
Intrigued by the collection of memorabilia, Madeline inspected framed play notices, engravings, and colored fashion plates of old costumes. “How wonderful, to have led such a life!” she exclaimed.
“I’ve had my ups and downs,” Mrs. Florence said. “And I’ve enjoyed all of it. Never regret anything, that’s my advice. Come, I’ll show you the room you’ll be staying in, and then we’ll have a long talk. You must tell me everything about yourself.”
Madeline had never before realized how obvious her thoughts were. It seemed that Mrs. Florence could read them as easily as Julia did. “Ah,” she said, regarding Madeline’s face. “You don’t want to discuss your past, I see. Well, we can find other things to talk about.”
Madeline was gratified by the elderly woman’s understanding. “Thank you, Mrs. Florence,” she said, accompanying her on the rest of the tour.
After unpacking her few belongings, Madeline changed into a dove-gray wool gown trimmed with plum cording. She was going to the theater tonight, to see Logan Scott on stage and decide for herself if he was as talented as everyone claimed. Standing before the mirror, she finished fastening her gown…and frowned at the result.
While the garment was well made, the style was all wrong, modest and practical with a primly high neckline. How was she going to seduce any man, least of all Mr. Scott, without some alluring clothes? Wistfully Madeline smoothed her hands over her figure. If only she had a beautiful gown made of silk and lace flounces, and slippers trimmed in pearls, and fresh flowers for her hair.…
After brushing out her long golden-brown hair, she coiled and pinned it carefully on top of her head. She wished she had curling irons, to make artful wisps dangle against her temples and cheeks. “Not even a drop of perfume,” she said, shaking her head ruefully.
After a few moments, however, her naturally high spirits asserted themselves. She would solve such problems later. Tonight she had only one thing to accomplish, and that was to see her first London play.
The Duchess of Leeds was kind enough to show Madeline to a place in the wings where she could stay and watch the play. “You’ll be all right here,” she said to Madeline. “Just make certain you keep out of everyone’s way. They’ll be rushing through scene and costume changes—you wouldn’t want anyone to trip over you.”
Obediently Madeline shrank to the side and found that she could see most of the action onstage, albeit from an odd angle. The play, called ALover Denied, was preceded by a musical performance and a one-act farce that sent ripples of laughter rolling through the audience. The curtains were drawn, and set pieces, flats, and people flew across the stage in apparent chaos. Miraculously everything fell into place in less than a minute. Two young men near Madeline pulled expertly at ropes and pulleys, and the curtains opened to reveal the beautifully crafted interior of a London mansion.
Applause and exclamations of pleasure emanated from the audience at the sight of the display. Then two characters, a husband and wife, began to discuss a list of suitors for their marriageable daughter. Madeline was enthralled as she watched the story unfold. She felt acute sympathy for the heroine, an ingenue who was being prevented from marrying her childhood sweetheart and instead was betrothed to a villainous man who refused to relinquish her to the arms of her true love.
To Madeline’s surprise, Logan Scott had not been cast as the girl’s true love, but as the villain of the piece. The moment he strode onstage, an electric thrill shot through the audience. Like everyone else, Madeline was riveted by his self-assurance, the threatening charm of his character. He wanted the girl for himself, and not even her love for another man would stand in his way.
To Madeline, each minute that passed was a revelation. She stood silently in the wings, her fingers gripped in a fold of velvet curtain, her heart pounding so hard that she could feel it down to her toes. Each time Mr. Scott spoke, she could barely breathe. He inhabited the character with ease, conveying the man’s selfishness and intense longing. Like the rest of the audience, Madeline began to hope that he might win the innocent girl’s love.
Mr. Scott remained onstage for most of the first act, manipulating, bargaining, driving wedges between the two lovers until it seemed that true love would never have its way. “What happens in the end?” Madeline couldn’t help whispering to a scene-mover who had stopped next to her. “Does Mr. Scott marry her, or does he let her go to the other man?”
The sceneshifter grinned as he saw the rapt attention Madeline paid to the action onstage. “I can’t tell you,” he informed her. “Wouldn’t dream of spoiling the surprise.”
Before she could entreat him again, the first act concluded and it was time for intermission. Madeline skittered to the side as the curtain was dropped. A troupe of dancers filed onstage to entertain the audience until the second half of the play began.
Wistfully Madeline waited in the semidarkness, hidden behind the edge of velvet curtain. It would seem an eternity until the play resumed. Anticipation filled her, and she was conscious of a tingle of happiness. There was no other place she would rather be than here, breathing in the scents of sweat and paint, and the acrid smell of calcium lights.
A large, dark shape moved past her, a man striding from the stage to the cluster of dressing rooms. Their shoulders brushed as he walked by, and his steps slowed. He stopped and lifted his hand to the place where they had touched. Slowly he turned to look at her. Their gazes met, and Madeline felt a throb of alarm in the pit of her stomach. It was Mr. Scott.
A shimmer of perspiration highlighted every angle of his face. Although the color of his eyes was muted in the shadows, the glitter of dawning anger was unmistakable. “You…” he said. “What the hell are you doing in my theater?”
No one had ever cursed at her before. Surprise made her slow to reply. “Mr. Scott…I can see that Her Grace hasn’t yet spoken to you about me.…”
“I told you there was nothing for you here.”
“Yes, sir, but the duchess didn’t agree. She hired me as her assistant—”