Chapter 60
Chapter 60
“I am the Countess of Penwood,” she shrilled. “Countess!”
The magistrate looked back and forth between the occupants of the room. As a countess, Araminta
outranked everyone, but at the same time, she was only one Penwood against two Bridgertons, one of
whom was very large, visibly angry, and had already planted his fist in the warden’s eye.
“She stole from me!”
“No, you stole from her!” Benedict roared.
The room fell into instant silence.
“You stole her very childhood,” Benedict said, his body shaking with rage. There were huge gaps in his
knowledge of Sophie’s life, but somehow he knew that this woman had caused much of the pain that
lurked behind her green eyes. And he’d have been willing to bet that her dear, departed papa was
responsible for the rest.
Benedict turned to the magistrate and said, “My fiancée is the bastard daughter of the late Earl of
Penwood. And that is why the dowager countess has falsely accused her of theft. It is revenge and
hate, pure and simple.”
The magistrate looked from Benedict to Araminta and then finally to Sophie. “Is this true?” he asked
her. “Have you been falsely accused?”
“She took the shoe clips!” Araminta shrieked. “I swear on my husband’s grave, she took the shoe clips!”
“Oh, for the love of God, Mother, I took the shoe clips.”
Sophie’s mouth fell open. “Posy?”
Benedict looked at the newcomer, a short, slightly pudgy young woman who was obviously the
countess’s daughter, then glanced back to Sophie, who had gone white as a sheet.
“Get out of here,” Araminta hissed. “You have no place in these proceedings.”
“Obviously she does,” the magistrate said, turning to Araminta, “if she took the shoe clips. Do you want
to have her charged?”
“She’s my daughter!”
“Put me in the cell with Sophie!” Posy said dramatically, clasping one of her hands to her breast with
great effect. “If she is transported for theft, then I must be as well.”
For the first time in several days, Benedict found himself smiling.
The warden took out his keys. “Sir?” he said hesitantly, nudging the magistrate.
“Put those away,” the magistrate snapped. “We’re not incarcerating the countess’s daughter.”
“Do not put those away,” Lady Bridgerton cut in. “I want my future daughter-in-law released
immediately.”
The warden looked helplessly at the magistrate.
“Oh, very well,” the magistrate said, jabbing his finger in Sophie’s direction. “Let that one free. But no
one is going anywhere until I have this sorted out.”
Araminta bristled in protest, but Sophie was duly released. She started to run to Benedict, but the
magistrate held out a restraining arm. “Not so fast,” he warned. “We’ll be having no lovey-dovey
reunions until I figure out who is to be arrested.”
“No one is to be arrested,” Benedict growled.
“She is going to Australia!” Araminta cried out, pointing toward Sophie.
“Put me in the cell!” Posy sighed, placing the back of her hand against her brow. “I did it!”
“Posy, will you be quiet?” Sophie whispered. “Trust me, you do not want to be in that cell. It’s dreadful.
And there are rats.”
Posy started inching away from the cell.
“You will never see another invitation again in this town,” Lady Bridgerton said to Araminta.
“I am a countess!” Araminta hissed.
“And I am more popular,” Lady Bridgerton returned, the snide words so out of character that both
Benedict’s and Sophie’s mouths dropped open.
“Enough!” the magistrate said. He turned to Posy, pointing to Araminta as he said, “Is she your
mother?”
Posy nodded.
“And you said you stole the shoe clips?”
Posy nodded again. “And no one stole her wedding ring. It’s in her jewelry box at home.”
No one gasped, because no one was terribly surprised. But Araminta said, nonetheless, “It is not!”
“Your other jewelry box,” Posy clarified. “The one you keep in the third drawer from the left.”
Araminta paled.
The magistrate said, “You don’t seem to have a very good case against Miss Beckett, Lady Penwood.”
Araminta began to shake with rage, her outstretched arm quivering as she pointed one long finger at
Sophie. “She stole from me,” she said in a deadly low voice before turning furious eyes on Posy. “My
daughter is lying. I do not know why, and I certainly do not know what she hopes to gain, but she is
lying.”
Something very uncomfortable began to churn in Sophie’s stomach. Posy was going to be in horrible
trouble when she went home. There was no telling what Araminta would do in retaliation for such public
humiliation. She couldn’t let Posy take the blame for her. She had to—
“Posy didn’t—” The words burst forth from her mouth before she had a chance to think, but she didn’t
manage to finish her sentence because Posy elbowed her in the belly.
Hard.
“Did you say something?” the magistrate inquired.
Sophie shook her head, completely unable to speak. Posy had knocked her breath clear to Scotland.
The magistrate let out a weary sigh and raked his hand through his thinning blond hair. He looked at
Posy, then at Sophie, then Araminta, then Benedict. Lady Bridgerton cleared her throat, forcing him to
look at her, too.
“Clearly,” the magistrate said, looking very much as if he’d rather be anywhere other than where he
was, “this is about a great deal more than a stolen shoe clip.”
“Shoe clips,” Araminta sniffed. “There were two of them.”
“Regardless,” the magistrate ground out, “you all obviously detest one another, and I would like to know
why before I go ahead and charge anyone.”
For a second, no one spoke. Then everyone spoke.
“Silence!” the magistrate roared. “You,” he said, pointing at Sophie, “start.”
“Uhhhh . . .” Now that Sophie actually had the floor, she felt terribly self-conscious.
The magistrate cleared his throat. Loudly.
“What he said was correct,” Sophie said quickly, pointing to Benedict. “I am the daughter of the Earl of
Penwood, although I was never acknowledged as such.”
Araminta opened her mouth to say something, but the magistrate sent her such a withering glare that
she kept quiet.
“I lived at Penwood Park for seven years before she married the earl,” she continued, motioning to
Araminta. “The earl said that he was my guardian, but everyone knew the truth.” She paused,
remembering her father’s face, and thinking that she ought not be so surprised that she couldn’t picture
him with a smile. “I look a great deal like him,” she said.
“I knew your father,” Lady Bridgerton said softly. “And your aunt. It explains why I’ve always thought
you looked so familiar.”
Sophie flashed her a small, grateful smile. Something in Lady Bridgerton’s tone was very reassuring,
and it made her feel a little warmer inside, a little more secure.
“Please continue,” the magistrate said.
Sophie gave him a nod, then added, “When the earl married the countess, she didn’t want me living
there, but the earl insisted. I rarely saw him, and I don’t think he thought very much of me, but he did
see me as his responsibility, and he wouldn’t allow her to boot me out. But when he died . . .”
Sophie stopped and swallowed, trying to get past the lump in her throat. She’d never actually told her
story to anyone before; the words seemed strange and foreign coming from her mouth. “When he
died,” she continued, “his will specified that Lady Penwood’s portion would be trebled if she kept me in
her household until I turned twenty. So she did. But my position changed dramatically. I became a
servant. Well, not really a servant.” Sophie smiled wryly. “A servant is paid. So I was really more like a
slave.”
Sophie looked over at A
raminta. She was standing with her arms crossed and her nose tipped in the air. Her lips were pursed
tightly, and it suddenly struck Sophie how very many times before she had seen that exact same
expression on Araminta’s face. More times than she could dare to count. Enough times to have broken
her soul.
Yet here she was, dirty and penniless to be sure, but with her mind and spirit still strong.
“Sophie?” Benedict asked, gazing at her with a concerned expression. “Is everything all right?”
She nodded slowly, because she was just coming to realize that everything was all right. The man she
loved had (in a rather roundabout way) just asked her to marry him, Araminta was finally about to
receive the drubbing she deserved—at the hands of the Bridgertons, no less, who would leave her in
shreds by the time they were through, and Posy . . . now that might have been the loveliest of all. Posy,
who had always wanted to be a sister to her, who had never quite had the courage to be herself, had
stood up to her mother and quite possibly saved the day. Sophie was one hundred percent certain that
if Benedict had not come and declared her his fiancée, Posy’s testimony would have been the only
thing to save her from transportation—or maybe even execution. And Sophie knew better than anyone
that Posy would pay dearly for her courage. Araminta was probably already plotting how to make her
life a living hell.
Yes, everything was all right, and Sophie suddenly found herself standing a little straighter as she said,
“Allow me to finish my story. After the earl died, Lady Penwood kept me on as her unpaid lady’s maid.
Although in truth I was made to do the work of three maids.”
“You know, Lady Whistledown said that very thing just last month!” Posy said excitedly. “I told Mother
that she—”
“Posy, shut up!” Araminta snapped.
“When I turned twenty,” Sophie continued, “she didn’t turn me out. To this day I don’t know why.”
“I think we’ve heard enough,” Araminta said.
“I don’t think we’ve heard nearly enough,” Benedict snapped.
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