London, April 1901
The Earl of Culligan was enjoying the spring sunshine in St James's Park in central London. Even though he had only arrived from Dublin a few days earlier, he had established a very pleasant afternoon routine encompassing a circuit of the lake and a stop for refreshment at a tea house on the edge of Birdcage Walk. From his seat outside, he could see Big Ben rising above the trees. A steady stream of hansom cabs and the occasional motor car passed him, and in the park, finely dressed gentlemen and ladies mingled with clerks and office girls. He watched them, his mind drifting idly as he smoked a cigarette.
A couple detached themselves from the throng and headed towards the tearoom. He noticed the girl straight away. Even though plainly dressed in maid's clothing and hatless, she was remarkably attractive, with unusually short dark hair that left her neck exposed. As she walked past his table, he was transfixed by her luminous green eyes and full lips. She gave him a glance and a quick smile, moving easily and gracefully, her splendid figure all too obvious under her tightly buttoned coat.
A beauty, no less. A full-blown English beauty, he thought to himself. They sat down at a table about ten feet from him, and he continued to study her discreetly. She did not look happy; in fact, her face was distressed, and as he strained to listen to their conversation, he had a good look at the man who was with her.
He did not like the look of him at all. A coarse, strongly built, fellow with a rough beard and thick dark hair, dressed in workman's clothes. As he watched, the man reached over the table and grasped the woman's upper arm.
She twisted away and he heard her say, 'No, I won't.'
He glanced around. The only other couple sitting outside had just left and were walking towards the pavement on Birdcage Walk.
A chair pushed back noisily, and he saw the woman was now standing rubbing her arm. She looked over at him, an unspoken appeal in her eyes. It was enough to spur him into action. Blood pumping, he rose and strode purposefully across to the table.
'Is this man bothering you, Miss?' he asked, before turning his glare on the man, who was now also rising from his seat.
'I don't really know who he is,' she said. Her voice had a thick West Country burr, he realised, as her words tumbled over each other. 'My mistress told me to meet her here at four o'clock, and when I was walking across the park, well, he just started talking to me and then followed me here.' She lowered her eyes, clearly embarrassed. 'He made an improper suggestion. Wants me to go with him. I told him I am not that sort of girl. Then he grabbed my arm.'
Culligan turned on the man in fury. 'You absolute bounder. Get out of it, or I will raise my cane to you, sir. Go on. Away with you!'
But the man stared belligerently back and stood his ground. 'Oo are you, anyway?'
The Irishman drew himself up and hissed, 'I am the Earl of Culligan and if you are not gone from this place in ten seconds then I will not be responsible for my actions.'
'Alright, I'm going. Pretty girl, ain't she?' He leered across the table. Then, as Culligan raised his cane, he turned and shuffled off. They watched him go in silence.
'Dreadful man. Come to my table, my dear. What a terrible experience for you. What is your name?' Culligan gently took her elbow and steered her back to where his coffee pot waited.
'Mary Felix, sir.'
'Well I am the Earl of Culligan, but my friends call me Alfred.'
'Oh no, sir, I couldn't do that. I'm just a lady's maid, and what with you being royalty and all.' She looked shocked at the thought.
He laughed, delighted by her naivety. 'I can assure you I am not of royal blood, Mary, just a common or garden Irish earl. And Alfred will do.'
'Mary, is that you?' a voice called out from behind him.
'My mistress is here,' said the girl, glancing over his shoulder.
He turned and just managed to stifle an exclamation. Another startlingly attractive woman was bustling over from the path. Her blonde hair was styled in tight ringlets and piled high and she was dressed in a pale blue dress with a small matching hat and carried a rolled-up parasol. As she neared their table, he realised she was older than Mary -- about thirty, he guessed.
He stood up to greet her and, as she met his eyes, for the second time in less than ten minutes he found himself bewitched. They were a bottomless shade of brown that seemed to ebb and flow in front of him as amusement, arrogance, passion, promise, and delight flitted across them in a beguiling kaleidoscope. He stared, momentarily transfixed.
In the background he heard Mary speaking and caught 'the Earl of Culligan'.
She held out her hand and he shook it, rapidly recovering from his shock. She had a melodious and surprisingly deep voice that seemed to embrace him with warmth.
'Mrs Georgina Beaufort, my lord. It appears we are in your debt.'
'It was very little, Mrs Beaufort. I merely did what any gentleman would do.'
'Yes, well, Mary has a history of getting into scrapes, I am afraid.' She lowered her voice and whispered, 'She got the looks, my lord, but she didn't get the brains to go with them.'
This confidence was accompanied by an arch look of such amused horror that the Irishman found himself grinning like a schoolboy, utterly charmed by the sheer charisma of the woman in front of him.
As the story was told, to Culligan's surprise, Mrs Beaufort seemed sceptical about Mary's role in the matter and questioned her closely. With the maid wide eyed and pleading innocence, the earl felt he had to step in.
'Having seen the matter unfolding before me, I think I can reassure you that Mary was the offended party.'
'Hmm, we'll see,' she replied, looking across the table at the girl. 'Mary has a chequered past and has not been with me very long. I have taken her on as an act of kindness after she was rescued from...' she paused and met his eye, 'a place of low reputation.'
'Ah, I see.'
'Quite. Well, anyway, enough of this. My lord, you must come to tea tomorrow and give me an opportunity to thank you properly for your noble act this afternoon.' Completely captured by the adoring looks Mary was giving him and the extraordinary charm of Mrs Beaufort, Culligan found he had little difficulty in accepting.
At half past four the following day, a cab dropped him at the entrance to Arundel Court and, following the instructions provided by Mrs Beaufort, he walked down the alley to the square and knocked on the shiny blue door. Mary herself opened it and welcomed him effusively. After taking his coat, she led him into a pleasant salon with a large bay window at one end and a settee and a bright fire at the other. A large and very attractively framed mirror was attached to the wall, he noticed.
Mrs Beaufort was waiting for him and smiled. 'My lord. Welcome to our humble home. How very nice to see you again.'
He was again captivated by her eyes but managed a little bow and took a seat opposite her. 'Do please call me Alfred, Mrs Beaufort. We are all friends here, I'm sure.' He beamed at her and managed to encompass Mary in the look as well.
'Then you must call me Georgina. Will you join me in a whisky and soda?'
'I would enjoy that, Georgina, thank you.'
She nodded to Mary, who moved over to a table where Culligan could see a collection of bottles and glasses. Out of the corner of his eye he saw her carefully pour the whisky and then struggle with the soda siphon, clearly unfamiliar with its operation. However, at last the drinks were served, and after Mary had left, he and Georgina had a very pleasant conversation for half an hour. She was a good listener and asked him interesting questions. He told her about his Irish estates and the importance of his role in the Irish Government before suddenly realising that he had barely given her a chance to speak at all.
'That's enough about me, Georgina. Do tell me about yourself and how you come to be living here in this delightful house.'
'Before I do, one more question for you, Alfred. Would you care for another whisky?'
He hesitated. The first one had been very strong, and he was feeling it, but before he could refuse, Georgina added, 'Do have one. I think that I will.' Without waiting for an answer, she walked to a bell button and pushed it, and thirty seconds later, Mary appeared. 'Two more whiskies,' she said.
Again Culligan noticed that her tone was distinctly short with the girl, but he supposed that, as Georgina was another woman, she was perhaps immune to her extraordinary beauty. He also noted that her maid's dress was of good quality cloth and surprising well fitted, pulled in tight around her waist and flaring gracefully out over the swell of her buttocks. The top was cut lower than he would have expected, and the deep valley of her breasts was enticingly evident as she bent over the drinks table.
Warmed and relaxed by the whisky, he watched as she walked carefully towards him, carrying his drink on a tray and smiling. He could see her nipples clearly underneath the fabric of her dress and felt a stir of lust. As he reached out for the glass, the girl stumbled in front of him. The tray tipped over, depositing the whisky in his lap, instantly soaking his trousers.
For a moment, pandemonium reigned as he stood up, frantically brushing with his hand whilst Mary wailed an apology, her hands at her face. Georgina leapt to her feet, her face suffused with fury.
'You foolish clumsy girl,' she cried. 'That is the second time in less than a week. What is wrong with you, child?'
'Oh, my lord, I am so sorry. Please forgive me.' The maid's plea was infused with rising panic as she stared at their visitor.
Culligan continued mopping with a handkerchief and replied, 'An accident, my dear. These things happen. It will dry in due course, I am sure.'
But Georgina was not to be mollified. Grasping Mary firmly by the arm, she steered her towards the settee opposite Culligan and sat down. 'I warned you that any more foolish behaviour would result in punishment, and I mean to keep my word.'