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She Confronted The Man Blocking Her Carriage In Public—Until One Word Revealed He Was The Duke

Her voice cracked despite her best efforts. You cannot possibly understand what it’s like to know that one mistake, one moment of visibility could  mean the difference between survival and ruin. The Duke was quiet for a long moment. When he spoke, his voice was softer than she’d expected. You’re right. I can’t. I’ve never worried about where my next meal would come from or whether I’d have shelter tomorrow.

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I’ve never been invisible because I had to be. Then why would you possibly want my help? Because I need someone who understands what’s actually at stake. Someone who sees the children in those hospitals as human beings, not statistics. Someone who he paused, and something shifted in his expression.

Someone who isn’t afraid to tell me when I’m wrong. Margot laughed. A sharp bitter sound. Your grace. In the last hour, I’ve called you arrogant, inconsiderate, and essentially useless. I think we’ve established that I’m fully capable of telling you when you’re wrong. Exactly. He smiled. And this time there was no danger in it, just genuine amusement.

Which is precisely why I want you involved. I don’t need more yesmen telling me how brilliant my reforms are. I need someone who will tell me when I’m blocking the damn street. The carriage slowed through the window. Margot could see the foundling hospital’s familiar brick facade. Their time was running out, and she needed to make a decision that could change everything.

If I say yes, she said carefully. What exactly would you expect from me? Honesty, insight. Accompany me on inspections of the institutions. help me understand what actually needs to change versus what sounds good in parliamentary speeches. He paused. And occasional reminders when my privilege is showing that would be a full-time occupation your grace.

Then consider yourself employed. Marggo’s breath caught. I already have a position which pays you barely enough to keep one pair of boots in acceptable condition. His eyes dropped to her feet, to the worn leather and the damp spreading from the failed soul, and Margot felt heat flood her cheeks. “I’ll compensate you properly for your time, enough that you won’t have to choose between hiring a carriage and eating.

It was too much, too sudden, too convenient. Men like the Duke of Greymont didn’t simply offer employment to women who’d publicly insulted them. They didn’t see value in governness with dead fathers and ruined reputations. Why? The word came out as barely more than a whisper. Why would you do this? He looked at her for a long moment, and Margot saw something in his expression that she couldn’t quite name.

Recognition maybe, or curiosity, or possibly just the aristocratic whim of a man bored enough to find amusement in a woman who dared to shout at him. Because in 33 years, he said quietly, no one has ever spoken to me the way you did today. And I think I’ve been waiting my entire life for someone to tell me I’m blocking the street. The carriage stopped.

The door opened. Rain continued falling on London’s indifferent streets. Marggo Thorne stood on the edge of the most dangerous decision of her life, looked into the gray eyes of a duke who saw her, actually saw her, and said the only thing she could say, “When do we start?” The Duke of Greymont’s first reform initiative began at 7:00 the following morning with an inspection of St.

Margaret’s orphanage in Suffukk, and Margot arrived to find that she’d severely underestimated what accompanying him on inspections would actually entail. She’d expected observation, notetaking, perhaps offering quiet insights while the Duke tooured facilities with administrators who’d spent weeks preparing for his arrival.

Instead, she found herself standing in a kitchen where rats nested in the flower barrels, staring at a matron who’d clearly received no advanced warning whatsoever, and appeared to be approximately 3 seconds away from fainting. Your grace, the woman stammered, dropping into a curtsy so deep she nearly toppled over. We weren’t, that is, we didn’t expect me.

The Duke stepped past her into the kitchen, his boots crunching on something Margot very much hoped was spilled grain. No, that was rather the point. He turned to Margot, and she saw that same dangerous amusement from yesterday in his eyes. Miss Thorne, would you assess the conditions here? Every instinct screamed at her to be diplomatic, to soften her words, to consider that this matron was probably underpaid and overworked and doing her best with insufficient resources.

But then she saw the rats, saw the mold creeping up the walls, saw the water damage suggesting the roof had been leaking for months, maybe years, saw all of it, and thought about the children sleeping upstairs, eating food prepared in this nightmare, getting sick from conditions that would never be tolerated in Mayfair.

It’s appalling, she said flatly. The sanitation is non-existent, the ventilation inadequate, and unless I’m mistaken, that’s black mold in the corner, which means respiratory illness is probably rampant among the children. The matron made a small wounded sound. The Duke nodded, “Show me the sleeping quarters.

” What followed was the most uncomfortable hour of Margo’s life. They inspected dormitories where 30 children slept in a space meant for 15. Examined threadbear blankets that wouldn’t keep anyone warm through winter. Listen to the matron’s increasingly desperate explanations about budget constraints and supply delays and the difficulties of maintaining a facility of this size.

Through it all, the Duke remained coldly polite. He asked questions in that measured aristocratic tone that made each inquiry feel like an indictment. He took notes in a small leather journal. He revealed absolutely nothing about what he was thinking. Margot hated it. Hated watching the matron crumble.

Hated seeing the other staff exchange terrified glances. Hated the way everyone treated the Duke’s presence like a natural disaster they simply had to endure. Finally, in the fourth dormatory, she snapped. This isn’t her fault. The Duke looked up from his notes. “I beg your pardon, the matron,” Mrs. Crawford.

“This isn’t her fault,” Margot gestured at the room at the peeling walls and broken window frames. “She doesn’t control the budget. She doesn’t decide how much money this institution receives or how it’s distributed. She’s doing the best she can with resources that are clearly inadequate. I didn’t suggest you didn’t have to.

You’re treating her like she’s personally responsible for these conditions when we both know the real problem is systemic. Margot felt her voice rising and couldn’t stop it. The board that oversees this place probably hasn’t visited in years. The men who control the funds likely have no idea what actually happens here. But you’re making her feel like she’s failed these children when she’s probably the only thing standing between them and complete catastrophe.

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