A Prince in the Pantry
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About this ebook
A PRINCE IN THE PANTRY
From USA Today bestselling author May McGoldrick, a romantic tale of two people trapped by fate...
The most anticipated ball of the Season awaits!
Prince Timour Mirza, an heir to the Persian throne, is visiting England on a diplomatic mission to choose a wife. Brought up in a world where his every move is dictated, Timour longs for one night of freedom.
Pearl Smith was raised amid London’s ton, but a reversal of fortune has left her father languishing in debtors' prison. Now, on the night of the grand ball, she has been reduced to working below stairs at the Whitwell House in London’s fashionable West End, the unwitting victim of a former friend’s venomous envy.
Curious about the life of everyday people, Timour trades his clothes and his position with a companion and escapes the masquerade ball. With the absence of his royal regalia, his darker skin and his beliefs draw unwanted attention.
Stunned and humiliated by women she thought were her friends, Pearl flees the mansion. But the last thing she expects is to become the champion of a tall, dark stranger.
And in the hours that follow, as a full moon bathes London in a May glow, Pearl and Timour will find that love can come when it’s least expected.
May McGoldrick
Authors Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick (writing as May McGoldrick) weave emotionally satisfying tales of love and danger. Publishing under the names of May McGoldrick and Jan Coffey, these authors have written more than thirty novels and works of nonfiction for Penguin Random House, Mira, HarperCollins, Entangled, and Heinemann. Nikoo, an engineer, also conducts frequent workshops on writing and publishing and serves as a Resident Author. Jim holds a Ph.D. in Medieval and Renaissance literature and teaches English in northwestern Connecticut. They are the authors of Much ado about Highlanders, Taming the Highlander, and Tempest in the Highlands with SMP Swerve.
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A Prince in the Pantry - May McGoldrick
A Prince in the Pantry
A Regency Novella
May McGoldrick
MM Books
Thank you for choosing this book. In the event that you appreciate this book, please consider sharing the good word(s) by leaving a review, or connect with the author.
A Prince in the Pantry
Copyright © 2021 by Nikoo and James A. McGoldrick
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Cover Art by Elefont Books Cover Design
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Edition Note
Authors’ Note
Preview of Borrowed Dreams
Also by May McGoldrick, Nik James, Jan Coffey
About the Author
1
London
May, 1814
Pearl Smith drew a handkerchief out of the cuff of her sleeve and patted the perspiration from her upper lip. The windowless sewing room in the basement of Londonderry House was suffocatingly hot.
The work on the cream-figured, silk muslin dress was finished. The garment hung on the wall hook, the hem mended. It was the only project that had been left for her today, and Pearl was glad. She was anxious to get back to her father, who was battling a summer cold and refused to take his dinner unless she was there with him.
Gathering up her bag and basket, she turned and started for the door but stopped short as she banged her knee on one of the benches.
She paused to rub the bruise, but it was quickly forgotten when a screech from a child drew Pearl’s head up. A consoling voice drifted in from the laundresses’ room next door, along with the higher pitch of other children.
Every day, the women brought their youngsters—some infants, others barely waist high. Some helped and some sat or lay swaddled along a wall while the mothers worked. Whatever grievance Pearl had with the uncomfortable room she was assigned to do her sewing in, her situation was nothing compared to how those laundresses suffered. The heat and the steaming odors of soap and starch and bluing rising from the great wooden vats was dreadful. And that was before lugging their heavy baskets out into the bleaching and drying fields in Hyde Park.
In her previous life, Pearl had scarcely thought of how hard servants worked, but she now recognized the endless drudgery and discomfort these people endured.
The clock chimed the noon hour as she stepped out of the sewing room. Walking down the hallway, she was thinking of stops she needed to make when an upstairs maid suddenly appeared in her path.
Sorry, miss. But are you leaving?
I’ve finished my work for the day. Why?
Begging your pardon, but the mistress sent me down for you. She wants you in her sitting room.
Pearl looked past the young woman down the corridor. She still had an hour of brisk walking to get home to her father.
The maid must have sensed her misgivings. I can tell her you already left, if you like.
All of the servants were aware of Pearl’s situation. It was no secret, and a few actually treated her with a mixture of sympathy and kindness. This woman was one of them.
Pearl laid a gentle hand on the woman’s arm and shook her head. It’s all right. I’ll go up and see Miss Cly before I leave.
The Londonderry House was the town residence of Lord Castlereagh, the Foreign Secretary. The powerful politician and his wife had no children, and they’d taken in their niece Rosa Cly as their ward several years ago. During the Season, Rosa circulated among the highest levels of society. But what mattered most to Pearl was that she had some influence with her uncle.
Oh,
the maid said as an afterthought. You should know, Miss Ivy Bartlett is up there with the mistress.
Pearl thanked her. She knew Ivy from her previous life, as well. Once upon a time, she and Ivy and Rosa had traveled in the same circles. Never exactly friends, but certainly friendly acquaintances.
Pearl hurried through the subterranean corridors of the mansion. She climbed the stuffy, narrow stairwell used by the servants until she reached the floor where Rosa’s apartments were located.
There was no one in the wide hallway, and the door to the sitting room stood slightly ajar. Voices drifted out.
Does she really live there? In the prison.
Yes, in Marshalsea Prison.
The first voice belonged to Ivy Bartlett; the second was Rosa’s.
How does she tolerate it?
She doesn’t have much choice, now does she. Besides, she wants to be with her father.
Pearl stopped and put her bag down beside a large Chinese vase outside the door. She wished she could block her ears, but this was surely just an echo of conversations between other members of the ton since her father was taken off to debtor’s prison.
How inconsiderate of Perceval Smith not to think of his daughter’s future,
Ivy said.
It was certainly irresponsible of him. It’s no surprise what happens when you borrow more money than you can afford and then fail to pay it back.
Pearl felt heat rising into her face. She forced herself to stand still, restraining herself from barging in and defending him. This was not what happened to her father. There was nothing intentional or fraudulent behind their change of fortune.
Not too long ago, her father had been the most successful importer of fabrics into France and England. He’d been ruined last autumn when the British wartime government seized the assets of his company for doing business with the French before the current outbreak of war.
Now he was languishing in debtors’ prison, and Pearl hoped Rosa might help get him out of Marshalsea.
So, what’s she doing here?
Ivy pressed. She’s hardly a trained domestic. What do you have her doing?
Sewing, so long as it’s not too complicated a job. Sometimes I ask her opinion on dresses I’m planning to have made. She always had a good taste.
Pearl did have some knowledge about fabrics. Muslins and Batistes and silks. Classic materials with Etruscan and Egyptian decoration and woven or embroidered borders. Mending dresses to feed herself and her father, however, wasn’t something she’d ever imagined doing.
And she ended up working for you how?
She asked me for a job, and I gave it to her.
With Napoleon abdicating last month, Pearl hoped that Rosa would convince Lord Castlereagh to get involved. His lordship certainly had the power to help Percival Smith, and the two men had once been friends. But to approach Rosa and simply ask such a huge favor wasn’t conceivable. Working in Londonderry House and appealing to her sense of compassion was another matter.
You have a heart of gold,
Ivy continued. I wouldn’t be so generous.
Pearl couldn’t take it anymore. The more she listened, the more she was pained by Ivy’s attitude. This was the same response she and her father had received from many of their supposed friends.
Taking a breath to compose herself, Pearl knocked and went in.
The two women were lounging on sofas that faced each other in front of a marble fireplace. The room had been redecorated in the past year, reflecting the simpler tastes of fashion that had been sweeping the homes of the ton. Persian carpets filled the floors with symmetrical