regard her daughter with a steady gaze. “Women here do not attend funerals or join the procession, my dear.”
“Since when?” Thornstock asked.
Beatrice cleared her throat. “Since forever. It’s always been frowned upon.”
“How absurd! And hardly fair.” Lady Gwyn shifted her gaze to her mother. “But you’re going anyway, aren’t you?”
Aunt Lydia sighed. “I see no point in giving rise to gossip locally. England is now our home, and we have to adapt to its customs.”
“Well, I’m going,” Lady Gwyn announced. “They can’t stop me.”
“Good for you,” Thornstock said. “Sounds like a stupid custom to me.”
“Every English custom sounds stupid to you, Thorn.” Greycourt looked at Gwyn. “Do you promise not to cry at the funeral?”
She blinked. “What do you mean?”
“That’s why women aren’t allowed. Because it’s believed that they show too much emotion in public, when they ought to be stoic.”
“Then Mother definitely mustn’t go,” Sheridan muttered into his soup, having wisely stayed out of the conversation until now.
“Sheridan!” Aunt Lydia said.
“Well, it’s true. You haven’t been stoic a day in your life. Indeed, you have a tendency to be rather . . . dramatic at times.”
His mother glared at him. “I can’t help it. My ancestor was a playwright.”
“And you never let us forget it,” Thornstock said, though with unmistakable fondness. He grinned slyly at Beatrice. “You may have noticed, Miss Wolfe, that all of us are named after dramatists.”
Beatrice hadn’t noticed, actually. She ran through their Christian names in her head: Thornstock’s was Marlowe, Greycourt’s was Fletcher, and then there were Sheridan and Heywood. All playwrights, yes. How odd.
Then something occurred to her. “But not Lady Gwyn, right?”
“I am named after an actress,” Lady Gwyn said in an arch tone. “There aren’t enough female playwrights of renown, and Mother could hardly name me Inchbald or Behn, so she chose to name me after Nell Gwyn. Thankfully, everyone assumes that Gwyn was taken from some Welsh ancestor of ours.”
“Nell Gwyn was one of the most famous actresses of her age,” her mother said with a sniff. “It’s nothing to be embarrassed about.”
“Poor Nelly was also a ‘famous’ mistress of Charles II, Mother,” Greycourt said dryly. “The Prince of Wales even owns a portrait of her in which she is wholly nude.”
His mother eyed him suspiciously. “How do you know?”
He shrugged. “I’ve seen it.” When she gasped, he added, “At a royal function. And my point is, I don’t blame our Gwyn for wanting to hide who her namesake is.”
Neither did Beatrice. She couldn’t imagine having the origins of such a name become known. And here she’d always thought Papa mad for naming her after Dante’s one true love. At least her namesake had been virtuous. Only imagine what sly jokes Uncle Armie would have made if she’d actually been named after a loose-living actress.
Greycourt turned to his sister. “If Mother isn’t going to the funeral, Gwyn, then you’re certainly not going. She needs someone with her.”
Lady Gwyn frowned at him. “Bea will be here.”
“That’s not the same, and you know it.”
“Don’t insult Bea,” Lady Gwyn protested.
“I’m not insulting anyone,” Greycourt said. “But Miss Wolfe hasn’t spent the years with Mother that you have. Mother would benefit from having you both here.”
“Listen to your brother.” Aunt Lydia reached over to grab her daughter’s hand. “I’d like to have you with me.” She shot Beatrice a fond glance. “And Bea, of course.”
Lady Gwyn huffed out a breath. “If I must. But I still think it’s wrong that I can’t attend Father’s funeral just because I’m a woman. For all intents and purposes, he was my father. So I have the right to grieve as much as Thorn or Grey or even Sheridan does.”
“I agree,” Greycourt said, to Beatrice’s surprise. “There are any number of society’s rules I find wrong. But if you are to have a successful debut, you’ll have to follow some of them. At least until you can catch a husband.” He smiled at Beatrice. “You too, Miss Wolfe.”
While she was wondering at that odd remark, Sheridan said, “This is probably as good a time as any to announce that Grey will be staying a few weeks so he can help Mother prepare Gwyn and Bea for their debuts.”
“The devil he will!” Lady Gwyn cried.
She’d taken the words out of Beatrice’s mouth. The very thought of the lofty Duke of Greycourt advising her on such matters made her heart falter.
“What? Don’t you want me around, Gwyn?” Greycourt asked with an odd note in his voice.
“Why would I?” Lady Gwyn