Constantine still remembered the gentle way she would stroke his head and brush back his hair as she sang him to sleep.
He’d been a broken little boy when he’d arrived at the duke’s Mayfair mansion. He’d thought it a palace, so grand had it appeared to his young eyes with its countless liveried servants and gleaming fixtures and glorious art and the vaulted ceilings that seemed to touch the sky.
For ten years, the duke scarcely spoke to Constantine, but the man had done well by him. Birchwood had brought him up when his parents died. No one had forced him to do so. He was a duke of the realm and he had taken Constantine in. He’d given him a roof over his head, a chamber of his own, food on his plate and allowed him to be tutored alongside his three sons.
Constantine owed him.
When one considered how perfectly reasonable it would have been to have turned Constantine over to an orphanage or workhouse. Their family connection was, after all, tenuous at best. He’d even purchased Con his commission at the age of seventeen, and no paltry commission either. He’d come into the army as an officer and had reached the rank of colonel by the age of thirty. He liked to think he had moved through the ranks due to his own merit, but his connection to the Duke of Birchwood was mentioned upon his every promotion.
Now, a year later, there had been talk of another promotion. He supposed that was moot now.
“Why have you been summoned home?”
“It seems the duke’s son has met with an unfortunate end. He is gone,” he said in an even voice that reflected none of his inner turmoil.
“Dead?” Morris asked as though requiring clarification.
“Yes.”
He felt a flash of remorse over Winston’s passing. As the eldest of his cousins and the one closest in age to Constantine, Winston had set the tone of tolerance toward Constantine, and his younger two cousins followed his lead. Still, he could never claim to have been particularly close to any of the duke’s sons. Cousins four times removed, there had always been a gulf between them—an awareness that he was naught but a foundling from the wrong side of the family tree. They’d never been cruel to him . . . merely detached. Coolly disinterested. Rather, they had treated him as a stray cat, largely ignoring him but occasionally giving him a scratch behind the ears.
Now with this letter informing him that Winston was dead—appallingly fast on the heels of Constantine’s younger two cousins who had also expired—he felt only a numb sense of shock and dismay at what this signified for him.
“I thought the Duke of Birchwood’s two sons already died? You received word of that many months ago. Why now are you being called—”
“Oh, allow me to clarify. This is a third son,” he quickly supplied with a shake of his head. He felt as though he’d taken a thump to the skull. It was all very bewildering. “Birchwood’s eldest and third son has expired. The three are gone now.”
All three.
Gone.
The Duke of Birchwood’s three sons were all gone from this earth. Constantine had received word of Malcolm’s and Albert’s untimely deaths not even a year ago, and now Winston was gone.
How did three brothers perish in the span of one year? All from different ailments? What were the odds? Winston from a splinter. Albert from choking on a bit of venison. Malcolm from a broken neck.
The duke now had no heir in which to hand down his title and property, entailed or otherwise—at least to no direct issue of his own. A circumstance that could never have been predicted considering his fruitful union with the duchess.
“Bloody hell,” his batman muttered, rubbing a hand over his forehead.
Constantine rose and made his way toward the nearby bottle of brandy. He rarely indulged in spirits. Too often, he’d been roused from bed to attend to one matter or another and he did not wish to be muddleheaded on those occasions. This felt an appropriate exception.
He poured the amber liquid into his glass and downed it in one gulp. “Bloody hell, indeed.”
“Who could have imagined such a tragic thing? All his sons lost in the span of one year?” Morris’s voice faded away.
He’d seen evidence enough of tragedy in his service to the empire. But three coddled, privileged sons of a duke dying in England was wildly irregular.
Constantine turned and faced his batman. The two had been in service