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for a baking tin and a muslin cloth with a little butter on it. She greased the tin with a single, practiced movement. "But it in't me."

Gracie took a sip of the tea. "Tilda said as 'e were Mr. Stephen's valet. 'As 'e got a new one, then?"

Mrs. Culpepper looked up sharply. "No, 'e 'asn't. Don' yer go..." Then her face softened. "Look, girl, I can see that yer upset, an' it's awful 'ard ter face someone real sick, as yer can't 'elp. Gawd knows, I wouldn't want a dog ter die alone, but so 'elp me, I dunno where Martin's gorn, an' that's the Gawd's truth. 'Ceptin' 'e's a good man, an' I don't believe as 'e'd ne'er give no one any trouble."

Gracie sniffed and blinked, her mind on Tilda and the fear inside her. It had been almost a week already. Why was there no letter, no message? "Wot's 'e like, Mr. Stephen? Would 'e get rid o' someone if they 'adn't done nothin' wrong?"

Mrs. Culpepper wiped her hands on her apron, abandoned the batter and poured herself a cup of tea. "Lord knows, girl," she said, shaking her head. " 'E's a poor mixed-over kind o' man. But even on 'is worst days I don't think as 'e would 'a got rid o' Martin, 'cos Martin's the only one wot can do a thing wit 'im when 'e gets bad."

Gracie tried hard to keep her expression calm, and knew she did not entirely succeed. This was new information, and it alarmed her even though she was not sure if she understood it. She looked up at Mrs. Culpepper, blinking several times to try to disguise her thoughts. "Yer mean when 'e's sick, like?"

Mrs. Culpepper gave a start and did not reply. Her hand stayed frozen on the handle of her cup.

Gracie was afraid she had made her first serious mistake, but she knew enough not to try to mend it. She said nothing, waiting for Mrs. Culpepper to speak first.

"Yer could say that," Mrs. Culpepper conceded at last, raising the cup to her lips and sipping the hot tea. "An' I'm not 'ere ter say diff'rent." That was a warning.

Gracie understood instantly. Sick was a euphemism for something far worse, almost certainly blind drunk. Some men collapsed in a heap, or were thoroughly ill, but there were always the odd few who became belligerent and started fighting people, or took their clothes off, or otherwise were an embarrassment and a nuisance. It sounded as if Stephen Garrick was of the last sort.

" 'Course not," Gracie said demurely. "Nobody says diff'rent. In't our place."

"Not that I'm not tempted, sometimes, mind!" Mrs. Culpepper added with some heat, just as the very handsome parlor maid came into the kitchen and stopped abruptly. "You've not come for luncheon already, 'ave yer?" Mrs. Culpepper said in amazement. "I dunno where the day's gorn ter. I in't nothin' like ready."

"No, no!" Bella assured her. "Loads of time." She looked curiously at Gracie. She must have overheard the last few words of the conversation. "Not that I wouldn't fancy a cup of tea myself, if it's hot," she added.

"This is Gracie," Mrs. Culpepper said, suddenly recalling Gracie's name. "She's come 'cos Martin's sister's a friend of 'ers, an' it seems the poor girl 'as the rheumatical fever, an' she's like ter dyin', so Gracie's lookin' for Martin ter tell 'im, which is terrible 'ard."

Bella shook her head, her face grave. "I wish we could help you, but we don't know where he is," she said candidly. "Usually when Mr. Stephen goes away it's in the middle of the morning, and we all know for days beforehand, but this is different... He just... isn't here."

Gracie was not going to give up without trying every avenue. "Mrs. Culpepper's been very gracious," she said warmly. "An' she says as Mr. Garrick really depended on Martin, so 'e wouldn't a' got rid of 'im on a fancy, like."

Bella's face pinched with anger. "He behaved pretty rotten at times. My ma'd have taken a slipper to me if I'd thrown tantrums the way he does, kicking and shouting and-"

"Bella!" Mrs. Culpepper said warningly, her voice sharp.

"Well, goes on like a three-year-old, he does sometimes!" Bella protested, her cheeks flushed. "And poor Martin put up with it without a word of complaint. Cleaning up behind him, listening to him weeping and wailing about everything you could name, or just sitting there like the misery of the whole world was on

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