PART 2: By the eighth week at Asheford Park, you knew two things with absolute certainty.
First, the estate could run beautifully if Lord Edmund Calder stopped trying to control every breath taken under his roof. Second, Lord Edmund Calder noticed far more than he admitted.
He noticed the autumn flowers in the east hallway. He noticed the library shelves you reorganized because the travel journals made no sense alphabetically. He noticed that the footmen stopped arguing near the pantry, that the laundry schedule no longer collapsed every Thursday, and that the kitchen staff had stopped whispering about resigning before Christmas.
You knew he noticed because Edmund Calder was not a man who looked at a thing without measuring it.
What you did not know was what he was measuring when he looked at you.
You were not naïve. A housekeeper in a Newport estate did not survive by misunderstanding attention. You had seen men look at servants as if they were furniture, temptation, convenience, or trouble. Edmund did none of those things.
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