Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 1860 - 125: Three Women Make a Drama? Two Will Do, T from The Shadow of Great Britain, a Fantasy novel by Chasing Time.

The next day, Palrston’s mouthpiece, The Morning Post, published a lengthy article, bluntly stating that the rger of the University of London with King’s College was an inevitable trend of history. It accused Sir Arthur Hastings, the Dean of Academic Affairs of the University of London, of resolutely resisting the University Education Act, disregarding British higher education, and being truly ignorant of the broader picture.

Although the public opinion tug-of-war between the University of London and the Foreign Office was still at a stalemate, Arthur now indeed had to set aside his verbal sparring with Palrston for a while.

The afternoon street was illuminated by the rare London sunshine, and the cobblestones of Lancaster Gate glistened with a silvery white light.

The slow, silent clopping of horse hooves approached from afar.

It was a sleek black two-wheeled carriage with silver trim, the horses shining in the sun, and the carriage spotless without a speck of dust, elegant yet unobtrusive.

It ca to a steady stop in front of the Arthur Mansion.

The coachman, in a gray wool uniform with a tall hat and reins in hand, glanced backward.

Following closely was an accompanying carriage embellished with the Hastings family crest. Inside sat Flora with her personal maid and an old butler who had served the Hastings family for years.

It could be seen that, although Flora was quite eager to et her cousin, her traveling entourage was still set up in a traditional way. It suited the image of a noble lady yet wouldn’t spark gossip among the neighborhood.

In other words, she had actually loosened the standards quite a bit because, in Flora’s view, unless invited by one of Arthur’s elderly female relatives or attending a social event hosted by a court noblewoman, she would almost never visit an unmarried male’s residence without a married female companion.

Fortunately, Arthur still carried the questionable Hastings family bloodline, so Flora was able to convince herself to make this visit.

After all, they were relatives. Although she was not yet married, as the eldest daughter of the Marquis of Hastings, she indeed had the duty to maintain family ties.

Of course, whether there was such a saying in the aristocratic circles and whether Flora truly had this obligation, the pig farr from York couldn’t tell.

Anyway, since Miss Flora Hastings felt since last night that she had this obligation, then she did.

The carriage door opened, and Flora, grasping the door’s handle wrapped in dark red velvet, stepped down.

It was clear that she had dressed with care today. Her attire was a dark blue traveling gown, with a cloak featuring a velvety texture, and her shoulders were embroidered with finely stitched silver iris vine patterns. She wore a wide-brimd hat adorned with gray feathers slightly tilted like a soft veil.

As soon as she alighted, her personal maid stepped forward knowingly, gathering the sides of her skirt and slightly lifting the dark blue hem.

Having been notified in advance, Becky quickly inford Arthur and then opened the door, standing alongside the cobblestone path in the garden to welco her.

She was so nervous she didn’t know where to place her hands.

Although friends often visited Arthur’s house, everyone knew that Arthur’s friends were mostly unruly characters.

Whether it was Great Dumas, Disraeli, Dickens, or Heine, Arthur’s friends were primarily from the middle class and paid no attention to guest reception formalities or travel etiquette. Most of them simply hailed a cab and rang the bell imdiately upon arrival. Sotis, with nothing better to do, they would co in groups to eat and drink for free.

Of course, Arthur also had quite a few ticulous friends, such as Lionel Rothschild and others. Whenever these acquaintances ca to visit, they always made appointnts in advance and were rarely late. But when they ca, it was usually to invite Arthur for hunting or cricket, so Becky hardly needed to serve them.

By this point, everyone roughly identified the problem.

That is, most of Arthur’s friends were male, and his female friends from the Bluestocking Society only t him at regularly held scientific salons, never visiting his ho.

Therefore, Becky had almost no experience in entertaining female guests; in fact, at the ti, it was rare for won to visit male friends alone. Let alone an unmarried noblewoman, who was the most troubleso. Nominally visiting alone, but in reality, they had to bring a large entourage to avoid suspicion.

Becky had no idea how to entertain her or how to settle her entourage.

Standing on the path, Becky repeatedly wiped her hands on her apron to make her fingers, reddened from the morning’s house cleaning, look less improper.

Flora approached slowly, glancing at the dostic maid’s actions with more than just a passing interest.

Feeling anxious under her gaze, Becky quickly bowed, saying, "Miss Hastings, you... please, please co in."

She expected Flora to pause, waiting for her to fully open the entrance door, or lightly cough to signal dissatisfaction.

Indeed, she hadn’t spent ti at the Household Association in vain, having heard from housekeepers there about the prowess of court ladies, who could direct servants with re glances, occasionally reprimanding them—a phrase like "Did your mother teach you to serve tea like this?" enough to make the kitchen maids cry all day.

At this thought, Becky felt completely frozen.

"Don’t be nervous, girl, I’m just here to visit a relative, not to inspect household affairs."

Becky paused, looking up to et Flora’s eyes filled with a smile.

She nodded hastily, her voice trembling, "Yes, Miss, thank you for your kindness."

Arthur was descending from the stairwell just then, casually placing the book he held on a side table, greeting with a smile, "Flora, how’s George these days? It’s been a while since I visited him."

"Dear, all is well, thank you for your concern." Flora paused in the entryway without rushing inside, slightly turning back to wait for the old butler before following Becky into the drawing-room.

Arthur pulled out a sofa chair with burgundy velvet cushions for her, while Flora gracefully removed her cloak and handed it to a maid to hang on the coat rack.

During this interlude, Arthur also took his seat.

He casually lifted a teapot, pouring two cups of tea: one Earl Grey, the other Bai Hao Yinzhen steeped with dried rose petals, predictably pushing the latter towards Flora.

Flora glanced at it but didn’t verbally express thanks, rely sipping from her cup, which eased the crease of worry on her brow from the past month.

"Arthur," Flora holding her teacup began with slight concern, "have you been unusually busy lately? George ntioned you haven’t gone hunting with him for two months, even Aunt Margaret started wondering if you had gone abroad."

Arthur gently returned the teapot to the silver tray. "I wouldn’t say abroad, though I’ve been hesitant to go out lately. I swear, even if I just stepped into a café near Downing Street recently, Palrston’s lot would see it as plotting a coup."

"Are you actually plotting a coup lately?" Flora raised an eyebrow, half-joking, "And not wanting them to find out?"

"Not at all, I wouldn’t dare." Arthur raised his cup in a small toast, "I’m rely devising ways to appear as if I’m not plotting any coup, hence choosing to stay ho, out of sight."

Flora teasingly said, "Isn’t staying ho the most dangerous? Your friends constantly expressing novel political opinions or absurd ideas, I’ve even seen it in The Economist, how could you allow a mber of the Napoleon family to serialize Napoleon’s Thoughts, it has been going on for months."

You are reading The Shadow of Great Britain Chapter 1860 - 125: Three Women Make a Drama? Two Will Do, T on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.