She went to where the bottle stood on the mantel, ignoring Maude’s tutting.
“Thank you,” Edwin said when he took the glass from her fingers. He swallowed a sip and winced. “Good Lord, that tastes like—”
Lily widened her eyes and looked pointedly at Indio.
“A mud puddle,” Edwin finished smoothly.
“Ick,” Indio said with interest. “Can I taste it?”
Edwin tapped him on the nose. “Not for another year at the very least.”
Lily cleared her throat.
Edwin rounded his eyes at Indio. “Maybe even two.”
“Bollocks,” her son said, making Lily choke in shock.
“Indio!”
But Edwin was laughing so hard he was spilling his wine, much to the delight of Daffodil, who was lapping it up off the settee.
“Here now.” Thankfully Maude intervened. “Best come outside, Indio, you and Daffodil.”
“Aw!”
“I seem to remember…” Edwin looked theatrically about the room. “Ah!” He picked up the parcel he’d earlier left by the settee. “This might be for you, young nephew.”
Indio eagerly took the parcel and unwrapped it, revealing a toy wooden boat, cloth sails and all.
Indio looked up, his mismatched eyes shining. “Thank you, Uncle Edwin!”
Her brother waved a hand magnanimously. “Think nothing of it, scamp. No doubt you’ll want to try it out in that pond I saw.”
“But only with Maude nearby,” Lily said hastily.
“Or Caliban?” Indio asked.
Lily hesitated for a moment, but the big man had been exceptionally gentle with her son last night. “Or Caliban,” she agreed.
“Huzzah!” Indio rushed from the theater, chased by a barking Daffodil.
Maude gave her a look that promised a talk later on and then followed her charge.
Lily sighed, taking a seat on one of the wooden chairs from the table. “You shouldn’t have spent so much on him.”
Her brother shrugged carelessly. “It was hardly a king’s ransom.”
And yet the money could’ve been better spent on clothes or food. Lily pushed the thought aside. Edwin had never been frugal with his money and a boy needed a treat once in a while as much as clothes and food.
He grinned at her as if he could tell the path of her thoughts. “Who is Caliban? An imaginary friend?”
“No, he’s quite real.”
“And Caliban is truly his name?” Her brother’s eyebrows were high arches of curiosity.
“Well, no—not that we know of, anyway. He’s a gardener here. Indio has taken to following him about.”
But Caliban was much more than that, Lily realized as she pleated her skirt between her fingertips. She remembered those huge hands, deftly holding his pencil as he impatiently wrote. Those beautifully airy sketches in his notebook. It was laughable, really, that she’d at first taken him for an idiot. It was only the day after his confession and she couldn’t think of him as anything but intelligent. Wonderfully intelligent.