leaning forward in his seat, eager for his first glimpse of the house as the carriage emerged from the trees to cross the bridge at the bottom of the long sloping lawn that led upward to the terraced formal gardens and the upper cobbled terrace and the house beyond.
But he sat back abruptly as the wheels of the carriage rumbled over the stone bridge.
Deuce take it, but they were entertaining. The house was lit up by what had to be a thousand candles. There were carriages outside the carriage house and stables.
Damnation, but what rotten bad fortune.
He should have stayed in London for a few days, he thought. He should have sent word ahead of him. Zounds, but they did not even know he had left India. They did not even know . . .
He set his head back against the cushions again and closed his eyes once more.
No, they did not even know.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
âWell, my dear,â the Duke of Harndon said to his wife, their first duties in the receiving line with his mother and Emily at an end, their secondary duty of leading off the opening set of country dances about to begin, âyou may as usual have the satisfaction of knowing yourself by far the loveliest lady at the ball. âTis almost shameful with Harry in the nursery for only three months and you alreadyâah, nine-and-twenty, is it?â
âFor the fourth year in succession,â she said, laughing at him. âLuke, you have been shopping in Paris again. Your coat is such a splendid dark shade of blue, and there is so much embroidery on your waistcoat that you put my gown to shame.â
âAh, but âtis the woman inside the gown who dazzles the sight, madam,â he said.
She laughed again. âI am glad you remembered your fan,â she said. âIt still scandalizes a few people.â
He fanned her face with it. âMy cosmetics I have abandoned with the greatest reluctance, my dear,â he said, âin deference to country tastes. But a man must be allowed to retain some of his pride. Without a fan at a ball I would feel quite naked, by my life.â
ââTis what comes of those ten years you spent in Paris,â she said. âLuke, what will Emmy do?â
âEmily,â he said, âis looking so fine that every other ladyâs face, except yours, is tinged with green. And as I told her earlier, if she dressed thus all the time, I would by now be beating back all of His Majestyâs army and navy and the single portion of his civilian male subjects as well from my doors. Perhaps I should be thankful that she is more often the witch of the woods.â
âOh, Luke,â she said reproachfully.
âIf you must quarrel with me, madam,â he said, âlet it be later. Much later, in your bedchamber. But I will not play fair, I would warn you.â
âWill she have him?â There was acute anxiety in her voice.
âShe would be a fool if she did not,â he said. âPowell has everything to recommend him to a bride below the rank of princess, I believeâlooks, breeding, wealth, mildness of manners. And he is remarkably eager to bring the matter to a point. There are Emilyâs dowry and her connections to attract him, as well as his openly expressed determination to please his mother and do his duty by taking a wife and setting up his nursery. I believe too he is somewhat captivated by the prospect of a wife who will not prattle. There is the small question of love, of course, and experience has demonstrated to me that in reality it is no small matter at all. But I believe we can trust your sister to order her own destiny, my dear. There is nothing abject about Emily. One can only hope that Powell does not see her as someone who will be passive and biddable, poor man. The musicians and all our guests await my signal to start the ball. Shall I oblige them or would you prefer to indulge in a fit of the vapors?â
âNo one else
Justine Dare Justine Davis