father died, I sent both of them away to live with our aunt.â
âYou could hardly have done otherwise. You must have still been in school.â
âUniversity,â he confirmed. âI am not so harsh on myself that I think I should have tended to them myself at that point, but I should have been a more involved guardian.â
She placed her hand on his arm in a gesture of comfort. âI am sure you did your best.â
Richard was sure he had not, but he said, âThank you.â
âHow old is your other sister?â
âMarie-Claire is almost fifteen.â
âFleur and Marie-Claire,â Iris murmured. âHow very French.â
âMy mother was a fanciful woman.â He flashed her a smile, then added a little half-shrug. âAnd she was also half-French.â
âAre your sisters now at home?â
He gave a nod. âYes. In Yorkshire.â
She nodded thoughtfully. âI have never been so far north.â
This surprised him. âHave you not?â
âI live year-round in London,â she explained. âMy father is the fourth of five sons. He did not inherit land.â
Richard wondered if she was issuing a warning. If he was a fortune hunter, he should look elsewhere.
âI visit with my cousins, of course,â she continued lightly, âbut they are all in the south of England. I donât believe I have ever traveled past Norfolk.â
âItâs a very different landscape in the north,â he told her. âIt can be quite desolate and bleak.â
âYou are not proving yourself an enthusiastic ambassador for your county,â she chided.
He chuckled at that. âItâs not all desolate and bleak. And the parts that are are beautiful in their own way.â
She smiled at the description.
âAt any rate,â he continued, âMaycliffe sits in a rather pleasant valley. Itâs quite tame compared to the rest of the county.â
âIs that a good thing?â she asked with an arch of her brow.
He laughed. âWeâre actually not too far from Darlington, and the railway that is being built there.â
Her blue eyes lit up in wonder. âAre you? I should love to see that. I read that when it is completed, one might be able to travel at fifteen miles per hour, but I cannot credit such a speed. It sounds frightfully dangerous.â
He nodded absently, glancing over at Daisy, who was still interrogating poor Winston about the Russian prince. âI suppose your sister thought that Miss Elizabeth should not have refused Darcyâs first proposal.â
Iris stared at him blankly before blinking, and saying, âOh, yes, the book. Yes, youâre correct. Daisy found Lizzy to be most foolish.â
âWhat do you think?â he asked, and he realized that he truly wished to know her opinion.
She paused, taking the time to choose her words. Richard did not mind the silence; it gave him the opportunity to watch her as she thought. She was prettier than heâd supposed at first sight. There was a pleasing symmetry to her features, and her lips were far rosier than one might guess, given how pale the rest of her was.
âGiven what she knew at the time,â Iris finally said, âI donât see how she could possibly have accepted him. Would you wish to marry someone you could not respect?â
âCertainly not.â
She nodded officiously, then frowned as she regarded Winston and Daisy again. Somehow, they had managed to get quite a bit ahead. Richard couldnât hear what they were talking about, but Winston had the look of a man in trouble.
âWe will have to save him again,â Iris said with a sigh. âBut this time you must do it. Iâve exhausted my knowledge of Russian politics.â
Richard allowed himself to lean toward her, close enough so that he could murmur in her ear. âThe Treaty of St. Petersburg defined the boundary between Russian