Authors: Connie Brockway
Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Victorian, #Historical Romance
“Fanny will be beyond pleased when she sees you’ve arrived,” Richard continued. “We haven’t seen you since our wedding nearly a year ago. And I know Beryl and Henley will be delighted, when they get here. As will Annabelle. All three of your sisters believe the sun rises and falls on you.”
“Good of them,” Hart cut in. “Where
is
Beryl?”
“Apparently Henley had to remain in town for some sort of political meeting.”
“Annabelle is with them?” Hart asked severely.
“Of course,” Richard assured him. “Beryl keeps the baby of the family well guarded, you may rest assured. Too well guarded, if you ask me. The child is as timid as a barn cat.”
“Richard,” Hart said coolly, “I am sure your colloquialisms mean no disrespect, but I would just as soon you refrain from comparing Annabelle to a cat, barn or otherwise.”
The friendliness faltered on Richard’s homely mien. Perhaps, Hart thought, he was being too hard on the young viscount. Certainly his rebuke would not make Richard—who’d always seemed nervous in his company—any more at ease. But if the next few weeks were to go as he’d planned, it was imperative that Annabelle be seen in only the most gracious and laudatory light: a light designed specifically so that the Duke of Acton would see in
her a young woman magnificently tailored to bear the title Duchess.
“Of course, Perth. Didn’t mean to offend,” Richard said, chewing his lip and unhappily casting about for another topic of conversation. It wasn’t necessary. Perth was quite comfortable with silence.
“Heard you’d arrived back in London but, must say, didn’t expect to find you here. Must say, didn’t expect to find myself here, truth be told. Rather exalted company for a country gent like myself. Can’t think why Fan and I have been included. And you! Didn’t think you went in for these country-house-party affairs.”
“I don’t,” Hart said shortly. “Beryl wrote me in Paris, asking me to come. Apparently Acton is pressing his suit for Annabelle. Beryl expects this house party has been arranged to announce their engagement.”
“Really?” Richard said, beaming happily. “Well, jolly good for old Annabelle.”
Hart ignored Richard’s enthusiasm. “I find it hard to believe that His Grace would act without first speaking to me as head of the family.” The narrowing of Hart’s eyes made clear how he viewed this oversight.
Richard shifted uncomfortably on his feet. “Well, Perth, it is common knowledge that you had a rather extensive investigation of Acton done before you even allowed him through the door to see Annabelle. You did the same to me. ’Spect you did it to old Henley too. Your approval has been assumed.
And Acton is quite one of society’s most eligible bachelors—with the notable exception of yourself.”
“Does Annabelle like Acton?” he asked, ignoring Richard’s arch comment.
“Why—why yes, I think so,” Richard said, considering the question. “I believe she likes him very well. Didn’t see much of society myself this season, but when Fan and I were in town, Annabelle seemed quite happy in Acton’s company.”
Hart nodded, somewhat mollified, and began mounting the stairs. His brother-in-law fell in step beside him.
“Where is your wife?” Hart asked suddenly.
“Oh, Fanny will be down directly she hears you’re arrived. She is not feeling all she might. She’s taking a rest before dinner.”
“Not feeling well?” Hart stopped and turned a chill, inquiring look on Richard. The viscount hitched his shoulders uncomfortably, like a puppy that has been scolded and isn’t sure why. Richard’s awe inspired a feeling of exasperation in Hart. It turned to surprise when the younger man blushed.
“I might as well tell you,” Richard said. “Though Fanny wanted to do so herself. Fanny is increasing.”
“Increasing.”
“She … This Easter she will present me with an heir.” Richard lifted his chin high, his pride apparent.
A flicker of deep pleasure pierced Hart.
A child. His own sister’s baby
. Envy cloaked in anguish suddenly
welled up within him. He extinguished it, rid himself of the unworthy emotion as he extinguished everything he did not want to feel. “Congratulations,” he said sincerely.
“Thank you. We are—we are so damned pleased!”
Hart nearly smiled at Richard’s excitement. But Hart was not given to smiles, so instead he offered Richard his hand, which the younger man grasped in his huge paws and pumped enthusiastically. Once more they climbed the flight of stairs.
Thus far Hart was pleased with both of his sisters’ spouses. Richard was not only heir to a considerable estate, but more importantly, he was an earnest young man, committed to his family home, his farms, and his poultry business. He might not be sophisticated, but he had a kind nature and wished above all things for a household filled with children. Qualities that made him the perfect partner for hearth-loving Fanny.
Henley Wrexhall, Beryl’s husband, had no title behind his name, but he was an up-and-coming young member of Parliament, having taken his seat for the second time in the House of Commons. Clever and astute, his zeal tempered by a practical nature, he was a highly commendable mate for Hart’s eldest sister, Beryl, whose ambition and social graces would best find expression as a politician’s spouse.
That left only Annabelle, his youngest sister. Finding Annabelle a mate had taken a bit more judicious
scrutiny. Annabelle had no obvious requirements in a husband.
She was modest and sweet and charming but her enthusiasms were a mystery to Hart, as were her aspirations. She was ten years his junior, and except for infrequent visits, he’d missed most of her growing up. He did not know Annabelle as well as he did his other two sisters. It was well that she liked Acton. If she fancied herself in love with him, all the better. Better still, he thought sternly, if Acton fancied himself in love with her.
Passing through the massive double doors at the top of the steps, Hart entered the house. The hall was crowded with guests; ladies clutching jewelry cases were frowning at their maidservants; gentleman milled about as they gave instructions to the army of valets regarding various heaps of luggage.
“How large a party is it?” Hart asked Richard.
“Quite a gathering. Upwards of thirty, I believe. Baron Coffey is here with his sons. A few relatives of Acton’s. Some old ex-major, the Dowager’s brother. Name of Sotbey, I believe. The Marchants are due to arrive. A few others.” Richard shrugged.
“I see.”
“I brought one of my lads, er, footmen, along to offer you his services as valet during your stay here, Perth,” Richard said shyly.
Hart forced back a surge of annoyance. Richard could not know how the kindly gesture taunted Hart as a reminder of his own weaknesses.
A valet
to witness his lapses of control?
N
EVER
. “Thank you, but I’ll do quite well on my own. As I always have.”
“Oh. Of course,” Richard said uncomfortably. “I’m afraid it will be some time before they have the room arrangements straightened out. The Dowager Duchess is in the reception hall. She’s had a buffet set out for those arriving. If you would care to join me?” Richard indicated the direction.
Hart nodded but took a moment to casually study the various adornments in the entry, from the gleaming—though now dirt flecked—black-and-white marble parquet flooring to the Beauvais tapestries suspended above the landing of the massive double staircase. A well-tended house. No telltale stains on the clean white walls betrayed the sale of some pricey picture. Ornate silver candelabras and Sèvres bowls brimming with chrysanthemums crowded gleaming ebony tables.
Very good
, he thought, allowing Richard to proceed him into the drawing room,
Acton knows how to keep his wealth
.
“Is Acton here?” he asked. “I wish to meet him.”
“You’ve not met him?” Richard asked, surprised.
“It isn’t necessary to see a man to judge his worth. Indeed, sometimes assumptions based on physical appearances can unduly influence one. I assume he is unexceptional?”
“Ah, yes. Quite unexceptional.”
Hart nodded, scanning the gathered guests
quickly. “You must point him out to me. The elderly woman in the burgundy dress, she is the Dowager Duchess?”
“Yes.”
“If you’d be so kind as to introduce me?”
Richard, who’d just been reaching for a cake on the silver tray a footman was presenting him, quickly withdrew his hand. “Of course.”
Richard led Hart through the throng of irritable- and weary-looking travelers. They stood in little queues engaged in desultory conversation, sipping lemonade and nibbling on toast and cakes, one and all impatient to be appointed their rooms so that they could cleanse themselves and rest before the evening festivities.
The stout old fellow with the grizzled muttonchops and the rigid bearing must be the ex-major. The tall, emaciated-looking gentleman with a luxuriant shock of silver hair who was flanked by two equally thin young men had to be Baron Coffey.
A loud peremptory voice suddenly called out. The footman in front of them started, turning too quickly. The tray he was carrying collided with Hart’s elbow and the champagne flutes slipped across the smooth silver surface. Reflexively, Hart grabbed the tray with one hand and caught the unbalanced footman’s elbow with the other.
“Have a care, man,” he snapped at the flustered servant, steadying him. He brushed at the wine droplets dotting his sleeve and tensed. Someone was watching him. He looked up.
A woman in a dun-colored riding outfit on the far side of the room was regarding him. She was openly amused. Her face—a winsome arrangement of large, dark eyes; slender, straight nose; and full, soft lips—was alive with mirth. He could not tell the color of her hair, hidden as it was by a short black veil fluttering from the brim of the fashionable hat she wore at a jaunty angle. And he was too far away to be able to discern the color of those heavy-lidded eyes. He suddenly realized that if he was staring at her, she was doing the same to him.
Brazen creature. She did not even pretend that she was not looking. She met his gaze boldly. Apparently no pretty sense of modesty went along with that pretty face.
For a second more their gazes locked, and then she broke off her study of him and turned back to the young man at her side—one of the Baron’s heirs, by the reedy look of him. From the dust that powdered the black pleats hemming her sweeping skirts, it was clear that she had traveled as hard and long as any of the other guests. How, then, did she contrive to look so fresh?
The man beside her bent closer. She turned her head, listening attentively, and then she laughed. Her lips parted, her eyes crinkled at the corners. Hart watched, telling himself he did so indifferently. His sisters had been trained to laugh decorously; a musical, closed-mouthed trill. This woman’s mouth opened, revealing a glimpse of even white teeth, a dimple—
“Hart?”
Startled out of his preoccupation, Hart looked at Richard.
“Shall we?” Richard motioned toward the Dowager Duchess.
“Lead on,” Hart said, glancing back at the unknown woman.
She was watching him again, and when she saw that he was looking at her, she feigned a start of shock, as though she’d read his mind about her lack of decorum and it amused her. With what could only be called a playful toss of her head, she pursed her lips and silently mouthed a
tch tch
of reproach in his direction.
How dare she mock him? Without giving her the satisfaction of a response, Hart turned, following the direction Richard had taken through the crowd.
Richard was waiting for him beside the Dowager Duchess. She was a tiny, ancient woman; wizened, white haired, with deep-set, opaque eyes beneath tissue-thin lids. There were faint circles of rouge on her sallow cheeks and the age-narrowed line of her lips could not be hidden beneath a coat of pink salve.
Richard cleared his throat. “Your Grace, may I present Hart Moreland, Earl of Perth?”
“Perth, how pleasant of you to come,” the Dowager Duchess said in a raspy soprano. “We feel quite honored to have secured your presence. Apparently, from what my son tells me, few do.”
There was an edge of irony in the polite words and instantly Hart reassessed the Dowager Duchess.
She might look like a superannuated porcelain doll, but there was intelligence here. She would make a worthy opponent—and a worthier advocate.
“The honor is all mine, madam.”
She allowed him to carry one heavily veined, beringed hand to his lips. “We have grown quite fond of your young sister, Perth.”
“I am pleased to hear it. I trust she has made herself pleasant?” he asked, confident of the answer.
“Very pleasant. But how could one fail to appreciate so agreeable a young lady?”
“Indeed. I am gratified.”
She was about to add another comment when a small commotion near the entry caught her attention.
“Fie!” Her thin lips pressed into a tighter line, smearing her lip salve. “The Countess Marchant, no doubt. Demanding immediate attention. I expect I’d best go do what I can about soothing her offended dignity. Gentlemen.” Both Hart and Richard snapped sharply forward at the waist as she left.
Hart straightened slowly, his thoughts on the Dowager Duchess’s veiled remark about his exclusivity. He had been careful, always circumspect, always proper. In the past five years he had lived his life so that not one aspect of his behavior would reflect poorly on his sisters—or their futures.
Richard fidgeted, craning his neck this way
and that as he looked around and then leaning close. “Who is she?” he asked.
“Who?”
“The woman you were staring at.”
Hart tensed, his gaze following Richard’s to where the elegantly garbed woman appeared and disappeared among the ever-shifting, ever-increasing throng. She moved too swiftly, he thought.
Her pale hands sketched fleeting stories in the air, her head dipped and tilted—quick, bright movements—as she listened and replied to those about her. Yet, he allowed, there was nothing awkward in her haste. She was as graceful as a dancer. No, nothing so choreographed as a dance. Perhaps some agile forest creature. Some forest prey, he amended harshly, too feckless to realize its danger and thus happy to gambol about the forest.