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Stormswept

Page 30

by Sabrina Jeffries


  “Besides,” she went on, “that is the purpose of St. George’s, is it not? To provide a place where gentlemen can determine the suitability of various suitors to women?”

  “To their female relations,” he said tersely. “Not to the friends of their female relations.”

  Clarissa stared up at him. “She has no man to protect her. And I very much fear all of the signs lead to her having found someone unsuitable, which is why she’s behaving oddly. I don’t want to see her end up trapped in a disastrous marriage. Or worse.”

  They both knew what the “worse” was, since Clarissa had gone through it herself. Damn. He might not have been her guardian for years now, but she still knew how to tug at his conscience.

  “It would be a very great favor to me,” Clarissa went on. “I tell you what—let me just introduce you. You can spend a few moments talking to her and see if I’m right to be alarmed. If you think I’m overly concerned, you may leave here with my blessing and never bother with it again. But if you think I might be right . . .”

  “Fine. But you owe me for this. And I promise I will call in my debt down the road.” He grinned at her. “At the very least, you must introduce me to some buxom widow with loose morals and an eye for fun.”

  “Hmm,” she said, rolling her eyes. “I’ll have to speak to my brother-in-law about that. He has more connections among that sort than I do.”

  “No doubt.” Her brother-in-law used to use “that sort” of women as models in his paintings. “But I don’t need you to talk to Keane. So I suppose I’ll settle for your promise not to be offended if I also refuse your invitation to your house party.”

  “There was a possibility of your accepting? Shocking. But since I’ve never seen you attend a house party in your life—unless it was to some bachelor’s hunting box—I didn’t bother to invite you.”

  “Good,” he said, though he was mildly annoyed. Marriage had obviously changed her. A year ago, she wouldn’t have stopped plaguing him until she’d convinced him to attend. Surely she had not given up on him already.

  Unless this was her sly way of once again trying to get him married off. He’d best tread carefully. “So where is this woman you wish me to meet?”

  “She was right over there by the—” Clarissa scowled. “Oh, dear, that’s her by the fountain, but what the devil are those fellows doing with her?”

  She stalked off across the lawn and he followed, surveying the group she headed for: a woman surrounded by three young gentlemen who appeared to be—fishing?—in the fountain.

  He recognized the men. One was a drunk, one a well-known rakehell, and the third a notorious gambler by the name of Pitford. All three were fortune hunters.

  No wonder Clarissa worried about her friend.

  He turned his attention to the chit, who had her back to him and was dressed in a blue-and-green plaid gown with a pink-and-yellow striped shawl.

  Good God. Any woman who dressed that way was bound to be a heedless young twit, and he disliked that sort of woman. Unless she was sitting on his lap in a brothel, in which case intelligence hardly mattered.

  As they approached the group, Clarissa said, “What on earth is going on here?”

  The jovial chap with cheeks already reddened from too much champagne said, “The clasp broke on Miss Trevor’s bracelet and it dropped into the fountain, so we’re trying to get it out to keep her from ruining her sleeves.”

  “I would prefer to ruin my entire gown than see you further damage my bracelet with your poking about,” the chit said, her voice surprisingly low and throaty. “If you gentlemen would just let me pass, I’d fish it out myself.”

  “Nonsense, we can do it,” the other two said as they fought over the stick wielded by the drunk. In the process, they managed to poke Miss Trevor in the arm.

  “Ow! ” she cried and attempted to snatch the stick. “For pity’s sake, gentlemen . . .”

  Warren had seen enough. “Stand aside, lads.” He pushed through the arses. Shoving his sleeve up as far as it would go, he thrust his hand into the fountain and fished out the bracelet. Then he turned to offer it to the young lady. “I assume this is yours, miss.”

  When her startled gaze shot to him, he froze. She had the loveliest blue eyes he’d ever seen.

  Though her gown was even more outrageous from the front than from the back, the rest of her was unremarkable. Tall and slender, with no breasts to speak of, she had decent skin, a sharp nose, and a rather impudent-looking mouth. She was pretty enough, but by no means a beauty. And not his sort. At all.

  Yet those eyes . . .

  Fringed with long black lashes, they glittered like stars against an early-evening sky, making desire tighten low in his belly. Utterly absurd.

  Until her lips curled up into a sparkling smile that matched the incandescence of her eyes. “Thank you, sir. The bracelet was a gift from my late brother. Though I fear you may have ruined your coat retrieving it.”

  “Nonsense.” He extended the bracelet to her. “My valet is very good at his job and will easily put it right.”

  As she took the bracelet from him, an odd expression crossed her face. “You’re left-handed.”

  He arched one brow. “How clever of you to notice.”

  “How clever of you to be so. I’m left-handed, too. So I generally notice another left-hander because there aren’t that many of us around.”

  “Or none that will lay claim to the affliction, anyway.” And he’d never before met a lady who was.

  “True.” She slipped the bracelet into her reticule with a twinkle in her eye. “I’ve always been told it’s quite gauche to be left-handed.”

  “Or at the very least, a sign of subservience to the devil.”

  “Ah yes. Though the last time I paid a visit to Lucifer, he pretended not to know me. What about you?”

  “I know him only to speak to at parties. He’s quite busy these days. He has trouble fitting me into his schedule.”

  “I can well imagine.” Pointedly ignoring the three men watching them in bewilderment, she added, “He has all those innocents to tempt and gamblers to ruin and drinkers to intoxicate. However would he find time to waste on a fellow like you, who comes to the aid of a lady so readily? You’re clearly not wicked enough to merit his interest.”

  “You’d be surprised,” he said dryly. “Besides, Lucifer gains more pleasure in corrupting decent gentlemen than wicked ones.” And this had to be the strangest conversation he’d ever had with a debutante.

  “Excellent point. Well, then, next time you see him, give him my regards.” She cast a side glance at their companions. “He seems to have been overzealous in his activities of late.”

  When the gentlemen looked offended, Clarissa said hastily, “Don’t be silly. The devil is only as busy as people allow him to be, and we shall not allow him to loiter around here, shall we, Warren?” She slid her hand into the crook of his elbow.

  “No, indeed. That would be a sin.”

  “And so are my poor manners,” Clarissa went on. She smiled at her friend. “I’ve forgotten to introduce the two of you. Miss Trevor, may I present my cousin, the Marquess of Knightford and rescuer of bracelets. Warren, this is my good friend, Miss Delia Trevor, the cleverest woman I know despite her gauche left hand.”

  Cynically, he waited for Miss Trevor’s smile to brighten as she realized what a prime catch he was. So he was surprised when her smile faded to politeness instead. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, sir. Clarissa has told me much about you.”

  He narrowed his gaze on her. “I’m sure she has. My cousin loves gossip.”

  “No more than you love to provide fodder for it, from what I’ve heard.”

  “I do enjoy giving the gossips something to talk about.”

  “No doubt they appreciate it. Otherwise they’d be limited to poking fun at spinsters, and then I would never get any rest.”

  He snorted. “I’d hardly consider you a spinster, madam. My cousin tells me this is your fi
rst season.”

  “And hopefully my last.” As the other fellows protested that, she said, “Now, now, gentlemen. You know I’m not the society sort.” She fixed Warren with a cool look. “I do better with less lofty companions. You, my lord, are far too worldly and sophisticated for me.”

  “I somehow doubt that,” he said.

  “I hear the dancing starting up,” Clarissa cut in as she released his arm. “Perhaps you two can puzzle it out if you stand up together for this set.”

  He had to stifle his laugh. Clarissa wasn’t usually so clumsy in her social machinations. She must really like this chit. He was beginning to understand why. Miss Trevor was rather entertaining.

  “Excellent idea.” He held out his hand to the young lady. “Shall we?”

  “Now see here,” Pitford interrupted. “Miss Trevor has already promised this dance to me.”

  “It’s true,” she told Warren. “I’m promised for all the dances this afternoon.”

  Hmm. Warren turned to Pitford. “Lord Fulkham was looking for you earlier, old chap. He’s in the card room, I believe. I’ll just head there and tell him he can find you dancing with Miss Trevor.”

  Pitford blanched. “I . . . er . . . cannot . . . that is . . .” He bowed to Miss Trevor. “Forgive me, madam, but I shall have to relinquish this dance to his lordship. I forgot a prior engagement.”

  The fellow scurried off for the gates as fast as his tight pantaloons would carry him. Probably because the wretch owed Fulkham a substantial sum of money.

  Pitford’s withdrawal was all it took for the other two gentlemen to excuse themselves, leaving Warren alone with his cousin and Miss Trevor.

  With a smile, he again offered his arm to Clarissa’s friend. “It appears that you are now free to dance. Shall we?”

  To his shock, the impudent female hesitated. But she obviously knew better than to refuse a marquess and quickly recovered, taking the arm he offered.

  As they headed toward the lawn where the dancing was taking place, Miss Trevor said, “Do you always get your way in everything, Lord Knightford?”

  “I certainly try. What good is being a marquess if I can’t make use of the privilege from time to time?”

  “Even if it means bullying some poor fellow into fleeing a perfectly good party?”

  He shot her a long glance. “Pitford is deeply in debt and looking for a rich wife. I should think you would thank me.”

  She shrugged. “I know what Pitford is. I know what they all are. It matters naught to me. I have no interest in any of them.”

  Pulling her into the swirl of dancers, he said, “Because you prefer some fellow you left behind at home? Or because you have your sights set elsewhere in town?”

  Her expression grew guarded. “For a man of such lofty consequence, you are surprisingly interested in my affairs. Why is that?”

  “I am merely dancing with the friend of my cousin,” he said smoothly. “And for a woman who has ‘no interest’ in the three fortune hunters you were just with, you certainly found a good way to get them vying for your attention.”

  She blinked. “I have no idea what you mean.”

  “The clasp on that bracelet wasn’t broken, Miss Trevor.” When she colored and glanced away, he knew he’d hit his mark. “So I can only think that you had some other purpose for dropping it into the fountain.”

  As they came together in the dance, he lowered his voice. “And if it wasn’t to engage those men’s interest in you personally, I have to wonder what other reason you might have to risk losing such a sentimental heirloom. Care to enlighten me?”

  © Jessi Blakely for Tamara Lackey Photography

  SABRINA JEFFRIES is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of several Regency-set historical romance series, including the Royal Brotherhood, The School for Heiresses, The Hellions of Halstead Hall, The Duke’s Men, and The Sinful Suitors. Whatever time is not spent writing in a coffee-fueled haze is spent traveling with her husband and adult autistic son or indulging in one of her passions: jigsaw puzzles, chocolate, music, and costume parties. With more than eight million books in print in twenty languages, the North Carolina author never regrets tossing aside a budding career in academics for the sheer joy of writing fun fiction, and hopes that one day a book of hers will end up saving the world. She always dreams big.

  FOR MORE ON THIS AUTHOR: authors.simonandschuster.com/Sabrina-Jeffries

  MEET THE AUTHORS, WATCH VIDEOS AND MORE AT

  SimonandSchuster.com

  Also by Sabrina Jeffries

  THE SINFUL SUITORS SERIES

  The Study of Seduction

  What Happens Under the Mistletoe

  (with Karen Hawkins, Candace Camp, and Meredith Duran)

  The Art of Sinning

  THE DUKE’S MEN SERIES

  If the Viscount Falls

  How the Scoundrel Seduces

  When the Rogue Returns

  What the Duke Desires

  THE HELLIONS OF HALSTEAD HALL SERIES

  A Lady Never Surrenders

  To Wed a Wild Lord

  How to Woo a Reluctant Lady

  A Hellion in Her Bed

  The Truth About Lord Stoneville

  THE SCHOOL FOR HEIRESSES SERIES

  Wed Him Before You Bed Him

  Don’t Bargain with the Devil

  Snowy Night with a Stranger

  (with Jane Feather and Julia London)

  Let Sleeping Rogues Lie

  Beware a Scot’s Revenge

  The School for Heiresses

  (with Julia London, Liz Carlyle, and Renee Bernard)

  Only a Duke Will Do

  Never Seduce a Scoundrel

  THE ROYAL BROTHERHOOD SERIES

  One Night with a Prince

  To Pleasure a Prince

  In the Prince’s Bed

  BY SABRINA JEFFRIES WRITING AS DEBORAH MARTIN

  Silver Deceptions

  By Love Unveiled

  We hope you enjoyed reading this Pocket Books eBook.

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

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  Interior design by Leydiana Rodríguez

  Cover design by Min Choi

  Cover illustration by Jon Paul Ferrara

  ISBN 978-1-4516-6554-3

  ISBN 978-1-5011-3099-1 (ebook)

 

 

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