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While You Were Spying (Regency Spies Book 0)

Page 22

by Shana Galen


  “What’s wrong?” His expression was concerned, mystified.

  “I want you to stop,” she repeated, trying to convince herself.

  “Cara.” He moved to enfold her in his arms again, but she ducked away.

  “No!”

  The confusion in his expression snapped away. He held up his hands, palms out. “What did I do?”

  “Nothing. You didn’t do anything, and that’s the problem.” She covered her face with her hands, wishing she could be content with the meager part of himself he offered her and knowing he would never give her all she wanted from him. She pressed her fingers to her throbbing temples.

  “Nothing has changed between us, and, unless it does, I don’t want you to touch me again.” Her gaze met his. “Ever.”

  His eyes hardened, and she saw the pain her statement had caused him. With a shock, she realized he’d been vulnerable a moment before. The stab of anguish in her chest at the knowledge she’d caused him pain was almost unbearable, but she could not go back. Nor did she want to. It had to be this way.

  “Very well.” He turned away from her.

  “That’s all you want to say?” she blurted out. “Very well?” She hadn’t expected him to proclaim his undying devotion, but crass disregard was a slap.

  “You ask too much, Francesca.” He rounded on her, and she saw the tight fury rippling through him.

  In a whirl of anger, she spun around, tore open the door and stomped down the hall. Heedless of the early hour, she slammed her bedchamber door closed behind her. When she’d gone to Ethan’s room, the rain had slowed to a mere drizzle, now the clouds opened up again and outside her window the rain crashed down in cold sheets. Apparently the sun had no intention of making an appearance that day. And, Francesca sank onto her bed, there was absolutely no hope of a rainbow.

  Twenty-three

  “Hell!” Ethan thrust himself into the ancient chair. It groaned, and for the fiftieth time he thought of having one of Brigham’s footmen bring him another.

  Glancing at the paper crumpled in his hands, Ethan swore again. Alex’s letter confirmed that a new shipment of British arms had been delivered to the French, and the smugglers they’d been investigating were no longer in Hampshire. Ethan hoped when he saw his brother tonight, Alex would have new information.

  Ethan itched to go back to work, scour London and Paris for the smugglers and their traitorous leader. Instead, he was late for his own betrothal ball. He couldn’t even call off the ball because he couldn’t be certain a smuggler was responsible for Francesca’s attack. The timing of Nat’s attack was after he thought the smugglers long gone. Had one stayed behind? Was he wrong to suspect them all along?

  He still held out hope the attacker might make another attempt on Francesca at the ball.

  Thoughts of the long night ahead made him grit his teeth, but he rose, tried to ignore the chair’s squeal, and headed into Hell. It would all be worth it when he caught Francesca’s attacker.

  It was after eight, but the light from the house and the lanterns on the line of arriving carriages lit the lawn as though it were midday. Ethan skirted the busy main entrance and angled for the quieter south front. Once inside, he made a rare stop to right his cravat and coat.

  Despite Pocket’s attempts to persuade him to don a striped green-and-gold coat with matching waistcoat and fawn breeches, he’d chosen to wear his usual conservative black attire. Now, he straightened his simple white cravat and hoped Pocket wasn’t lying in wait with one of his infamous bristle brushes.

  Ethan ambled along the halls, greeting guests and avoiding the harried servants. He recognized several of his acquaintances and was beginning to think the evening might not be torture after all, when he entered the ballroom.

  Clearly Lady Brigham had outdone herself, and in a fashion only she could manage. The room glittered, sparkling gold everywhere he looked. The theme the viscountess had chosen was, not surprisingly, Italy. Like gold-flecked sentries, replicas of the Coliseum, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and the Sistine Chapel stood guard around the room. Replicated sculptures and paintings by the Italian masters—Michelangelo, Raphael, da Vinci, among others—cluttered the walls. At the top of the room, the small orchestra was hidden, not behind ornamental shrubbery, as was the usual custom, but sequestered behind a lavish grotto, overflowing with dense foliage.

  Plants and flowers toppled over each other, vying for space. The profusion of roses in every hue choked him with the strength of their scent, and interspersed among the roses were lilies and irises, daffodils and tulips. The trees, plants, and vines of the grotto were real as well. And though he’d never planned a ball, Ethan knew that it must have cost Lady Brigham a fortune to obtain the fresh flowers and plants during the cold English November.

  Ethan shook his head and made his way through the ballroom to the supper room. It took him perhaps a quarter of an hour to navigate the short distance; he was stopped time and again by Lady Brigham’s guests. He knew all of them—Lady Sefton, Lord and Lady Osterley, the Marquess of Alton, Baron Montague. Even the Prime Minister, William Pitt, was expected.

  Patience now strained to the breaking point, and still hours of merriment remaining, he glanced once, then again, at the lavish feast tumbling down the endless table. The massive piece of furniture looked ready to collapse under the weight of its offerings. Ethan almost gaped at the piles of food. There were mounds of fruit—mostly fresh, not preserves—strawberries, pineapple, apricots, peaches. Cherry water and pineapple cream ices, sweetbreads, several chocolate soufflés, and, Francesca would be pleased, dozens of pastries and sweets—sugarplums, candied violets, cakes, pies, meringues, and tarts of every variety, including chocolate—vied with the other dishes for the choice positions.

  One of the footmen, in new blue-and-gold livery, offered him a glass of champagne, and Ethan gulped it down, then took another.

  Ethan’s gaze swept the room. More guests had arrived—Lady Bessborough held court just outside the supper room, Charles James Fox passed by, already in a deep political discussion with Lord Brigham, and Ethan thought he saw Lord and Lady Holland as well as Lady Melbourne, making their way to the ballroom.

  It was the middle of a wet, cold, dreary November, and yet the most august personages in the country had left their warm residences and flocked to Hampshire to attend Lady Brigham’s betrothal ball. He didn’t know why the fact should surprise him. After all, Francesca was the daughter of a prominent viscount, and he was a marquess.

  What did surprise him was how much of a fool he was. In several weeks these same eminent guests would be sitting in their drawing rooms reading The Morning Chronicle and gossiping over the latest on-dit—the abrupt end of the Dashing-Winterbourne betrothal. It would take machinations and maneuverings, but he had to make certain Francesca emerged unscathed.

  He scanned the room again. It was packed with people, and not one of them was the person he wanted to see. Where the devil was his betrothed? She’d barely acknowledged him the past week, but surely she’d attend her own betrothal ball.

  Ethan pushed his way out of the room, ever vigilant for any guests who did not look as though they belonged. He spotted Alex, who looked bored. The earl shook his head, indicating he’d seen nothing. He nodded to Alex, then spoke briefly to several guests before squeezing through the crowded doorway into the hall.

  “Che buona fortuna!” Lady Brigham fastened onto his arm. “There you are, Lord Winterbourne! We have been looking everywhere for you.”

  And he’d been watching for her as well, hoping to avoid her. Too late for that now.

  Lady Brigham wore a scarlet gown trimmed with gold, and the huge red and gold plumes on her headdress poked him in the face as she turned her head about. “Look at all these people,” she hissed. “I was afraid the rain would keep them away, but they have all come!” She beamed at him, and Ethan tried to smile back.

  “Francesca is with her padre in the ballroom. Are you ready to make”—she paused, fingers ti
ghtening on his sleeve—“the announcement?” Her voice was breathy with excitement.

  She didn’t wait for him to respond, merely tugged at his sleeve to encourage him in the direction of the ballroom. He went to his fate without protest. Best to get it over and done with.

  The guests milling in the ballroom were all smiles, faces full of eager anticipation. Ethan inclined his head, spoke to several, and then in mid-stride he stumbled.

  Standing at the top of the room, framed by the spill of roses and greenery from the grotto, stood Francesca. Her arm was linked with her father’s, and if it had not been, Ethan might not have believed it was she.

  She was exquisite—wilderness tamed—in an ivory tunic dress of white crepe over white sarcenet and all trimmed with gold. Her glossy chocolate curls were pulled into an intricately twisted coil at the back of her head. A few rings of chocolate flowed from the center of the twist, arranged flawlessly. Her hair was perfect, nothing at all like the unrestrained jumble of tangles he was used to. He was almost disappointed, until he noticed a few recalcitrant tendrils escaping to frame the milky white skin of her face and neck.

  That was the Francesca he liked.

  The style of the times dictated elaborate headwear and ornate jewelry, but Francesca wore neither. Ethan could see, as he neared her, that her only embellishment was a pair of small gold earrings with golden stones, most likely a gift from her parents. Ethan wished he had thought to buy her something. Suddenly he wanted to see something of his on her.

  Francesca’s dark eyes never left him as he crossed the hushed room to meet her. It seemed hours before he reached her, days before her father relinquished her arm, and weeks before she offered him her gloved hand. He took her hand, noting she was trembling. He bowed and kissed her gloved fingers, giving her a quick wink as he took his place beside her.

  Her father said something, no doubt formally announcing their betrothal, but Ethan didn’t hear a word. He couldn’t take his gaze from her. Encased in white and shimmering gold, she was an angel. Albeit, with those dusky eyes and the fall of that dark heavy hair, she was probably the most sensuous angel he’d ever imagined.

  An intense flash of desire shafted through him. The miserable week spent without her only heightened his desire. He wanted her, his enchantress. This was a woman who’d declared her love to him only days ago, making her heart vulnerable to him. And now this same woman stood before him, indeed before all the world, and made herself vulnerable to rumor and innuendo, made herself vulnerable once again to her attacker, simply because he’d asked her to. Because he’d insisted it was the only way to protect her.

  Because she trusted him.

  She loved him, and for the first time since Victoria, Ethan wanted to believe in love. He wanted to believe that this woman was different, that this woman would never betray him.

  The music started and Ethan was vaguely aware all eyes were on them. Even Francesca watched him expectantly. Forgetting for the moment that he detested dancing, detested balls and Society, he led her onto the dance floor. The other couples chosen to begin the dance also took their places, and Ethan swept her into his arms, thinking as he did so, that no matter what else happened, he would protect her. Nothing mattered as much as her safety, not Grenville, not France, not Victoria or George Leigh. Nothing else mattered because he could no longer deny, no longer wanted to deny, that he was in love with her.

  Completely, utterly, inexplicably enchanted, captivated, enthralled, but most of all, in love with her.

  Ethan turned Francesca on the dance floor, turning the idea in his mind as he did so, waiting for the feeling of dread to settle in his stomach. It didn’t. He felt easy, free, as though this was where he should be—putting his palm to hers when required, resting his hand lightly at her waist when the form called for it, eyeing her hungrily when she moved away from him, then taking her hand in his when she returned.

  She was flushed, her breath coming in little snatches that had nothing to do with the exertions of the dance. He’d seen her walk three miles without tiring in the least. She was reacting to his seduction. And he realized that he was seducing her—silently and effectively and before the entire room. One look at her and he knew she wanted him, knew everyone else could see it as well, and he had yet to exchange a word with her.

  They’d barely spoken in the last week, but in that moment he couldn’t fathom what they’d argued over. Whatever it had been, he’d make it right.

  “You’re an excellent dancer,” he said when she turned to him after a curtsy to the peer on her left.

  She looked startled at the sound of his voice. “Not really. I believe I’ve tripped over my gown at least three times already.”

  She glided away from him, and he took the hand of some nondescript lady, stepping forward and back with her, then reaching once again for Francesca.

  “I didn’t notice,” he said when he held her hand again. “All I see is your beauty.”

  She blushed, her eyes widening and her lips parting enticingly in surprise. His felt his desire for her double.

  “Don’t say things like that.” For the moment they were immobile, facing each other as the couples at the end of the line filed past them.

  “Why not?”

  “You know why,” she hissed as a couple paraded past them.

  “Tonight I don’t care.” They moved together again, as the forms of the dance dictated. “I propose we call a truce, forget our differences, at least for tonight.” Or longer, he added silently.

  She pursed her lips, considering. She danced away from him, then gave him a stern look when she spun back. “For tonight.” She sounded like a strict schoolmistress — a disciplinarian trapped in the body of a deity. “This will probably be my only betrothal ball. I suppose I should at least try to get on well with my betrothed.” She smiled at him, playful.

  His desire flared.

  “At the very least,” he answered.

  She stepped forward and, taking advantage of their momentary closeness, he put his lips to her ear. “I want you.”

  He stepped away from her, and she from him, and this time he did see her stumble. He barely suppressed his smile of satisfaction. He took her hand and, as the music ended, gave her a roguish smile.

  “Another dance?”

  “Not just now.” She sounded out of breath.

  His grin widened. “You’re breathless. Let me fetch you a refreshment.”

  “Lemonade,” she breathed.

  He raised an eyebrow. “I think we can do better than that.”

  Protocol dictated he fetch the refreshments for her, but he wasn’t about to relinquish her hand or give any of the dandies and young blades present an opportunity to ask her to dance. Locking her hand in his, he led her to the supper room, nodding cordially at the dozens of well-wishers, but not stopping to speak with any of them. He was calculating how soon he could see her alone.

  He stopped a passing footman and took two glasses of champagne, handing her one as they entered the supper room, where they were met with more congratulations. Francesca made valiant attempts to speak with each of their guests, but Ethan dragged her away. He was not in a mood to share.

  Picking up a plate of Lady Brigham’s new china, he inventoried the table again, seeking Francesca’s favorites.

  “Everyone must think we’re incredibly rude.” She gestured to Lady Ennerdale. The woman was standing with her mouth open, as a moment before Ethan had hauled Francesca from the elderly woman’s side in the middle of her felicitations speech.

  “More likely, everyone will think we can’t wait to be alone together.” He gave her a lingering look. “Not far from the truth.”

  “You shouldn’t speak so,” she scolded, following him down the length of the table toward the desserts.

  He turned his attention from the feast for a moment, raised one of her imprisoned fingers to his lips, and murmured, “I do a lot of things I shouldn’t.”

  She took a quick breath and her eyes da
rkened. He held her gaze a moment longer then began loading the plate with delicacies—strawberries, pineapple, sugarplums, and a slice of cake.

  “Good Lord!” she said peering over his shoulder. “I hope you will help me eat some of that.” She was laughing. That at least was a good sign.

  He tossed her a grin. “Don’t count on it. I’ll wager your mother didn’t let you eat anything all day.”

  She shrugged, and he knew he was right.

  “I thought so. No arguments. You’re to eat everything on this plate, including”—he added two of her favorite chocolate tarts—“these.”

  He offered the heavily-burdened dish to her, but she didn’t take it. Her face had drained of color and she was clutching her hands together so tightly that the skin where her fingers pressed was stark white. Behind them, someone cleared his throat.

  “I see you haven’t lost your taste for chocolate tarts.”

  Twenty-four

  Ethan stared at Benedict Malevent, the Earl of Roxbury. The earl offered a chilly smile.

  “What are you doing here?” Francesca’s voice broke slightly on the last word, and she cleared her throat, putting her small white hand to her neck.

  Roxbury took in her every agitated movement. Her former betrothed smiled, outwardly reassuring, but the expression, tight as the man’s posture, added no warmth to his ice-blue eyes.

  “I was invited, of course,” Roxbury answered. “I thought you knew.” His tone seeped smugness. The man was obviously pleased that his presence had taken her by surprise.

  “Oh.” Francesca scooted closer to Ethan, and though he angled his body to welcome her, he kept his stare on Roxbury.

  He knew the man, of course. In London, they moved in similar circles, belonged to some of the same clubs. He’d never taken much notice of the earl. Never had a reason. But now he found he loathed the man.

  Ethan could see why women, why Francesca, would find Roxbury handsome. The earl was impeccably dressed, all in black. The dark color emphasized his unusual eyes—pale blue, almost watery in color. They gave him the appearance of looking through, rather than at, those he addressed. His brown hair was carefully styled to appear tousled, a look that contrasted with the stiff formal manner in which he held himself. He’d clasped his hands behind his back, but now that he brought them forward to take one of Francesca’s, Ethan noticed the man wore black leather gloves instead of the usual white silk deemed appropriate for formal affairs.

 

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