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This Earl Is on Fire

Page 11

by Vivienne Lorret


  “Vale, I thought you were giving Boswick a tour,” Liam said, pressing a hand over the latch and debating whether or not to open the dressing chamber door.

  During the final leg of the tour of Wolford House, Vale and Boswick had begun a discussion on honeybees. Since Vale was a scientist by nature, he was no doubt thrilled to have found a fellow beehive enthusiast. The only interest Liam had in honey was how it would taste on Adeline’s lips. And that was certainly not an appropriate topic to discuss in front of her father.

  Liam wanted to linger here, hoping that the mere thought of her would soothe him as much as her voice seemed to have done thus far. Instead of a moment of solitude, however, Vale found him.

  Nevertheless, his cousin had a way of taking charge that was not invasive. Not usually, at least.

  Although, Liam had been relieved to find Vale here this morning. It had allowed Liam the opportunity to see to business matters and not neglect Boswick. Not only that, but Liam was moved by Vale’s response upon seeing his injuries. His stoic, analytical cousin rarely allowed his countenance to reveal his thoughts, but the shock and concern had been evident in his gruff manner.

  “Your housekeeper is giving Boswick a tour of the gallery instead,” Vale said. “I wanted to speak to you privately.”

  “You sound rather ominous, Cousin. What is there to speak of that you do not already know? I have informed you and Hollycott everything I remember from the attack.”

  “I wish you had informed me sooner. Though perhaps the reason you did not is partly my fault. I should have done something to breech the barrier that our family set in place during our boyhoods. I thought the matter had sorted itself over the years.”

  Liam had not made an attempt either. The truth was, it was difficult for him to form attachments. After his father’s death, he’d been so lonely and broken that he’d feared loss more than he desired companionship. That all changed when he was seventeen, when a debutante and her family seemed to see right through him and welcomed him as one of their own.

  Yet after the deception, he found it difficult to trust anyone enough to close the distance he kept between himself and others. Though he should have made an exception for his own family.

  Right now, it was too much to think about. Liam felt pain stab at his temples. And damn it all, he missed the quietude of Boswick’s residence.

  “Stop this, Vale. I insist.” Yanking open the door, he squinted and wished he’d closed the drapes in his bedchamber. “I never cared that you became the duke. The title was rightfully yours to begin with, and so there was never a need to speak of it. There. Now that we’ve settled things, please tell me why you’ve suddenly become a loquacious ninny who cares a farthing what I think.”

  “Ivy mentioned that my”—Vale straightened his shoulders and tugged at the hem of his waistcoat—“regard for the people closest to me is not always evident.”

  Shaking his head in pity, Liam crossed the room to close one of the drapes. Sadly, it seemed as if he and Vale had this in common as well. But at least Liam held himself together with a measure of dignity. In contrast, his cousin was utterly henpecked.

  “Well, you may inform your wife that I am rather perceptive.” Then Liam paused, thinking that there might also be another reason his cousin was not behaving as usual. Vale had been married nearly four months now. “Congratulations on the expected arrival of your heir.”

  “How did you—”

  When his cousin’s brows lifted, Liam shrugged. “I’ve seen that look of terror in the eyes of other men when their wives were in confinement.”

  Vale’s shoulders relaxed and he offered a nod, not disputing Liam’s observation. “The physician confirmed our own suspicions yesterday. By my calculations, the child should arrive—Why did you laugh just now?”

  Liam couldn’t help himself. It was so typical of Vale to put everything into an equation. He’d even come up with a mathematical equation for marriage. The ton was still talking about Vale’s Marriage Formula and how he’d used it to find his own bride. What most people did not understand was that it hadn’t happened like that at all. After all, it was obvious that Vale had been smitten with Ivy from the first moment he’d met her. He never needed a formula.

  Liam shook his head. “Oh, nothing. I just had a glimpse of young Northcliff’s life, scribbling calculations over the nursery walls.”

  His mocking prediction made Vale grin broadly before he remembered himself and resumed his more typical austere expression. “Regardless of the turn our conversation has taken, I sought you out for a reason.” He straightened his shoulders once more. “I am here to inquire what you intend to do about Miss Pimm.”

  At the unexpected mention of her, a jolt shot through Liam. “I intend to do nothing.”

  “Surely, being the rather perceptive individual that you are, you realize the harm you caused Lord and Lady Boswick and Miss Pimm. While I have not met his wife and daughter, Boswick seems unconcerned about your reputation. He is an intelligent, amiable fellow, but I fear he is unused to the ways of the ton.” Vale released a slow exhale, laden with disappointment. “As it stands, Miss Pimm will have no chance of being accepted into society or in finding a husband.”

  Liam gritted his teeth against the bitter tang of guilt at the back of his throat. “That is why I asked Aunt Edith for assistance. She invited them to the opera the last evening.”

  “Considering your reputation, it should not surprise you to learn that, even after our aunt’s intervention, speculation is running rampant, and none of it favorable for Miss Pimm.”

  Damn. “Society is full of fools. We both know that.”

  “There are whispers that the family is full of gullible, naïve country folk,” Vale said. “Because they have never visited London before or entered—what many believe to be—proper society, they are seen as easily seduced.”

  Liam swallowed, remembering last night. “I have been injured. Let’s just say that I haven’t been up to the task of seducing an entire family. Give me a few more days and then perhaps—”

  “The ton does not know the extent of your injuries. Many are already whispering that there never was an attack upon you. They believe that you are holed up in a den of iniquity.”

  “Which would be preferable to whatever you have planned for me, no doubt.” Liam cast a gaze of longing to his bed. He needed sleep. He needed quiet. He needed just one more taste of Adeline’s lips . . . He shook his head to dislodge that errant thought. “I can only assume that is the reason you are here. You want me to make an appearance.”

  “It so happens that I’m not the only one,” Vale said, withdrawing a silver emblazoned invitation from his inside pocket. “Thayne sent this. The messenger explained that our friend had the audacity to wait for Lady Strandfellow’s steward to finish it before he would leave.”

  Liam stared down at the card, feeling nauseous once more. The Select Seventy. “No doubt at an event so full of respectable, pious members of our society that I will burst into flames upon crossing the threshold.”

  Vale smirked. “I don’t imagine it will be spontaneous combustions, but you might be singed.”

  Splendid. Liam was already looking forward to this evening.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Liam arrived late. Since a prompt arrival at any of the events he typically attended was considered bad form, this should not have mattered. Tonight, however, he was supposed to make a favorable impression on his hostess—a Sisyphean task, if ever there was one.

  Lady Strandfellow did not like him. She’d been coerced into extending an invitation, and she did not bother to hide her displeasure at his tardiness, his appearance, and likely his reputation. Though, if Liam were to rate his own appearance, he’d say he looked acceptable under the circumstances.

  It couldn’t be helped that part of his face was a mottled blend of violet, green, and yellow. But at least he was clean-shaven, though with no help from Neville. After enduring three solid minutes of his squeamish v
alet’s choking sounds and open-mouthed gagging, Liam had done the job himself. A fine effort, if he did say so himself. Not a single nick. And more than that, it had felt satisfying, slicing off the old and uncovering the fresh, unmarred flesh beneath.

  He was beginning to understand Boswick’s simpler practices. There was nothing he expected of his servants that he would not do himself. For too many years, Liam relied on his servants to see to everyday tasks without thought. Now he found that it was good to step away from what he’d always done and take a new approach.

  Perhaps relying on his servants, as he had done since his father’s death, had kept him from seeing things in a new light. His encounter with Vale earlier today had told him that he required a closer look at his familial relationships as well. But all in good time.

  Tonight was for Adeline.

  At the edge of the hall near the archway to the ballroom, Liam cast a cursory glance at his own reflection in the glass front of a curio cabinet. Since there was nothing he could do about his face, he paid closer attention to his attire. Thankfully, Neville had been able to hold his stomach long enough to tie a proper cravat and help Liam into his tailored black coat, or else he would have arrived even later.

  Straightening his shoulders, he stepped into the ballroom. As luck would have it, a footman toting a tray of wine glasses passed by in the same moment. Liam snatched one for himself and immediately took a fortifying swallow. Then he cringed and glared down at the offensive vintage. It was wine-colored water, and nothing more. This would not do. How did Lady Strandfellow expect her guests to survive this insipid gathering without assistance?

  In answer to that question, Liam’s gaze quickly scanned the room for a glimpse of Adeline. The instant he found her, he felt the wine begin to work, relaxing him in subtle doses.

  This evening, she wore a sheath of white netting over a yellow petticoat that brought out threads of gold in her light brown hair. She possessed an honest beauty. Her complexion had that scrubbed-clean pink that made her all the lovelier. And when she looked at him in return, he felt his lungs expand, as if the air he breathed was somehow fresh and untainted.

  The upward lift of her brows indicated her surprise at seeing him, but there was something almost beseeching in her gaze, calling to some slumbering part of him that he’d never awakened.

  Adeline stood beside her parents and Juliet. Not far separated, Aunt Edith chatted with Lady Strandfellow, the latter glancing at the Pimms sourly. That was when Liam realized something was amiss.

  Only now did he notice that Adeline’s eyes were too wide, her smile more brittle than bright. She should be laughing, her eyes shimmering with gaiety. This was her adventure, after all.

  He had the impulse to cross the room immediately and stand by her side. Yet he also knew such behavior, amongst such pious company, would only make matters worse for her.

  Liam loathed these types of events. Here, propriety was paramount . . . at least on the surface. Everyone looked the part—styled and coiffed to perfection, their finery without flaw, their gloves gleaming white. He smirked at this pretense. The utter hypocrisy.

  Several familiar faces amongst this lot had not only attended a few gatherings hosted by the infamous Lady Reynolds but were also members of an elite gentleman’s club run by Lady Hudson. And when Liam caught their gazes, each one in turn would startle and dart a nervous glance at their wives.

  What? Did they imagine that he was the bringer of sin and that theirs would be exposed in his presence? At least he had the decency to wear his misdeeds in the open.

  “You look like the devil,” Thayne remarked, sidling up to him.

  “Then it is fitting, considering that I am now standing in hell.” Liam cast a baleful look over the length of the ballroom. The paneled ceiling, walls, and dark wood floors might have set the perfect stage for an illicit encounter behind one of the potted trees in the corners. Instead, wall sconces, chandeliers, and tapers lit every nook and cranny and made the room overly warm. He tugged at his cravat. “Should have known you’d make the cut for the Select Seventy.”

  Only gentlemen who were highly regarded and married, or highly regarded, unmarried, but searching for a bride received invitations. The only qualification Liam fit was being unmarried. Likely, Lady Strandfellow was reciting a constant litany of prayers under her breath to be saved from such an unworthy guest as he.

  “Ah, yes. Quite the achievement, considering I’ve done nothing other than become a marquess by happenstance,” Thayne mocked. Though the truth was, the moment he’d inherited the title from a distant relative, he’d turned downright respectable. Traitor.

  “You did not have to force such a fate upon me,” Liam insisted.

  Thayne was doing all that was expected of a titled nobleman, attending teas and soirees, riding through the park at a fashionable hour, and refusing invitations deemed improper by the ton’s matrons. In contrast, and because nature abhorred a void, Liam typically accepted more than his usual share of improper invitations. At least until now.

  Though it did not escape his notice that soon enough, Liam would not have any of his real friends left. He’d be the only one of their foursome without a family. Not that he needed one.

  “What are friends for?” Thayne remarked a bit too brightly.

  Liam grumbled. “All I require now is a decent drink. Yet there are no spirits to be had. At least, nothing stronger than this watered-down wine and cups of tepid green tea.”

  “Yes, unfortunate that.” Thayne frowned as he looked down into his empty glass. “Apparently, Lady Strandfellow has recently taken to believe that even black tea causes too much stimulation and therefore leads to uninhibited behavior.”

  “Not a single card game in sight either.”

  Thayne chuckled. “This is polite society. The only attraction this evening is the event itself. Conversation is acceptable, and dancing—”

  “As long as it does not allow for too much contact between partners,” Liam added with a sardonic laugh.

  Their hostess needed to turn her quizzing glass on Vale and his bride. They appeared engrossed in their study of a clock stand’s pendulum, but Liam wasn’t fooled. He noticed how Vale discreetly toyed with Ivy’s glove, and how she smiled coyly in response, her cheeks flooded with color. Even though they were married, everyone knew that their hostess disapproved of any open sign of affection.

  Such familiar touches from an unmarried gentleman to a debutante would cause a scandal. In fact, if Liam were to stop beside Miss Pimm and explore the flesh beneath her glove, their hostess would likely gasp and faint on the spot.

  And it was just shocking enough that it made Liam itch to do it. His fingertips, and other parts, pulsed with yearning as he looked at the narrow expanse of skin exposed above her glove and beneath the gathered sleeve. More than that, he wanted to hold her against him, to brush away the curling tendrils from her cheeks. And he was weak-willed, already imagining how soft they would feel against his own.

  Then again, he didn’t have to imagine it. He knew exactly how it felt to have her hair brush his face. To have her lips upon his. Her sweet breath on his tongue . . .

  He issued an involuntary groan. Bollocks. He never should have kissed her.

  “Are your injuries paining you?” Thayne asked, interrupting Liam’s dangerous thoughts. “I can procure a chair . . .”

  Liam shook his head and dragged his attention away from Adeline before he caused a spectacle.

  “Had I known, I would have asked you to stay with me for your recuperation.”

  “Think nothing of it. I was not even conscious the first day, and following that, I was not capable of leaving the bed.”

  Even now, Liam did not want to admit how exhausted he felt.

  “Ah. So then you were unable to leave Lord Boswick and his family,” Thayne said blandly as if this was all a matter of curiosity. Nothing more. “That is a relief. I thought you’d chosen to stay. There are rumors abounding, you know.”

&
nbsp; “So I am told.” Liam felt his hackles rise. He knew where this was going and cast Thayne a look of warning. “I’m certain that did not bode well for your wager.”

  “Wager?” Thayne scoffed, feigning innocence. Then he shifted from one foot to the next, and his gaze shot across the room to where Adeline stood with Juliet.

  “I’ve always known. You must have forgotten how fond of me your mother is.” Liam drained the last of his watered wine with a shudder and gave the empty glass to a passing footman before turning back to Thayne. “What I can’t fathom is why you would do such a thing? Wagering to transform me into an Original is like trying to lose.”

  Thayne said nothing in response, but his knuckles turned white as he gripped his own glass.

  “But wait! Have I hit the mark?” Liam asked with a waggle of his brows. “Are you trying to lose in order to make Juliet stay in London?”

  “You are an arse.”

  “Do try to be more original with your insults.” When Adeline had said the same words, at least she had a wealth of emotion behind them.

  Thinking of her automatically drew his attention to her. Again. Yet, as he looked across the ballroom, the vivaciousness and determination that marked her character were still absent. In place of it was an air of uncertainty in her wide eyes as she stared at the dancers.

  Only now did he think of her limb, recalling what she had confessed to him about not dancing. Though he guessed she’d never had the opportunity. After all, Adeline was not one to permit anything from stopping her. She’d proven her bravery by attending this gathering.

  As if sensing his careful study, she looked in his direction. For two beats, they shared a knowledge to which only he was privy—her secret and his admiration. Slowly, he inclined his head, still holding her gaze. In response, her mouth tilted up at each corner before she turned back to her parents.

  Lord and Lady Boswick hovered protectively by her side until Aunt Edith called them away, apparently, to speak with Lady Strandfellow. Liam wondered how that encounter would fare. For Adeline’s sake, he hoped for the best.

 

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