The Virtuoso

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The Virtuoso Page 33

by Grace Burrowes


  There were tariffs and tolls, of course. She was expected to show up at Her Grace’s weekly teas from time to time. Not every week, not even every other, but often enough. She stood up with her brothers when they deigned to grace the ballrooms, which was thankfully rare of late. She occasionally joined her sisters for a respite at Morelands, the seat of the duchy in Kent.

  But mostly, she hid.

  They reached the ducal mansion, an imposing edifice set well back from its landscaped square. The place was both family home and the logistical seat of the Duke of Moreland’s various parliamentary stratagems. He loved his politics, did His Grace.

  And his duchess.

  One of his meetings must have been letting out when the hour for Her Grace’s tea grew near because the soaring foyer of the mansion was a beehive of servants, departing gentlemen, and arriving ladies. Footmen were handing out gloves, hats, and walking sticks to the gentlemen, while taking gloves, bonnets, and wraps from the ladies.

  Maggie sidled around to the wall, found a mirror, and unpinned her lace mantilla from her hair. She flipped the lace up and off her shoulders, but it snagged on something.

  A tug did nothing to dislodge the lace, though someone behind her let out a muttered curse.

  Damn it? Being a lady in company, Maggie decided she’d heard “drat it,” and used the mirror to study the situation.

  Oh, no.

  Of all the men in all the mansions in all of Mayfair, why him?

  “If you’ll hold still,” he said, “I’ll have us disentangled.”

  Her beautiful lacy green shawl had caught on the flower attached to his lapel, a hot pink little Damask rose, full of thorns and likely to ruin her mantilla. Maggie half turned, horrified to feel a tug on her hair as she did.

  A stray pin came sliding down into her vision, dangling on a fat red curl.

  “Gracious.” She reached up to extract the pin, but her hand caught in the shawl, now stretched between her and the gentleman’s lapel. Another tug, another curl came down.

  “Allow me.” It wasn’t a request. The gentleman’s hands were bare and his fingers nimble as he reached up and removed several more pins from Maggie’s hair. The entire flaming mass of it listed to the left, then slid down over her shoulders in complete disarray.

  His dark eyebrows rose and for one instant, Maggie had the satisfaction of seeing Mr. Benjamin Hazlit at a loss. Then he was handing her several hair pins amid the billows of her mantilla, which were still entangled with the longer skeins of her hair. While Maggie held the fluffy mass of her mantilla before her, he got the blasted flower extracted from the lace, and held it out to her, as if he’d just plucked it from a bush for her delectation.

  “My apologies, my lady. The fault is entirely mine.”

  And he was laughing at her. The great, dark, brute found it amusing that Maggie Windham, illegitimate daughter of the Duke of Moreland, was completely undone before the servants, her sisters, and half her father’s cronies from the Lords.

  She wanted to smack him.

  Maggie instead stepped in closer to Hazlit, took the fragrant little flower, and withdrew the jeweled pin from its stem.

  “If you’ll just hold still a moment, Mr. Hazlit, I’ll have you put to rights in no time.” He was tall enough she had to look up at him—another unforgivable fault, for Maggie liked to look down on men—so she beamed a toothy smile at him when she jabbed the little pin through layers of fabric to prick his arrogant, manly skin.

  “Beg pardon,” she said, giving his cravat a pat. “The fault is entirely mine.”

  The humor in his eyes shifted to something not the least funny, but Maggie’s spirits were significantly restored.

  “Your gloves, sir?” A footman hovered, looking uncertain and very pointedly not noticing Maggie’s hair rioting down to her hips. Maggie took the gloves and held them out to Hazlit.

  “Can you manage, Mr. Hazlit, or shall I assist you further?” She turned one glove, and held it open, as if he were three years old and unable to sort the thing out for himself.

  “My thanks.” He took the glove and tugged it on, then followed suit with the second.

  Except his hand brushed Maggie’s while she held out his glove. She didn’t think it was intentional, because his expression abruptly shuttered. He tapped his hat onto his head and was perhaps contemplating a parting bow when Maggie beat him to the exit.

  She rose from her curtsey, her hair tumbling forward, and murmured a quiet, “Good day,” before turning her back on him deliberately. To the casual observer, it wouldn’t have been rude.

  She hoped Hazlit took it for the slight it was intended to be.

  “Oh, Mags.” Evie bustled up to her side. “Let’s get you upstairs before Mama sees this.” She lifted a long curling hank of hair. “Turn loose of that mantilla before your permanently wrinkle it—and whatever happened to put you in such a state?”

  Acknowledgments

  For a tadpole author to see her debut trilogy published in the space of a year is terrifically gratifying. This takes a lot of patience on the part of the publisher’s staff, because the author is very much learning the process by the seat of her pants. My thanks go to Sourcebooks’s publisher, Dominique Raccah, for many reasons; to my editor, Deb Werksman, for even more reasons; and to all the troops at Sourcebooks, Inc., who’ve had a hand (yes, Valentine) in creating this lovely little book: Skye, Susie, Cat, Danielle, Madame Copy Editor, cover artist Anne Cain, and all the unsung heroes in marketing, art, bookmaking, and everywhere in between.

  And there’s one other person I need to thank: My first piano teacher. The late Kaye Rossi instilled in me a love of music that brings me joy to this day.

  About the Author

  New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Grace Burrowes hit the bestseller lists with both her debut, The Heir, and her second book in The Duke’s Obsession trilogy, The Soldier. Both books received extensive praise and starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist. The Heir was also named a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2010, and The Soldier was named a Publishers Weekly Best Spring Romance of 2011. She is hard at work on stories for the five Windham sisters, the first of which, Lady Sophie’s Christmas Wish, is already on the shelves. Grace is a practicing attorney specializing in family law and lives in rural Maryland.

  Grace loves to hear from her readers and can be reached through her website at graceburrowes.com.

 

 

 


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