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Unleashing Mr. Darcy

Page 7

by Teri Wilson


  Perhaps she could call herself a Londoner for the time being. That had an awfully nice ring to it.

  The climb was longer than she expected, but still not as strenuous as the trek up to her New York apartment. Sue explained that in Europe, what Americans referred to as the first floor was called the ground floor. What Elizabeth knew as the second floor was subsequently the first floor in England, and so on. So her bedroom was situated on the top floor of the home, up three flights of stairs.

  Sue led her through a set of white double doors at the top of the staircase.

  “What do you think?” Sue waved her hand with a little flourish. “I do hope you like blue.”

  Elizabeth was at a loss for words. It was the most beautiful bedroom she’d ever laid eyes on. The walls were covered in pale blue toile wallpaper that featured scenes of French women in ball gowns and large powdered wigs. Tiny dogs danced around their feet. The duvet cover on the four-poster bed was fashioned from matching fabric, as were a pile of overstuffed throw pillows.

  Elizabeth ran her fingertips along the smooth white wood of one of the posts at the foot of the bed. “Oh, Sue. This can’t possibly be your guest room. It’s gorgeous.”

  “It is most definitely the guest room. I could never convince Alan to sleep anywhere so girlie. Or froufrou, as he calls it.” She shrugged.

  Elizabeth shook her head, struggling to take it all in. “This room is fit for a princess. Not a dog nanny.”

  “Oh, don’t be silly. What’s the use of having such a pretty room if no one’s enjoying it?” Sue grinned. “So, you like it, then?”

  “Are you kidding? I love it.” Elizabeth gave Bliss a squeeze and released her to explore their new home. Much to Sue’s delight, she shuffled straight to a sweet little dog bed with a toile cushion that matched the duvet cover. “Correction—we love it.”

  Elizabeth gave Bliss a little pat and noticed the large window on the far wall, framed with a generously proportioned window seat. More throw pillows, toile and pale blue crushed velvet, made the bench a cozy-looking refuge. She felt drawn to the area at once, captivated by the view of Sue’s charming neighborhood.

  “This is fantastic. Look, I can see everything from up here.”

  “Yes, it’s an excellent spot for spying on the neighbors.” Sue clapped her hands. “Success, then. I want you to feel at home here. There’s a tiny kitchenette at the end of the hall, right next to the water closet.”

  “Water closet?” Elizabeth turned away from the window and searched Sue’s face for a clue. All she saw was a hint of amusement.

  “The powder room, dear.” She laughed. “Don’t worry. We’ll make a Brit of you before you know it.”

  Elizabeth had known she coddled Bliss, but she hadn’t realized to what extent until she’d been introduced once again to Sue’s Border terriers. They were the most perfectly trained dogs she’d ever seen. It was remarkable. They moved in flawless unison. If Elizabeth told one of them to sit, they all planted their rumps on the ground at the same exact moment. A down command elicited a similar uniform response. After only an hour of looking after them, Elizabeth had begun thinking of them not as a pack of dogs but rather a military unit. A scruffy, wirehaired infantry.

  The jet lag hit Elizabeth full force, and by nine o’clock she could barely keep her eyes open. She slipped into her nightgown and situated herself on the window seat. As she gazed out at the darkened London street and reflected on her first day in the Barrows’ household, Elizabeth wondered why they’d hired her. Other than to help out at the shows, of course.

  Those dogs—Violet, Hyacinth, Daisy and Rose—could run the house themselves. They hardly needed a nanny. Although she supposed they were smart enough to get in serious trouble if left to their own devices. They had a television in their room. Or the telly, as Sue had called it. When the house was empty, Sue left it on to keep them company. Elizabeth wouldn’t have been surprised if the Border terriers tuned in to the home-shopping channel, dialed the phone with their little paws and ran up thousands of dollars in credit-card bills for crazy things like the ShamWow or a blanket with sleeves. That was the kind of intelligence they possessed. These were not normal dogs she was dealing with.

  Bliss danced around on her hind legs, peeking over the edge of the seat until Elizabeth scooped her up. Not that the Cavalier wasn’t fully capable of jumping up there on her own. She was spoiled, plain and simple.

  “Yep, you’re spoiled,” Elizabeth murmured as she surrendered and ran her fingers over the Cavalier’s silky chestnut ears. “But I love you just the way you are.”

  Bliss let out a little snuffling sound and wedged her way between one of Elizabeth’s legs and the neat row of velvet pillows. Behind her, the window glowed with the soft yellow light of the streetlamps that lined the sidewalk below. Elizabeth smiled at the bright red telephone booth she could make out, even in the dark, right next to the cupcake bakery on the corner.

  London was charming.

  Elizabeth had been in the country for all of fifteen hours, and she was smitten with the place. The street was quiet now. The cupcake bakery’s windows were darkened. Some of the quaint row houses had lights on, but only in one or two windows. Even the church down the street had stopped ringing its bells every hour, on the hour. South Kensington was packing it in for the night.

  But as Elizabeth scooped all sixteen pounds of Bliss’s dead weight into her arms, ready to head for bed, she spotted something out the window that gave her pause.

  Another Cavalier!

  She planted Bliss back among the pillows and leaned toward the windowpane for a closer look.

  Her bedroom was three floors up, but she could spot a fluffy, wagging Cavalier tail from any distance. The dog prancing around on the threshold of the house across the street was most definitely a Cavalier King Charles spaniel. She squinted and tried to make out the dog’s owner.

  It was a man. But from so high up, and in the dark, she couldn’t tell much else. He appeared to be wearing jeans and a sweater, but there was something about the way he moved that carried an air of formality.

  They meandered down the street and, once they’d reached the church, turned back toward home. The man kept a watchful eye on his Cavalier until they’d made it about halfway down the block. Then he suddenly turned his face toward her window.

  Elizabeth couldn’t make out his expression in the darkness, or his features, for that matter. But her face flushed with heat as she watched him watching her. He stood on the sidewalk with moonlight caressing his broad shoulders for a long while. Longer than seemed appropriate. Not that anything about spying on the neighbors was necessarily appropriate.

  Elizabeth knew she should back away from the window and head for bed. She couldn’t seem to make herself do it. For some inexplicable reason, she felt drawn toward the pair outside. She told herself it was because of the dog, of course. Another Cavalier. Why wouldn’t she be curious? But the way her heart pounded told her there was a bit more to it than that.

  He waved. It was just a slight movement of his free hand, but the stir it caused inside Elizabeth was sizable. She returned the gesture.

  The man tilted his head, as though studying her. She was struck with the sudden worry that he could see her face. Could he tell who she was?

  Surely not.

  What did it matter, anyway? She didn’t know a soul here, besides the Barrows. She was anonymous. Invisible.

  She swallowed, but a flutter rose up from her belly and settled in her chest. Sitting there, in silent communion with this stranger on a London street, she didn’t feel invisible at all. In fact, she felt anything but. She felt alive.

  Disappointment tugged at her consciousness when he looked back down at his dog. They headed toward home. Elizabeth kept watching as he opened the door and the pair slipped inside.

  “Come on, sweethea
rt,” she murmured to Bliss. “Time for bed.”

  She crawled under the covers of the impressive four-poster bed, with Bliss curled by her side. Even though she’d traveled clear across the Atlantic Ocean that day and was exhausted beyond comprehension, Elizabeth lay awake for quite a while before she fell asleep. She tingled all over, from head to toe.

  At last her eyes fluttered shut. And for the first time in a week, she wasn’t awakened by nightmares of Grant Markham.

  6

  Donovan stared into his tea and wondered if there was enough caffeine in the world to get him going the next morning.

  “Lawrence, I won’t be going to work today,” he muttered.

  “Yes, sir.” Lawrence just stood there, gaping at him in stunned silence until he vanished back down the hall.

  Donovan never missed work. Not that “work” was an actual location. It was more of a metaphorical place. At Chadwicke, he conducted business in the library, surrounded by books that had been on the shelves for generations but were hardly ever touched. Sometimes he stared at the spine of the first-edition Dickens as he listened to Aunt Constance ramble on and on about some minute detail of the family trust while silently wishing he could tune her out and flip through its pages instead.

  In London, he worked from the drawing room. But the only thing in the pale green room that interested him now was the whelping pen and its contents—Figgy’s tiny, wriggling pups.

  He decided to give in and spend the day looking after his dogs. He wouldn’t be of any use to the Darcy Family Trust today anyhow. After his sleepless night, he’d probably give away half the family fortune without even realizing what he’d done.

  And what was more, he couldn’t have cared less. How could anyone expect him to get any sleep after what he’d seen? That vision, for lack of a better term.

  He’d taken Finneus out for a final walk up and down the block when he’d looked up and spotted her.

  It wasn’t really Elizabeth Scott, of course. He still possessed enough sanity to know he’d only been imagining things. Or the dim light had been playing tricks on him. Whichever, it didn’t really matter. He’d seen her again, if only in his imagination. And she was as lovely as ever.

  He’d debated leaving for Chadwicke in an attempt to get his wits about him. He couldn’t go on like this forever. His behavior was beginning to worry him, to some extent.

  Why her? Of all the women in the world, why was he so preoccupied with thoughts of Elizabeth Scott? She may have had a naturally beautiful, captivating quality about her, but that sharp tongue of hers was less than wholesome. In the improbable event he ever did see her again, she’d be more likely to use that sensual mouth to hurl a string of insults at him than what he had in mind.

  That prospect brought with it a surge of arousal that confounded him even further. What he needed was rest. Some relaxation, time with the dogs, a good night’s sleep. Then he’d be good as new.

  He nodded to no one but himself. Donovan Darcy was going to skive off, and he intended to do a right good job of it.

  He took a final spot of tea, pushed himself out of his leather chair and stepped over the wire walls of Figgy’s whelping pen. She scrambled into his lap when he sank down cross-legged on the floor, leaving her pups confused and searching for their mum as best they could with their eyes not yet open. They stood on wobbly legs, stumbling here and there until they began mewing like kittens.

  “Your babies are looking for you,” Donovan whispered in Figgy’s ear.

  Her eyes grew wide, even wider than usual, which was significant considering Cavaliers had such big, round eyes to begin with. Her furry brow creased with worry as she eyed her pups.

  “Go tend to them. I’ll be here all day.” He picked her up and set her back down on the fresh, clean bed in the center of the pen.

  She kept her gaze fixed on him as all the puppies, save one, found their way back to her. The wayward pup squealed her displeasure as she nudged her little pink nose against the bumper of the dog bed.

  “Don’t worry. I’ll give you a hand, love.” With great care, Donovan plucked the puppy off the ground and gathered her into his palms.

  He turned her so she faced him. Her muzzle and nose were bald and pink as bubble gum. It would take a week or so for her nose to begin the transition to black. She had a perfectly proportioned white blaze down the center of her face, framed on either side by rich chestnut. Best of all, she had a much-coveted Blenheim spot square in the center of her little head. Donovan ran his thumb gently over the spot and, as he did so, noticed something unusual.

  He narrowed his gaze at the pup’s face and turned her toward the light, just to be sure. “Well, would you look at that?”

  Beneath her right eye, halfway to her nose, there they were...a tiny cluster of peach-colored specks. He wiped at them to make sure they wouldn’t disappear. They didn’t, naturally.

  “Would you look at that?” Donovan repeated and laughed in wonder. “I’ve bred a puppy with freckles.”

  It was a rarity, both in his breeding lines as well as in puppies of such a young age. That he could see the spots at all when she was only a few days old guaranteed they would be most visible later on.

  Oh, the irony.

  If this had happened weeks ago, he would have made arrangements to place the puppy in a pet home as soon as she was old enough to leave her mum. Chadwicke Cavaliers were in high demand, whether pet or show quality. Donovan had a waiting list of pet homes as long as his arm.

  Things were somehow different now. He couldn’t say why, but this was the puppy he would keep even though the rest of them were picture-perfect. All he saw when he looked at those faint hints of freckles were Miss Scott and the little dog she loved so much. For some nonsensical reason, Donovan wanted to hold on to that memory. What was it he had compared her complexion to?

  A pastry dusted with sugar and spice.

  A dessert.

  He brought the pup closer and tucked her against his cheek. “I think I’ll call you Pudding.”

  Pudding squirmed against his face, her coat soft as down feathers. Donovan set her back down beside her mum, and the worry lines on Figgy’s brow instantly smoothed away.

  Donovan took in a deep breath as he watched the dogs. He felt better already. He climbed out of the whelping pen and went off in search of Finneus. A walk was in order.

  After he secured Finneus in his harness and gave Lawrence strict instructions to tell any and all callers—especially Aunt Constance and, God forbid, Helena Robson—he was out for the day, Donovan headed outside. He glanced across the way at the window where he could have sworn he’d seen Miss Scott the night before. The drapes were open, revealing nothing but an empty room. No winsome beauty gazing out at him like a princess in a tower.

  He shook his head and cursed at himself for even bothering to check.

  Finneus jerked on the end of his lead, bringing Donovan back to the present. For that, Donovan was grateful. He let the dog lead the way and followed him toward the bakery on the corner, since that was where he seemed to be headed.

  They’d only taken a few steps when Finneus strained harder in his harness. The leash grew taut, and Donovan was forced to tighten his grip. “Settle down, boy.”

  Donovan looked up and saw a pack of dogs heading in their direction. Finneus was doing his best to get to them, as if they were his long-lost family. One of the dogs was a Cavalier, but the others were Border terriers. Four of them. Donovan followed the tangle of their leashes up toward the woman at the other end, and his heart stopped.

  Elizabeth Scott.

  So he hadn’t gone mad, after all. She was here. In London. On his very street.

  He brought Finneus to a halt and waited for her to meet his gaze. She didn’t so much as glance at him but stayed focused on her quintet of dogs, untangling th
e multitude of leashes as she went.

  The instant she spotted Finneus, Elizabeth’s face lit up. Her cheeks glowed with the warmth of exercise and her obvious excitement at spotting another Cavalier. She picked up her pace and, to Donovan’s great pleasure, headed straight toward him.

  A wry smile came to his lips as she dropped to her knees at his feet. He couldn’t help it. Elizabeth Scott...on her knees in front of him.

  Finneus planted his paws on her shoulders and licked her cheek. Joy was written all over Elizabeth’s face. Donovan dreaded the moment she realized it was him, for surely her delighted expression would turn to one of revulsion.

  He cleared his throat. There was no sense in postponing the inevitable. “Miss Scott, what a pleasure.”

  She flew to her feet in an instant. Her mouth formed a round O of surprise, drawing Donovan’s attention to her perfect pink lips.

  They stood there eyeing one another as they had the night before. It had been real, not a fantasy. Donovan smiled in remembrance and watched as Elizabeth’s cheeks filled with color. He waited for those exquisite lips to turn down in a frown.

  They didn’t.

  Instead, Elizabeth Scott narrowed her gaze, as if looking at him for the first time.

  She said one simple word. “You.”

  * * *

  “Yes, me.” Mr. Darcy’s smile was all warmth and charm.

  Elizabeth knew at once he was the man she’d watched through her window the night before. Same dog at the end of the leash, same broad shoulders, same man.

  Same flutter in her belly.

  The way he was looking at her, with a twinkle in his eye that could only be described as wicked, told her he’d figured it out, as well.

  “Nice dog.” She nodded at the cute little Cavalier at his feet. “Is he yours?”

  “Thank you. And yes, he’s mine. His name is Finneus.” He sidestepped a group of women carrying covered casserole dishes who looked as though they were headed toward the little stone church on the corner, then steered Elizabeth and her pack of dogs inside the short wrought-iron fence of one of the townhomes.

 

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