Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
asked.
Actually, that was a bit odd, wasn’t it? Why were men giving
Sophia gifts, beyond the fact that she was Sophia Dalby and she
required gifts, which was perfectly lovely as habits went and cer
tainly Penelope was not at all put off by it. Once she was a duch
ess, she would think of some very good reason why she should
be given perfectly extravagant gifts all the time.
George moved closer to Cranleigh and Edenham as they ex
amined the vases, and Lord Iveston, before Penelope could do a
thing about it, distracted as she was in planning all her future
gifts, found herself in a corner of the white salon with him by a
door leading to she knew not where.
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The candles had been lit, but not well in this corner, and
because of the rain, it had gone quite dark even if the room was
done up entirely in white. That was the least of it, however. The
worst of it was that it was Lord Iveston who had got her into this
little corner and not Edenham, and that was just the sort of thing
that Lord Iveston, whom she barely knew, but knew enough
to know that she found him entirely peculiar, would do. Why,
if she knew him any better, she’d think he was ruining whatever
small chance she had at Edenham on purpose.
“It is very difficult to see the vases from here, Lord Iveston,”
she said, trying to peer round his shoulder, which was fl atly im
possible as he simply towered over her.
“You don’t truly care about the vases, Miss Prestwick,” he
said, which was completely like him as he was so very contrary.
“I can’t think why you should say such a perfectly ridiculous
thing, Lord Iveston,” she said, giving up peering and trying to
gracefully accept being trapped within the least interesting cor
ner of the room.
“Because they were prominently displayed in the center of
the room for your entire visit and you did no more than glance
at them.”
“Was I supposed to inspect them? I didn’t want to appear
rude.”
“I don’t believe you, Miss Prestwick. I don’t think you mind
appearing rude at all.”
“What a perfectly horrid thing to say!” she snapped, staring
up at him. “And how perfectly like you to say it.”
“I don’t believe you know me well enough to say that, Miss
Prestwick,” he said, giving her the most strange of looks, which
made sense as he was a very strange man.
“Apparently I know you well enough, Lord Iveston. You are
not the most cordial of men, which I’m certain you will excuse
How to Daz zle a Duke
103
me from saying because I am equally certain that your disposi
tion can be no surprise to you.”
Lord Iveston looked very much like he was developing a
twitch near his left eye.
“My disposition . . . but perhaps I am merely modest, a most
private man,” he said.
“If you were a modest, private man, you would hardly tell me
that, would you?”
“You are probably correct in that,” he said with very obvious
reluctance.
Penelope snorted, delicately. Most assuredly delicately.
“But I don’t believe,” he continued, “that you can possibly
know me well enough to dislike me, Miss Prestwick. I am most
unaccustomed to being disliked.”
“I should think so,” she said. “As you rarely leave your home,
it is equally true that no one can know you well enough to dislike
you and that no one whom you do see would dislike you. It’s a
very safe existence you’ve made for yourself, Lord Iveston. I don’t
say it’s unattractive, but it is unusual.”
There. How much more conciliatory could she be?
“But are you not also unusual, Miss Prestwick?” he said, prov
ing most neatly her premise. What sort of man made a comment
of that sort? “I don’t say it’s unattractive of you to be outspoken
and given to making awkward remarks, but it is unusual.”
“Awkward remarks?” she said in quite a curt manner, which
he would likely think proved her outspoken nature, as if that
were a flaw. “I do not make awkward remarks, Lord Iveston. It
is only that I am unusually observant and proceed logically when
all others stumble into emotional hedgerows.”
“Emotional hedgerows?” Lord Iveston said softly, his mouth
softening into a tepid smile. “That’s quite good.”
“Thank you,” she said with rather more sarcasm than was
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likely wise. “Is that all you wished to discuss? Your private na
ture and my forthright manner? The topic has been adequately
covered, don’t you think?”
“Miss Prestwick,” he said softly, taking a half step nearer to
her when he was already quite close enough. More than quite
close. Very nearly hovering, if she wanted to be outspoken about
it, which she did. “Miss Prestwick,” he said again, very nearly
whispering. His voice, and his nearness, sent a most unwelcome
shiver down her spine. “I do think we’ve started on the wrong
foot somehow. Can we not start again, this time with more cour
tesy and warm civility between us?”
It was a thought. Surely, if she were to follow Sophia’s counsel
at all, and she would be a fool if she did not, she was supposed
to be using Iveston as a prompt to get Edenham to notice her.
She’d not done at all well at that, though she couldn’t quite reason
out why. It must have something to do with Lord Iveston. He
wasn’t at all what she expected and her reaction to him wasn’t at
all convenient, which quite naturally resulted in her somewhat,
but only somewhat, unpleasantly warm responses to him. She
couldn’t think why he should annoy her more than say, George,
but he did. He was just so very peculiar. That was likely it. She
had never been comfortable around peculiar people who be
haved in ways she did not either approve of or understand.
And she did not understand Lord Iveston at all.
But far worse, she did not understand her reaction to him,
which was reason enough to be uncomfortable in his presence,
wasn’t it? Of course it was.
There now. Having reasoned it all out and having determined
that their initial wrong-footedness, surely a most apt word, was
due to his peculiarity and her most reasonable reaction to it, she
would and could proceed on better, firmer footing. Edenham was
the goal, after all, and if Iveston could serve her purposes there,
well then, he should be encouraged to do so.
How to Daz zle a Duke
105
“I find I agree with you, Lord Iveston, which I do fear will
shock you,” she said, looking him straight in the eye. He did have
the most brilliantly blue eyes. “I am more than delighted to begin
again. How shall we accomplish it?”
Iveston smiled softly. It did quite nice things to his face. She
found herself smiling in return when she had had no plan to do
so. How perfectly extraordinary.
“Miss Prestwick, I think the wisest course and the most
time tested is the surest policy in diplomatic negotiations such
as ours.”
“And the wisest course, Lord Iveston?”
“Compliments, Miss Prestwick. Every ambassador of every
nation begins with compliments, which are quickly followed
by gifts.”
“Which are less quickly followed by one nation or the other
giving something up which they had no plan to give up,” she
said, smiling again.
“Ah, but you stray too far ahead, Miss Prestwick. Let us begin
with compliments and see where that takes us.”
“I must warn you, Lord Iveston,” she said, still staring
boldly into his eyes, which might have been a mistake as she
could feel a thread of heat wrap itself around her throat, “that
I cannot be complimented into giving anything up that I have
determined I want.”
“How can you know, Miss Prestwick? I have yet to tender
even the first compliment. Perhaps it is possible to have what you
want altered.”
“By compliments? Impossible.”
“By gifts?”
“What sort of gifts?”
“What sort of gifts would tempt you?”
“No, Lord Iveston, if you seek to tempt me, you must fi nd
your own way. I will not aid you in this hostile negotiation.”
106 CLAUDIA DAIN
“Not hostile, Miss Prestwick, merely heated,” Iveston said, his
blue eyes looking quite as hot as flame. The thread of heat around
her throat thickened into a cord and tightened, sending waves of
awareness up her spine and down beneath her bodice ties.
How completely and perfectly extraordinary.
Nine
“YOUR work, I assume?” Lord Ruan asked Sophia.
He had not followed the Duke of Edenham over to inspect
the porcelain, as indeed she had not expected he would. No, the
Marquis of Ruan had not come to Dalby House to look at any
thing other than its mistress, which was so lovely of him, truly,
and she did enjoy it, deeply, but there always seemed to be so
much going on and, worse, Lord Ruan always seemed to be so
aware of it.
If there was one trait a man should absolutely not possess, it
was being observant. Being clever and observant was even worse.
Lord Ruan, as much as she wished otherwise, was both.
“I beg your pardon?” she asked, staring up at him. He had
quite rugged features and very green eyes. He was, not to put too
fine a point on it, a very handsome man. And he knew it. There
was that bit about being both clever and observant again. Such
a strain, really, to keep a man like Ruan on such a tight rein. One
could not but wonder what he would do, what he was capable of,
if given even a nod of encouragement.
Of course, it was folly to even think such a thought with
108 CLAUDIA DAIN
Markham in the room. She was his mother and she did try to
keep things comfortable for him, darling boy, and truly, she
rarely had any trouble at all. Ruan was something else again.
Ruan, she was very much afraid, was going to prove hard to
resist.
“That,” Ruan said with a shift of his head, indicating the very
shadowy corner where Penelope and Iveston stood in what
looked to be very pleasant conversation. How nice. Things
were going quite well there and with hardly any effort at all
on her part.
“I can’t think what you mean, Lord Ruan,” she said. “As you
must be perfectly aware, I have not actually invited any of my
guests today. You all just appeared from out of the mist and seem
quite determined never to leave my house again. Of course, that
might be due more to the rain than my charms.”
“Which not even you believe,” he said with a lopsided smile.
It looked quite devilish on him.
“But one is required to make such remarks, Lord Ruan,” she
said, moving toward the front windows, Ruan trailing her like a
trained hound.
“I can’t believe that you answer to any requirements but your
own, Lady Dalby,” he said, “which is why you have, from your
fi rst day in London to this, turned the Town on its head.”
“What do you know of my first day in London, Lord Ruan?”
she asked, all thoughts of flirtation buried in suspicion. Too
clever, too observant, that was this man’s entire problem. Or at
least it was a problem for her. “I’m certain I should remember
you if you were here. Where were you if not in Town?”
“Out and about in the world, Lady Dalby,” he answered.
“Having the sorts of adventures that are very nearly required of
a man at that particular age. Your own son is soon to be on an
adventure, isn’t he?”
“Where did you hear that?”
How to Daz zle a Duke
109
“From his own mouth, Lady Dalby, whilst we were chatting
at Aldreth House on that delightful day that Lord Cranleigh fi
nally claimed Lady Amelia for his own. The day of the satire.”
There was something so very purposeful about the way Ruan
had said the word
satire
that Sophia knew without question he
was going to do something very awkward, something like prowl
into the shadows of her very shadowy past. Oh, most people in
London of a certain age were quite convinced they knew every
thing there was to know, of interest, that is, about her, but there
was much she did not want known and Lord Ruan was just the
sort to want to know those precise things. If he continued on in
such manner, she would be required to drop him before she had
even picked him up.
And she had decided to pick him up, just yesterday, in fact.
She was slightly bored, what with Caro married and Markham
leaving with John and the boys for a lengthy visit to America. A
lover was such pleasant way to pass the time, but only if the lover
were pleasant and not given to looking in places he had no need
to look.
“The day of the satire, Lord Ruan? Satires come out nearly
every day.”
“But so rarely to such quick effect.”
“Only if they are not very good. Good satires create a very
quick response.”
“How are satires judged to be good, Lady Dalby? By their
art? By their timeliness? By their cleverness?”
“By the response they provoke, Lord Ruan. I thought I had
made that clear.”