Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
are all clearly imbeciles.” And here she stopped herself. Barely.
“For wanting to marry a man like me?” he finished, his voice
as soft as eiderdown.
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117
“I make no presumptions as to what sort of man you are or
would be as a husband,” she said, staring at the room behind
him, clearly just now aware of how shrewish she had appeared.
Miss Prestwick’s voice carried quite well when she was impas
sioned. An interesting tidbit he filed away for later consideration.
“I only remark upon my observations as to the man you appear
to be today.”
“Caustic observations,” he said.
“As least mine were observations. Your remarks were accusa
tions, and equally caustic,” she said, taking a shallow breath and
pressing her lips together. She had quite a lovely mouth, now that
he thought about it. “I can’t think how we came to near blows,
Lord Iveston. I have no animosity toward you, but I think you
must agree that I was provoked most unfairly.”
“If I must, I must,” he murmured.
Did she realize how often she made pronouncements and
edicts? Likely not. Women never did realize those sorts of
things, the very things that made them unattractive to men. The
question now to be faced was why he didn’t find her unattractive.
With every impassioned word out of her lovely little mouth he
found himself more and more intrigued. She wasn’t the least bit in
awe of him. The only other female he could think of who wasn’t a
bit intimidated by him was his mother. And Sophia, but he really
couldn’t put Sophia in the same class as a virginal young woman
out in Society looking for a titled husband. And Penelope was
looking for a husband, that much was obvious. She’d be a fool if
she wasn’t, and at least by her own definition, she was no fool.
“Would we really have come to blows, Miss Prestwick?” he
asked. “I do suppose you would assume that I’d call Cranleigh in
to fight for me, but in this instance, I do think I should like to
fend for myself. A tussle, Miss Prestwick. To tussle with you. How
do you think I’d fare?”
She smiled, which did show such a basically amiable nature
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that he smiled in return. She was marvelous fun to tease. “I think,
Lord Iveston, that I’d not disgrace myself.”
“Miss Prestwick, do I hear a chiding note? Dare I think that
you believe I would disgrace myself?”
“Lord Iveston, you are very much maligned, I think, to be so
sensitive as to your abilities. For good cause, one must but won
der,” she countered, smirking at him, “have you been often
trounced? I find it difficult to fathom. You would outreach all
your opponents, but perhaps it is your very nature which de
feats you? Are you not a fighter, Lord Iveston? Perhaps it is that
you lack not the experience but the need, for who would attempt
Hyde’s heir?”
“You are, aren’t you, Miss Prestwick?” he countered. “I think
you are brawling with me even now, using your very quick tongue
as a sharp weapon when all I have is my long arms. What can I
do with long arms in this instance, Miss Prestwick? I lack the
swiftness of tongue you demonstrate so well. Propriety forbids
me from explaining, let alone demonstrating, what tongues and
arms may do when employed together.”
He didn’t know where that had come from. It was quite be
yond the pale. It wasn’t at all like him to taunt and tease a woman,
and certainly not a virginal one, but there was something so very
prim and superior and forthright about Penelope that he found
he couldn’t resist. What were her limits? How far could he go and
how would she respond? All he knew without doubt was that she
would respond unlike any other woman of his acquaintance. And
that alone charmed him.
She didn’t seem to want him. It was most peculiar of her,
as well as being somewhat relaxing. His guard was down and
he found it strangely refreshing. As well as more than a little
insulting.
Of course there was the wager, but it was a paltry thing. He
didn’t care what Cranleigh, or anyone else, thought of him or her
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119
or the lack of interest on her part. What did it matter? In a week,
at best, it would be forgotten forever.
But he knew even now that he would not forget. How could
he? She was his first, rejection, that is, and a man didn’t forget
his first. No, not quite rejection, nothing so strong as that, but
something almost infinitely worse. Little Miss Prestwick was not
even bothering to look him over.
How utterly inexplicable.
He considered her as she considered him, his most inappro
priate words hanging in the air between them. She didn’t look
especially alarmed, though she was looking at him more intently
than she had yet done. He found he enjoyed it.
“Lord Iveston,” she said, staring boldly into his eyes, “I do
think your nature betrays you yet again. My initial impression
was that you are not a fighter, and now I find myself adding that
you are also not a lover. If a man is neither a lover nor a fi ghter,
what is left for him to be?”
“A duke,” he said, smiling at her response. Miss Prestwick was
a fighter. What next but to wonder if she was also a lover?
What was wrong with him? He never behaved this way be
fore today. Of course, he’d never met Penelope Prestwick before
today.
“When a man is a duke, all else becomes inconsequential,”
she said, smiling. “I see you have your priorities well established
and have nothing to fear and, indeed, no action or inaction to
defend.”
“You are not angry,” he said, studying her. “I have not be
haved as I ought, said things I’ve never before said, yet you are
not angry. Why is that, Miss Prestwick? Is it because I am to be
a duke?”
“I’m sure that’s part of it,” she said, with a brief smile. “I think
it is only that you have surprised me, Lord Iveston. I have not
had many conversations with men, aside from my brother of
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course, of such openness in both content and expression. I’ve
enjoyed myself. I hope you have as well.”
She was comparing him to her brother?
“I have, Miss Prestwick,” he said softly.
Her brother?
“In the spirit of openness, and finding you not at all what I
expected,” she said, looking around the room behind him in the
most careful manner, “I wonder if I may continue on in like man
ner, asking something of a minor favor of you.”
“Minor favors often have very long strings,” he said.
“Oh, no, not at all,” she said with some firmness. “It is only
that it would be so very convenient if you could, please, continue
on being quite attentive to me.”
He was puffing with pleasure before the word
convenient
pricked all pleasure of out him.
“Convenient, Miss Prestwick? I’m afraid I don’t under
stand you.”
“It is only that, I have found that the surest way to gain male
attention is to have one male lead the way, as it were. I was only
hoping that you might not find it inconvenient to lead the way,
only for a time, until I gain the attention of the man I would not
be at all displeased to marry. It would be the smallest of acts,
Lord Iveston, and I do believe you have all the necessary skills
to be convincing. If it would be no trouble?”
It took no effort at all to understand her words, obviously. No,
the trouble was in believing them. Was this some ploy to haul
him into marriage?
By the very earnest look in her dark eyes, it was not.
What was left was worse. She wanted him . . . no, no, that was
the problem. She didn’t want him at all. She wanted him to act
as a lure to other, more desirable men. One man in particular,
no doubt. A woman who had worked up a plan like this already
had a man in mind. And it wasn’t him.
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121
By God, why wasn’t it him?
He had no desire to marry her, obviously, why should he, but
if she had the wit to entertain a single thought in her head, she
should want to marry
him
. Perfectly obvious, wasn’t it? It had
been obvious all his life. He’d been outrunning and outmaneu
vering mamas and their avid daughters for well over ten years.
What was wrong with
this
woman? Certainly there was nothing
wrong with him.
“I assure you, Lord Iveston,” she said against the wall of his
shock and silence, “there will be nearly nothing at all for you to
do. A conversation here and there, a dance or two over the course
of the Season, nothing much beyond normal discourse between
two unmarried people enjoying their Season in Town.”
“Nothing much beyond? Yet something beyond,” he managed
to say. “How else to work the trick, Miss Prestwick?”
“It is not a trick!” she flared. “It is nothing like. It is only that
men behave in certain ways and respond to certain prompts.”
“Like trained dogs,” he said crisply.
“Rather like untrained dogs,” she snapped back, her eyes
flashing. “Even you must admit that men follow certain signals,
particularly where women are concerned.”
“Even I? Because even a dullard such as I must have experi
enced these signals? And what are these signals, Miss Prestwick?
Half-wit that I am, I must have them spelled out for me.”
“Oh, don’t be cross. It is just like a man to be cross when his
little mysteries are exposed.”
“My mystery is not little,” he said stiffl y.
“I beg your pardon?”
“Never mind,” he said, standing at his most rigid posture.
“The signals, Miss Prestwick? I live to be enlightened.”
“You know them, surely, Lord Iveston. I’ve come to think
they are almost instinctual in a man, rather like the migration of
geese in the autumn. Where one man of distinction goes, others
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will soon follow. Men do tend to cluster around objects of interest
to them. I only ask, as a man of distinction, if you would mind
very much clustering around me for a bit, to give the other men
a chance to follow your lead?”
He knew very well that she did not truly think of him as a
man of distinction. If she did, she wouldn’t have discounted him
in her husband hunt, would she? Of course she wouldn’t. It was
a sop to his pride, and a poorly executed one, too.
Still, she did have a point about men and clustering. It was
only remarkable in that she hadn’t understood the obvious
point that it wasn’t that they clustered to be in the same group,
but that they each found the same things desirable. Did Miss
Prestwick think of men as nothing better than sheep?
The answer was obvious, insultingly so.
When one had any sort of discourse with Penelope Prestwick,
one was required to put away antiquated notions of what consti
tuted an insult.
6
“I think I ought to be insulted,” the Duke of Edenham said to
Sophia. The occupants of the room had shifted again, with the
notable exception of Iveston and Penelope Prestwick, who re
mained nearly huddled in the far corner of the room next to the
door to the dining room. Ruan was speaking with John, Markham
was talking to George Prestwick, George Grey was talking to
Cranleigh, Young and Matthew were standing together and talk
ing to no one.
“If you have to think about it,” Sophia said, “I don’t think it
possible that you are truly insulted. But, because I am, if nothing
else, a courteous and gracious hostess, what, darling Edenham,
has upset you?”
They were sitting on the matching sofas in front of the fi re,
the room gone quite dark now as it was past dusk and it was still
How to Daz zle a Duke
123
raining. The candles struggled against the gloom, fl ickering se
ductively in the shadows, dancing against the darkness. It was a
most unusual time of day to be entertaining, but what was she to
do? Throw them all out upon the street? No, too much of interest
was happening right now in her little salon. Such a surprise, re
ally, as she had anticipated none of it. A London Season had a
way of doing that, which was one reason why they all paid such
a dear price to enjoy it.
“I thought you said Miss Prestwick was mine for the taking,”
Edenham said. He did not look at all upset, mind you, he merely
looked slighted in that precise way men had of looking when
every woman in the room did not fall into a dead faint at their
feet. “She hardly looks it, does she? She’s been nearly entwined
with Iveston in the corner for fi fteen minutes now.”
“But, darling, does she look happy about it?”
“She hardly looks miserable.”
Edenham, for all that he had already had three wives and had
accomplished two children out of them, was, for a man of his
mature years, a most insecure man. Of course, it was his three
wives and two children who were most responsible for his feeling
insecure. Certainly there could be no other cause. He was hand