Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
most noble effort on his part not to call attention to this highly
unusual conversation. Of course, it would be all over the room
in a quarter hour, but the effort, the nicety of it, was a thing worth
noting.
“That sounds a most logical conclusion, Miss Prestwick,”
Iveston said, “but I do wonder if you have the required experi
ence to make it.”
“Required experience? What can that mean, Lord Iveston?”
she said, moving her truly lovely ivory-bladed fan a bit more
briskly. “What sort of experience could possibly be required of
a properly reared, unmarried woman?”
“If you’ll excuse me,” Lady Lanreath said, taking her sister,
Lady Paignton, who did look quite ready to respond to Miss
Prestwick’s question with what was certain to have been a most
entertaining reply, by the arm, quite firmly, too. “I must intro
duce Bernadette to an old acquaintance of mine.”
Bernadette did not look at all eager to leave either George
Grey or Lord Penrith, but off she went, with a sultry look for both
of them, or it might have been all of them as George Blakesley
did not appear to be completely immune to sultry looks that
happened upon him. Sophia watched for Antoinette’s response
to George Blakeley’s response, and could not see any response at
all. Which did not mean everything, but surely must mean some
thing.
“As you are clearly a properly reared, unmarried woman,”
Sophia said, “it is quite impossible to explain it more fully, Miss
Prestwick. You simply, and most appealingly, lack the requisite
experience.”
Penelope did not look at all pleased at Sophia’s insertion into
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the conversation. And who could blame the girl? She, like any
reasonable woman, wanted to keep all male attention fi rmly on
herself and was clearly prepared to do or say anything, or nearly
anything, to make that happen.
Eyeing Penelope more closely, and truly studying the gleam in
her dark eyes, Sophia amended her position. Penelope Prestwick
looked prepared to do anything at all to attain her goal, which
was quite clever of her, wasn’t it?
“Yet as you have asked about the wagers,” Penrith continued,
looking askance at Sophia in what was to be assumed was a con
spiratorial effort, “I must tell you, Miss Prestwick, that not only
is there a wager that you will marry the Duke of Edenham, but
also one that you shall soon marry the Marquis of Iveston. I
presume you know of it, Lord Iveston?”
Iveston, to his immense credit, did not so much as blink. “As
I am the author of the wager, I most definitely know of it,” he said
calmly. “I had, however, not anticipated making my suit to Miss
Prestwick here, now, and under such unusual conditions. I will,
however, not allow unusual conditions to hinder me. Miss Prest
wick,” he said, looking down at her from his very attractive
height, “shall we take a turn about the room?”
Penelope looked at Iveston quite brightly; indeed, her cheeks
looked nearly flushed. “To what purpose, Lord Iveston?”
“To win my wager, Miss Prestwick, what else?”
What else? Why to seduce her, if he had any skill at all.
Sophia smiled just thinking of it.
Thirteen
PENELOPE barely kept her grin in check. George, her George,
looked quite prepared to make a fuss of some sort, as if being a
bit daring were not required to snare her duke for life, and by her
duke, she obviously was thinking of Edenham. Iveston might be
looking down at her quite jovially and she might be smiling up
at him quite demurely, but it was all for Edenham. Who had not
yet arrived. Still, he couldn’t fail to hear about the wagers and
Iveston’s clear fascination with her.
How remarkably duplicitous he was; she wouldn’t have
thought Iveston had it in him. He certainly gave every appear
ance of being nearly captivated by her, which was perfection
itself, if only Edenham were here to witness it. The question now
remaining was whether Iveston could keep his performance in
top form for the rest of the evening. As to that, the question was
also whether she could keep herself looking at Iveston in any
thing approaching fascination.
Although, strangely, she wasn’t finding it as difficult as she
had anticipated.
He was not an unattractive man, not physically. He was quite
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well put together, actually, and his eyes were truly an intriguing
shade of blue. Even his manner was becoming less irksome the
more time she spent in his company. Wouldn’t Edenham
be pleased that she had a friend in the future Duke of Hyde?
Alliances of that sort, the most innocent and socially appropri
ate sort, were always to be desired, were they not? Wasn’t
it very clever of her to have knitted the Hyde dukedom and
the Edenham dukedom into a pleasant bond of even the most
casual sort?
Of course, having it on White’s book for all posterity that she
had been wagered to marry one or the other of them wasn’t
precisely a casual sort of bond. And, by the look glimmering
beneath Iveston’s placid demeanor, he was thinking some
thing along those very same lines.
He had to be told the reason for the Edenham wager, and she
was the only one to do it. It would not be a pleasant duty, but as
Iveston was a relatively pleasant, if odd, man, she was fully pre
pared to face him. In fact, the sooner he understood everything,
the better.
It was for that reason alone that she said, “Why, Lord Iveston,
in the spirit of fair play, I do think you and I may walk about
the room. I would hate to deprive you of the opportunity to win
your wager.”
Iveston’s blond eyebrows raised quizzically. George, her
George, sighed heavily, which sounded nearly like a moan.
George, Sophia’s George, grinned, which did nothing for her com
posure. George, Iveston’s George, pressed his lips together and
studied her with rather more attention than was warranted. It
wasn’t warranted, was it?
What had she said? That she was trying to help Iveston win
his wager, that’s all. What was wrong with that? It was a very
reasonable, very fair-minded position, wasn’t it? Of course,
she was going to marry Edenham, but shouldn’t she at least give
How to Daz zle a Duke
165
the appearance of being open to being wooed? How else to get
Edenham into the halter? As to that, what other men had Iveston
arranged for her? She needed at least three to give a good cluster
ing effect, though five would be ideal. Anything more than
five and she knew she couldn’t manage it. Six or more men at
once were quite beyond her abilities, and she was practical
enough to admit it. She needed to make that clear to Lord Iveston
as well. Really, she had so much to discuss with him. They
needed to make a circuit of the room immediately.
“In the spirit of winning, I shall agree with you, Miss
Prestwick. You are most gracious,” Iveston said, with a casually
delivered bow.
Avoiding looking into Sophia’s clearly amused gaze, Penelope
smiled with as much innocence as she could manage and began
her circuit of the room, Lord Iveston at her side.
They were watched, obviously. But, in the spirit of London
Society and the ton’s intense curiosity over anything even re
motely scandalous, they were not approached. Who wanted to
stop the drama? Not a one of them.
Penelope understood them completely. She was one of them,
after all, and as attuned to a good scandal as the next person.
Perhaps more. She was very observant, after all.
“Imagine my surprise, Miss Prestwick,” Iveston said just as
she was opening her mouth to tell him all she expected of him
in the next few days, “to discover a wager on the book that you
would marry Edenham this Season. I thought it was your ex
press wish to not taunt the duke in that precise way, given that it
could reflect so poorly on you.”
“Poorly on me? That is not at all what I said, Lord Iveston,”
she said, lifting her chin and smiling distractedly at Lady Paign
ton, who was watching them most avidly. Such a disagreeable
woman. Why, she was nearly falling out of her dress.
“Isn’t it? That’s what I heard you to say,” Iveston said, taking
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her rather firmly by the arm and nearly pulling her about the
room. She cast a glance at his face.
He did not look any different than he normally did, though
perhaps a bit more contained. As he was rather known for being
contained, she was not at all certain how she was able to make
the distinction in degree, but she was. Iveston was annoyed. Per
haps more than annoyed. Enraged?
Ridiculous. A man of his retiring nature didn’t have the nec
essary spirit to engage in anything as energetic as rage.
Or passion.
Where had that thought come from? It was most inappropri
ate and entirely off the point. She cared nothing for Iveston’s
passion or rage, or more truly said, lack of either, or both. Very
likely both.
She looked at him again, this time with more force, and was
nearly astonished to see that the area just below his earlobe and
just above the folds of his snowy cravat was chalk white. She had
discovered that men, when annoyed or enraged or anything in
between, had the tendency to go either red or white in their
physical responses. Iveston was clearly a white. Her father was a
red. Her brother was also a red. She, being a woman of remark
able composure and therefore with no occasion to be either an
noyed or enraged, did neither. Her complexion was as constant
as her composure.
But just looking at that tiny splash of white on his pale skin
did arouse the smallest degree of curiosity. How far down did
that miniscule display of broken composure descend? To his
neck? To his throat? As a matter of scientific discovery, surely
it was a logical question. Did Iveston even know that he was
sporting a telltale mark of white? Would he care that she had
seen it?
Of course he would.
How to Daz zle a Duke
167
And that, for entirely inexplicable reasons, made her smile.
“Find this all very amusing, do you?” he said under his
breath.
“Not at all. I merely have a cordial nature. Unlike others I
could name.”
“Go ahead. Name them,” he said. “I should like very much to
hear your entire list.”
“My entire list of what?”
“Whom, Miss Prestwick. List of whom. I should like to know
precisely which men you intend to cajole into offering for you,
by way of White’s book, of course. That does seem to be your
method, doesn’t it?”
“I’ve never cajoled anyone into doing anything in my life,”
she said on a huff of outrage. Of all the insults! As if she would
stoop to such asinine behavior. Did he think her no better than
a shopkeeper’s assistant, trying to cajole the baker’s boy into
marriage?
Iveston looked down at her with a very superior air and said,
“Trust you to be insulted by being accused of cajolery.”
“I can see that no one has ever accused you of it. It’s demean
ing in the extreme, Lord Iveston. As if, why, as if I cannot form
a logical thought and see it to fruition.”
“Thoughts do not come to fruition, Miss Prestwick. Actions,
however, do,” he said, tugging her around the room. They looked
perfectly ridiculous; she was certain of it. “You have set many ac
tions into play. How do you propose to pick all the fruit that shall
surely come of it? And by fruit, of course I mean husbands.”
“I only require one husband, Lord Iveston, as must be per
fectly obvious, even to you.”
She winced slightly as the words left her mouth. Bother it, but
if one wanted to be very particular about it, and she was quite
certain that Iveston was in a very particular frame of mind at the
168 CLAUDIA DAIN
moment, one could take her remark as being slightly, but only
slightly, insulting. She glanced up at him.
The white spot below his ear had grown slightly and was now
very defi nitely trailing down below his cravat.
It was utterly fascinating. And what else to think but that she
was making progress of a sort? She did enjoy making progress,
in any endeavor. She wasn’t at all fussy about that.
“As to that, Miss Prestwick, I should say it’s not obvious to me
or to anyone else,” Iveston gritted out, nodding politely at Mrs.
Anne Warren, who was standing next to her betrothed, Lord
Staverton. Staverton and Mrs. Warren nodded in reply, but said
nothing. How could they? Iveston was nearly dragging her
around the room. “As there are two wagers on White’s book, and
as there are two names which appear, and as the odds are cur
rently running in Edenham’s favor, I should think the only thing
that is perfectly obvious is that you have a penchant for making
a spectacle of yourself and that you have arranged for me to be
made a spectacle right alongside you. I, Miss Prestwick, have no