Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
sort of looks that a woman would want to possess, although per
haps Iroquois women were different in that.
She considered it thoroughly for a few seconds and made
her decision. No, it was highly unlikely that any woman, no
matter her race or nation, would want to look either savage or
dangerous.
228 CLAUDIA DAIN
“How nice for her,” she said crisply.
Iveston chuckled, and then he coughed into his hand. Most
peculiar, even for him.
“Pen,” George said, shaking his head at her.
Oh, bother, what had she said now?
“I’m cold and damp, George. Do you suppose we could go in
now? My hair curls in the wet. I have won two pounds off the
ever-obliging Lord Iveston, and now I should like to enjoy this
soiree beyond the padding of my purse.”
Let it be noted that she was not asking anyone’s permission.
The question, and it had been a stupid question to begin with as
George should know that she was well able to protect her good
name better than anyone else as she had the most to lose by los
ing it, had been answered satisfactorily. She was done with kiss
ing Lord Iveston, done with pretending she had not been kissing
Lord Iveston, and done with answering questions about her ac
tivities. Let George fi nd her when she was being seduced by the
Duke of Edenham, that would be something worth his time and
trouble. In fact, she was counting on him doing just that.
“Well spoken,” Iveston said. “Now, Mr. Grey, tell me about
your sister. Why didn’t she come to England with you? What is
her name? Is she affi anced?”
Penelope was walking from the damp darkness into the light
of Lanreath House when she pulled up short at Iveston’s words
and turned to face Iveston, who did not even have the grace to
look abashed. “I suppose you’ll be asking next if her hair curls in
the rain?”
Iveston, blue eyes shining like a summer day, replied, “Not
until I meet her, no, Miss Prestwick, though it is not a question I
have ever asked before now.”
“And if you ever meet my sister, which I don’t think you ever
will,” George Grey said, “I don’t think you’ll ask it of her.”
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229
Mr. George Grey did not look at all offended. In fact, he looked
amused.
“Why ever not?” Iveston asked.
“Because Elizabeth’s hair curls wet or dry,” Mr. Grey an
swered.
“I should like to meet her, I think,” George said. Her own
brother! If this wasn’t turning into the worst evening of her Sea
son, but then again, the Season had just begun.
Penelope swallowed a curt retort, which she was certain
would be turned back upon her somehow, and walked with all
her dignity intact into the noise and light of Lanreath House. No
more dark gardens for her. Unless Edenham had a fascination
for dark gardens, then all would be reassessed to suit his urges.
And she did so hope he had urges.
6
IVESTON resisted every urge he had, and they were considerable,
to pull Penelope into his arms and kiss her into limp-kneed
submission. Although, even limp-kneed, she was hardly submis
sive. No, the girl had the most unique talent for standing and
delivering, even when flushed with desire and roiling passion.
At least, he assumed it was roiling passion. That she was so
silent about her feelings and so loud about her intentions did
make her something of a puzzle. A delightful puzzle.
He’d never known a woman like her.
He wanted to know her better, in every sense of the word.
What sort of woman arranged to be kissed by a groom? For
he did now believe her. Penelope was too forthright and too lack
ing in the normal levels of tact to lie about it. She clearly saw
nothing wrong with arranging for her own needs to be met.
There was something scandalous about that, and he liked it.
There was also something very frustrating about her fl at
230 CLAUDIA DAIN
refusal to pursue him. She was interested in him. He knew she
was, but she was too fixated on Edenham to notice it. Well then,
the obvious course was to force her attention onto him.
He didn’t anticipate much trouble there. Look how jealous she
was even now at the mere mention of Elizabeth Grey. He would
have her exactly where he wanted her, Penelope, not Elizabeth,
in a matter of hours. He wasn’t at all certain how he was going
to accomplish this, but he knew one thing absolutely: he was
going to enjoy himself immensely.
Eighteen
“DARLING, I thought you’d never arrive,” Sophia said to the Duke
of Edenham. “Lady Richard, you are looking quite as beautiful
as ever. I do think London agrees with you completely. You must
get up to Town more often.”
The Duke of Edenham and Lady Richard were perhaps the
two most beautiful people England had ever produced. Their
features were elegantly cut, their eyes expressive, their forms
exquisitely shaped. They were each intensely lovely and intensely
miserable, marriage having not met their expectations in the
slightest.
Darling Edenham had been scarred by death, each of his
three wives very nearly literally dying beneath him, and Kath
erine had been scarred by betrayal. She had married for love, and
disreputable, though charming, Lord Richard had strayed. More
than once and never with discretion. That he had strayed into
Lady Paignton’s bed made this evening a very important one
for Lady Richard. It was time to put old ghosts to rest, not at all
literally speaking as Sophia had no real desire to see Lady Paign
ton murdered, and certainly not by the delightful Lady Richard.
232 CLAUDIA DAIN
That would be a very poor end to what should have been a very
remarkable life.
“I think it is the children who agree with me, Lady Dalby,”
Katherine, Lady Richard, answered, giving Sophia a breathy
kiss on the cheek in greeting.
“I can quite understand that,” Sophia said, studying Kather
ine. “You might have children populating your nursery one day.
If you married again.”
“I am content with the children in my brother’s nursery, So
phia,” Katherine said softly. “Very well content.”
“Are you?” Sophia said, and with a smile, she added, “How
wonderful for you. No one in London is ever content. You may
begin a new fashion. I do hope so. There is nothing more stimu
lating than a new fashion taking hold.”
“I do feel hugely insulted and I shan’t stand here and listen
for another moment,” Edenham said, grinning. “I was under
the firm impression that I was the most stimulating man in
Town, and it was you who gave me that impression, Sophia.
You seem quite mercurial of a sudden. I can’t think what to do
about it.”
Edenham was positively joyous. He was clearly delighted
to see his sister out in Society, and well he should be. It did
Katherine no good at all to hibernate. It only led to all sorts of
unflattering speculation, which was the worst kind of all.
“But darling, you must stand and listen for there is so much I
must tell you,” Sophia said, drawing the two of them to a spot
along the back wall of the reception room, a wall simply dripping
with large mirrors, to have a private chat. Private? With mirrors?
Oh, she knew precisely what she was about. “You know of the
wager, naturally.”
“Wager? I’m afraid I do not,” Edenham said.
“Does it concern Edenham?” Katherine asked in a worried
undertone, casting a glance about the room. The occupants of
How to Daz zle a Duke
233
the room glanced back at her. Many, if not most of them had not
seen her since her husband’s very timely death.
Katherine was wearing white muslin of the most pristine lines
with flawlessly cut white kid gloves. As was her practice, and
which she was becoming quite famous for, which would likely
annoy her completely, Katherine was wearing no jewelry what
soever. As a consequence, and in direct conflict with every other
woman in the room, she looked as classically beautiful and pure
as a vestal virgin of old. Her dark chestnut hair was done up in
a loose pile and her hazel brown eyes looked enormous in her
delicately structured face. She was, as far as it was possible to be,
the direct physical and emotional opposite of Bernadette, Lady
Paignton, and it was a mystery to half the population of London,
the female half, how Lord Richard could possibly have fallen
from his wife’s bed into Bernadette’s. The male half understood
it completely.
Sophia, because of her unique experience of the world, un
derstood it as well, though she thought Lord Richard a complete
fool and didn’t shed a tear when he’d been killed in that duel.
She’d wager Katherine hadn’t cried either. She did hope not.
“But of course it does, darling, which is why the room is full
to bursting,” Sophia answered. “Now Edenham, I do want you
to prepare yourself, but it seems that not only has a wager been
placed on White’s book that you shall marry Miss Prestwick, but
someone, I leave you to guess it, has made a wager that Lord
Iveston will be the man for Penelope. Darling, you have compe
tition. And everyone in Town is here to see who shall win the
delightful Miss Prestwick. Are you quite prepared for that?”
Edenham, to his immense credit, which did so much to dem
onstrate why she found him so attractive, did not so much as
blink.
“It’s not to be lances on horseback, I presume? Then I am
hardly alarmed. A wager. What is that? Wagers are made every
234 CLAUDIA DAIN
day. I do not fear being on White’s book. Is not Miss Prestwick
alarmed that this episode will tarnish her good name?”
“I can see you have not spent much time in conversation with
Miss Prestwick,” Sophia said blandly.
“Is she a ribald sort?” Katherine asked.
“No, not at all,” Sophia said. “Miss Prestwick is . . . practical.”
“Practical. That doesn’t sound terribly amiss,” Katherine said.
“Hugh, are you planning to marry again?”
“Not exactly planning,” Edenham answered.
“But if you stumbled into it, you wouldn’t cry for help?” So
phia said, chuckling.
“That’s about it,” Edenham said.
“Oh, Hugh,” Katherine said on a sigh. It was perfectly
obvious she felt that her brother had enjoyed as many wives
as he ought.
“As you have arrived far later than Lord Iveston,” Sophia
said, ignoring Katherine for the moment, “he has far outpaced
you in his courtship of Miss Prestwick. You shall have much to
do to catch him up, darling. I suggest you start as soon as you are
able to fi nd her.”
“To fi nd her? Where is she?”
“Lord Iveston dragged her out of the room a half hour ago,
which did change the odds in his favor, which I’m certain you
will see the logic of. Why, he may have won the wager, and the
girl, already. I do, do wish you had arrived earlier, Edenham. I
can’t possibly help you if you’re not here to be helped.”
“You’ve wagered on me, I take it?” Edenham said.
“Ten pounds,” Sophia said, and then added, “but I’m desperate
to get fi fteen on Iveston. He does look good for it, doesn’t he?”
It was at that moment that Penelope and her brother entered
the reception room, Iveston and George bringing up the rear.
Penelope looked utterly disheveled.
How to Daz zle a Duke
235
“Oh, dear,” Sophia said. “I do think I should make it twenty on
Iveston. I can’t see how I could lose, do you, darling Edenham?”
He didn’t answer. She had hardly expected him to.
6
LORD George Blakesley, just back from placing his wager on
White’s book and looking forward to a bite to eat at Lady Lan
reath’s famously well-laid table, was accosted by two things al
most immediately; one was the sight of Iveston looking a bit
bedraggled about the cravat trailing behind a very bedraggled
Penelope Prestwick, and the other was Lord Penrith grabbing
him by the arm and pulling him off into a corner, far away from
the food, it should be added.
“What are the odds now?” Penrith asked.
“They were in Edenham’s favor,” Lord George answered.
“What’s happened?”
“No one knows. But something. Edenham’s just here. And
he’s talking to Sophia. Things should perk up quite a bit now. I
can’t see that Iveston has much chance, truthfully. If Sophia is
aiding him in acquiring Miss Prestwick, the matter is as good as
settled.”
George, as he was Iveston’s brother, did not care for that state
ment in the least. What to do but rally to Iveston’s standard?
“I don’t believe you know Iveston well at all, Penrith. My
money is on my brother. He is more determined and more
charming than is generally credited.”
“I don’t mean to insult you and yours, Lord George, but it is
not so much that Edenham is the better man here but that Sophia
Dalby is clearly backing him. I wonder if you understand how
fully that changes things.”
They were both standing quite stiffly now, their chins tucked