Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
the drawing room and into the stair hall. He looked curious and
not a little bewildered. Perfect. There was nothing worse than a
man who was too sure of himself in affairs of the heart. They
behaved very negligently, very quickly and she would have none
of it, most especially not from her future husband.
The stair hall at Lanreath House was not exceptionally large,
though it was exceptionally well-appointed. The walls had been
faced with white marble, the stair treads of pale stone, and the
stair rail was of nicely wrought iron. The candlelight from the
massive candelabra at the base of the stairs created a very ap
pealing glow. More importantly, there was no one, not even a
servant, using the stair hall at the moment. The moment the door
to the drawing room closed behind Lord Iveston, he placed both
of his hands around her waist, pushed her up against the closest
wall, and kissed her savagely.
Well. He seemed to have no control at all when it came to her.
It was very nearly comical.
In fact, she felt like laughing. The only thing keeping her from
it was his mouth pressed firmly against hers, doing hot and
tantalizing things with his tongue that the groom had never
managed. As to that, Lord Iveston seemed to be using every
opportunity to do more. This kiss was very much more than the
last one.
It was so nice when a man made every effort to surpass
himself.
She really ought to push him away from her. Or at the very
least she should take a step back so that her breasts were not
252 CLAUDIA DAIN
rubbing against his chest. Yes, she really ought to do that. And
she would. Eventually. Certainly there was no rush about it, was
there?
“You do this very well,” he said, nearly echoing her own
thoughts about him. She sometimes had the strange sensation
that Iveston could read her mind. She didn’t like it in the least.
“You think I do it very well. We get on, don’t we, Pen?”
“Miss Prestwick,” she said against his mouth. “You are too
familiar.”
“Yes, I am that,” he said, grinning. She could feel the move
ment of his mouth against hers, his breath nuzzling against her
skin, the vibration of his words tickling along her spine. “You
don’t mind, do you, Pen? You like what I do. You like the way I
do it. You would like more of it. You—”
“You talk rather a lot, don’t you?” she said, pushing at his
cravat, putting her mouth on his neck and biting him gently.
“Only to you. There seems so very much to say,” he said,
moving his hands so that they pressed beneath her breasts. Her
nipples tingled in invitation.
“Does there? I hadn’t noticed,” she whispered, licking his ear.
He shivered. He also, perhaps in retaliation of sorts, fl icked
his thumbs over her nipples. She moaned and bit his earlobe.
“How much more can you stand?” he said softly, pulling her
against his hips, his leg pressing between her knees.
“I was about to ask you the same,” she said, running her
hands around and under his waistcoat, nipping at his throat.
He had the most tantalizing throat. Someone should be paid to
write a sonnet about it.
“I’m a half step from taking you on these stairs,” he groaned,
his mouth at her neck, her throat, the swells of her breasts.
“That sounds miserably uncomfortable. I shouldn’t like it in
the slightest.”
“Oh, yes, you would,” he said, chuckling.
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253
She giggled in reply, which truly wasn’t much of a reply, was
it? But it was all she could think of, being that thinking was be
coming increasingly difficult and the reason for engaging with
Lord Iveston all but forgotten in the mist of desire and longing
he created whenever, and she would never admit this to him,
naturally, but whenever he looked at her.
The door to the drawing room opened suddenly, throwing
noise and reason all over them. Iveston pulled away from her
instantly, so sudden a movement that she lost her balance
and nearly fell to her knees. He put a hand on her elbow, steady
ing her, all the fun of the situation completely gone, and looked
with the most bland demeanor at the intruder to their . . .
experiment.
It was Sophia. Penelope found she was not a bit surprised.
Sophia was just the sort of person who intruded into the most
private of situations, and she did it without a hint of reluctance.
“Can you sing?” Sophia said, looking at them without any
degree of censure or even curiosity that Penelope could detect.
As her vision was a bit clouded by remnant passion, she was not
entirely certain of her conclusion.
“Are you speaking to me?” Penelope asked.
“I am. Can you sing?” Sophia said, the door having been
fi rmly closed behind her.
“Passably well,” Penelope said a bit curtly. “Why? Do you
think I should sing now?”
She was more than a little frustrated. She and Iveston had
been having such a pleasant time and truly got on better than she
would have believed twelve hours ago, if she had bothered to
think of him at all, which she nearly hadn’t. Oh, a passing
thought, a speculation, but nothing serious.
And still, it was nothing serious. Edenham took all her
serious thoughts. But perhaps Iveston could have whatever was
left over.
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“I should say it’s essential that you do,” Sophia said, walking
over to them. “Iveston, you shall play for Miss Prestwick. That is
why you have sequestered yourselves, to choose your music and
your key.”
And with that, the doors burst open and Lady Lanreath beck
oned them in with a cautious smile and the beginnings of a
frown. It might have been possible that Lady Lanreath did not
care to have a girl ruined at her house, not when she entertained
so rarely. But of course, if Penelope could arrange for Edenham
to ruin her tonight, then Lady Lanreath would just have to live
with the results. As would Penelope.
The thought was not as cheering as it had been just an hour
previous. She couldn’t think why, except that it must have some
thing to do with her impending performance.
Yes, that was logical, wasn’t it?
Twenty
“WHAT song can you sing passably well?” Iveston murmured as
they walked with as much innocence as was possible given that
their clothing was horribly mussed.
“What can you play?” she countered, smiling at her brother,
who did not smile in return.
Oh, bother. If she weren’t careful, George would make a fuss
over the wrong man entirely and botch the whole thing. She sim
ply had to get him alone and explain things, though she could not
but wonder if George was perhaps beyond the point of explana
tions. Brothers did have a notoriously short leash when it came to
their sisters. What they felt about other women was entirely differ
ent, which did seem the worst sort of illogic. Did they really be
lieve that their own sisters were any different from any other
woman? How was a sister supposed to do all that was required to
catch a man if her brother put all sorts of hindrances in her way?
Hindrances of the
no touching before marriage
variety? How could a
woman get a man if she wasn’t allowed to touch him? Innocently,
of course.
256 CLAUDIA DAIN
Or nearly so.
“I play beautifully,” Iveston said.
“I suppose you think you do everything beautifully.”
Iveston smiled and said, “Only because I actually do.”
She couldn’t help it. She chuckled.
Lady Paignton looked at her in distinct disapproval. As if she
had the right! Lady Paignton was a scandal and should be more
tolerant of others, a defi nite
judge not lest ye be judged
approach. Of
course, there was nothing about Lady Paignton that suggested
one whit of intelligence so Penelope was forced to allow her a
great degree of latitude. But she did not like her.
She could ignore Lady Paignton: who was she but the sister
of the hostess? She could not as easily discount Lady Richard,
Edenham’s sister. Lady Richard, a remarkably beautiful woman,
was looking at her with a great degree of scrutiny. That never
boded well. No one, especially a woman on the marriage mart,
could well tolerate scrutiny. Why, Society would crumble into
ruin if anyone actually looked very hard at it.
The pianoforte was in the front corner of the room, near one
of the windows that faced Berkeley Square. Iveston walked to it
with an easy stride, displaying no hesitation or discomfort that
she could detect. She did so hope she was matching him in that.
What to sing? She couldn’t think of a thing. Every song she had
ever learned, and she’d learned upwards of one hundred as she
did enjoy singing very much, had run out of her head like a pack
of braying dogs. Not a single song.
Iveston sat with singular elegance, looked up at her with a
pleasantly bland expression, and began to play “Of Plighted
Faith,” an air from the opera
The Siege of Belgrade
. She knew it. Of
course she knew it. Everyone knew it.
And with the melody lifting her, she opened her mouth and
began to sing.
How to Daz zle a Duke
257
6
“I didn’t think it was possible, but his cravat looks even worse.
He should sack his valet,” Lord Raithby said.
“It’s not the fault of his valet,” Lord George Blakesley said, his
gaze fastened on Miss Prestwick.
“Ah, the girl then,” Raithby said. “I shouldn’t have thought
she had it in her, though I can’t say that I know her even slightly.
However, she does give one the impression of severe respectabil
ity, doesn’t she?”
“I hadn’t given it a bit of thought,” George answered.
“Well, I had,” Lord Penrith said, entering their number with
out qualm, which really was very bold of him given George’s
state of mind, “and I, while finding Miss Prestwick pleasant
enough, also thought her a bit unusual. Perhaps it is only that
Lord Iveston magnifies the unusual bits in her, though how or
why remains a mystery.”
“I should think it all remains a mystery, wouldn’t you?”
Raithby said. “The wagers are all over the field, though Edenham is still quite the favorite.”
“As he hasn’t even approached her yet this evening, I fi nd that
inexplicable,” George said, not at all wanting his brother to ap
pear lacking, yet not wanting him to be married just to win a bet.
It was a most uncomfortable state of affairs.
“Perhaps that is the answer. Get Edenham with her, let us
observe them together, and the wagers will likely level off. Iveston
may even pull ahead,” Raithby said.
Penrith said nothing more, but he did appear to be watching
Sophia Dalby with pointed interest. That was not an unusual
occurrence on the most ordinary of days, but George did not
think in this instance that Penrith’s interest was amorous.
“Ten pounds more on my brother,” George said abruptly.
258 CLAUDIA DAIN
“That’s family loyalty, I must say,” Raithby said.
“Not at all. It’s his cravat, Raithby. One simply cannot ignore
the evidence revealed upon his crumpled cravat.”
6
“IT looks to me as if she attempted to pull his cravat off with her
teeth,” Lady Richard said, looking quite severe. But then, Kath
erine had developed the knack or perhaps the need of looking
severe upon her marriage to Lord Richard, her completely irre
pressible late husband.
“She may have done,” Sophia said mildly, nodding a greeting
to Anne Warren, wordlessly encouraging her to join them.
Katherine, more than ever, was sunk into an abyss of misery
that hadn’t got a bit better, and indeed, may have actually got
worse since her husband’s death. Completely understandable,
even with a husband such as Richard Becklin had been. Hand
some, charming, dangerous, and dead. That was the usual order
of things. The problem was that Katherine had married for love
and love, in the form of Richard Becklin, had betrayed her. It
wouldn’t do Katherine a bit of harm to spend a little more time
out of her own thoughts and into the light of the world, as dirty
and spoilt as it sometimes appeared. Why, look at Anne, and she
did hope Katherine would look hard at Anne. Anne Warren had
suffered more in her life than Katherine had in her brief marriage.
Surely some resiliency was expected. She was the daughter of
duke, after all. Did these delineations mean nothing anymore?
But of course they didn’t, which was the entire point,
wasn’t it?
“And you say she would very much like to marry my brother?”
Katherine said. “She has an interesting way of going about gain
ing his attention.”
“And yet she has it. Fully,” Sophia said, taking a glass of
Madeira as a footman passed them.
How to Daz zle a Duke
259
“They do sound lovely together,” Anne said, staring at Iveston
and Penelope. “Almost as if they had practiced before tonight,
but that’s not possible, is it?”