Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
“What is it? Something costly? But of course it would be.”
“I shan’t show you. If you want to see it, you’ll have to traipse
over to Dalby House to see it,” Cranleigh said. Iveston rose to his
feet, looking imminently ready to go.
Cranleigh sighed. “Wait ten minutes, will you? I don’t require
an escort, which is surely what she will conclude.”
“Why should you care what Sophia Dalby thinks?”
Cranleigh snorted and stared up at him. “Not Sophia. Amy.
I can’t have my wife thinking I didn’t go willingly, can I? If it
doesn’t seem my idea, she’ll get the notion that she can compel
me to do anything.”
Iveston, who knew very nearly everything as it pertained to
the courtship of Amelia and Cranleigh, found it almost impos
sible not to laugh outright. He did chuckle, but that was to be
expected, wasn’t it?
“And she doesn’t have that notion already?” Iveston said.
28 CLAUDIA DAIN
If Cranleigh hadn’t been holding a very costly Chinese some
thing-or-other, he was quite sure Cranleigh would have given
him a black eye. Or tried to, anyway.
“You’re determined to come, aren’t you? Just dying to fi nd a
laugh at my expense,” Cranleigh said as they walked across the
music room side by side.
“Well,” Iveston said slowly, “yes, actually. I can’t see how
you’d disappoint me in that, can you? A gift for Sophia,” Iveston
said, grinning. “I quite think she must deserve one.”
“I’m quite certain she would agree with you,” Cranleigh
grumbled.
Iveston could see the gleam of humor in Cranleigh’s eyes; he
was not fooled. It was as they were walking into the blue recep
tion room that Mr. George and Miss Penelope Prestwick were
admitted to Hyde House by Ponsonby.
“Ten minutes, Iveston,” Cranleigh murmured as they walked
across the spacious room. “After that, you must face Miss
Prestwick on your own. I’ll not be waylaid in my own home.”
Nevertheless, Cranleigh bowed crisply to Miss Prestwick’s pretty
curtsey, accepted Mr. Prestwick’s felicitations on his marriage,
and said most cordially, “And how are your roses today, Miss
Prestwick? Quite as lovely as they were when I last viewed
them?”
Miss Prestwick, her dark eyes glittering, said a bit stiffl y,
“Most assuredly, Lord Cranleigh. Give them not a moment’s
worry. Whatever befell them, they have made a full recovery.”
“How stalwart of them,” Cranleigh said, “or is it your sure
hand with roses, Miss Prestwick?”
“I should say the credit should go to the roses, in this in
stance,” Mr. Prestwick said, smiling cordially. His sister did not
appear to think him cordial in the least, to judge by her chilly
demeanor.
How to Daz zle a Duke
29
As Iveston had developed the habit of spending the better
part of his days avoiding the rabble that was the ton, he had not
met Miss Prestwick before the night of the ball her father, the
viscount, had hosted. She was, either fortunately or unfortu
nately, not quite like the other women of his scant acquaintance.
In concert with her bold coloring, there was something about her
manner that was equally bold, very nearly masculine in force. It
was quite intriguing. In point of fact, he had never been looked
over by a woman with quite so appalling a lack of subtlety since
reaching his majority. In some strange fashion, it was very nearly
refreshing.
Iveston, who was by no measure a fool, knew he was the most
eligible man in Town. He was of good house, good family, good
fortune, good health, and good teeth. He was heir to a dukedom,
and quite a nice one. He, without being obnoxious about it, had
it all. Naturally, women being what they were and Society being
what it was, nearly every unmarried woman below the age of
forty and above the age of fifteen would be delighted if he showed
them the slightest interest.
It was not to be supposed that Miss Prestwick was any
different.
“As interesting as I find my roses to be,” Miss Prestwick said,
glancing coolly at her brother, “I’m quite aware that others don’t
share my passion for horticulture. I can see that you are on your
way out. Please don’t allow us to keep you. My brother and I had
hoped to see Lady Amelia, to return the shawl that was . . . that
I . . . that she . . .” Miss Prestwick looked quite at a loss. Iveston
had a most difficult time not laughing outright.
“How very thoughtful, and indeed generous of you, Miss
Prestwick,” Iveston said into the stilted and sudden silence.
“Quite as generous as when you made loan of your lovely shawl
when Lady Amelia was so in need of it.”
30 CLAUDIA DAIN
Cranleigh, it should be reported, looked quite red about the
neck. As well he should, as he had been responsible for Amelia
needing the shawl in the first place, her muslin gown quite torn
to shreds, very nearly literally.
“The shawl belongs rightly to you, Miss Prestwick,” Cran
leigh said, shifting his package from hand to hand.
“I feel that, as things stand,” Miss Prestwick replied, ignoring
whatever attempts her brother made to enter the conversation,
“the shawl should remain in her care. Permanently.”
“Goodwill gesture, you might say,” Mr. Prestwick said in
slightly cheeky fashion. Iveston found it all rather amusing. Cran
leigh, by his expression, not as much.
“However it is phrased,” Miss Prestwick said firmly, “we
shall not keep you. As you are so readily available, will you
not take the shawl, Lord Cranleigh? I will feel so much more at
ease knowing it is in the proper hands.” Clutching her own red
shawl about her shoulders, she looked nearly ready to sprint for
the door.
Odd. Should she not be making some more determined effort
to stay? And to win his attention? It was completely irregular.
Here he was, caught out, one might say, an heir apparent who
was known best for not being readily available to callers. Yet here
he was, available, facing a quite attractive girl with dark hair and
eyes and fashionably pale skin.
It was beyond question that she would be very delighted to
marry him. They all were, weren’t they? He had what every
woman wanted in a man, and he was not such a dullard that he
didn’t know it.
Of course, she was a bit peculiar. That might explain it.
Wasn’t she just slightly too forceful? Too direct? It wasn’t at all
what a man looked for in a woman, not if he had any sense. His
mother was entirely too direct and very nearly forbiddingly
forceful, so he was very clear about what he wanted in a wife,
How to Daz zle a Duke
31
when he bothered to think about it at all, which he rarely did. He
wanted a wife he could manage without any effort, he knew that.
Most women looked pleasant enough from a distance, but get to
know them in any degree of polite familiarity and they became
positive dragons. Not that he would ever call his mother, the
duchess, a dragon; however, the duke did have a bit of a time
with her, not that he ever complained. On the contrary, his father
seemed remarkably content with his situation, but Iveston was
nearly certain that it was possible to be even more content with
a less energetic wife.
Miss Prestwick, now that he had got a good look at her, seemed
to boil with energy.
Entirely unpleasant. He was completely put off.
He stood in a relaxed posture of attention and said not a word,
shutting her out and showing her that he was not in the least in
terested in her. Of course, he watched for her response.
Proving that she was peculiar and not at all aware of how to
behave, she barely glanced at him. And when she did, she was
quite obviously dismissive.
In all his twenty-nine years, nearly ten of them being feted
and pursued by every mama to every girl above the age of four
teen, he had never been dismissed so thoroughly. In fact, not at
all. Not a bit of it. He’d been hotly pursued, as was entirely ap
propriate, if annoying. This chit, this little nothing of more
money than breeding, was discounting
him
?
Gad, she was peculiar. Very nearly mad, by all appearances.
“We must be off, Cranleigh,” he murmured, ducking his head
slightly before looking at Ponsonby, communicating without words
that the Prestwicks could be shown to Amelia or out the door, so
long as they were shown away from his presence. Ponsonby, quite
well trained in that sort of thing, understood completely. “Your
pardon, Miss Prestwick. Mr. Prestwick. My brother and I have an
appointment we must keep.”
32 CLAUDIA DAIN
“I shall inform Lady Amelia that you are calling,” Ponsonby
said. “If you will just wait here?”
“Oh, not at all necessary,” Miss Prestwick said, eyeing the tall
clock against the wall. “The shawl is safely in your care, Lord
Cranleigh, and that is all that can matter.”
“You do not wish to stay?” Ponsonby asked.
Cranleigh and Iveston, against all sense, stood somewhat
mesmerized at being so ruthlessly managed by this slip of a girl.
Her brother looked entirely accustomed to it, proving Iveston’s
point neatly.
“I’m afraid we can’t. We have an appointment of our own to
keep,” Miss Prestwick said.
“We do?” Mr. Prestwick said somewhat comically.
Miss Prestwick did not look at all amused, which was some
what delightful. Such a stiff sort of girl. One could not but wonder
what it would take to unbend her.
“Of course we do, George,” she said tightly, rearranging her
perfectly arranged shawl. Did Miss Prestwick fidget when her
plans were questioned? “And we must hurry.”
“Excuse us,” Mr. Prestwick said amiably, “we must hurry.”
And with only the barest of cordial formalities, the two were
out the door and back onto Piccadilly. Cranleigh looked nearly
as befuddled as Iveston felt.
“Remarkable girl,” Cranleigh said. “I never thought to see
one like her.”
“Remarkable? How?” Iveston said as Ponsonby arranged for
their coats to be brought down.
“She’s the only unmarried woman I’ve yet to see who didn’t
fall all over herself in trying to gain your attention. She had it,
by all appearances, and she threw it right back at your feet.”
“She did not have my attention,” Iveston said curtly, taking
his hat from Ponsonby.
How to Daz zle a Duke
33
“No?” Cranleigh said, his hands full with his mysterious gift
for Sophia Dalby. “Then I suppose it doesn’t matter.”
“No, I’m quite certain it doesn’t,” Iveston said as they walked
out onto Piccadilly.
And it didn’t. Though Cranleigh found it all very amusing, to
judge by his laugh.
Four
THE Duke of Edenham entered Dalby House fully ten minutes
before his appointed time. He was no fool. A man who wished
to remain on Sophia Dalby’s good side paid attention to details
of that sort.
He was shown directly into the white salon, where the blanc
de Chine cup that was the reason for the salon was missing. In
its place was a celadon vase of quite exquisite design. Edenham
knew the origin of the blanc de Chine cup; he did not know the
origin of the celadon porcelain. He was not a man who endured
being kept in the dark about important changes such as these,
with a woman such as Sophia Dalby.
“You’re early, darling,” Sophia said as he took a seat oppo
site her on one of the matching sofas in the room. “There is
nothing more charming than a man who so promptly pays off
his wagers.”
“In ready money, too,” he said, handing her a small bundle
of gold coins. “Count it, if you wish.”
“Oh, I shall,” she said with a twinkle in her dark eyes. “There
How to Daz zle a Duke
35
is nothing quite so delicious as the feel of gold between my
fi ngers.”
They sat opposite each other. The celadon vase gleamed on
a low table between them, a spark of color in a room nearly glow
ing white.
“I see you have a new bit of porcelain, Lady Dalby,” he said.
“Another payment for another wager?”
“Not at all,” she said, putting the bundle down next to the
vase, her bodice dipping slightly as she leaned forward. Edenham appreciated the effort, and indeed, enjoyed the view. “It was
a gift.”
“For services rendered?”
“Edenham, you are too coarse by half. Why, I do wonder
where you get such ideas.”
“Do you?”
Sophia smiled and leaned back against the cushions. “Darling
Edenham, if you want to know something, why not simply ask?
I have very few secrets.”
“But the ones you do have are so very intriguing,” he said,
studying her face.
He’d known Sophia for years. They were close in age, though
not at all close in experience, either shared or otherwise. He had
never known the sweetness of lying betwixt her legs; indeed, he
had no wish to. He was, perhaps, one of the few men who
could say that, not that he would ever admit so publicly. No, he