"A failed one," Cousin Kate added. "You used to
have a sense of style. It was society's loss when you ran
off to hide in the country."
"Yes," Honoria drawled cynically. "Society lost a
scandal to gossip about."
"Derrick Russell was a fool to throw you over, after
what you'd been through. You should have defended
yourself, you know."
"Father needed me more." Besides, no one really
knew what she'd been through. She had needed to escape,
as much as her father had needed her to care for him. "I
don't intend to discuss the past," she added with steel in
her voice, "and I do not wish to hear Captain Russell's
name mentioned ever again."
Lady Kate drew herself up indignantly, but the
nearby footman stepped forward before she could speak.
He took a folded parchment invitation from the hand of a
guest who had just entered, and Honoria gratefully turned
her attention back to her duties as hostess. She had not
expected to have so many old wounds opened this
evening, nor had she expected the pain to still be so fresh
and sharp after so many years. She was happy for any
diversion.
"The Viscount of Brislay and the Honorable James
Marbury," the footman announced.
Honoria turned her weak-eyed scrutiny on the
newcomers.
Though the men who came toward her were both
tall, one was slender, while the other's broad shoulders
were set off to perfection by an expertly tailored black
frock coat. Even with all the stirred-up pain coursing
through Honoria, the larger man riveted her attention
instantly. Something in the graceful way he moved and
the confident tilt of his head sent a strange sensation
through her. His hair was dark brown and wavy and his
complexion sun-kissed, glowing bronze beneath the blaze
of candles in the chandeliers. He had heavy arched brows,
a wide, full-lipped mouth, and a strong, stubborn jaw.
She could make out no more details without her
spectacles, yet she could imagine his eyes. She had had a
necklace of amber once. She remembered the clear,
golden glow of the beads as she held the strand up in the
intense Mediterranean light, how warm they'd felt as
they'd played through her fingers, how beautiful and
sparkling. His eyes should be like that: captured sunlight.
"Brislay brought his bastard, I see," Lady Kate
whispered, using her fan to cover her words.
Honoria turned a swift, shocked look on her cousin.
"A bastard? At my father's ball?"
"And a fine bull of a lad he's turned out to be. My
son tells me he's taken the sporting clubs by storm with
his boxing and riding and fencing skills. That crowd's
taken him up as the latest fashion, but the viscount was
wise to introduce the boy to society here. Wise, if not
discreet," she added, as she seemed to notice finally that
Honoria was appalled.
Honoria's thoughts tumbled in shocked outrage. A
bastard! It was not proper. She would not have it—not in
her father's house! She didn't care how close her father
and the Viscount of Brislay were, nor did she care if
Brislay chose to be kind to his byblows. Admirable
behavior had nothing to do with correct behavior. Queen
Victoria was very different in the matter of morals and
propriety than the unscrupulous, lackadaisical uncles who
had held the throne before her. If word got back to her
and her high stickler of a companion, Baroness Lehzen,
that Lady Alexandra Pyneham had allowed herself to be
introduced to someone's illegitimate son, the duke's
standing at court and in the political arena would be
damaged. And Honoria took the idea of reform very
seriously. She could not walk into the House of Lords,
but her father could. So as usual, she must take it upon
herself to protect him.
For decorum's sake, she could hold her tongue and
offer her hand. For propriety and politics' sake, there was
but one thing she could do. People would gossip either
way, but disapproval would fall on the unfortunate young
man who should not be here, rather than on the good
name of the Duke of Pyneham.
Honoria turned her back before the men reached her.
Head held high, spine as stiff as a board, she walked
away from them. If Lady Katherine greeted the viscount
and his bastard, that was fine. If her father should choose
to speak to the men when they approached him, that was
his choice; it would not be the same as actually being
formally received. Upholding the family's position,
Honoria fled at a dignified pace toward the back of the
room. Stares and whispers followed her, as she knew they
would.
But she did not look back—not even when she heard
his
voice.
Because, of course, it could not be
him
at all.
"Was it something I said?"
James Marbury was well aware of just having been
insulted, but for his father's sake, he lightened the
moment with a joke.
"Hardly, James." His father put a long-fingered
aristocratic hand on his arm. His right arm, James
noticed; his sword arm. Edward Marbury, Viscount of
Brislay, looked beyond the little woman who had put
herself between them and the tall, proud creature
everyone was watching walk away. "I believe the lady of
the house must suddenly be indisposed."
That was clearly nonsense, but James nodded his
agreement. The Cut Direct had just been issued to him by
the hostess of the ball. He almost laughed, as he was used
to a direct cut hurting a great deal more than his pride. "It
is not so serious, sir," he said with quiet reassurance, "if
there is no blood involved." He received an understanding
smile in response. It was good to see how the deep lines
around his father's mouth and eyes lightened when he
showed pleasure.
Though James was furious with the woman who had
dared insult his father, he had learned long ago when not
to let his true feelings show. The scars on his back
twinged a little beneath the fine linen and wool clothing,
reminding him of the days when keeping his feelings
masked was necessary to staying alive.
I might have liked
her
, he thought. Now she was his enemy. He wondered if
he should show her how dangerous it was to be his
enemy. He did not recall her face, for he had been caught
by the sight of her flame-red hair. He had a weakness for
red-haired women.
It was that weakness that drew him on, as much as
his temper, more than any need for revenge. He kissed the
hand of a handsome older woman who looked him over
boldly and told him to call her Lady Kate. Then he
excused himself. He knew it was not wise, but could not
help but follow the very tall red-haired woman.
James stalked her as carefully as a hunting cat
through the crowded rooms. Heads turned to follow his
progress. Many had seen the duke's daughter's behavior,
and word of it spread in a wave to those who had not. Yet
he ignored everything but his chosen prey. He spotted her
standing amidst a group of hired musicians, staring at a
huge portrait of a horse. The musicians watched her
warily as they attempted to set up their instruments. She
was in their way, he thought, and too arrogant and
thoughtless to care. James approached with caution, and a
smile that spoke clearly to anyone who cared to note it
that he was intent on conquest. The whispers about
propriety would change to speculations of seduction soon
enough. He had nothing to lose, but the haughty,
disdainful woman would have to live with what she had
started.
What the devil is the matter with me? What have I done to
that poor young man
?
Honoria thought, as she discovered she'd come to a
halt in front of the place where the musicians were setting
up to play for the ball. She returned to her senses with an
abrupt rush of mortification. She'd let fear of scandal
cause her to act like a fool. She stared at the painting of
her grandfather's favorite hunting horse as her thoughts
whirled. Such unkindness was not usually part of her
normal behavior. She'd been cruel to a man who'd had the
misfortune of being born out of wedlock—hardly
something a Pyne should take offense at.
She would have liked to blame her unconscionable
behavior on her father for his scheming, or Lady Kate for
her bluntness. She did think that if Lady Kate hadn't
mentioned the man, that with one exception, Honoria
loathed above all others, she might have handled meeting
the Honorable James Marbury with her usual aplomb.
For the footman had announced Marbury by a title
that would belong to the Viscount of Brislay's heir. She
couldn't recall ever hearing that her father's friend was
married, but he would not be likely to name a bastard his
heir. Lady Kate's gossip must be wrong. She should not
have paid attention to her cousin's tattling.
"Oh, no." She sighed. "My behavior was not only
utterly reprehensible; it was totally groundless," she
whispered to her grandfather's horse. "And where did this
peculiar inclination to talk to paintings come from?"
Aware of a violinist eyeing her nervously, she
stepped back—into a solid, living wall. Before she could
whirl around, a voice whispered in her ear, "Perhaps
you're afraid to speak to a real, living man."
Honoria lifted her head defiantly. "I'm not afraid of
you," she announced to the man who wasn't there as his
finger slowly traced down the side of her throat. Her
pulse raced in the wake of that invisible touch.
"Perhaps you'll learn to be." His other hand touched
her waist. She was drawn subtly, slowly, ever closer
against him.
She was trembling and her knees had gone weak, but
she attributed this reaction to the fact that she had gone
completely mad. She refused to faint when a large, warm
hand came to rest on her shoulder, but it was a near thing.
The room whirled around her, her already faded view of
her surroundings worsened as darkness threatened on the
edge of her vision. A sound like the buzzing of angry
bees filled her ears.
His hands were not touching her, of course, nor did
she really feel the warm, solid body she knew too well for
her own good pressed against her back. This was some
sort of fever dream, a hallucination. Perhaps she was sick
in bed, fighting for her life with a high fever, her presence
at the ball just a nightmare brought on by illness. She
longed for that to be true.
But then—she
was
mad… or she wouldn't be
hearing his voice. She had never, in all these years,
imagined hearing his voice. She'd remembered it, of
course—every deceptive or cruel word. But never before
had he come into her dreams and said something new. He
had always stayed safely in her past.
Well, not safely. Nothing about him was safe—not
even the memories.
"Turn around and look at me."
She shook her head, which did nothing to help the
dizziness. "Go away. I don't want you here. Leave me
alone, you bastard."
"My parents are married,
señorita duquesa
."
Of course. They'd had this conversation before.
"My parents were married," he insisted. "So you should
not call me that." He paced back and forth, his large
presence filling the small but opulent bedroom. He wore
a heavy brocade robe of scarlet and black with nothing
on beneath it. It was loosely tied, so it showed off his
broad chest and the occasional flash of strong, sturdy
thigh as he moved. She curled her bare legs beneath her
on the end of the bed and watched as he restlessly
crossed from one side of the Oriental rug to the other. A
flame flickered behind the colored glass shade of the
lamp on the table beside her, throwing rainbows among
the shadows on the wall, and on her naked skin. The
breeze that came in through the latticed window brought