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Authors: Marion Chesney

Tags: #Historical Romance

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BOOK: The Sins of Lady Dacey
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The hour getting ready for the Buchans’ turtle dinner was to remain in Honoria's mind for some time as her last period of happy innocence in London. So far the gossip and scandalous affairs of London society had passed her by. She sunnily believed the best of everyone. Why, even the wicked Duke of Ware was nothing more than a respectable middle-aged man who had chosen to befriend them. Mr. Delaney had called that day. Pamela had told her about his offer of friendship, and there certainly was no longer anything in the Irishman's behavior toward her friend to occasion either worry or comment.

She did not know that Mr. Delaney had confided in Pamela that he was sure Archie Buchan's interest in Honoria was strictly mercenary, because Pamela had decided not to tell Honoria. There would be plenty of other men glad to wed her for her looks alone. Honoria, decided Pamela, had not the sophistication to know how to treat such a situation. If she continued in happy innocence, then she would behave at the dinner just as she ought.

Had she known that Honoria was pleasurably enjoying her first romantic dreams, the subject being Archie, Pamela would have warned her. But Honoria had such an
untouched
air about her it was hard to imagine any thoughts running through that brain other than very unworldly ones. Perhaps Honoria would have remained heart-free had she not started reading novels. She had picked up one of Pamela's with a view to pointing out to her friend the folly of the writing and then had been completely lost in a fantasy world. As she read, the hero began to look more and more like Archie Buchan.

So, fresh and scented and happy, both set out for the Buchans’ home, little aware of what was waiting for them.

Lady Buchan, alarmed at her dreadful mistake in cultivating Miss Goodham, had thought of cancelling the dinner, but on calmer reflection realized that with the duke to be present at her table as a lure, she could increase the dinner party to include two genuine heiresses, namely a Miss Briggs and a Miss Faring, and their parents. Archie was told firmly but sadly that they had been mistaken in Miss Goodham. She was not an heiress, and in any case, any female under the protection of Lady Dacey should not be encouraged. Archie sunnily accepted his parents’ remarks and promised to court either Miss Faring or Miss Briggs like the dutiful son he was.

The company was gathered in the Buchans’ drawing room when Pamela and Honoria entered. Archie, Honoria saw immediately, was standing by the fireplace talking to two ladies. He looked up briefly at her and then returned to his conversation.

“So kind of you to come,” said Lady Buchan. “Is Lady Dacey not yet returned?”

“No, I am afraid not,” said Pamela. She had noticed Archie's indifference and her heart sank. She wished now that she had warned Honoria.

“That must put you in a very difficult situation,” said Lady Buchan. “Come and meet the rest of the company. Miss Briggs and Miss Faring...” And so the introductions went on. Honoria curtsied to Archie and thanked him shyly for the bouquet of flowers he had sent her that day. He gave her a hunted look, said hurriedly it was nothing, nothing at all, and then immediately engaged Miss Briggs in conversation again, talking about people Honoria did not know and therefore excluding her from the conversation.

The duke arrived with Mr. Delaney just in time to see what was happening. He bowed to his hosts and walked immediately to Honoria's side and raised her hand to his lips. “Miss Goodham,” he said in a caressing voice. “Your beauty eclipses us all. Walk with me for a little. I have news of your aunt.”

“What news?” asked Honoria. She felt miserable about Archie. He had a silly laugh, she decided suddenly. She looked up at the duke, who smiled intimately down into her eyes, making her feel awkward and breathless.

“I heard from a friend recently returned from Paris that your aunt, Lady Dacey, had declared her intention of returning home to take up her duties, namely you and Mrs. Perryworth.”

Honoria felt that what had started as a bad evening was becoming horrible. She realized all at once how comfortable she and Pamela were together and how she secretly dreaded her aunt's return. But there was worse to come. “Do not take Archie Buchan's defection to heart,” she heard the duke say. “I fear I am responsible for that. Mr. Delaney put it about that you were an heiress. I disabused Lord Buchan of that notion. Hence the presence of two genuine heiresses and the busy courtship of Archie.”

“This is dreadful,” exclaimed Honoria. “Such vanity! Mine, I mean. I am grateful to you, Your Grace, for interceding on my behalf. If Mr. Buchan's interest in any female is because of her fortune, then he is not worth knowing.” She looked up at him candidly. “And I know you are flirting with me to be kind, to give me a social cachet I might not otherwise have. I have heard you have a wicked reputation, but I judge people as I find them. It gives me pleasure to tell you, Your Grace, that I think you have a heart of gold.”

And the Duke of Ware blushed for the first time in his life.

Mr. Delaney was furious with Archie Buchan. He felt the man should at least have tried to disguise his blatant greed. So just before they were about to go in for dinner, he murmured to Lady Buchan, “It is wicked of Ware to put about that Miss Goodham is not an heiress.”

“What can you mean?” demanded Lady Buchan.

“I fear Ware has fallen in love at last.” Mr. Delaney sighed. “Miss Goodham is a considerable heiress, but by telling everyone that she is not, Ware hopes to cut down the competition.”

“Indeed! How odd!” Lady Buchan realized with anguish that she had placed Honoria at the bottom of the table, far away from Archie. She glared at Archie, who had relented enough to compliment Honoria on her gown.

Archie took that glare as a reminder that he was to forget Miss Goodham and so he added hurriedly, “Of course, I do not know about such things as gowns. You must not take me seriously. Ah, I must take the beautiful Miss Briggs in to dinner.” He turned his back on Honoria and held out his arm to Miss Briggs. Lady Buchan stifled a groan.

Once they were all seated at the table, Lady Buchan noticed Honoria's downcast looks and cursed the Duke of Ware who, as the highest ranking guest, was seated next to her.

How to get a message to Archie? She had supplied the diners with those newfangled French table napkins. In most houses, the guests still wiped their mouths on the tablecloth. She waited until the duke was talking to the lady on his other side and taking a lead pencil out of her reticule, hurriedly scribbled the message, “Miss Goodham IS an heiress,” on the starched linen surface of her napkin. She leaned forward to the duke. “Would you be so good as to pass that to my son, Archie?”

The duke took the napkin, flipped it open, and glanced down at it just as the gentleman on Lady Buchan's other side claimed her attention. He took a lead pencil out of his pocket, and changed IS quickly to ISN'T, and told his neighbor to pass it to Archie.

Archie glanced down at the message and then up at his mother, who nodded to him solemnly. Archie was in awe of his domineering mother. He took the message to mean that he had not disaffected Miss Goodham properly enough and so during the meal, he flirted assiduously with Miss Briggs and Miss Faring, who were placed on either side of him.

When the ladies retired to the drawing room, Lady Buchan set out to be charming to Miss Goodham. Honoria began to relax and to think kindly of Archie again. But as soon as the gentlemen joined them, Archie went straight to Miss Briggs and Miss Faring and continued flirting.

“Now, why did Lady Buchan try to tell her son that Miss Goodham was an heiress after all?” the duke asked Mr. Delaney.

“Because I told her you only said she was not because you wanted her for yourself,” replied Mr. Delaney cheerfully.

“I should call you out. Do you know Lady Buchan wrote a message on a napkin that said Miss Goodham IS an heiress and asked me to send it along to Archie? I changed the IS to ISN'T, so our Archie is still being cold to Miss Goodham. Ah, his stern mama has his ear at last. Watch this.”

The duke quickly crossed to Honoria's side. “Have you heard the latest
on-dit,
Miss Goodham? It seems that Lady Arthur, married only a month, took off for foreign parts with her first footman. Her husband pursued the guilty pair to Dover and fought the footman on the quayside. They beat each other nearly to a pulp and then retired to the nearest inn to have their wounds dressed while Lady Arthur fainted and sighed and fainted again, crying to all who would listen that two men were fighting over her, so there was little hope of keeping the matter quiet.

“Alas for Lady Arthur. When she awoke the next morning, feeling like Cleopatra and Delilah rolled into one, she was informed by her maid that her husband and the footman had become the best of friends and had gone abroad together.”

“That is very shocking,” said Honoria seriously. “Poor Lady Arthur.”

“Poor nothing! She cuckolded her husband and made him fight with her lover as publicly as she possibly could.”

“I suppose other people's romances are considered ridiculous and funny,” said Honoria. “But perhaps they are tragedies to the people concerned. What, for example, would you think if I told you that I was in love with Mr. Archie and the fact he was spurning me was upsetting me greatly?”

“I would say you were a silly goose to waste your affections in that direction. But just in case you have formed a
tendre
for that worthless object who is now beaming on you—No! Walk with me, talk to me! He is not going to cut into our conversation. The fact of the matter is that Lady Buchan did believe you to be a great heiress. Disabused of the fact, she ordered Archie to be cool to you. Mr. Delaney, in a spirit of mischief, told Lady Buchan that ... that you were in fact an heiress after all and so she has no doubt ordered Archie to court you again.” The duke had no intention of telling Honoria that his friend had said he wanted her for himself.

“How sad and shabby all this is,” said Honoria. She turned away from him to face Lady Buchan, who approached them with a beaming Archie in tow. “Would you sing for us, Miss Goodham? My son would be delighted to turn the music for you.”

“Mrs. Perryworth has a very fine voice,” said Honoria, avoiding Archie's gaze. “You would find her the better choice. I am sorry. You were saying, Your Grace ... ?”

“Now look what you have done, you idiot,” raged Lady Buchan as the duke led Honoria away. “You have practically thrown her into Ware's arms.”

“Not my fault at all!” Archie looked hurt. “You sent me that message at table saying she wasn't an heiress. You'd told me that already, so I thought you were giving me a further warning.”

“It said IS!”

“Is. Isn't. The damage is done for the moment. If I were you, Ma, I'd ask Mrs. Perryworth to sing and therefore do something to please Miss Goodham.”

Pamela looked nervous when asked. She had never performed since her marriage, the vicar frowning on anything other than singing hymns in church. Honoria had heard her singing as she moved about Lady Dacey's house. It was one thing to sing when one was by herself, but another to perform in such fashionable company. Mr. Delaney saw her confusion and said merrily, “Come, Mrs. Perryworth, we will give them a duet. I will play.”

He sat down at the piano and flicked through the music, after lighting the candles in their brackets on the pianoforte. “Here we are.” His eyes glinted up at her mischievously in the candlelight. “'Oh, Love Divine,’ just the thing.” And before Pamela could protest, his fingers rippled expertly over the keys, and the guests fell silent.

The two voices rose and fell in the simple ballad, the soprano that was Pamela's voice intertwining with Mr. Delaney's tenor.

Honoria, who had taken a seat next to the duke on a backless sofa, watched the couple uneasily. She felt they had forgotten everything in the world but each other, that they were singing the words to each other.

When they finished singing, the guests applauded enthusiastically and called for more, but Mr. Delaney said quietly to Pamela, “If only I could kiss you again.” Her color flamed, and she walked away from the piano.

“I think he really is in love at last,” said the duke to Honoria. “What a pity.”

“You must speak to him.” Honoria leaned toward the duke and spoke urgently. He was conscious of every bit of her, the way a tendril of brown hair lay against the cream of her cheek, the curve of her lips, the scent she wore. Without thinking, he took her hand and raised it to his lips. “No, don't do that!” exclaimed Honoria, taking her hand away. “I beg of you, Your Grace, you must tell Mr. Delaney to leave Pamela—I mean, Mrs. Perryworth— alone.”

“It is not as easy as that,” he said. “Love, once started, is very hard to stop. Archie is hovering about again. Talk to me about something, anything. I know—tell me about this vicar.”

“Oh, Mr. Perryworth? Well, he is quite well-looking in his way. But a very cold man with a rather judgmental manner. ‘Mrs. Perryworth, I trust you will behave becomingly in London and spurn the devil at all times.'” He looked down at her in surprise, for she had mimicked the vicar's voice, he was sure, accurately. “He delights in finding fault. Dear me. I am quite overset or I would not criticize the man so. But if only he were a warmer person, more
caring
, then perhaps Mrs. Perryworth would not be in danger. Mr. Delaney is very charming.”

“I am surprised Mr. Perryworth allowed his wife to escape to London.”

“He is impressed by Lady Dacey's title and fortune, as are my parents. But he must miss her dreadfully. Mrs. Perryworth does a great deal of the parish work.”

BOOK: The Sins of Lady Dacey
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