Chapter 6
A good servant is always discreet, faithfully performs all duties, and never judges his employer’s habits. Except, perhaps, the truly reprehensible ones.
A Compleat
Guide for
Being a Most Proper Butler
by Richard Robert Reeves
As Christian cantered toward the park, he caught sight of Lady Elizabeth and her cousin, Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton, the woman who’d been serving as chaperone the night before. It had taken very little effort to learn the cousin’s name; now all Christian had to do was find a way past her to Elizabeth.
Impervious to his presence, they swept by in a rather showy carriage, the black lacquered sides catching the light almost as much as the matched blacks that pulled it.
The vehicle was enough to excite attention, every inch gleamed with newness. But the combination of the gorgeous horses and the shimmer of Beth’s golden hair against the red velvet seat pulled the eye far quicker than mere money and position could account for. She was, quite simply, a stunningly beautiful woman.
It was a good thing he was protected from feeling more for her than was seemly. Her connection to her grandfather would forever keep her charms from working on his jaded palate. She was the key into her grandfather’s world and nothing more, no matter what the troublesome Reeves might wish to imply.
Christian watched as she leaned forward to speak to her cousin. There was something innately graceful about Elizabeth. He wasn’t sure if it was her gestures, the way she held her head, or the genuine charm of her person, but just watching her was a fascination in and of itself.
It really was a pity she was his enemy by birth. Still, he refused to feel poorly for admiring her beauty. How could he help it? Just seeing her there, reclining in the seat, dressed in a trim Russian-styled short coat, a white crown bonnet adorned with bluebells on her golden hair, he thought she looked like a wood nymph stolen from the forest.
His playful gelding shied in pretend horror from a flower cart that rumbled past. “Easy, Lucifer!” The beast snorted and pranced, arching his neck and blowing through his nose. Christian eased his heels into the animal’s sides, keeping a firm hand on the reins. Lucifer recognized the touch of his master and quieted, though not before he gave one last defiant snort.
Christian turned his horse toward the park gates, following a short distance behind the cabriolet. The wind rose just as they passed through the gates and lifted a curl of Beth’s golden hair about the edge of her bonnet. Christian’s body tightened instantly. He could picture her as she’d been at the ball last night, her full lips pursed with interest, her eyes dark with unasked questions.
The wind lifted the tormented curl and pulled it along the edge of her bonnet, a golden banner. Christian thought of her hair, of her porcelain white skin and how it would look against his own darker coloring. His body tightened even more, his groin aching ever so slightly. Damn, but what he would give to see her in his bed, divested of her finery and trappings, nothing between them but unbridled passion.
Shaking his head a little at his own foolishness, Christian adjusted his seat in the saddle. Lucifer tossed his head and whickered as if laughing.
Christian leaned forward and said into the horse’s ear, “I am not amused.”
Beth’s vehicle reached the outer loop of the path. Christian nudged Lucifer forward as a noticeable stirring of motion began at the side of the pathway. A small number of men—about five in all—who’d been rather listlessly sitting upon their mounts or leaning against their carriages, surged forward like ants scurrying from a kicked over anthill. They leaped upon their horses and climbed hurriedly into their carriages and then they merged, mingled, and dashed toward the cabriolet.
Christian frowned. He’d expected suitors, but…only five? A woman with Elizabeth’s fortune alone could count on at least twenty suitors in the park on any given day.
It was odd in the extreme.
What made the situation even more curious was that the five men surrounding the cabriolet were all known to be seeking a woman of fortune. What was afoot? Besides fortune, Lady Elizabeth was beautiful and the daughter of a blasted duke, for heaven’s sake! Surely there were men who would wish to court her based on those pronouncements rather than her dowry?
Christian glanced at Lady Elizabeth, but could detect no nuance in her person to show her feelings at being left in such thin company. By Zeus, he needed to find out what was occurring here.
Lady Elizabeth laughed at something her companion said, the sound drifting back with the wind to land delicately on Christian’s ears. The curve of her pink lips seemed to beckon him forward, though he could not get near her on the narrow path due to the horses crowded about the cabriolet.
A flash of impatience flared, and suddenly, despite the fact that it complicated his plan, he found that he wished every man in sight to Hades. The reaction was so instantaneous, so thorough, that he drew up, frowning.
Somehow, perhaps because he needed her for his plans and had been listening to reports of her existence for the last six months, he’d begun to think of Elizabeth as…his. He stiffened in his seat. What the hell was he thinking? That sort of thing could lead to a far more serious relationship than he cared to claim. So why was he sitting here, battling a most uncomfortable and unfamiliar surge of bitterness? A feeling almost akin to jealousy?
Unconsciously, Christian tightened his grip on Lucifer.
The horse shied in reaction. Cursing a little, Christian fought to bring Lucifer under control, though he never stopped watching Beth. She’d seen the approaching suitors and was now leaning forward to say something to her coachman—perhaps urging him to move onward. But if that was her intent, it was too late; the pathway that wended about the park was blocked before she even made the first turn.
Damn them all to hell and back, the bounders. His only option now was to separate his quarry from her erstwhile fortune-seeking entourage. It was rather like trying to extricate a particularly juicy piece of meat from the jowls of a pack of salivating wolves.
Fortunately, Christian was more wolf than any of the others. Unlike the lily white pampered pets before him, he’d made his own way in the world, fought for his own food with sinew and stealth, teeth bared the entire way.
He turned Lucifer toward a side path and brought the restless horse through a low bracket of brush a short distance up the path. He caught sight of Elizabeth, her eyes meeting his for the space of a second. To his immense satisfaction, she reacted instantly. Her face brightened and her eyes flashed with pleased recognition, her lips parting as if to say his name.
But just as quickly, she rethought her reaction, for she bit her lip and looked away, her color high.
That decided it. “Come, Lucifer,” he murmured. “We are summoned.” Christian touched his heels to the sides of his mount. The gelding sprang forward as Christian guided him between the side of the cabriolet and the men who attempted to ride next to it.
No horse was a match for Lucifer. He sneered at the other mounts, snorting and baring his teeth. The other animals, as pampered and protected as their owners, took one look at the aggressive gelding and shied out of reach, away from the cabriolet.
Soon, Christian was in place beside the carriage. “Lady Elizabeth,” he said, touching his whip to the brim of his hat, smiling down into her eyes. “You look”—he let his gaze drift over her—“lovely. A rose in a hothouse of daisies.”
In Christian’s experience, a normal maid—especially one so inexperienced—would have been immediately thrown into a flutter of unease and excitement. But Lady Elizabeth was made of sterner stuff.
Her brows rose ever so slightly, and she said in that slightly husky voice of hers, “I beg your pardon, but have we met? I don’t believe I know you.”
A smile danced in her eyes, a dimple quivered on one rounded cheek.
For an instant, Christian completely forgot his quest. He forgot he was in the park, on his horse. He forgot that there were other people about. He forgot everything but the smiling eyes of the woman before him.
He leaned forward. “My lady, it is my most fervent wish that you did know me. Well.”
Her lips quirked in a delicious half smile. “Well, then. Perhaps that is something we can remedy, my—”
“Beth!” Her companion—Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton—grasped Elizabeth’s hand and said, “Careful!” in a warning tone very similar to the one she’d used the night before.
Elizabeth sent her cousin a reluctant glance, then winced as if remembering something unpleasant. “Oh yes,” she said in an irritated tone. “That.”
Christian did not allow the smile to slip from his face, but all his senses sharpened. What was this? He struggled to understand.
Beside Christian, the Duke of Standwich was trying desperately to keep his rather plump mare under control. The normally placid animal wildly eyed Lucifer and tugged her reins in a most unseemly manner. “My lord!” Standwich huffed, sawing unbecomingly at the reins. “Pray control your mount!”
Christian glanced down at Lucifer, who was prancing with glee beside the cabriolet but otherwise minding himself with fair decorum. “My mount is under control. Your mare is the one who is unruly.”
Standwich’s mouth thinned, even as he had to pull his restive horse back onto the path. “Lady Bud never behaves in this manner—”
“I beg your pardon,” Christian said, trying to suppress a grin and failing. “Did you call your horse ‘Lady Bud’?”
Beside him, Elizabeth gave a short gurgle of laughter. Christian flashed a smile in her direction, their eyes meeting a moment.
Standwich’s face reddened. “Yes! Yes, I did call her that. It is my mother’s mare, if you must know. I only borrowed it because I thought it would behave prettily in a lady’s presence.” The duke sent a resentful glare at Lucifer. “Unlike your mount, which is not fit for public usage!”
Christian rubbed Lucifer’s neck, which made the animal pick up his feet a bit higher. “I don’t believe you have any right to question my horse. Nor I yours. If you wish to ride a prissy animal, that is none of my concern.”
“Though my mare’s name is Lady Bud,” the duke said hotly, “she is not a weak animal. She’s just called—oh, dash it! I am not explaining myself to you.” He sniffed, his back so stiff it was a wonder he could still ride. “Besides, she’s nothing like my usual mount. My horse is twice the animal of that brute you’re on!”
“What’s its name?”
The duke blinked. “Name? I don’t—”
“What is the name of your horse?”
A deep flush rose in the duke’s face. “That doesn’t have anything to do with—”
“Afraid to tell me,” Christian said with satisfaction. He glanced down at Beth and winked.
She colored, a quiver of laughter touching her lips.
The duke audibly ground his teeth. “I didn’t name the horse myself! He was already two years old when I bought him and—”
“Perhaps his name is…Sir Lady Bud?”
“No! Of course not!”
Christian shrugged. “Fine. Don’t tell us your mount’s name. I daresay it is nothing unusual.”
“It is too exotic! It’s Bathsheba!”
“You named a horse Bathsheba?”
“I didn’t name it, I tell you! Not that it matters. I find Bathsheba a lovely name.”
“That’s a horrid name for a horse. It’s far too exotic and should be given, instead, to a creature capable of beauty and passion and desires.” Christian turned to smile down at the lady. “Someone like Lady Elizabeth.”
Elizabeth’s cheeks pinkened though her companion was not so circumspect. She choked out a laugh. “La, Beth! You, as Bathsheba!”
The duke sputtered out a protest. “B’God, Westerville! Quite improper of you to say such things!”
“Nonsense,” Christian said, leaning down so that only Beth could hear him. “Would you like to be rid of these fleas, my love? Or have you not yet finished amusing yourself at their expense?”
Beth’s eyes met his with a warm look. “Fleas? Surely not.”
The words were no sooner out of her mouth than her companion cleared her throat in a very telling manner. Lady Elizabeth glanced at her friend, then colored and gave a short nod.
Intriguing. Christian leaned down to speak yet again when Standwich’s clumsy horse knocked against Lucifer.
Lucifer instantly whipped over to nip at the bumbling mare, which balked and tried to get away, bumping into the horses of two other determined gentlemen.
“Blast it, Standwich!” said one gentleman, glaring at the duke. “Take heed what you are about!”
His companion added with a heavy French accent, “Perhaps you should move to the back of the group if you cannot control your mount any better than that!”
Christian noted with amusement that several of the suitors had already given up and had fallen behind. There were but the three of them left, and he had procured the only spot where one could actually converse with the lady.
He leaned over to Lady Elizabeth from Lucifer’s saddle. “If you will not call these lumps of manhood ‘fleas,’ then how about ‘rats’? They are swarming in a pack, look as if they’d be delighted to nibble your toes given the chance, and several have rather frightening facial whiskers reminiscent of that species.”
Elizabeth laughed, her eyes crinkling beneath the brim of her bonnet. She looked damnably fetching at that moment and incredibly feminine.
She opened her mouth to answer him when Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton interrupted brightly, “They are more like little yapping dogs, don’t you think, Beth?”
Lady Elizabeth’s gaze narrowed annoyingly on her companion. There was a moment of silence, during which time her cousin sent her a warning look of such intensity that Christian raised his brows. Whatever warning Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton communicated, it caused Beth to sigh. She sent Christian a rather apologetic look before saying, “S-s-s-so, my lord. How would you rid me of this pl-pl-plague?”
For an instant, Christian was too surprised to answer. Lady Elizabeth winced at his expression, her cheeks flushing a bit before she looked away. He didn’t think he’d heard her speak in such a halting manner before, but perhaps he’d simply missed it; God knew her chaperone didn’t seem to want her to speak at all.
Not surprisingly, Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton broke the silence. “My cousin has some difficulty in forming words, as you can see.”
Shoving his surprise aside, Christian shrugged. “There are times I am not as eloquent as I would like.” He caught Lady Elizabeth’s gaze and noted she didn’t seem quite as distressed. He smiled, noting the gold and green that flecked her lovely brown eyes, a fact he’d missed last night in the dim light of the ballroom. “My lady, I would rid you of this rat infestation with alacrity. Of that, you can be assured.”
Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton nodded. “Beth, I suppose there is no harm in allowing the viscount to shoo away all of your suitors. We cannot run the carriage properly with so many people about. So long, of course”—and here the older lady pinned him with a determined smile—“he understands he is to leave as well.”
Lady Elizabeth flicked a glance up at him. “Y-y-y-you are incorrigible.”
Christian bowed. He could have sworn that the few brief sentences she’d spoken to him before had not been so encumbered. But perhaps it had been a simple case of the order of her words.
Whatever it was, he decided that he didn’t really care if Lady Elizabeth’s speech was halting, though it was possible that explained the mysterious lack of suitors. Truly the men in London were lily weak.
For Christian, it was damnably fascinating to watch her lush lips forming each word, stuttered or not. In fact, he realized with some surprise, her stutter made him want to kiss her all the more.
He grinned and touched the brim of his hat. “You, my lady, are too beautiful to sit in such a mundane manner, surrounded by such fools who think to amuse you with empty compliments.”
Beth had to admit the viscount had taken an accurate measure of her suitors. They were indeed bothering her, the lot of them. Beatrice’s new cabriolet was designed for a spanking pace, and because of the small squadron that had followed them down the path, they were forced to crawl along as if they were in a tiny cart pulled by fat ponies.
Westerville glinted an amused smile her way as if he could feel her frustration. She couldn’t help but respond. It was odd, but though the man irritated her with his overconfidence, she found his presence both stimulating and reassuring in some way.
Westerville glanced at the few remaining suitors, all of whom seemed determined to ride abreast of the cabriolet. After a moment’s consideration, he nodded as if making a decision, then leaned down. Pale green and rimmed by the thickest black lashes, his eyes were almost level with hers. “My lady,” he said, his deep voice rumbling over her, “pray move to one side.”
Beth raised her brows. “One side?”
Beatrice kicked her ankle.
Beth winced, then said in an oddly bored voice, “Wh-what I mean is, one s-s-s-side?”
Something flared in the viscount’s eyes, an expression quickly shuttered by the fall of his lashes. Beth winced. Oh blast her stutter! She never seemed able to remember it when the man was around. Yet…when she’d finally remembered to use it, he hadn’t been discouraged at all and had accepted her flawed speech without comment or even an outward wince. In many ways, he’d accepted it much better than the charlatans who continued to hound her.
In fact, she didn’t think a single other gentleman had reacted so well. She stole a glance at him from under her lashes and caught him looking back at her, boldly and without pretense. There was a look in his eyes, one of enjoyment and…knowledge. As if he’d just discovered something about her and was relishing it. Goodness…did he know?
He winked, slowly and sensually, sending a flutter of heat across her skin. Beth could only stare. Had he guessed at her subterfuge? Heaven knew that if he had, it was her own fault. She really should be upset. But instead…she winked back.
There was a stunned second’s worth of a pause, just long enough for the viscount to blink once in astonishment, and then he tilted back his head and laughed—long and loud.
Beatrice looked from him to Beth and back. “What? What is it? Did I miss something?”
Beth bit her lip, trying to keep her own laughter from ringing out with Westerville’s. Heaven help her, but the man was dangerous for a million and one reasons, not the least of which was his sense of humor that so closely mirrored her own. An intelligent, cautious woman would avoid the man.
But somehow, today, looking at him astride such a lovely horse, his green eyes shaded by the brim of his hat, his broad shoulders perfectly lined by an expertly cut riding coat, his finely carved mouth curved in a smile…What was one more day? she asked herself.
“So, will you slide over?” he asked, a rakish challenge in his gaze.
“She cannot,” Beatrice said, leaning forward in a bristling mass of skirts and protectiveness.
Beth’s smile did not waver. “Ah, but I can, too.”
Had Annie seen her lady’s smile, she would have been able to tell Beatrice to tread carefully. The maid knew that when Lady Elizabeth smiled that certain calm, determined smile, she’d made up her mind about something. And when Lady Elizabeth made up her mind about something, there was no changing it. But Annie was not here, and even had she been, it was highly unlikely Beatrice would have paid the maid the least heed.
Instead, Beatrice said with even more insistence, “No, Beth. You may not move aside. I will not allow it.”
That did it. A smile firmly on her face, Beth gathered her skirts and slid over on the seat. Before Beth knew what the viscount was about, he had swung off the horse and, with a graceful vault, deposited himself neatly in the seat beside her, his horse never breaking stride.
“Well!” Beatrice said, her cheeks red. She glared at Beth.
Feeling a little guilty, Beth reached over and took her cousin’s hand. “I am sorry. But you vexed me a bit.”
Westerville handed his horse’s reins over his shoulder to the outrider who held on to the back of the cabriolet. The man obediently looped the reins over a hook, and soon the beautiful gelding was trotting along behind the cabriolet.
Now, of course, Standwich was free to move closer to the cabriolet, but for naught. All he could do was ride beside Christian, who had his back toward the suitors.
“Well, my love?” Westerville said, leaning into the corner and trying to find room for his long legs inside the cabriolet’s rather limited space. “Shall we take this smart carriage through its paces?”
Beatrice freed her hand from Beth’s and sent an irritated glare toward the viscount. “My lord, please do not address Lady Elizabeth as ‘my love.’ It is vastly improper, as I am sure you are aware.”
He slanted Beatrice a glance, a slow grin lifting the corner of his mouth in a way that seemed to light his green eyes from within. “Madam, I may not always act in a manner you think proper. But I can promise you this…I shall never bore either you or Lady Elizabeth. I don’t think you can say the same of these paltry hangers-ons who are following us even now.”
“Oh! The nerve!” Standwich protested miserably from his place beside the coach, well out of conversation range of everyone in the carriage.
“What did that man say?” demanded the Frenchman who rode at his side.
Christian looked at Beatrice. “Why don’t you ask the coachman to give your carriage a good run? Didn’t you say you wished to see how she’d go through her paces?”
Beatrice hesitated a second, her gaze meeting Beth’s. Beth offered an encouraging nod of her head. Why shouldn’t they enjoy a ride? After weeks of stultifying convention, it would be lovely to feel the wind in her hair.
As if he knew her thoughts, the viscount’s leg moved ever so slightly to one side, touching hers through the skirts of her gown. It was a simple movement, with several layers of clothes between them, yet it sent a shock through her so sudden, so physical, that she had to grasp her hands in her lap as hard as she could to keep from reacting. The man was a menace to her peace of mind.
Beatrice saw none of this, for she was in deep discussion with the coachman. After a moment, she turned about in her seat with a decided flounce. Her eyes sparkled with indignation. “My own coachman tried to tell me he couldn’t go any faster than what we were—ambling like old women in a farm cart! So I told him that Harry had bought this cabriolet for me to cut a dash in, and a dash I would cut.”
“Good for you!” Beth said. She would have congratulated her cousin more, but the coachman chose that moment to let the leaders have their way, and soon they were flying down the path, traveling much faster than propriety allowed.
Beatrice grabbed the sides of the cabriolet as they swayed wildly down the path, one hand on her bonnet. The fresh air made her lift her face to the sun, and she laughed, glancing behind them. “Beth, your suitors appear quite put out!”
Beth turned to look back over her shoulder, but a curve in the path sent her sliding along the seat—and brought her firmly up against the viscount.
He looked down at her, a smile on his lips, his eyes alight with amusement. “Going somewhere?”
She pushed herself back to her side, grabbing her bonnet as a puff of wind threatened to rip it from her head. She began to say something, but the thought of stuttering at such a lovely moment was abhorrent, so instead she just smiled. That seemed to please him well enough, for he grinned back, his eyes bright beneath the brim of his hat.
It was a wonderful moment, Beth decided. Her bonnet ribbons flew behind her, slender banners of blue, the fresh wind ruffling her skirts and toying with her hair. Beatrice looked just as pleased even though the wind was hitting her full on and picking her hair apart, tossing her curls about her head until she looked like a medusa.
“Heavens!” Beatrice exclaimed as they rounded a corner at such a spanking pace. Her eyes shone, her face filled with mischief. “Wait until I tell Harry how I sprung ’em in the park! He’ll have an apoplexy!”
They rode the rest of the way around the park, the viscount taking advantage of the sway of the carriage to lean against Beth whenever he could. She was achingly aware of him, and instead of watching the gorgeous array of flowers flying by, she found herself sneaking glances at him. Each and every time she did so, she discovered his gaze on her. She found herself admiring the masculine line of his mouth, the handsome set of his shoulders, the delicious contrast of his light eyes against his darker skin.
Beatrice and the viscount made desultory small talk, the viscount leading the way. Beth spoke but little, managing a minimal stutter, enough to keep Beatrice from kicking her ankles. It wasn’t until fifteen minutes into the conversation that Beth realized something rather odd. The viscount was asking an inordinate amount of questions about her grandfather.
Warning bells sounded in the back of her mind. Why was the viscount so interested in Grandfather? There was no mistaking the intense focus that appeared on Westerville’s face when Beatrice answered his questions, as if her every word was of great import.
The carriage finally returned to where they’d begun, and slowed. Beth was glad to note that her suitors had dispersed; she had other things on her mind now.
“Well!” Beatrice said, a happy flush to her face as she attempted to stuff her rioted curls back beneath her bonnet. “That was certainly refreshing. I do hope your horse didn’t get too fatigued.”
“I am certain he enjoyed a little canter. He doesn’t receive enough exercise in town.” The viscount stood, opening the carriage door, and lightly stepped to the ground. He turned as he shut the door and tipped his hat. “Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton. Lady Elizabeth. Thank you for allowing me to join you.”
“You are qu-qu-quite welcome,” Beth said, a sinking in her heart. She could not deny the viscount’s charm. Yet neither could she pretend he was like her other suitors. There was something amiss about his pursuit. Something…suspicious. Why had he asked so many questions about Grandfather?
Westerville took the reins for his horse from the waiting groom, but before he mounted, he lifted Beth’s hand from where it had been resting on the edge of the carriage window and pressed her fingers to his mouth. Tingles traced up her arm and settled in her breasts. Her fingers curled closed, and he released her, then stepped back to swing up onto his horse.
Once there, he smiled down at her, his green eyes aglow beneath the brim of his hat. “Good day, Mrs. Thistle-Bridgeton. Lady Elizabeth. I hope we meet again.”
Beatrice sighed. “It was a lovely ride! Thank you for your company.”
Beth, meanwhile, didn’t say anything.
This didn’t seem to bother the viscount at all. He merely smiled in her direction, turned his horse, and rode off.
Beatrice watched as he rode away, saying in a rather grudging voice, “I vow, but that is a handsome man.” Beth raised her brows and Beatrice colored. “Well,” she temporized, “he is handsome, and thoroughly ineligible.”
Beth shook her head. “You are such a goose. All a man has to do is smile at you and off you go, melting into a puddle at his feet.”
“I know. Harry says he despairs of ever going on holiday without me for I’m likely to fall in love with the new footman before he returns.”
“You would never leave Harry.”
“I know,” Beatrice agreed, though she still watched the viscount’s receding figure with admiration.
Beth opened her gloved hand to smooth her skirt where the wind had ruffled it. As she did so, a small scrap of paper fluttered out and fell to her feet.
Beatrice was still busy tucking her curls back beneath her hat, so she failed to see Beth bend over and pick up the small folded paper.
She carefully unfolded it. In bold, sweeping letters, it read, Meet me at the British Museum tomorrow at ten. If you dare.
Beth turned to look at the viscount, who was even now cantering away. He rode so confidently, a dark figure on a horse that far outshone any of the others in the park. Both the rider and the horse drew the eye, and more than one lady looked rather longingly after the retreating figure.
Beth’s fingers tightened over the reticule she held in her lap. He was just so…delicious. Yes, strange as it sounded, the man was plain delicious, like a raspberry ice or a bonbon from the confectioner’s shop. Odd, but she’d never really thought of a man in quite those terms. She slid a glance at Beatrice and caught her cousin staring after Westerville as if she’d like to taste him that very minute. “Beatrice!”
Beatrice flushed guiltily. “Just because I am married does not mean I do not appreciate a handsome man when I see one. Especially one with eyes like that and such a smile. Oh Beth, there is something almost angelic about him.”
“Angelic? I was about to suggest he was Satan’s own!”
“There is bit of a devil to him as well, make no doubt. But then he will smile and…” Beatrice sighed, fanning herself slightly as she did so. “All of this makes him even more dangerous, which is why I am going to find out all I can.”
“About what?”
“About him, of course! I know a little, but not enough. As handsome as he is and as thoroughly as he’s been chased since he arrived in London, I daresay there are hundreds of women who’ve managed to worm some sort of information out of him. I shall begin with the dowagers and work my way to the fallen women and just gossip, gossip, gossip with the lot of them until someone tells me something.”
“That is quite a sacrifice, I am sure.”
Beatrice patted Beth’s hand. “Anything for you, dear.”
“I’m certain.”
“I have no doubt that there are any number of skeletons in that man’s closet. He fairly radiates danger and sultry intent and…” Beatrice shivered. “I vow, but I need to go home and see Harry this very minute. Meanwhile”—she fixed a suddenly solemn gaze on Beth—“I want your promise not to see Westerville again. Not until I’ve made some inquiries into his character. Perhaps—just perhaps, mind you—I’ve been wrong. I mean, all I really know about him is that his parentage isn’t what it should be. Other than that…” She shrugged. “The rest is probably just rumor.”
Beth looked forward. “What rumor?”
“Well…” Beatrice glanced around, as if someone might overhear her in her own cabriolet, before leaning forward to say in a loud whisper, “He was not born into his title, you know. Some people say the viscount was once a highwayman. Others say he was involved in things much more dangerous, smuggling on the coast or the diamond trade in Africa. Whatever it was, I daresay it was a matter of economy. A bastard son with no father…well, it couldn’t have been easy. Now, of course, he’s so wealthy it almost hurts! Lady Chiltendon said he was as wealthy as the prince, maybe more so.” Beatrice sighed. “It’s a pity his lineage is in question. Your grandfather would never countenance such a match.”
Beth looked down at her hand where the viscount had pressed his lips. The skin still tingled, her arm slightly numb as if she’d been holding it over her head too long. Rich, was he? Then he was not pursuing her for her dowry. An odd relief flooded through her at that; she hadn’t even realized until that moment how much the thought had bothered her.
So why was he pursuing her? She frowned down at her closed fist, the paper tightly held between her fingers. For some reason, she was struck with the memory of his expression when he’d asked about Grandfather. Of all the men she’d met in the last few weeks, none of them had questioned her about that. Not a single one. Which made the viscount’s questions all the more odd.
“Beth? Did you hear me?”
“I beg your pardon, but I am afraid I was woolgathering.”
Beatrice leaned forward, concern etched in her gaze. “Do you promise not to see him until I can discover more? I wouldn’t ask you if I didn’t think him so attractive but…He even has me looking forward to meeting him again!” Beatrice made such a comical face that Beth laughed.
“He’s dangerous.” Beth pulled open her reticule and pushed the paper into it, then tied it closed. “Quite frankly, I think the less I see of the viscount—at least until we discover more about him—the better it will be for us all.”
Beatrice heaved a relieved sigh. “Thank you! I know it’s difficult to understand, but better to find out the ugly truth now rather than later, when it might be a bit more painful. You are an heiress, after all, and perhaps the rumors of his wealth are unfounded.”
“You don’t believe that.”
“No,” Beatrice confessed. “Frankly, there are some things that puzzle me about the viscount. A lot of things.”
Forcing a smile, Beth turned the subject to Beatrice’s new cabriolet and how well it had run. Beatrice couldn’t resist such a topic, and she was soon expounding on how dear Harry was to give her such a luxurious present and how she wished she could think of something to give him in return.
Beth listened with half an ear, her mind still wrapped up in the viscount. She’d give Beatrice a week to discover the viscount’s intentions and then, if she found nothing, Beth would set out on her own.
She’d always loved a good mystery, one of the reasons she read so much, and if the viscount had something to hide, she’d find it.
As Grandfather liked to say, there wasn’t much one couldn’t do, if one but put one’s mind to it.