Much Ado About You. Eloisa James
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Miss Essex drank the rest of her champagne. ‘I would venture to say that you are in error,’ she said, in a conversational tone. ‘My parents are both gone, and I would give much for a chance to speak to either of them — just one time.’
Her voice didn’t shake, but Lucius felt a pang of acute alarm. ‘Ah, but it would be different if we shared mothers,’ he said quickly.
‘Why so?’
‘ ‘Tis my mother that chooses not to speak with me,’ he said, and wondered at himself. Most of the ton, Lady Clarice amongst them, believed the shunning went the other direction. It must be something to do with Miss Essex’s clear blue eyes. They gazed at him with such curiosity that it was hard not to answer, even though he routinely avoided questions about his parents with dexterous efficiency.
‘How could you know after nine years?’ she asked. ‘Perhaps she is longing to see you. If she is bedridden a great deal of the time, I’m certain that you don’t have opportunities to meet accidentally.’
‘We live merely two houses apart. If Mrs Felton had the inclination to see me, it would be a moment’s work to send me a message,’ Lucius remarked.
She looked shocked at that. An innocent, this Scottish girl. Probably she would be a huge success on the market: there were few enough ladies with her beauty combined with that bone-deep sense of honesty.
‘Two houses apart? And you don’t speak?’
‘Precisely,’ Lucius said briskly. ‘But surely you are correct. Perhaps one of these days we shall meet accidentally, and all will be well.’ He wasn’t going to tell some chit of a girl that he had bought a house in St James’s Square precisely so that such meetings would happen. He had never told a soul how many times his mother had indeed accidentally encountered her only son … and let her gaze slide away as if she’d encountered a particularly repellent rodent.
Miss Essex appeared the stubborn sort, though, and leaned toward him to make another comment. Luckily, Lady Clarice commanded both their attentions.
‘My son’s lovely future wife will be visiting us tomorrow,’ she was saying. ‘I am persuaded that you know her, Mr Felton, since you are quite cultured, are you not? Miss Pythian-Adams is quite the most cultivated young lady of the hour. Apparently the Maestro of the Opera House remarked that Miss Pythian-Adams has a voice to rival Francesca Cuzzoni!’
‘I’m afraid that my reputation for cultivation must have been exaggerated,’ Lucius said, as a footman placed turtle soup before his place.
Tess stole a glance at him. Mr Felton clearly considered their conversation about his family to be over. She didn’t believe for a moment that his mother didn’t wish to effect a reconciliation: the poor woman probably dampened her pillow every night, longing for her cruel-hearted son.
One only had to take a look at the line of his jaw to know that Mr Felton’s pride was as fierce as the north wind. If he inherited that trait from his father, it was no wonder the family was split asunder.
Then Lady Clarice’s voice caught her attention again, and Tess realised with a shudder that it was Imogen who was receiving the brunt of Lady Clarice’s description of her son’s betrothed. Lady Clarice must have caught the glances that Imogen kept sending Maitland.
She had captured the attention of the entire table now, although her comments were still markedly addressed to Imogen. According to her future mother-in-law, Miss Pythian-Adams had the most superb carriage, the most intelligent mind, and the most exquisite sensibilities of any living young woman.
‘She sounds charming,’ Imogen said, clutching her glass so tightly that Tess hoped it wouldn’t break.
‘Oh, she is,’ Maitland put in. ‘Miss Pythian-Adams is quite, quite charming. Any woman with five thousand pounds a year is, by definition, a dazzler.’
There was an unholy edge to his voice that made Tess uneasy. Surely that wasn’t an appropriate thing to say about one’s betrothed?
‘Dearest,’ Lady Clarice said to her son, ‘that was unworthy of you. While it is true that Miss Pythian-Adams is quite fortunate in having such a generous dowry — left to her by her maternal grandmother, the Duchess of Bestel — your lovely fiancée is far more than merely an heiress. Miss Pythian-Adams is cultured in every way. I declare, I have been all a ruffle, thinking what I can do to keep such a cultivated young lady amused during this visit! It’s not as if I could teach her a new tatting stitch, after all; she has had her sketches of the Roman Coliseum printed in The Ladies’ Magagne?
Imogen was holding up remarkably well. ‘What an honour,’ she commented, taking a deep draught of champagne.
‘I don’t suppose you had superior tutors in the art of sketching up in Scotland,’ Lady Clarice commented kindly. ‘Miss Pythian-Adams combines true ability with the very best instruction. I’ve heard her sketches compared to those of the great Michevolo himself!’
‘I believe you may be referring to Michelangelo,’ her son put in. He was getting a tight-lipped look that reminded Tess of the petulant tempers he indulged in when his horse didn’t perform as he wished at the track.
Mr Felton leaned slightly toward her, and said, ‘Alas, it appears that the course of true love is not quite smooth.’
‘A cliché,’ she told him.
‘I didn’t say that it never runs smooth,’ he said. ‘But I stand corrected, Miss Essex, and shall quote you no more Shakespeare.’ His eyes had a wicked twinkle to them. Probably because Mr Felton’s place had been added later, the footmen had placed his chair at an improperly close distance to her own. She felt as if his hard physique was positively towering over her. The sensation was not quite pleasant: it was rather unnerving, in fact.
Tess pointedly turned her gaze back to Lady Clarice, who was still talking of Miss Pythian-Adams’s visit. ‘She must see the ruins at Silchester. After all, it is one of the very finest Roman ruins, and so close to here. I’m quite certain that she will be able to regale me with its provenance and – and all manner of interesting facts about it!’
Her son cut in with an acid comment. ‘I suspect you are no bluestocking, are you, Miss Imogen?’ he asked. ‘There’s nothing more tedious than a woman with her nose in a book.’
Tess was certain that Mr Felton was still looking at her; it was as if she could feel his eyes on her face. She turned her head and was instantly caught by his gaze. His eyes were dark and curious, with something so intense about them that she felt it almost like a blow.
‘I’m afraid that my sisters and I have had little opportunity -’ Imogen began.
‘Of course not,’ Lady Clarice broke in. ‘Raised in the backwoods of Scotland as you were. Why, it’s not fair even to compare a young lady with Miss Pythian-Adams’s refinement and — to be frank — her advantages to a young lady of Miss Imogen’s background.’ She beamed at Imogen, although to Tess’s mind there was something of the cat’s greeting