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The Return of Her Lost Knight

Page 25

by Melissa Oliver


  Either try to lose Lord Harlington again in the crowd, which was proving difficult as he apparently had the instincts of a homing pigeon as far as she was concerned, remain stuck talking to the idiot for the duration and likely kill him before the end of the night and then face imprisonment for murdering a peer of the realm, or, most horrific and unpalatable of all, she could dance with him.

  None solved the problem.

  That would teach her for carrying the stupid dance card in the first place, even though she never had any intentions of using it. Her lofty plan of sneaking off to a quiet room, for the last hour, to finish writing the next chapter of her latest novel was in tatters thanks to him.

  And thanks to all the words which were filling up her head and positively bursting at the seams to be let out, she’d likely have to write them all in the small hours now when they finally got home. If they ever got home before dawn—which was looking increasingly unlikely when absolutely none of the guests was leaving despite it already being a good hour past midnight.

  When murdering him seemed the only viable option, another idea struck. It was sly and sneaky but undoubtedly no less than this noxious, stalking, leering libertine deserved—but it just might work.

  ‘You can have the next country dance, Lord Harlington—but only if you leave me in peace beforehand.’ Which gave her precisely one cotillion and one short quadrille to find somewhere in this unfamiliar house to hide. Ideally somewhere with a desk, a lamp and a plentiful supply of ink and paper because her mother had banned her from bringing any.

  The annoying lord beamed, clearly beside himself with joy that he had finally worn her down with his superior and scintillating wooing. ‘Oh, thank you, Miss Hope! You have made my night.’ While he was oblivious that he made her flesh crawl.

  ‘But only if you leave me in peace remember!’ All she needed were a few undisturbed minutes to escape. ‘If I see you watching me, or even as much as facing in my general direction in the next ten minutes, I shall declare my reluctant offer of a dance null and void. Do I make myself clear, Lord Harlington?’

  ‘As crystal, my dearest vixen.’ He had the gall to smile smugly at his perceived triumph. ‘I knew my dogged determination would eventually pay off.’ Then he tried to kiss her gloved hand and she placed it behind her back and glared at him appalled down her nose.

  ‘I can assure you, hell would have to freeze over for me to allow that!’ The thought of his lips anywhere near her skin made her want to gag. ‘Keep your filthy hands and your slobbering lips to yourself, sir!’

  ‘Shall I meet you back here in this alcove?’

  ‘Yes...here would be perfect.’ Because it was now the exact place where a herd of wild elephants wouldn’t drag her once she had secured her freedom. As an additional incentive, she shooed him off with both hands as if he were vermin, making sure she scowled in complete disgust as she did so. ‘Now go away. Leave me in peace, halfwit!’

  Thwarted from touching her, he blew her a foul lingering kiss instead. ‘Consider me gone...my lovely Mistress Vixen.’

  Feeling oddly violated as well as annoyed, Hope couldn’t contain the grimace as she watched him disappear into the crowd, her flesh still crawling. Perhaps one day a man would come along who surprised her? One who talked to her and not her chest. One who adored her brain and her wit and had noble intentions for once rather than entirely carnal. Every man seemed to want to skip Charity down the altar, and with the besotted Piers about to whisk Faith to the Writtle family chapel in Richmond, it seemed doubly annoying that the only place any man ever suggested taking her was to their bed.

  She sighed, fed up to the back teeth with it all, but conscious there was no time to waste, she shook herself to banish all thought of Hideous Harlington, adjusted the filmy fichu she had added to her already modest gown, then swiftly searched for a suitable exit in case he realised his folly and came back. She needed a way out which wasn’t obvious to escape before anyone saw her. Aside from Lord Harlington, she had already spotted another two lecherous gentlemen in the ballroom who also struggled to take no for an answer, and she didn’t want to swap one plague of boils for another.

  The main door was undoubtedly the quickest route, but that would take her past both the dance floor and the refreshment table, so that wouldn’t do, but behind her were a line of French doors leading out to the darkened terrace.

  Without a second thought, she slipped through one and dashed down the steps into the garden, fully intending to hunt for a different entrance back inside, well away from the odious Lord Harlington or any other prying and preying eyes. But the moon was full, the night air surprisingly warm and the sky so clear she could see every twinkling star.

  Hope had always adored the night. She had never been an early bird and had always struggled to sleep until many hours after the rest of the household were snoring, even as a little girl. As a child she had passed the time daydreaming, creating little stories in her head to keep herself entertained and soon discovered that storytelling was her calling and her vivid imagination was always at its best when the sun, like her family, was sleeping.

  Charmed and instantly at home, she ventured further into the pretty but unfamiliar garden, enjoying the dark silhouette of the fancy topiary lining the winding path. Like all such gardens in the centre of the crowded capital, this one wasn’t particularly large, but it was long and narrow and its owners had created little rooms ringed with flower beds or shrubbery to give the illusion of space and the suggestion of privacy. They had achieved this so well, from only a few yards from the house, she could barely see the twinkling lights of the ballroom. She could, however, hear the alluring sounds of tinkling water, so headed straight for it.

  The little white fountain trickled over a pale Grecian-style urn sat on top of a narrow pedestal, sat in a circular pond. Ringing it was a perfectly symmetrical miniature, knee high maze made up of neatly clipped box hedging, heather, and lavender.

  Because she enjoyed a challenge, she followed the puzzle properly until she reached the centre, then sat on the wide brim of the pond’s inviting wall—a wall clearly designed to be sat upon. It was the perfect spot to read, even by candlelight, if she had had the wherewithal to fetch a book and candle in her hurry to escape. So instead she simply sat as she supposed she was meant to and soaked it all in, consigning the opulent scenery to memory in case she ever needed it in one of her future stories.

  The ghostly sounds of the orchestra wafting on the breeze.

  The hoot of the solitary owl somewhere behind her.

  The way a single wispy cloud floated and swirled eerily across the surface of the permanently startled face of the pearlescent moon.

  The ominous crunch of gravel under a large boot...

  Oh, good grief!

  Her heart sank as she realised the irritant had found her, and she huffed out a frustrated groan as the undeniably male shape invaded her short-lived sanctuary.

  Except this male wasn’t shaped like the weedy Lord Harlington as it swayed haphazardly between the shrubs. It was tall and broad and had far too much hair. Harlington wore his fair short hair neatly plumped and pomaded à la Brutus like every dandy and fashionably besotted Brummell devotee in the ton—but this hair was a dark shoulder-length riot.

  As its owner stumbled into the maze, those big boots quite oblivious of the artfully clipped intricacies of the little hedges, she noticed he also had a beard too. And an earring!

  ‘Evening.’ He raised one enormous hand in greeting, then to Hope’s horror seated his bottom beside her, sending the distinctive whiff of freshly consumed alcohol her way. ‘Don’t mind me.’ His voice was deep, the words a tad slurred. ‘Pretend I’m not here.’

  ‘You are drunk, sir!’

  ‘That I am.’ He grinned at her, the moon revealing a row of perfectly straight white teeth buried in the dense, dark thicket of his beard and two friendly but strangely c
ompelling dark eyes. It hinted that there was a surprisingly handsome face hidden beneath all the fur. ‘Just a little bit.’ He held his finger and thumb an inch apart. ‘But sadly, nowhere near enough as I want to be.’

  With that, he produced a bottle of champagne from somewhere within his coat and idly tore off the foil. ‘Are you out here hiding from all that pretentious nonsense too?’ The shaggy head gestured back in the rough direction of the ballroom. ‘There was so much inane wittering and preening I thought my head was going to explode.’

  Hope blinked at the expensive bottle. ‘Did you just steal that from the Earl of Writtle?’

  ‘I hardly stole it. He’s dishing out barrels of the stuff inside. His son’s reshent...reshantly...’ Two dark brows came together in consternation as his inebriated tongue failed to navigate the word.

  ‘Do you mean recently?’

  ‘Exactly.’ He nodded in mock solemnity. ‘Apparently the poor chap is recently engaged. No doubt to some witch who will make his life a living hell.’

  Instantly Hope bristled. ‘The witch is my sister, sir, so watch your mouth.’ Nobody ever dared insult a Brookes in front of another Brookes—unless they also happened to be a Brookes.

  ‘Is she?’ He blinked and grinned again. ‘Well then, that certainly calls for a shellybration.’ The cork exploded from the bottle and flew in a wide arc into the trees. ‘To your sister and the hapless, hopeless bastard she’s marrying! Cheers!’ He toasted the air and then took a long swig from the bottle before offering it to her.

  She glared, affronted. ‘No thank you.’

  ‘Oh... I do apologise.’ He riffled in his pocket for a surprisingly pristine handkerchief and used it to wipe the rim of the bottle, then held it out again. ‘It’s perfectly chilled and not too shoddy if champagne is your thing.’

  ‘I said no thank you, sir!’ She surged to her feet and he threw his messy head back and laughed.

  ‘Oh—you’re one of those girls.’ He gulped down more of the champagne and had the gall to look at her, amused. ‘The pious and sanctimonious sort.’ Then he frowned as his eyes briskly swept the length of her. ‘Although, if you don’t mind me saying, you don’t look typically like the pious sort looks. You’re too...’ He deposited the bottle carefully beside him and then drew an exaggerated hourglass in the air with his hands while staring her dead in the eye. ‘It must be dashed inconvenient for you.’

  ‘I’m sorry?’ She wasn’t sure whether she was appalled, confused or intrigued.

  ‘To have a saucy tavern wench’s body but the soul of a nun.’ Hope couldn’t decide which insult was worse. ‘I’ll bet you have to beat the men off with a stick.’

  Because his gaze hadn’t once dropped to her bosom despite the fact it was now level with his eyes, the truth leaked out before she could stop it. ‘Sometimes I wish I carried a stick. A big one.’

  ‘I don’t doubt it.’ He nodded. ‘Especially when you’re put together like Eve tempting Adam. Men are simple creatures, by and large, who reliably tend to be ruled by their urges and nothing fires an urge more than a woman as womanly as you.’ He wafted his large hand to encompass her without once breaking eye contact. Then he frowned and stood, his fingers suddenly tugging one of the stray curls she had arranged to frame her face and holding it up to the moonlight to scrutinise as if it were a scientific specimen. ‘Is this ginger?’

  ‘I prefer the term red.’

  ‘Of course you do. Because ginger is spicy and you’re a prude. But whatever name you call it, I don’t suppose it helps your predicament any. The face, the figure...’ He tugged her curl again. ‘And all this hair combined would make even the most celibate of saints pant and drool like a dog. You have my sympathies, madam, because I was cursed by the Almighty to look like trouble.’ The corners of his lips twitched and his dark eyes hooded, making him look sinfully handsome as well as naughty. ‘Although to be fair to him, I am more trouble than I’m not, so perhaps you can judge some books by their covers, Miss...?’

  ‘Brookes.’ She waited for recognition to dawn because everybody knew her parents, or lately her sister Faith whose engagement he was clearly attending.

  It didn’t. Instead he stuck out his enormous hand and used it to pump hers. ‘I am very pleased to make your acquaintance, Miss Brookes.’ His skin was warm and calloused, which made a very pleasant change from the sort of hands she was used to shaking. ‘I am Lucius Nathaniel Elijah Duff. Which is a dreadful mouthful and all much too stuffy, so please call me Luke. I don’t suppose you have a Christian name, do you, Miss Brookes?’ His mischievous dark eyes danced with amusement as they held hers. ‘At least not one you’d allow any old fellow to use with impunity, what with you being one for temperance and propriety and all that.’ And now he was plainly teasing her, which was new when most men simply made improper advances and stared at her chest.

  ‘It’s Hope and you are quite correct, sir, I absolutely do not give you leave to use it.’

  ‘That is no doubt very prudent, Hope, for I am not to be trusted.’ He sat back on the wall of the pond and smiled. ‘So what are you hiding from?’

  ‘Panting, drooling dogs.’ She found herself smiling a little back at him before she stopped it. ‘One particular hound to be more specific, who cannot take no for an answer. You?’

  ‘Determined well-bred ladies in want of a husband. One particular well-bred lady to be more specific, who has a problem with the word no too.’ He chuckled at her obvious surprise. ‘I know, Hope. It’s completely ridiculous and entirely unbelievable that any well-bred woman would contemplate shackling themselves to me for all eternity—but it also happens to be the absolute gospel truth. After thirty years of being considered blessedly and wholly unsuitable to all and sundry, I find myself suddenly eligible and sought after by the exact sort of woman I have always avoided and who have always avoided me back.’ He took another drink from the bottle and shrugged as if he was totally baffled by it all. ‘It’s most disconcerting.’

  For reasons she didn’t understand, Hope sat back down too. He might be big, drunk and uncouth, he might also look a bit too brooding and dangerous for Mayfair, and there was no doubting he wasn’t the least bit gentlemanly, but there was something about him which called to her. ‘How did you suddenly become eligible, Mr Duff?’

  ‘I have become obscenely rich, Hope.’ His tipsy tongue tripped endearingly over the obscenely, making her laugh. ‘I have so much money nowadays, I am practically wallowing in the stuff and I’m blowed if I know what to do with it.’

  ‘Well that will do it. There is nothing like deep pockets filled with coin to make a debutante’s heart flutter.’

  He slanted her a very appealing glance. ‘You’re not a debutante, are you?’

  ‘Good gracious no! I am far too old and cynical for all that. Though even if I were, I still wouldn’t be tempted.’ In the five years since she had first entered society, and after five years of being reduced to nought but a buxom body to be lusted over by practically every gentleman she encountered, she had been quite put off the lot of them. While other girls dreamed of snaring husbands or romance, she now dreamed of nothing of the sort. The thought of being pawed and panted over by a glassy-eyed man who only ever saw her as a pair of breasts filled her with horror. ‘Nor am I aristocratic enough to be a debutante. Or at all, in fact, Mr Duff.’ An aspect of her character she proudly wore like a badge of honour. ‘One of my grandfathers was a mason, the other a draper.’

  ‘And your father?’

  ‘He’s...’

  ‘Mistress Vixen...?’

  The unwelcome voice came from the direction of the terrace and Hope instantly deflated like a balloon. She buried her face in her hands and willed herself invisible. ‘Oh, heaven help me!’

  ‘Mistress Vixen?’ Lord Harlington practically sang the words as he tiptoed nearer, and she realised that if he had tracked her down into the garden, he also p
robably thought she had come out here on purpose to lure him for a tryst. ‘I know you are out here...’

  ‘Mistress Vixen?’ Her enormous, inebriated companion clearly found that hilarious and nudged her as he laughed. ‘Is that what your drooling hound calls you? That’s priceless.’

  ‘It is not a name I have ever encouraged.’

  ‘I should think not. It’s terrible... But very funny.’ He slapped his knee as he laughed. ‘There’s no mistaking what he’s after, is there?’ He playfully butted her shoulder with his. It was so solid it felt like a brick wall.

  ‘Sadly not. I can think of many adjectives to describe Lord Hubert Harlington, but subtle isn’t one of them.’

  ‘Hubert is it?’ His dark brows raised a notch. ‘Were you and he once...you know...?’

  ‘No!’ She was horrified by the mere suggestion. ‘Absolutely not! I have never done a thing to encourage him!’ Or any other man for that matter. Not that that ever seemed to matter when she was cursed with red hair, big lips, wide hips and an unnecessary amount of cleavage. ‘I cannot stand the sight of him. But the more I tell him off about that dreadful nickname, the more he uses it and the tenacious idiot refuses to leave me alone no matter how much I rebuff him.’ As she stared indignantly, and her eyes took in the sheer size and intimidating girth of the man sat much too familiarly beside her, another idea formed.

  A frankly brilliant one.

  ‘I don’t suppose I could trouble you to do something drastic to get rid of him for me, Mr Duff?’ Because the slight and slender Lord Harlington would feel like a paltry sapling up against this mighty oak. He’d likely burst into tears on the spot if this brute said boo too, which would be marvellous.

  ‘It would be no trouble at all, Hope. I’ve always fancied myself as a knight in shining armour. It would be my pleasure in fact. I’ll get rid of the pest this instant.’

  She only had time to smile her thanks as the hapless Harlington wandered into the clearing. A smile which quickly turned to shock a split second later as she found herself attached to her rescuer’s lips.

 

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