Lady Fitzhugh put in, “We would enjoy having you to tea very much, Miss Wade, even though my daughter is inclined to jump straight to an invitation without considering the previous obligations of the person she invites.”
“Oh,” cried Elizabeth, “that is true. I had not thought of how your Sunday afternoons are not free. You would have to ask the duke for permission to come, and that is a difficulty, I am sure, for he is a bit intimidating. A duke has to be, I should think.”
“Not at all, Miss Elizabeth!” Mrs. Bennington put in. “He may seem a bit so, but once you have spoken with him a few times, you find he is quite amiable. His tenants think him a good and just landlord, and Mr. Bennington regards him very highly. Why, he had Mr. Bennington, Miss Wade, and myself to dine with him two weeks ago, and he was all ease and amiability. Was he not, Miss Wade?”
“Yes, he was,” Daphne admitted. And far too charming for my peace of mind. “Asking him for permission is not necessary, and thank you, Lady Fitzhugh, I should like to come very much.”
“Excellent. Edward deems you to be a nice, steady young woman, and I vow you would be quite a favorable influence upon my daughters.”
“I believe it would be the other way about,” Daphne said, “for it has been expressed to me of late that I am far too severe and sensible, and it is your daughters who would provide the favorable influence.”
“Then it is settled,” Anne declared. “You must come to tea, and tell us all about the duke.”
“Oh, yes!” cried Elizabeth. “Tremore shall make far more interesting conversation than Abyssinia! We have met him, of course, but Papa is so tiresome, for he refuses to take us with him to the hall when he calls on the duke. And you are of no help, Mrs. Bennington, for you tell us nothing of him.”
“I know nothing,” the older woman assured. “I almost never see his grace. Our suite of rooms is well away from the family quarters. The duke is a very private sort of man, and even Mr. Bennington tells me very little.”
“Papa is the same, so I fear we must turn to you for information, Miss Wade, for you have surely seen more of the duke than we have. Of course, we attend the annual fête up at the hall, along with the rest of the county, so we see him there, and sometimes catch a glimpse of him riding by on that big, black gelding of his when we walk in the park at the hall, but that is all. He never gives parties or balls, and he never comes to the local assemblies. Oh, how I wish he would. Perhaps he might even engage me for a dance. How wonderful that would be!”
“Then you would be the one to swoon,” Anne put in, “and embarrass us all.”
“Now, Anne, that is enough idle chatter,” Lady Fitzhugh broke in. “We came here with a purpose in view beyond your mooning over his grace. We must get you fitted for that new gown.” She turned to Daphne. “Miss Wade, we look forward to seeing you on Sunday, and you as well, Mrs. Bennington.”
As Lady Fitzhugh and her elder daughter left the group, the shop assistant stepped forward and asked the other three women how Mrs. Avery’s establishment could be of service.
Elizabeth shook her head at the shop assistant and said, “I’ve spent all my pocket allowance already this month. I cannot purchase a thing.”
“Nor I,” Mrs. Bennington told the girl. “I only came in because of Miss Wade here.”
“Then we can only hope you intend to purchase something, Miss Wade,” Elizabeth said, “for both Mrs. Bennington and I are being so dull.”
Daphne pointed to the pink silk concoction in the window. “I want that.”
“Oh, yes!” Elizabeth cried. “It is a perfect color for you, and would look ever so nice. It appears to be about the right size and if it could be made to fit in time, you could wear it to the assembly rooms on Saturday.”
“Oh, Miss Wade will be needing it for more than our little assemblies here,” Mrs. Bennington said, moving her stout form out of the way so that the shop assistant could take the dress down from the window. “She is going to Chiswick shortly to spend the winter with Lady Hammond. And the season in London with her as well.”
“London!” Elizabeth cried. “Can it be so? We are going to Town as well. We leave after Twelfth Night, for Papa has business to attend, and we shall be staying through the season.”
“I shall be leaving earlier than that,” Daphne answered. “December twenty-first is the last day of my stay at Tremore Hall before I go to Lady Hammond.” As she said it, Daphne felt an odd pang of what almost felt like homesickness, and she pushed it aside at once. Tremore Hall was not her home.
“Oh, how wonderful to be companion to a duke’s sister!” Elizabeth said. “I should love that.”
“Not companion, dear,” Mrs. Bennington corrected. “Miss Wade is a friend of Lady Hammond.”
“Even better. I shall dare to call on you there, Miss Wade. I saw the viscountess once at Brighton, when Papa took us there for a holiday to go sea bathing. She is beautiful, isn’t she? As you are a friend of hers, you shall be moving in very high circles.”
“I know, and I confess, I am a bit intimidated by it,” Daphne admitted. “I have not been much in society.”
“Nor have I, but we shall not be daunted, Miss Wade. We shall brave the season together and you shall introduce me to all your toplofty friends.” A mischievous smile lit her face. “If we make fools of ourselves, we shall console each other.”
“Nonsense!” Mrs. Bennington said. “Both of you will do very well.”
Daphne saw the shop assistant was waiting patiently nearby with the pink gown in her hands, and she added, “Forgive me, but I cannot wait another moment to try on that lovely dress.”
She left the other two women and followed the assistant to the back of the shop. She could not remember feeling more excited about something as simple as a piece of clothing.
The patterned hem of the skirt had barely settled at her ankles before she knew she had been right. She stared at herself in the glass as the shop assistant began doing the buttons up her back, and something came over her, something so intoxicating that she felt as if she were the most beautiful woman in the world. As the assistant began pinning where the dress needed adjustments, Daphne looked at herself, and for once, she did not see a plain, unnoticeable woman who wore glasses and faded into the background. She felt beautiful, and the feeling came from the inside out. How a froth of rose-pink silk could create that sort of strange, instant alchemy was a mystery, but she did not need to know how.
An impatient knock followed her thoughts. “Does it fit?” Elizabeth asked from the other side of the door. “Do show me.”
Daphne padded over to the door in her stockinged feet, and Elizabeth’s reaction when she opened the door was all she could have hoped for. “You look lovely!” the girl declared as she entered the small room and closed the door behind her. “I knew it would suit your coloring and your figure. You are going to take it, are you not?”
“I am.”
“It does look ever so nice on you, miss,” the assistant said, coming up behind her to take the gown in a bit at her waist. “The bodice needs a gusset under each arm, for it is a bit tight there, and the waist is too loose, but with that and a few other little adjustments, it will fit as if it had been made for you.”
A voice behind Elizabeth called her name. She opened the door and looked back down the hallway to the shop. “Oh, that is Anne calling me,” she said, and came back inside the fitting room. “I suppose she and Mama are ready to return home, so I must go.”
Elizabeth grasped Daphne’s hands and gave them a quick squeeze. “I cannot wait until you come to tea, and you shall tell us all about Abyssinia, and everywhere else you have been, but especially, you must tell us about the duke. He is so handsome, and so tall. Rather like a prince in a story, I think. And a duke is very nearly a prince, is he not?”
Before she could reply, Elizabeth was slipping out the door to join her sister. Daphne leaned out through the open doorway and watched her new young friend walk away down the corridor to the
front of the shop. “Yes, I thought he was a prince once, too,” she murmured under her breath. “But taken all in all, he is just a man.”
She stepped back inside the dressing room and closed the door. The assistant began to unfasten the hooks down the back of the gown, but Daphne stopped her. “No, not yet. I want to wear it a minute longer.”
The assistant met her gaze in the mirror with a knowing smile, then stepped away, and Daphne returned her attention to her reflection in the glass, savoring again that feeling of exhilaration, a sensation as heady and potent as drinking champagne. Right now, at this moment, she felt like the most beautiful woman in the world, a far more delightful thing than dreaming of a fantasy prince. Daphne hugged herself, and she couldn’t stop smiling. A pretty dress was a wonderful thing.
Chapter 14
Some peers were of the opinion that their rank made them gentlemen, but Anthony had always felt that being a true gentleman required honor as well as fortune of birth. He had offered to teach Miss Wade to dance in exchange for more of her time, and he had assured her that he would carry out that instruction to the best of his ability. He intended to keep strictly to his word, though she was beginning to test his honor in a very dangerous way.
He had told both her and himself he wanted that apron off of her because it was so damned ugly, but the truth was far less honorable. He wanted to look at her without it, envision again the figure he had discovered hiding beneath its stiff canvas protection that day in the rain.
He had been right about that thing. She wore it like a chastity belt, and with that body, she had good reason to need it. Standing so close to her last night, with his hands in her hair, it had taken everything he had not to lower his hands to far more intimate places. Her first dance lesson, and her tutor was imagining the oldest dance of all.
This morning, as he made his daily tour about the estate, just thinking of last night was enough to make him burn.
Anthony brought Defiance to a halt beside the lake, and the groom who rode with him paused a respectful distance away.
It was a glorious afternoon, pleasantly warm, though the chestnuts, elms, and oaks were showing the full glory of their autumn color. But he barely noticed. As his gelding took a drink, Anthony closed his eyes and allowed himself the indulgence of a bit of harmless imagining, in which a pair of long, shapely legs played a very significant role.
When he opened his eyes, Anthony found that Defiance had finished quenching his thirst. He pulled on the reins, starting to turn the horse around, intending to head toward the farm, but as he lifted his gaze above the water to the folly on top of the grass-covered knoll opposite, something caught his attention and he stopped again.
Sitting in front of the folly, shaded by a huge chestnut tree, was the woman who had been occupying his thoughts all morning. She was seated on a blanket spread across the grass, a large picnic basket on one side of her, and her discarded straw bonnet on the other.
Anthony gestured to the groom to follow him and spurred Defiance to a canter around the lake and up the hill toward the folly.
Like all the other garden ornaments of the estate, the folly had been designed by Capability Brown fifty years earlier for the ninth Duke of Tremore, Anthony’s grandfather. It had been given the grand name Temple of Apollo, but it was simply a small, round structure of curved limestone blocks capped with a dome and surrounded by decorative columns and faux Roman statues.
She looked up at the sound of their approach. “What a lovely place this is!” she called out as both men halted their horses about ten yards from her and dismounted.
Anthony handed the reins of his gelding over to the groom. “Wait here,” he ordered, and turned away to join Miss Wade.
“Thank you for the compliment to my estate,” he said, walking over to where she sat and coming to a halt at the edge of the blanket. He bowed to her, then clasped his hands behind his back and turned his head slightly to look at the sketchbook on her lap. On the top sheet of drawing paper was a half-completed image in charcoal of the lake, gardens, and fountains below, with Tremore Hall in the distance. “I see you have come to sketch the view.”
“Who could not?” She gestured to the basket beside her. “I also have a picnic. Would you care to join me?” She moved her hat out of the way for him to sit down beside her. “Your cook is generous with your larder, and I have far too much for one person.”
He remained standing. “Are you certain you want me to do so? After all,” he added softly, “you do not like me. Remember?”
“If you are still waiting for that apology, you can just go away,” she answered with spirit. “If you are prepared to be nice, you may stay.”
“Thank you.” He bowed to her. “I shall endeavor to be as charming as my nature will allow.”
She looked at him with doubt. “I do not know if that is enough, your grace.”
Anthony gave a shout of laughter, but his humor vanished as she scooted over to make room for him on the blanket. The movement caused the hem of her skirt to ride up, revealing her bare feet. Very pretty feet they were, but his mind led him upward, thinking of delicate ankles, rounded calves and smooth, taut thighs.
“Are you all right?” she asked, staring up at him, her eyes wide behind the lenses of her spectacles.
All right? God, no. He was making himself insane.
Anthony drew a deep breath, feeling as if he were dragging himself out of quicksand. “Of course,” he said, and moved quickly to join her on the blanket before she could notice what was so close to her eye level, grateful that she was still looking into his face. “I am perfectly well, thank you.”
He pulled off his jacket and draped it as carelessly as he could manage across his hips as he stretched out his legs. He loosened his cravat, then leaned his weight back on his arms, noticing her brown leather boots placed neatly at one corner of the blanket, each one holding a rolled-up white stocking. He stared at them, trying to think of something to say. He took refuge from his own lust in the only thing he could think of—teasing her.
“So this is how you decided to spend your day out,” he said, with mock disappointment. “You spurned my company for a picnic basket and a day of sketching?”
“I am afraid so,” she said, mirroring his injured demeanor with a pretense of apology in her tone. “But you would have made me work.”
“And you prefer to idle away your day in such frivolous pursuits as these?”
“It is worse than that,” she told him gravely. “I also went into the village this morning and did a bit of shopping. I bought a set of gardenia-scented soaps and a box of chocolates.”
“I had hoped you would choose to buy a new dress.”
She leaned toward him in a confidential fashion. “I did that, too.”
Surprised, Anthony glanced at the dun-colored cotton fabric of her skirt. But that made him think again of her legs, and he fixed his gaze on the lake and gardens spread out below them. “If you bought a new dress, then why in heaven’s name are you not wearing it?”
She hit his shoulder with her pencil. “I bought an evening gown!” she cried, laughing. “And do not tease me about my clothes.”
“An evening gown? Miss Wade, every moment I spend with you is filled with surprises. What color? Do not tell me any shade of brown, for if you do, I shall go to Mrs. Avery myself and order you a different frock, thereby ruining your reputation for the remainder of your life.”
“It is not brown. It is pink. Rose-pink, and made of silk.” Her breath escaped on a dreamy little sigh, and he turned his head again to look at her. On her face was an expression of pure bliss.
Like men everywhere, he did not understand how something as trivial as a mere garment could engender such joy in women, but he did appreciate the effect. A woman could be as beautiful as she felt herself to be, and it seemed as though even the efficient and sensible Miss Wade was not immune to the magic of a pink silk frock to help that feeling along. But then, the woman who sat beside him was not
the same Miss Wade he had known a month ago. “You have relieved my mind.”
He watched as she bent her head over her sketchbook again, and he caught the golden glint of sunlight in the intricately braided crown of her hair. “I also note that you have taken my advice.”
“Advice?”
“About your hair.”
She did not look at him, but he saw a tiny blush creep into her cheeks as she tucked a loose tendril behind her ear in a self-conscious gesture. “Ella helped me. She was a lady’s maid once.”
“Ella?”
“Third housemaid. Do you not know the names of your servants?”
Anthony shook his head. “Only the upper servants. I have seven estates, most of which I only visit for one week each year to tour the park and meet with the steward. Each has its share of staff, and I do not hire any of them myself. That falls within the purview of butlers and housekeepers. I could not remember all the names of my servants if I wanted to.” He gave her a rueful look. “I suppose you are now going to reprove me and say that I should know all their names.”
“Perhaps I was,” she admitted, and gestured to the groom who was standing motionless about thirty feet away, ready and waiting to obey any command given him. “Do you know his name?”
“No, and I do not wish to,” he said, feeling almost defensive and wondering how he got that way. “It would not be appropriate. A man of my rank only speaks with upper servants unless absolutely necessary. He is a groom.”
“He is a man.”
“He is not a man, not to me. He is a groom. If I knew his name, if I knew anything about him, he would become a person to me, and that begins to narrow the gap between my rank and his. Over time, I might even begin to regard him as a friend.”
Guilty Series Page 13