by Joan Smith
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Belgrave House
www.belgravehouse.com
Copyright ©1977 by Joan Smith
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Chapter One
Miss Puella Fairmont came to London to make her curtsy at St. James's in the spring season of 1811. She was duly chaperoned into polite society under the auspices of her aunt, Lady Sara Mantel, a dashing matron, who was soon sure she could make a respectable match for her niece in the six weeks set aside annually to present the debutantes. The girl had some looks, some conversation, and some money—not an outstanding quantity of any of the three, but enough to make a fairly interesting combination. Her rather simply styled brown hair was no great asset, but her brown eyes sparkled brightly when she was amused. Her quiet conversation sparkled too upon occasion, and if ten thousand pounds was not a fortune, it was at least respectable.
Her season began auspiciously enough. Puella caught the eye of Sir Horace Farthington, a baronet of easy means and presentable person, but somehow it came to nothing after a few weeks. A few other gentlemen came to call; they stood up with her regularly at the balls and routs she attended, so Sir Horace was allowed to slip away. But somehow, one by one, the others stopped coming around to Grosvenor Square, too. Then suddenly the season was over, and Puella had not received a single offer. No matter. She was only eighteen, and another season would see her more sure of herself, more at ease in society, more sought after.
Puella returned to her mama for the summer and again went to Lady Sara for the fall Little Season. But instead of growing more interested in the social scene, she became bored with it. She reduced her aunt to near hysterics by refusing a much sought-after voucher to Almack's in order to remain home and work on her book. During the summer she had begun a novel, based on her first unsuccessful season. Too Long at the Fair, she had tentatively entitled it. The theme had to do with the folly of the haut ton.
Lady Sara was not an intellectual woman, but she was shrewd and soon cooked up a scheme that would get Ella, as her niece was called at home, out to parties under the guise of training her eye and practicing her pen on the subject of her novel. Mr. Thorndyke of the Morning Observer wanted a gossip columnist to write a daily piece on the social doings of the ten thousand, and as he was a friend of Lady Sara's husband, Lady Sara came to hear of it. She would be his correspondent officially, but in fact the writing of the column would be largely left to Ella. She could feel she was gaining experience at writing and would simultaneously be forced into society. The idea appealed to Ella and was soon put into execution.
The pseudonym, “Miss Prattle,” was chosen, and the column proved a great success. That same season, Lady Sara's mother, the Dowager Countess of Watley, came to stay with her, and the three women managed to straddle the narrow band that constituted society. Lady Watley was a crony of Lady Melbourne and soon became a bosom friend of the Prince Regent and his set as well. She discovered all the on dits, the gossip, of that scandalous tribe: who was losing a fortune at Watiers, or Oatlands, where the Duke of York set his guests down to faro at twenty guineas a hand, while one or the other of his wife's twenty dogs gnawed their boots and chased their valets. If Prinney changed his affections from one aged damsel to another, as he regularly did, this too was observed and reported, frequently with a venomous quote from Richard Sheridan. Lady Sara gathered in information from the dashing young set and older gentlemen still on the catch for a wife, and Ella herself kept her ears cocked for the goings-on of the debutantes and their beaux. A more comprehensive intelligence service could hardly have been devised for the purpose, and to add richness to the column, Miss Prattle developed an acerbic manner of reporting that won her a wide and appreciative audience.
Almost, it seemed, Lady Sara's scheme had succeeded too well in one direction. The writing certainly increased Ella's interest in going out to parties, but it did not lead her to look for a husband. Quite the reverse, it made her a highly critical young lady, who tended to look for a fault, or at least a folly, in all the men she met. And follies she found a-plenty. Men, she soon discovered, came in three main species. They were either of the Corinthian school, who thought the world began on the riding field and finished in the green baize boxing ring; or they were dandies whose major interest was the cut of a coat and arrangement of a cravat; or they were inveterate gamblers, willing to risk a fortune on the turn of a card, or even on the progress of two flies across a pane of glass. They came, of course, in combinations of these three main patterns, with a few recognizable subspecies such as the poet, the fortune hunter, and the rake. Miss Fairmont acknowledged there were some good men in the world as well, but as they were of no use to Miss Prattle, they were hardly observed at all and never cultivated. She came, she wrote, she conquered, and became without quite realizing it a personage of some consequence herself, albeit anonymous. It was a foregone conclusion that her writing must remain a secret, or she'd have been barred from society.
Conjecture was rampant as to the author of these caustic reports who had an entree into all branches of society. It was variously reported to be Lady Caroline Lamb, doing it for a spree, or her sometime lover, Lord Byron, doing it for spite, or Beau Brummell doing it for money. Never once did it occur to anyone that it was being written by a young lady from the country, still in her teens that first year, and not even known to sight by three-quarters of the great people she lampooned with such scorn and familiarity.
Ella smiled softly to herself when her grandmama would tell her, upon returning from a soiree at Carlton House, the Prince Regent's residence, that the Prince himself had told her in the strictest confidence that Miss Prattle was in truth a purse-pinched and illustrious peeress, or when Lady Sara laughingly reported, “Guess who they are saying we are now, love. Lady Oxford! Was there ever anything more absurd? I had it of Emily Cowper. I could hardly keep from laughing in her face, only of course I didn't, for it is she who will give Miss Prattle a voucher for Almack's."
Ella lifted an eyebrow, her brown eyes dancing. “You must certainly not offend her. Miss Prattle is very curious to see how her flirtation with Lord Palmerston goes on, and where shall she do it but at Almack's? Isn't it odd, Sara, that Almack's is considered such a citadel of propriety, when its very patronesses are such high flyers? I think Miss P should raise the point, don't you?"
“Miss P is becoming a crusader for respectability, is she? Your column would die on its feet if the ten thousand should turn respectable on you, Ella."
“Oh, I don't consider more than five thousand possible of conversion; the other half are lost souls,” Ella returned airily, her mind following its latest bent—the shenanigans of the patronesses of Almack's. Sally Jersey too had a dozen beaux, she was thinking, as her mind flitted over the other hostesses.
“True—then, too, you always have Clare to fall back on in the unlikely case of mass conversion."
“There is no danger of his reforming at any rate,” Ella said tartly. “One can always count on His Grace for some reportable piece of behavior."
“He's not so bad as some of the others,” Lady Sara replied.
“You only say so because you are sweet on him,” her niece charged. “You are as bad as all the other women, toadying to him, and puffing him up in his own conceit."
“Yes, Miss Prattle, but then we can always count on you to deflate his pretensions."
“No, I only try to. With him I
never succeed. He pays me no heed."
“That doesn't stop you from trying."
“Oh, no, I will get him yet,” Miss Prattle said, a determined and even martial light in her eyes. There, if only she would sparkle like that in public, Sara thought.
“Every eligible female in London wants to get him,” Sara laughed. “That is precisely what makes it possible for him to behave so ill."
“Well, Sara, but I do not want to get him in the sense of attracting him—I only want to straighten him out a little."
“I know, goose, and you have about as much chance of correcting his behavior as I have of marrying Napoleon Bonaparte."
“Rather less, I should think,” Ella said. “But still, he is good copy for the column."
“People would read it avidly if you did no more than print a whole column of his name, and nothing else. There's a sort of magic about him."
“Well, he does not seem magic to me, only insufferably rude and overbearing."
“Quite right, but he has the most winning smile in London, when he cares to put himself to the bother of using it."
“A smile is not for using!” Ella asserted, and the two ladies fell into a philosophical argument till dinner was announced.
Chapter Two
His Grace, the Duke of Clare, was not the premier duke of Britain, but he was certainly the premier parti, the most eligible bachelor. He had fallen heir to his title and estates at the age of twenty-four, when his unfortunate elder brother Joseph had killed himself by tumbling from a prime goer in a race against Lord Monkland and an Irish chairman. As a result of this sad affair, Lord Patrick had become the eighth duke and, along with his hereditary title, shortly acquired the honorary one of the season's best catch as well. Pretty girls who had not given him a thought before vied for his attention now. There had been no partying for a year after Joseph's death, of course, but the number of letters of condolence that he received, carefully worded to have somehow the aura of a billet-doux, gave some indication of his new position in society.
For two years he had been in love with Miss Artley, a delightful blond lady, and for two years she had been showing him the back of her head as she turned to admire some more eligible suitor. Now that was at an end. He was allowed as many lingering glances into her limpid blue eyes as he wished. It was not only hinted, but shamelessly said in so many word, that the offer she had formerly rejected would now be acceptable. Patrick discovered, though, that whereas he had panted after an unattainable beauty, that same beauty, when available, was less prized. But she had really divine dimples, and one afternoon about a year after his accession he was standing in her mama's saloon, for the purpose of making her an offer in form. Some malign chance led Miss Artley to embark on a discourse regarding her duty to her family. She hoped to erase any resentment that might be lingering at having refused him when a younger son, only to accept him now that he had inherited a title.
“I am sure it is my—and indeed everyone's—duty to make the best match they can. One has to think of family and connections and that sort of thing. How shocking it would have been in me—how ungrateful for all mama and papa have done for me—to have accepted an offer from a younger son, for you know I have two sisters and two brothers who must be provided for. I owe it to the family to marry well, whatever my personal preferences may have been when you asked me before."
“You hold this to be a categorical imperative?” Clare asked, some mischief dancing behind his gray eyes.
“I beg your pardon?” she asked, alarmed at such unloverlike language. She had naturally expected he would fall in with her line of thinking and swoon to hear she would have liked to accept him the first time he asked.
He delivered—right in the middle of a proposal—a short lecture on Kant's theory of hypothetical and categorical imperatives, then concluded all by himself (certainly the astonished lady had not a comment to make) that hers had been a hypothetical imperative, one arrived at to reach a specific goal. She had no bent for philosophy, but a certain low animal cunning in her detected in his sophistry that she was being led into stating she had wanted only to marry well for her own ends. She quickly denied the matter.
“Ah, then, you hold it to be a categorical imperative,” he demanded. “One that must be followed because of its rightness and necessity? It might be taken as a general law."
This had a good sound of dissipating the blame, and she concurred readily. “Oh, yes, one must always consider one's family. That is clearly a duty."
He nodded his head sadly. “I feared it must be so,” he said. “I am grateful for this talk, Miss Artley. My own heart dictates my offering for you, but clearly it is my duty to seek higher for a match, for the sake of my family. I am burdened with no brothers or sisters, but have a great many lesser relatives who must be taken care of. As the head of my family, it behooves me to marry an heiress, and I must not shirk my duty."
“I didn't mean that!” she squealed in alarm. “You need not scruple to marry where you will, with your fortune."
“But a law is a law, and a duty is a duty. If I offered for you, there would be all those brothers and sisters to provide for, whereas if I offer myself to, say, the Honorable Miss Twillingford, I should be advancing the welfare of my family."
“But she has a squint! You would not like that, my lord. Indeed you would not."
“I only mentioned Miss Twillingford as an example of the sort of lady I ought to offer for. I don't believe Kant mentions a squint at all, but certainly I must look as high as I dare for the sake of my family."
Miss Artley was reeling, but she was not down—and by no means out. She laughed weakly—too weakly to produce the dimples—which might very well have turned the trick. “You have misunderstood me,” she told him. “I do not mean you will be expected to provide for the girls and Clarence and Edgar. Gracious, we are not so poor as that. Papa has taken care of them all, and I, as the eldest daughter, have a larger dowry than the other girls. Twenty-five thousand pounds. Anyone might live handsomely on the income of that."
“But you recall that when I offered for you before, you did not think we could live at all handsomely on your portion and my own. And I was not quite penniless at the time."
“What has that to do with anything?"
“A great deal, my dear. As Lord Patrick and Lady Arabella we might have rubbed along on our jointures, but a duke and duchess have such ripping expenses you don't begin to perceive the half of it. Three estates to keep up..."
“But you have a huge income now! Thirty thousand pounds I have heard mentioned."
“Very true, but you have made me see it is my duty to marry a fortune of similar size, for the sake of my family."
“No, indeed! I didn't mean anything of the sort. You have misunderstood me."
He smiled a deceptively bland smile. “No, ma'am, I have understood you perfectly. It is impossible for me to offer for you, but I do wish you every success in your capture of Baron Almquist. A very respectable fortune, and he will be of some assistance to your family, I believe.” Clare arose from the velvet settee where they had been sitting together.
“But you asked to see me alone!” she pointed out. “You would not have done so only to speak to me of Kant, whoever he may be. Mama expects..."
“Mama will be disappointed, even as we are disappointed,” he said, lifting her ringless fingers to his lips. The family engagement ring sat in his pocket. He was aware of an inexplicable feeling of joy at the thought.
“This is so silly, Patrick. It is not in the least necessary for us to part. I am sure papa could raise the dowry if that is what..."
“Now that, my dear, would clearly break every law you have been extolling to me. I could not allow you to act so unhandsomely."
“It is you who keeps chattering about laws and imperatives,” she said angrily. “I never heard of Kant till you mentioned him."
“Wise young girl.” He touched her cheek with one finger. “You reached his immutable laws all
by yourself. You knew your duty a whole two years ago and acted in a manner that would be to the best advantage of your family. I am really abominably slow. I didn't find it out till I happened to come across Kant a few weeks ago. Barely in time to avoid making a dreadful mistake."
“But you came to make me an offer. You know you did."'
“I will be eternally grateful that you reminded me of my duty.” He bowed and swept majestically out the door. The impish smile on his face led the hovering butler to believe that all was well. He even dared to enquire roguishly if the duchess would like him to summon her mama when he went to the drawing room a moment later.
He was confounded when the young lady stamped her foot at him and said she never wanted to hear such impudence again. As this was followed shortly by a childish outburst of tears, he refrained from pursuing the matter.
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The duke was in a pensive mood as he tooled his yellow curricle down the street to the Park. He had most certainly gone to Park Lane to make Miss Artley an offer. He was no longer a young sprig and felt vaguely that he ought to marry, as he had no brothers to inherit if he should by mischance die young, as Joseph had done. He was accustomed to thinking himself in love with Miss Artley. Clearly she was desirous of marrying him, so why had he shied off at the last minute? It was some latent resentment that rankled, he supposed, at her former refusal. The sure knowledge that since he had come into his late brother's honors, he was sought after by one and all. Hadn't more than two words to say to him when he was Lord Patrick. Each one wanted to be a duchess—that was the sum and total of it. Damned if he'd satisfy ‘em. He had gone too far in goading Miss Artley, though. That had been unhandsome and uncalled for. He would see no more of her dimples after this day's work.
In less than twenty-four hours, he realized he had miscalculated the degree of his insult. Miss Artley's mama, when she discussed the visit with her daughter, decided that Arabella had set the duke's back up by alluding to former times, but felt it must be only a temporary fit of pique and sought to reawaken his interest. New gowns were fitted and great pains taken to discover where Clare might have the chance of seeing them and rekindling his passion, but the flame was well and truly extinguished.