God, she was lovely.
And too good for him.
He took her hand again and kissed it. “You say the most impossible things.”
She gave a little laugh. “Yes, and you’re an Impossible Bachelor. Put us both together and we’re…”
“We’re what?” he asked her.
“Why, it’s obvious.”
“It is?”
Something shimmered in the air between them, but he wasn’t sure what it was.
Poppy almost looked as though she felt sorry for him. “Good-bye, Nicholas,” she said with a restrained little smile.
And before he could help her out, she opened the carriage door and left.
CHAPTER 33
Possible, that’s what Poppy thought she and Nicholas were. But if he couldn’t see it for himself, then she wasn’t going to bother explaining. Nor would she marry him. The only man a Spinster would marry was someone who knew as well as she did they were meant to be together.
She shouldn’t have to convince a man to love her, should she?
And the same went for her relationship with Papa. The next afternoon, she gathered her courage and stood before his closed library door. Aunt Charlotte had left that very morning for their country home in Kent to visit a dear old friend. She’d be gone a week, and Papa would be home more to watch over Poppy. It was as good a time as ever for her to approach him.
She lifted her hand, bit her lip, and knocked at the library door.
“Come in,” Papa called, ever stern.
When she entered, he looked up, his eyes etched with his usual worries about the state of the country and his role in Parliament.
“This is a welcome diversion.” He paused in his writing.
“Am I, Papa?”
He sighed. “Of course you are.”
She bit her lip. “I’m sorry. It’s just that—”
“Yes?”
She sank into a chair. “You’re gone all the time. And I never see you. And I wonder sometimes if you wish Mama had never had me. Often when you look at me, you appear angry.”
Lord Derby laid down his quill. “I’m not angry at you. I do what I do for love of you. To make you proud. And to leave this country in a better way for you and your children after I’m gone.”
Poppy studied his dear, lined face. “I’m thankful. And proud of you. But sometimes I wish you were here with me, laughing with me, talking to me. Sometimes I think that would help me more than you doing your duty. How can I tell my children funny little stories of their grandfather if you’re not here? They’ll learn all the grand things, of course, about your time in Parliament. But I want them to know you. That you like three lumps of sugar in your tea. And very shiny black boots. And singing. Not that you’ve done that in ages, not since before Mama died.” She swallowed. “But sweet, special things like that.”
Lord Derby hesitated. “I—I don’t know what to say. Other than I’m sorry you feel ignored.”
Her throat tightened. “I know you’re doing your best. But I wish we talked more about Mama. Since she’s been gone, we never do.”
Lord Derby frowned. “You’re asking a great deal this morning. Why now?”
She shrugged her shoulders, feeling sheepish. “Only because I’m growing up, I think. I’m trying to be brave and live in the present, rather than the past. And the present includes you. I want to be part of your life, Papa. I want more from you than a frown and a lecture. I want my old father back. It might mean we have to start in the past and work our way to the present moment, but please. I’d like us to try. We’ve missed so much that we could have shared together.”
He stared at her, his brows arched and his eyes no longer exuding authority and sternness. His gaze was concerned and sad.
Even lonely.
“I’ll give your words much consideration, dear,” he said.
“Thank you. And Papa, now I have another favor to ask.”
“What’s that?” he asked over his spectacles, back to his old House of Lords self.
She smiled. “Nothing so weighty as the first favor. Although it’s related. I simply want permission to go through Mama’s things. It’s time we kept the special things and … and cleared out the others.”
Lord Derby’s brow furrowed. “All right. You and I shall go through her things together. Tonight. After dinner. At eight o’clock sharp.”
Poppy gave him a little curtsy. “I’ll be there, Papa.” She leaned over and kissed his cheek. “And thank you. I know this will be difficult, but I’m sure it’s what Mama would have wanted.”
“On with you now. You’re just like your mother. Nosy and bossy and”—he paused—“and you’ve got me wrapped around your little finger.”
“I do?” Her eyes filled with tears.
“Of course you do. Now go. I’ve got a speech to write.”
She looked back at him from the door and felt a burst of hope. Perhaps she would be starting a new relationship with Papa.
It would be a fresh start for both of them.
CHAPTER 34
Nicholas was adjusting his cravat in the mirror of his bedchamber, preparing for a night of card playing with Harry, Lumley, and Arrow—Poppy was staying in with her father—when a series of rude knocks came at his door.
He opened it to Frank, who stepped into his quarters and laughed. “I got you now, brother.”
Nicholas shut the door behind him. “How so?”
“I know about you and Natasha. You’ve been sleeping with her.”
“I’m frightened,” Nicholas said in his drollest manner and went back to his mirror. He wasn’t sure what to think, actually. Perhaps he should be concerned.
But he’d never show Frank.
Frank cackled. “My source is impeccable.”
“Oh? Who is it?”
“Natasha.”
“Why would she tell you?”
“She wants to marry you, old boy, and she’s paying me lots of money to help spread the word that she’s having a baby Staunton. Nick, if it’s a boy. Or Nichola, if it’s a girl.”
“What?”
“She sent me to see her diplomatic host while she’s in Town—what’s his name?”
“Lord Howell. He’s to look after her until she leaves England.”
“Right, well, I told the old codger you and the Russian princess carried on while he and his missus were in the country. I gave him a lock of Natasha’s hair that I supposedly found at your apartment, and I demanded payment to keep quiet about the baby.”
He snorted with amusement.
Nicholas threw down his neckcloth. “Why couldn’t Natasha tell Lord and Lady Howell her lies all by herself?”
Frank laughed. “Because then she looks like a conniving widow. This way, she comes across as fairly innocent, lured into bad behavior by an Impossible Bachelor. And just to make sure the Howells don’t believe the princess and I are in on this together, she gave me Boris. I told them I’d stolen the beast and would return him only if they pay me a fine sum of money. Both Lord and Lady Howell would never dream she’d give away her precious dog, even for a moment.”
“So the Howells will speak to her,” Nicholas said. “She’ll be suitably agitated, denying everything, at least in the short run, and begging for her dog back. Which means they’ll believe you really are a blackmailer, brother. They’ll also believe I fathered her child. It’s a clever ruse.”
“But it is true,” said Frank, “at least the part about you sleeping with her.”
“She’s a widow, not a virgin, and I never slept with her. We had a few titillating romps between the sheets, nothing more.”
Frank crossed his arms over his chest and chortled. “Your quibbling doesn’t matter, and you know it. It’s a matter of diplomatic protocol. Lord Howell was assigned to look after Natasha, and he’ll be in massive trouble at Whitehall if it gets out that you had an affair with her, especially if she’s with child. Marriage, on the other hand, is a respectable outcome.”
&nb
sp; “Look, Frank. I’m sure I’m not the only man in London who’s found himself in the princess’s bed. A widow taking lovers is hardly unheard of, and I certainly took care that she wouldn’t be with child.”
“How do you know—if you were drugged?”
A small part of Nicholas was alarmed that Frank knew those details of his liaison, but he quickly brushed it off. “A man knows.”
But he must admit, he didn’t know one hundred percent, did he? He’d never been drugged. What if—
No. It couldn’t be.
Nevertheless, he was uneasy. “And why should you care whom I marry anyway, Frank? Isn’t one girl the same as the next to you? Why the preference for the princess over Lady Poppy?”
“Revenge, of course.” Frank scratched his ear, quite as if he were speaking about the weather. “For you always being the good brother and having the title and all the money.”
“How is my marrying Natasha allowing you to get revenge?”
“You lust after that Poppy woman, and I can’t wait to see her throw you over. She’ll call you a scoundrel. An utter disgrace. But even better, you’ll have to live with Natasha—and her dogs—the rest of your life. Sergei’s already out buying a proper dueling pistol with which to kill you if you don’t marry her, and Natasha’s being comforted by the Howells as we speak.”
Nicholas didn’t deign to reply.
Frank turned purple. “You think you’re always going to win, don’t you? Well, not this time.” He slammed the door behind him.
It bounced back open.
“Don’t forget to walk Boris if you know what’s good for you!” Nicholas called after him.
Sure enough, a mere ten minutes later, Lord Howell sent Nicholas a note demanding his presence at his home immediately.
Dear God. He’d have to cancel his card game and find a way out of the mess with Natasha. But how could he do so without making her look like an idiot?
And was it possible that he had fathered a child with her while he was drugged?
He deserved the scare, he realized now. He’d run wild with no stops on his behavior for far too long.
But, no. He couldn’t have fathered Natasha’s child. He wouldn’t let blind panic rule his sense of logic. What man would be able to forget the pleasure involved in making a baby? And how could a man even have a fertile sexual response if he’d been so drugged that the next day he’d had trouble waking up well after the sun had risen?
He was sure, absolutely sure, someone else had fathered Natasha’s baby. Either that, or she wasn’t with child at all.
She’d have to confess, that’s what. He’d get her to see the light.
But when he arrived at the Howell residence, Natasha wouldn’t budge.
“You compromised me,” she said, blubbering in front of Lord and Lady Howell. Her corgis were draped over every sofa arm, and a few were sleeping on the rug. “I’m having your baby.”
Nicholas inhaled a deep breath and instantly regretted it. The smell of dog, which he usually didn’t object to, was rather overwhelming.
“Natasha.” His tone demanded she look at him. Finally, she met his gaze. “Tell the Howells you’re making this up.”
She burst into false tears again and collapsed on the sofa, somehow finding a spot between two of her pets.
“You’re making things worse, Your Grace,” Lady Howell cried. “She’s already feeling poorly, thanks to you and your—”
She fixed her beady eyes on his crotch.
“Bettina,” Lord Howell chastised her.
Lady Howell puffed up like a dandelion. “So? Am I to mince words? This so-called gentleman bedded our Russian charge. And now she’s with child. He must do the right thing this instant and marry her.”
Lord Howell stood. “Of course he shall. Won’t you come up to scratch, Your Grace? You’re from an old and proud line.”
Lady Howell drew in her chin. “But we’d never heard of it, dear, until—”
“It’s an old and proud line, Bettina.” The tips of Lord Howell’s ears were turning bright pink.
“Duke? Will you do the right thing?” Lady Howell’s assertiveness was all but forgotten as she stared at him with wide, worried eyes.
Nicholas felt the weight of his noble family tree bearing down on him. They may never have heard of the Drummond line, but it was old and proud. And he wasn’t a blackguard. “Of course I would do the right thing if—”
“See?” Lord Howell whirled on his wife. “He’ll do it.”
“Lord Howell—” Nicholas objected. “I never said—”
Lord Howell put up his palm. “You’ll do the right thing. And by tomorrow we expect your other engagement shall be called off. We’ll keep Natasha inside till that’s done. Then you’ll take her to Gretna.”
“We’ll put it about that you two were irresistibly in love and ran off together,” said Lady Howell.
Nicholas’s fists curled at his sides as he took in the conniving miss who never seemed to run out of crocodile tears.
“Natasha.” His voice was icy. “When you can think more clearly, you’ll do the right thing and tell your hosts the truth.”
She put a trembling hand to her breast. “I—I don’t know what you mean. Your own brother saw you leaving here the morning the Howells were away. If your own brother would turn you in, how could you not be guilty?”
He was extremely tempted to take his pistol and shoot a vase off the mantel simply because he was livid. But he knew dramatics would get him nowhere. This family was convinced he was to marry Natasha.
He bowed to Lord and Lady Howell. “I will not be returning. The princess will have something important to tell you, so please urge her to confess.”
But nobody said anything. Lord Howell merely stared right through him, Lady Howell patted Natasha on the head, and Natasha’s face contorted and turned red.
“I love you, Niccckky,” she bawled.
The dogs began to bark at her. One of them howled. It was a veritable canine chorus, except for one fat corgi who gave a leisurely scratch to his ear with his hind leg and then sank to the rug and closed his eyes.
He was probably as sick of the whole business as Nicholas was. The worst part about it was—
It was his own fault. He’d refused to grow up when he should have. And now he was paying the price. On that bitter note, he stepped over a particularly shrill yapping corgi and departed without another word.
CHAPTER 35
That same evening, in a small sitting room off his bedchamber, Lord Derby patted Poppy’s hand. She could feel a new beginning flower between them already, like the pretty daisies painted on Mama’s box of treasures. Together, they’d spent the last thirty minutes sorting through most of it.
Poppy had laughed, and she’d cried, examining the items her mother had valued.
She was seeing many of her mother’s things for the first time in years … her favorite brush. Her crystal atomizer with the cobalt-blue tassel. Her squashy red felt pin cushion Poppy had made as a young girl and which her mother brought out at every opportunity, especially when her friends were over.
And a miniature of Mama holding Poppy as a baby. She and her father both cried the longest over that one. But they were having a wonderful time, despite all the emotion.
“Despite your rough beginning, are you pleased with your choice of fiancé?” Papa asked her now. His voice had a whole new quality—not new, actually, but old. It sounded the way it had before Mama had died.
Poppy girded herself to pretend she wasn’t planning on leaving the Duke of Drummond behind. She couldn’t tell Papa of her plans, even with this new closeness. Not yet. It would ruin things between them.
“Of course,” she answered. “Although I worry about what will happen to you when I’m married and gone.”
And she was. If she ever met a man she wanted to marry, what would happen to Papa?
Lord Derby chuckled. “I’m flattered, but a lady’s first allegiance should be to her husband
. Not to her father.”
“Oh, dear.” She felt a bit choked up again. “I don’t like to hear that.”
“But it’s the truth.” Papa’s tone was gentle. “When a woman finds the right man, she must cleave to him, putting the marriage first and all else second.”
“But—”
He hugged her close, and Poppy was happy, but she couldn’t help noticing what Papa had said.
Marry the right man.
He’d qualified his statement.
Had she misjudged him? She’d lied to all her suitors the past three years, but perhaps if she’d only explained to Papa what sort of man was the right man for her, she never would have had to go to such lengths.
She took his hand. “Papa, did you really believe Lord Eversly was the right man for me?”
He made a wry face. “I’d no idea. But it’s a bit late for that, isn’t it? Perhaps I should have asked you.”
He searched her eyes, concerned.
“I should have told you,” she said simply.
“Will Drummond suit, do you think?”
She gave a small nod.
“Good.” Papa patted her hand. “I like him. I think you’ll suit very well.”
She felt a surge of emotion close her throat. She thought … nay, she knew she and Nicholas would suit very well, too. Pity that he didn’t seem to be aware of that. She tried to fend off the sense that a black cloud was forming around her, one that would bring her pain.
Papa scratched his ear, which he was wont to do when he was embarrassed. “I have a small box, too,” he said. “If you don’t mind, I’d rather go through it with you while I’m alive. I—I wish your mother had had that chance.”
“I’d love that.” Poppy grinned at him, and her heart felt lighter at his enthusiasm.
He had a pack of old playing cards that had belonged to her grandfather, and a fine cheroot he’d received the day Poppy had been born. “I received two,” he said, “and smoked one. I wanted to save it, you see. It’s not often a man is blessed with two beautiful women in his life. The first time I saw you, you looked at me with your mother’s eyes and gave a lusty cry with her same rosebud mouth.”
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