“Leave your window open.”
Of all the insufferable cheek. The man must think her mad. She’d do no such ridiculous thing. It would mean ruin this time for certain.
Besides, she liked nice men, men who counted it a favor if she called them by their Christian names, men who worried over the state of drains and danced with their cool, dry hands lightly holding hers in perfect correctness.
But, God help her, some wicked, ungovernable part of her heart wanted to lift her window sash when she retired to her chamber that evening.
To see if Aidan Danaher would climb through it.
Chapter 3
The play’s the thing
Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the King.
—SHAKESPEARE, Hamlet
Aidan watched Rosalinde through the intricate turns of the quadrille. Pleasant as it was to see her move with grace around the room, it was not so pleasant to see her do it in the company of another man. Each time she glanced his way, he silently repeated his request for her to leave her window open. After she missed a step, turned the wrong direction and nearly plowed into Lady Cowper, Aidan was satisfied his message had been received.
Now if she’ll only do it, he thought with a long sigh.
He resisted the temptation to use the Knack on her. Once he was in her chamber, it would be a simple thing to be found with the lady in flagrante delicto and settle the whole question with a quick marriage to hush up the scandal.
He was a baron with means now. Once the initial furor died down, Polite Society would come to the conclusion that he wasn’t such a bad bargain for her. He was looking forward to spending a good deal of time and money convincing her of that as well.
But if he used the Knack to gain entrance to her bedchamber, how would he ever know if it was he she fancied or if she’d been compelled by his gift to welcome him to her bed?
Love was freely given or it was not love.
Aidan was determined to have nothing less from Rosalinde Burke. In the darkness of his incarceration, she’d been the one spot of blazing color. Her kindness and generous spirit had kept him from growing bitter over the injustice of his situation. One night with her convinced him of the existence of a merciful God.
But Aidan didn’t intend to show her any mercy. Short of knacking her, he’d make her love him or at least remember that once she had loved him. Surely that never really went away.
He stopped at the arched doorway leading into the room set aside for gaming and looked back at her. Rosalinde smiled up at her dancing partner and a red haze settled over Aidan’s vision.
Viscount Musgrave wasn’t a bad sort. Lord knows, it might have been easier if he was. They’d even been friends years ago during the short time Aidan and his brother came to live with their English cousins. Edwin was thoroughly decent, a stickler for good form and fair play.
Aidan could more than hold his own with cutthroats and thieves. Against an upright, proper gentleman, he wasn’t quite sure how to proceed.
He’d charmed Rosalinde once. He only hoped he’d be able to do it again. In case she didn’t lift the sash of her window to him, it was time to set plans for his alternate goal in train. He intended to clear his name.
Aidan steeled himself to abandon her to the dance floor with Viscount Musgrave and made his way to the gaming room. Six or seven tables had been set up around the long hall. Whist, euchre, loo, any type of game of chance a man might favor was in full swing. There was even a hazard table, the dice clicking merrily, in one corner. Aidan’s cousin, George Stonemere, raked in the bones and gave them a shake. Judging from the hard set of his mouth, the dice had not been kind to him.
“If Lady Chudderley ever tires of being a meddlesome busybody, she might set up for gaming hell proprietress in earnest,” Aidan murmured.
At the poque table at the far end of the room, Rosalinde’s father hunched over a dwindling stack of chips. The regretful expression on his heavily jowled face reminded Aidan of a dog who’d just pissed the rug.
After shadowing Mr. Burke on a trek through a number of gaming establishments one night, Aidan knew the man was in debt. In fact, he’d made it a point to quietly buy up the lion’s share of Mr. Burke’s vowels from his creditors, to keep Rosalinde’s father from being hounded for repayment. The former commissioner had no idea Aidan Danaher held his IOUs, a princely sum. He suspected that despite his recent elevation to rank and privilege, Mr. Burke still considered Aidan little more than the Irish convict who used to muck out his stables and spit-shine his boots. When Rosalinde’s father saw him, his face brightened with calculation and he motioned for Aidan to join them.
“Don’t know why it is, Stonemere, but I seem to have better luck with the cards when you’re playing too,” Mr. Burke said expansively.
“Perhaps because it’s always good luck to have a player with poorer luck at the table,” Aidan said with a self-deprecating chuckle as he pulled up a chair. The play was fast and furious. He made sure Mr. Burke raked in the next three pots.
He and the commissioner had made their public peace months ago, when they first ran into each other on English soil.
“Knew you couldn’t have been guilty,” the commissioner had said gruffly. “Glad to see an injustice overturned.”
Aidan had merely smiled. Mr. Burke knew Aidan had confessed to the crime of which he was accused, but because he now had a milord before his name, somehow that fact was conveniently forgotten. In public, at least. A man with a title might do anything with impunity, it seemed.
Aidan’s mother must truly have loved his bounder of a father for her to have given up such power to follow him to a piss-poor potato farm in Ireland. Or maybe the old devil had used the Knack on her. Aidan was never quite sure how matters stood between the two of them. She was every inch a lady of quality and his father was as rough as they came.
“Such a man is a trial to the soul,” his mother would say, but the smile that tugged at the corners of her sweet mouth also said such a man was wildly exciting.
Wildly exciting or not, his father didn’t provide Aidan and his younger brother Liam with a stable home. The family moved from shire to shire, his da taking work where he could get it. When things got too hard, his mother had packed Aidan and Liam off to live with their English cousins in Wiltshire. After growing up wild as thistles in Ireland, transplanting them to Stonehaven was a disaster on all counts.
Two players tossed down their hands and excused themselves, clearly disgusted at the former commissioner’s continued string of good luck.
“I see there’s room for another player.”
Aidan looked up to find his cousin George standing by an open chair.
Good. He hadn’t even had to use the Knack to lure him to the table. Aidan didn’t want to dissipate its power should he need it later, but he’d have done it if George hadn’t moved to the poque table soon. He wanted to make sure George was in on the final hand. Without speaking, Aidan waved his cousin to a vacant chair. He didn’t want to chance George hearing the slightest hint of excitement in his voice over this development.
“I, too, would like to play.” Viscount Musgrave appeared suddenly, squeezing through the crowd.
Aidan frowned. Even though Musgrave had been visiting Stonehaven when the murder occurred, he didn’t suspect the viscount and didn’t need him around in order to further his scheme to clear his name.
Especially since Rosalinde was still hanging on the man’s arm, all flushed and lightly winded from her exertions on the dance floor. A couple of curls at her temples had loosened and now dangled past her chin. The effect was too soft, too sensual for fashion. Undone. The light sheen on her cheeks reminded Aidan of how delectable she looked after a good hard swive, her skin glistening, spent with pleasurable effort.
Aidan tamped down his body’s reaction to her. He needed to focus his energy elsewhere now. On his cousin George, mostly.
“There you are, Father,” Rosalinde said as she hurried around to Mr. Burke’s s
ide. Aidan stood to acknowledge her presence, as all the men did, but she didn’t spare him a glance. “Aunt is looking for you.”
“Well, if Lady Chudderley comes here, she’ll find me, gel,” her father said. “My luck’s running too high to leave the table just now.”
“True enough,” Aidan said with what he hoped was a hangdog expression. “Your father’s about to turn out me pockets.”
In truth, it had been a good trick to lose to him. Mr. Burke was an abominable player, but Aidan needed him to win. It was the only way to make his plan work.
“By all means, sit down, Lord Musgrave,” Rosalinde’s father insisted. “But don’t feel badly if I beat you too.” He turned his head toward his daughter. “Tell her ladyship I’ll attend her after I relieve Lord Stonemere of the rest of his chips.”
“Shouldn’t take long at the rate ye’re going,” Aidan said amiably as the dealer started flicking cards at each of them.
Rosalinde made no move to deliver her father’s message, instead taking up a position from which she could scowl at Mr. Burke most conveniently when he wasn’t looking. Aidan decided it was preferable to have her here after all, so there’d be no confusion later about what happened.
Viscount Musgrave settled beside Aidan. “I must say, I wouldn’t have figured you for a man who didn’t mind losing.”
“Cards are nothing,” Aidan said, shooting Rosalinde a quick glance. She refused to meet his gaze. “But there are some things it would pain me a great deal to lose.”
“I daresay prison taught my cousin patience in losing,” George said artlessly.
Someone’s breath hissed in surprise. It was one thing to be aware of a gentleman’s unsavory past, quite another to throw it in his face.
“It taught me many things, but mostly that a man makes his own luck when it comes to the important things in life,” Aidan said, breaking the uneasy silence. He glanced at the cards he’d been dealt. Too good. He tossed them, face-side-down into the center of the table, bowing out of a winning hand. “Certainly didn’t improve me luck at cards though,” he said with a laugh.
The next hand was better for his purposes. It was far worse. Aidan could hardly have had a weaker start, but he made a cautious bid.
“Want another drubbing, do you?” Mr. Burke said and matched his bet.
The viscount and cousin George were both in. Aidan raised his stakes, with less caution this time.
“I believe he may have the cards this hand,” Lord Musgrave said as the bidding went around the table. “But I’ll back my own.”
When one of his opponents showed signs of flagging, Aidan Sent him a strong silent suggestion and they all continued to bid. Finally, Aidan shoved his remaining chips into the center of the table.
“I can buy that pot, you know,” Mr. Burke said.
“But ye’re too much the gentleman to do that. Allow me to sweeten it further, if ye will.” Aidan leaned forward and caught the eyes of every player around the table. “My lake is teeming with trout. The woods in Wiltshire are full of gamebirds and trophy bucks. To my wager, I’ll add a fortnight for all of ye as guests on my country estate. I’ll show ye such sport, ye’ll talk of it for the rest of your lives.”
“Fur, fins, and feathers, eh? Some men prefer other quarry,” George said with a wink. “Will there be women?”
“Of course. Bring your families as well. Perhaps your mother and sister would enjoy a country outing, Musgrave.” Aidan turned to the viscount, purposely misunderstanding his cousin. He needed this to be a respectable house party, not a rakehell’s orgy. Though if all went well, he’d have his own private carouse with Rosalinde.
Viscount Musgrave eyed Aidan thoughtfully for a moment. “It’s been years since I visited Stonehaven. Very well, I’ll take that bet.”
“And I,” Mr. Burke agreed, slapping down the appropriate wager.
George squinted at Aidan. “I wouldn’t mind staying at the family seat again, though I warn you, this may turn into a more expensive wager than you intend.”
Aidan let his lip twitch, hoping George would take it for a tell that he was bluffing.
“Let’s see your cards, cousin.” George pushed a stack of chips forward.
Aidan slumped his shoulders and tossed his pitiful hand into the center of the table. “Looks like ye gentlemen have sniffed out me bluff. I lose.”
“But he didn’t lose, Father,” Rosalinde complained after the last guest straggled away from Lady Chudderley’s party. “He’s getting exactly what he wants. Lord Stonemere knows we’d decline a direct invitation to his home. Anyone in Society would.”
“The girl’s right, Loromer,” Lady Chudderley chimed in. She gloried in browbeating Rosalinde’s father whenever she could. Heaven had blessed her with no sons of her own to reprove, so her only nephew had to do. “And now Lord Stonemere’s managed to trick you and the viscount and his poor cousin into a fortnight in his company.”
“And our families. Don’t forget that.” Mr. Burke’s face flushed red with irritation. “If you don’t like the gentleman, why in blazes did you invite him here in the first place?”
“That’s neither here nor there. Joining in a house party implies a far closer relationship than a chance invitation to attend a large rout.” Lady Chudderley pursed her lips as if she’d swallowed a bite of herring that had turned. “Besides, it’s never a question of whether one likes someone or not. Spending time in another’s company is first and foremost about whether the association is a proper one.”
“Then why invite him to your soiree if he’s not fit company?” Mr. Burke’s point was small, but it was the only one he had in the argument, so he worried it like a terrier after a rat.
Rosalinde knew perfectly well why her great-aunt had invited Aidan. He’d charmed her, as neatly as the serpent had deceived Eve in the garden. He’d charmed her great-aunt because it was what he did as easily as breathing.
But Rosalinde was determined not to succumb to that charm again.
“The fact is you’ve obligated this family to an unwholesome outing. For a fortnight, no less.” Her great-aunt shook a bony finger at her father. “And I’d like to know what you intend to do about it.”
“I intend,” Father said testily, “to shoot a brace of pheasant and catch a stringer of trout. And the two of you will accompany me and, damn it all, we’ll have a jolly time of it too, and that’s that.”
Lady Chudderley made a ‘tsking’ sound. “Mind your language, Loromer.”
“Bother my language.” He ran a hand over his thinning hair. “Hang it all, I don’t see that there’s a way around it. We have to go. If a man has debts of honor, it’s incumbent on his creditors to allow him to make his markers good.”
“Debts of honor, eh? There’s a fanciful term for gambling losses,” Lady Chudderley said, one gray brow arched. “Well, at least you’ve turned the conversation to a subject with which you’re well acquainted.”
Rosalinde rolled her eyes heavenward and made good her escape. Once her father and great-aunt began wrangling about his gambling debts, the argument might continue for hours.
When she reached her chamber, she found her maid Katie nodding on a chair near the fireplace. The door latch clicked behind her and the girl roused with far more cheer than the late hour warranted.
“There y’are, miss.” Katie hopped up and skittered over to help Rosalinde out of the plum gown. “Was it a nice party? Did you have a loverly time, then? Me and Gus, we heard the music from downstairs and took a few turns of our own in the scullery. Right sprightly we was too. You wouldn’t think it to look on him, what with him being such a big strapping fellow, but my Gus is fair light on his feet.”
The restful thing about having Katie as her maid was that Rosalinde was rarely required to add anything to a conversation with her. Katie was perfectly capable of keeping up both sides with no apparent effort.
“Will you be wanting me to brush out your hair?” Katie asked after she stowed the gown in its place
and helped Rosalinde out of her corset and petticoats and into her lacy nightshift. “My Gus loves to brush my hair.”
“No, I’ll manage,” Rosalinde said, before Katie could launch into a description of the other things her Gus loved. The little maid had married the tall, well-favored footman last March and to hear Katie talk, one would think marital bliss hadn’t been invented before they tied the knot. Rosalinde’s body was already achy and restless, already keyed up enough without a whispered recital of her maid’s bedtime activities. “Go on, Kate. I’ve kept you up late enough as it is.”
“Aren’t you kind?” Katie said, stifling a yawn as she shuffled to the door. “G’night then, miss.”
Rosalinde pulled out the pins holding her coiffure in place and shook her hair loose with one hand. Then she began brushing the long strands, working out the worst of the tangles with her fingers.
She glanced toward the window.
Since she was on the upper story of her great-aunt’s townhome, and her property backed onto St. James Park, it was unlikely anyone could see in to spy on her. But she turned down the gas lamp, just in case. She usually sneaked a bit of Shakespeare before bed, but after the way Aidan had stirred up her belly, she didn’t think she could bear any more Romeo and Juliet this night, lest the dull ache of emptiness never let her sleep.
“Leave your window open.” She could almost hear Aidan’s voice in her mind.
As if she was fool enough to do that again. What sort of round-heeled ninny did he take her for?
She wandered to the window, still stroking her hair absently. The Season was nearly over and many families were preparing to leave the growing heat of London for the coolness of their country homes. Her bedchamber was certainly warm enough to justify opening the window a crack in hope of a breath of breeze. By day, London was becoming a sweltering miasma of unhealthy smells. When the stars came out, they seemed to chase away the worst of the stale fug.
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