Tempted by a Lady's Smile

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Tempted by a Lady's Smile Page 5

by Christi Caldwell


  Richard met her stare full on. “Those are very detailed pieces of information you have…” He gave her a meaningful look. “On the kippers. It is, however, information that can be gleaned by anyone.”

  They stood, locked in a silent battle with their chests rising and falling—when the absolute silence registered.

  A flush heated his neck and raced up to his ears as from the corner of his eye, he noted the gaping members of the peerage taking in his exchange with Gemma. The color of her skin turned red and if he weren’t close to yanking his cravat at the attention on him, he’d have looked with an even greater appreciation upon the splash of color on the skin exposed above her modest décolletage. Instead, his gaze snagged on the familiar figure in the doorway. And just like that, all the attention trained on a mere Mr. Richard Jonas and Miss Gemma Reed was forgotten at the sudden appearance of Westfield. A buzz went up about the room and Richard inclined his head. “Miss Reed, you might wish to try the kipper before they are claimed by all the other guests.”

  Another spirited glimmer lit the lady’s eyes but then with the regal bearing of a queen, Gemma marched over to the table. A young footman pulled out a chair and she slid into the folds with a quiet thank you. Richard carried his dish beside her. She placed the crisp white napkin on her lap and then stilled “What are you doing?”

  “Sitting,” he returned, and even as she opened her mouth, he claimed the mahogany chair.

  As Westfield made his way to the sideboard, each young lady present and her mama, followed him with their eyes. Interestingly, all except the very one who’d risk her good name and ruin, who now occupied the chair next to his. The lady devoted her attention to her plate, moving the silver fork around the contents upon the white, gold-trimmed porcelain.

  He studied her with renewed interest; the silenced magpie now sat huddled within herself, shoulders bent as though she sought to disappear within herself.

  Westfield looked over the table a moment and then strode over. The young ladies present held their breaths, and then let out a collective sigh of disappointment as he came to a stop not at the head—but beside that brown-haired, silenced magpie. “May I claim this seat?” Westfield favored the top of Gemma’s head with a charming grin that was wasted on the young woman who still examined the toast on her plate as though she’d uncovered a new genus of flower.

  Then her shoulders went straight and she looked about. Richard repressed a frown as the lady locked her gaze with Westfield’s. He searched for the excited ramblings or the clever words and, yet, the long case clock in the corner of the room ticked by the incredibly long stretch of awkward silence.

  Richard took mercy. Under the table, he nudged his knee against Gemma’s and she jumped. He gave her a meaningful look and she blinked several times before saying, “Of course. That would be most permissible, my lord.” The lady swiftly returned her attention to that damnable piece of toast that she now set to buttering.

  Most permissible? Richard furrowed his brow and stared openly at his friend who claimed the chair on Gemma’s opposite side. Who was this reserved, guarded creature? Why, she didn’t display a shadow of the spirited miss who’d kissed him with abandon and challenged him at the sideboard before a room full of guests.

  Westfield leaned over and murmured something close to Gemma’s ear and a rush of the becoming color flooded her cheeks. The lady nodded, but her response was lost to Richard.

  His frown deepened. Why, by the devil, Westfield was…flirting with the young lady. A little pebble of what felt like annoyance pitted in his belly. It was preposterous, unthinkable, it was… He gave his head a hard shake. Why in blazes should he care who the other man settled his attentions on? And he most assuredly should not care.

  With zeal, Richard carved away at his kipper. Small and oily, indeed. He popped a piece into his mouth and the lady stole a sideways peek. He chewed and stared boldly back at her, daring her with his gaze to say something.

  Gemma captured her lower lip between her teeth. She wished to say something about his choice of meal and there was something very oddly…intimate about knowing that about this lady.

  Instead, she shifted her focus back to her plate and remained silent, and as much as Gemma Reed had grated on his last nerve, he also despised seeing her subdued as she was now. With an unexplainable need to draw her from the close-mouthed shell she’d crawled within, he leaned close to say something in her ear when loud voices sounded in the hallway, followed by exuberant tittering. At his side, Gemma jerked erect.

  He glanced up as a pair of perfectly golden, undoubtedly flawless, young ladies filed into the room like noisy geese and rushed over to the open seat beside Westfield, quarreling publically over that empty chair.

  Gemma slunk low within the folds of her seat and Richard’s intrigue with the lady redoubled. Who was Miss Gemma Reed, exactly? Bold, spirited minx? Or painfully shy, quiet miss?

  And why did he have this sudden need to know?

  Gemma was a bumbling, soundless fool, is what she was.

  With Lady Thelma and Lady Constance, twin sisters and soon to be Diamonds of the First Water having settled on just which of them would claim the chair beside Lord Westfield, they proceeded to speak over one another in their bid to capture the young marquess’ attention. Where other ladies had the ability to fill voids of silence with clever banter and repartee, Gemma’s tongue became tied worse than a sailor’s knot.

  The singular interest in the marquess and ability to capture his attention should have grated. She stole a sideways glance up at the other gentleman who occupied the chair next to hers. Yet, there was something…oddly reassuring in this near stranger’s company. Where she’d never been possessed of words around…well, really any gentleman, with this man she was comfortable in ways she’d never believed possible. He was aggravating and insufferable, and stirred her spirit with his high-handedness.

  Why are you thinking of the Marquess of Westfield’s friend? Why, when you are seated beside Lord Westfield himself? Giving her head a shake, and then a second one for good measure, she smoothed her hands over the arms of her chair. I am capable of discourse. Hadn’t she just blistered Richard Jonas’ ears at the buffet, handling her rebuttal to his cheeky charges with great aplomb?

  “Do you ride, Lord Westfield?” As soon as the inquiry escaped her lips, she cringed; one of those inward and outward types for all to see. Of course he rode. It was rumored that he had one of the most distinguished stables in the kingdom.

  The marquess looked to her with a gentle smile and she hated that smile. She would have preferred it to be slightly teasing or even greatly teasing, the way it would have been on a certain Richard Jonas. “I do. I actually have plans to ride following the morning meal.”

  “I ride,” she blurted. Blast, now he’d think she was angling to accompany him. Mortification curled her toes. “Not that I wish to ride with you.”

  A sound that might have been a strangled laugh escaped Richard at Gemma’s opposite side. Oh, the lout. Her neck heated. “Forgive me,” she said quickly. “I would certainly enjoy riding with you. I have always loved horses.” Horses and dogs were a good deal easier to speak to than the human sort. She cast a desperate look about for Beatrice. Alas, she’d long proven to keep late morning hours, and to avoid a gathering of dowry-seeking lords, at all costs.

  Westfield settled back in his seat and layered his arms upon his chair. “You are knowledgeable of horses, then?” He directed that question to the top of her head and she followed his gaze to a stone-faced Richard.

  “Oh, yes,” she said excitedly, returning her focus to the marquess. This was, after all, a conversation she was familiar with. From across the table, where her mother now sat, she gave her head a curt shake. Ignoring the pleading in her eyes, Gemma leaned forward in her chair. “Really quite fascinating creatures.” She gestured wildly with her hands as she spoke. “I once read you can tell a horse’s age by his teeth.”

  “Is that so?” The marquess lift
ed a golden brow. “What other fascinating pieces do you know?”

  “Well, not his precise age,” she clarified. “But rather a general estimate of it. They can live to over thirty and did you know…” She dropped her elbows on the table. “It takes over eleven months for a foal to develop inside a mare. And sometimes the foal will arrive early, but it can also arrive as long as four weeks longer. Can you imagine that? Twelve months of—”

  “Gemma,” her mother’s sharp tone cut across Gemma’s telling.

  And it was then that Gemma registered the gazes of each guest present turned on her as though she were an oddity on display and, in this instance, she was…a display of her own making, borne of topics that were never appropriate for the breakfast table, or any table, for that matter.

  Gemma retrained her stare on the eggs on her plate and as the guests returned to topics that moved beyond horse gestation, she shoved her fork around the plate and contemplated it. She could not swallow a single bite. Her stomach churned in a painful knot as she prayed for this moment to end.

  Richard leaned close in his chair and it groaned in slight protest. Gemma braced for his coolly mocking words. “Do you know what I also find interesting about horses, Gemma?”

  She hesitated and then, not allowing him the triumph of his amusement with her displeasure, bit out, “What is that, Mr. Jonas?”

  “Horses cannot vomit or breathe through their mouths.”

  Gemma stared unblinking at her plate. Surely he hadn’t just…? Then she snapped her shoulders back and glared at him. The boiling anger within was far safer than the humiliated embarrassment of her impolite discourse this morning. “Tell me, Mr. Jonas, do you delight in tormenting all young ladies? Or is that pleasure reserved for me?”

  A frown marred his lips. “I didn’t—”

  She angled her body in a way that they were directly facing one another. “But I find nothing kind in your taking pleasure in another person’s discomfort.”

  He opened his mouth. But wanting to hear a single other word from his lips about as much as she wanted to listen to the clever prattling of Lady Thelma who occupied the seat beside the marquess, Gemma shoved back her chair. “I bid you good morning, sir, and hope you find something else to occupy your time other than taunting and tormenting young, more than slightly awkward ladies.”

  Giving a toss of her hopelessly uncurled hair, she dislodged a strand and it fell flatly over her eye. Then, with her head held high, Gemma marched from the breakfast room. Her feet twitched with the urge to take flight, but where could young ladies steal off to escape any further notice or embarrassments?

  Chapter 5

  The lady had thought he was making light of her.

  Given their previous two exchanges, Richard could certainly understand just why Gemma Reed would come to that very opinion. And yet, as he guided his mount over the duke’s rolling property, that very low opinion she carried grated. For that exchange had singularly revealed more of anything real about the lady than any other words she’d uttered.

  Until the morning meal, she’d been nothing more than any other lady present, hunting a future-duke and professing love based on flimsy words better reserved for a hound. Then she’d gone on one of her endearing rambles and she’d swiftly become a lady with interests…and what was more, she’d become a lady with an interest in horseflesh.

  For all the shock and disgust etched in the faces of the assembled guests, Richard had been…his eye twitched. By God, he’d been captivated by the little minx in that instant. He clenched and unclenched his jaw. Only, the lady had seen him as judgmental as every other member of the peerage present.

  And why shouldn’t she? You’ve done nothing but bait and tease her since the moment she stepped into your riding path a day prior.

  Guilt needled at him and he urged Warrior onward. He scanned his gaze over the lush, green, rolling countryside. Where would a lady escape? No doubt the last person she cared to see in this moment was him. A memory of her as she’d been, with humiliated hurt blazing in her eyes, caused a knot in his belly. He far preferred the lady snapping and hissing like a cornered cat than the dejected, slumped figure who’d hastily fled the breakfast room.

  Richard slowed his mount to a stop and Warrior danced in a small circle. He patted the horse’s damp coat and glanced in the direction of the lake. With a click of his tongue, he wheeled Warrior around and cantered on to the thick copse at the edge of the duke’s property. He guided Warrior to a stop and then, with reins in hand, walked the massive creature over to nearby brush and looped his reins about a thin oak. Patting him once on the withers, he strode over to the copse, and then hesitated.

  What was the likelihood the lady was even here? He turned to go when a faint sniffling penetrated the morning quiet. Perhaps it was just the rustling leaves overhead. Or perhaps it was…

  Sniff Sniff

  That muffled sound of misery cleaved through him. Unhesitant, Richard entered the copse, moving deeper into the densely wooded area and then stopped. Gemma sat atop a boulder with her knees drawn close to her chest. The sight of her tucked against herself, with her shoulders bent, wrenched at something in him. He took a step forward and a branch snapped loudly in the quiet.

  Gemma froze and then whipped her head around. “You.”

  In the absolute absence of anger or outrage in that tone, he took another step forward. “Me.”

  She dropped her legs over the edge of her sitting place and hopped to her feet. “I did not come here to be mocked by you. I have suffered through enough of your company these two days, Mr. Jonas.” A fiery glimmer lit her brown eyes and they sparkled with such spirit, words momentarily left him. She narrowed her gaze. “Why are you staring at me like that?”

  And because he really didn’t care to examine why he’d been staring at her and just what she made of that look, Richard touched a hand to his chest. “Richard,” he corrected her.

  “I beg your pardon?” Four little creases lined her brow.

  “My name is Richard.” It defied propriety, and the cool dislike that had existed since their first meeting, but he wished to hear his name on her lips. He desperately wished to hear her wrap those two syllables in her lilting tone. I’m going utterly mad. There is no else accounting for it. “I did not come here to mock you.” Once again, guilt needled at him. For the lady was certainly entitled to her suspicious opinion where he was concerned.

  “Do you mean you have not come here to mock me more than you have already done these past two days?” She shot an eyebrow up and guilty heat burned his neck. “No,” she scoffed. “I hardly need you to point out everything inappropriate in speaking on a horse’s gestation, at the breakfast table, no less,” she muttered that last part under her breath.

  No there wasn’t anything appropriate in such discourse. It was, however, the singularly most interesting thing any woman of his acquaintance had uttered…including Eloise. For her love of riding, she’d feared horses, and certainly hadn’t known a jot about their teeth or gestational period. He’d seen only Eloise for so long, he’d failed to appreciate that there were any women with an interest in the equine. And there was something…really rather captivating about a woman with that shared interest. A smile pulled at his lips. Lest she see it and again believe he made light of her, Richard promptly schooled his features. “I understand I’ve given you little reason to trust me.”

  “No you haven’t,” she shot back, and a strand of hair fell over her brow. An urge grew to take that lock between his fingers and test whether the tresses that shimmered in the sunlight streaming through the dancing leaves overhead were as satiny soft as it appeared. She shoved it behind her ear, stealing that opportunity from him. Gemma advanced. “First, you kissed me.”

  Which he’d greatly enjoyed. He retreated a step.

  “Then,” she stretched out that single syllable. “Despite knowing I mistook you for another gentleman…” Which he did not like at all, for reasons that he also did not know or care t
o examine. Color flooded her cheeks. “You allowed me to bare my heart’s y—” This would assuredly be an inappropriate place to smile. He fixed on thoughts of their kisses and the satiny smoothness of her skin. Desirous musings that would kill all amusement. He swallowed a groan. Mayhap that was not the safest direction, after all. “Furthermore, Mr. Jonas,” she continued as she took another step. “You allowed me to confess secrets I’ve shared with only my dearest friend.”

  He scowled. In knowing she’d spoken of Westfield with another, made her declaration to the gentleman…something more. Something unpleasant, indefinable, roiled in his belly. “You urged me to remain seated.”

  Throwing her hands up, she emitted an exasperated sigh. “Because I believed you were Lord Westfield.” Which made her interest in Westfield even more real, and he didn’t quite know what to make of the odd tightening in his chest at that truth. She jabbed a long, gloveless finger in his chest, drawing his attention to the digit. “Then you spoke of horse vomit.” This lively figure before him was so vastly different than the shy, hesitant lady in the breakfast room. He far preferred her spitting and sparkling to the subdued miss she’d been earlier. It was a crime that a woman with her spirit should ever be so silenced.

  “I am a horse breeder.”

  Gemma opened her mouth to speak and then closed it. “What?” She tipped her head at an endearing angle.

  Richard encircled her slender wrist within his fingers and removed it from his person. “I am a horse breeder,” he said again. “I suspected a lady knowledgeable about horse teeth and the gestational period of the creatures would appreciate that piece of information.” For as direct and unflinching as she’d been, speaking amidst the assembled guests, there had been nothing that marked her as squeamish. Rather, she’d spoken with a zeal that had…intrigued him.

 

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