by Lauren Smith
And that was it. An hour after they had walked through the door, they were walking back out. Upon arriving home, her mother sent her to bed for a good night’s rest so that she wouldn’t develop wrinkles or bags or circles under her eyes.
Instead of doing as she was told, which Moira rarely did, she made a list of the few eligible gentlemen who had made her acquaintance that evening. Unfortunately, they were all English.
There had to be at least one Scotsman in London, with an estate close to Edinburgh, preferably. The Highlands would never do because they were far too remote. One must have access to a good modiste, a lending library, and a haberdashery if one was to survive so far away from friends and family.
Once the list of English gentlemen was completed, she lay in bed reading until she was forced to put the book away at about the same time she should have been returning from the ball.
Oh, why had her mother made her leave? How could she be a mystery to anyone if they didn’t even know she existed? It was all quite ridiculous, and Moira was certain she’d missed a grand time. It was so unfair that her friends had been allowed to dance and flirt while Moira had been in her chambers reviewing lists and reading. Had her sleeping chamber not been on the second floor, Moira might have snuck out and returned to the ball. Her brother was there, with his wife, and he could have acted as her chaperon. Except, there was no tree in which to lend assistance and besides, last time she’d used a tree outside a window as an escape, she’d fallen and injured her ankle. With the Season just beginning, Moira had no desire to suffer such a circumstance again and then be forced to miss even more balls.
With any luck, her mother would no longer insist on Moira missing any of the events she and her friends were looking forward to attending, or she might just have to devise a plan for sneaking out so she didn’t miss a thing.
Moira rose from her bed, walked to her desk, and picked up the list she had penned the night before. There were only five names, all titled gentlemen, or heirs, and none of them sounded even remotely Scottish.
“The light blue will look lovely on you.”
Moira glanced at the walking dress Beatrice laid out on the bed. Walking dress. She was to meet Pippa at the entrance of Hyde Park today! Excitement rushed through her being as she glanced at the clock again. Only two hours and then she’d be free. Pippa had probably stayed for the entire ball and no doubt could make introductions to all of the people she’d met and hopefully, Pippa would share what Moira anticipated were titillating tales from the night before.
Oh, why couldn’t she have an old, lax guardian instead of her mother?
A scratch at the door drew Moira’s attention. “Come.”
Mary, another maid, popped her head inside the chambers. “Lord and Lady Hearne to see you, Lady Moira.”
“Tell them I will be right down.” Why were her brother and sister-in-law here? “Have tea and cakes delivered, please. Lots of cakes.” Moira’s stomach grumbled because she was starving. Normally, she would have had her morning meal before now, but she’d make due with Cook’s delicious cakes and biscuits.
“Very good.” Mary bobbed a quick curtsey and closed the door.
Moira rushed through her toilette, without allowing Beatrice to do much with her hair except brush and pin it back before rushing to meet her brother and sister-in-law. Nyle and Alvina had been at the Heathfields’. Perhaps they would have stories to tell.
“Moira Kirkwood, ladies do not run down the stairs. They do not appear below stairs without their hair being arranged and their clothing properly attired.”
She skidded to a halt, her slippers carrying her a few extra feet on the marble floor, the moment she heard her mother’s voice. Moira glanced down at her gown. It was precisely what she’d planned on wearing to meet Pippa so why wasn’t it presentable enough for her own family? Oh, she so hated changing clothing three, four, five times a day. It was a terrible waste of time when one could be reading, shopping or simply enjoying a glorious day, as she intended to do in a few short hours
Moira turned to face the woman who was the bane of her existence. “Alvina and Nyle are here. I wished to see them, and they don’t care how I’m dressed.”
Her mother raised an eyebrow and looked down from the landing. Oh, she hated the censure and sometimes Moira felt that she’d suffered under such judgement since birth and would forever be a disappointment. Maybe if the woman wasn’t constantly trying to change her, Moira wouldn’t be so irritated with her.
“What of other callers?” her mother asked. “They will care.”
Moira suppressed a sigh. “There are no other callers, Mother, nor do I expect there to be any.”
“Of course there will be callers,” her mother insisted. “You made quite an impression last evening. I expect they will be arriving within the hour.”
How did one make an impression when barely a few words were spoken, and her outing had lasted all of sixty minutes in a room full of at least one hundred people? Her mother was daft.
“Go upstairs and change into a morning gown, and have Beatrice do something with that hair of yours. Then you may visit with your brother and that wife of his.”
Moira resisted the urge to roll her eyes, but she turned to do as her mother bade. Thank goodness Beatrice had a talent for arranging hair, and in short order.
“Explain to me why you would allow, encourage or otherwise be compromised by Miss Moira Kirkwood?” Gideon Waite, Viscount Ainsely, asked his former school mate whom he happened to run into at White’s.
“I haven’t the foggiest. I’ve never even met the chit.” Peter Radburn, Marquess Lydell, leaned back in his chair. “And can a lady even compromise a gentleman? Isn’t it usually the other way around?”
“Of course they can,” Gideon chuckled. “It happens all the time. Except, we call it being trapped into marriage. She encourages a stolen kiss in the moonlight, her father appears, and bachelorhood comes to an end.”
“I suppose so,” Lydell shrugged.
Mr. Jordan Trent pulled out a chair and joined the men at their table, then signaled for the footman and ordered a brandy before he focused on Lydell. “About this bet…”
“I know nothing about it,” Lydell threw his hands up in defense.
Gideon laughed. Lydell was rather private and the more he tried to go unnoticed, the more Society gossiped about him. Of course, it didn’t help that less than a sennight ago all of London had learned Lydell was in need of an heiress.
Jordan grinned. “I do.”
Both Gideon and Lydell leaned forward.
“Fiske and Alston overheard Lady Moira speaking to Lady Hearne before the dowager Lady Hearne took her from Heathfields’ ball last night.”
“Go on,” Lydell prompted when Jordan paused to take a drink from the glass just set before him.
Jordan glanced at Gideon. “I should have known those two would make an issue of the young woman’s words.”
“Jordan,” Lydell warned, running out of patience. Gideon had seen these two in similar conversations over the last ten years. The more Lydell wanted to know something, the longer Jordan took in the telling.
“You were there too?” Gideon asked.
Jordan turned to him. “I was right behind Lady Moira. Her mother had just glared at me. I don’t understand why mothers don’t like me. Have I ever ruined an innocent, spoke cruelly to a young lady? It is very disconcerting to be treated as a pariah when I have done nothing wrong.”
Nothing wrong. The man was the very definition of rake, but what he said was true. Mothers hated him, and young debutantes adored him.
“What did she say?” Lydell ground out.
Jordan returned his attention to the much frustrated Lydell. “Before this Season is out, I will find a gentleman to take me to Scotland, even if I have to compromise him to do so."
“Good God,” Gideon stammered. “Why the devil would she make such a statement?”
“I don’t know,” Jordan shrugged.
&n
bsp; “Is it her appearance? Does she think no gentleman will offer for her, so she’d best hie off to Gretna before he changes his mind?” Lydell prompted.
“No, I don’t think so. In fact, she was rather pretty.”
Lydell sighed with annoyance. “Why was my name put in the betting book then? If she didn’t name me, why was the bet made at all?”
“Her dowry.” Jordan leaned forward and lowered his voice. “Twenty thousand pounds.”
Gideon sat back and whistled. The amount of the chit’s dowry would have every destitute and non-destitute gentleman on her doorstep as soon as the news spread. “Where did you come by this information?”
“Her brother, Hearne. And he was none too happy after reading the wager in the betting book a short time ago.”
Chapter 2
Moira paused at the bottom step to eavesdrop on her mother’s conversation. “I don’t know why Lady Heathfield allowed reprobates like Jordan Trent or that horrid St. Austell in her home. Perhaps having lived in the wilds of Yorkshire all of her life, she doesn’t know any better.”
Both names were familiar to Moira. Her mother had pointed out the gentlemen with a strong warning to avoid them completely or Moira might just find her reputation in shreds. While her mother’s opinion did make the gentlemen all the more interesting, they would never do. Neither was Scottish.
“I believe the fellows are friends of Lord Heathfield,” her brother offered.
“Well, the man is married now and should cease associating with such persons.”
“Trent also happens to be a good friend of mine,” her brother continued.
“The same goes for you. You should have broken ties with that man long ago.”
Moira rolled her eyes, took a deep breath, and calmly walked into the room. “Good afternoon, Alvina and Nyle.”
Her sister-in-law wore a forced grin Moira recognized all too well. It was the same look all her sisters-in-law adopted when spending above five minutes with her mother.
“How was your evening, Moira?” Alvina asked. “Did you enjoy your first ball?”
“The few moments I was allowed to remain were quite pleasant.”
“You were there an hour,” her mother chastised. “It was long enough for a first appearance.”
Moira poured herself a cup of tea, adding only one sugar since her mother was watching, before settling into a chair. She preferred at least three sugars, but her mother scolded if she took more than one.
“Enough about Society,” her mother announced and turned to Nyle. “I don’t understand why you and Alvina do not live here with us. It is the family home. You are the earl. Why rent a small townhouse for the Season?”
Moira could answer that question but held her tongue.
“We don’t wish to crowd,” Alvina answered.
“Crowd? We have six empty bedchambers.”
Windsor Castle wasn’t large enough if Mother was in residence.
“Besides, I worry that Nyle isn’t taking proper care of you.”
Her brother sat forward. “Mother!”
She leveled her eyes on her son. “Well, she still isn’t increasing, is she?”
Moira choked on her tea and glanced at Alvina, who turned a lovely shade of rose.
“That is one area of my life in which I do not need your assistance.” Nyle sat back and crossed his arms over his chest.
“Ellen is expecting her second child and Ruth her first.”
Poor Alvina looked as if she wished the furniture would swallow her whole after the comparison to Moira’s other sisters-in-law. Their circumstances were what kept the rest of her family from London this Season. With only Alvina and Nyle in Town, they’d be bothered twice as much with Mother’s interference, as she’d not need to spread her meddling among her four offspring.
“Enough, Mother,” Nyle ground out.
Her mother turned to Alvina, and Moira held her cup aloft, too afraid to drink for fear of what her mother might say next. “That is a lovely shade of yellow, dear, but it doesn’t suit you at all. We shall go shopping this afternoon.”
“I doubt that will assist in begetting an heir,” Moira mumbled into her teacup before taking a sip. Nyle narrowed his eyes in warning.
“That is very kind of you, but I have already made plans for the day.”
Wilton, their butler, stepped through the door carrying a silver tray stacked with envelopes.
“Very well then, but we mustn’t put this off. You clearly need my assistance in choosing fabric that is flattering for your complexion.” With that, Moira’s mother stood and accepted the tray from Wilton. “Look at all of these invitations. I knew you would be sought after, Moira.”
Moira resisted the urge to roll her eyes and glanced away only to note that Alvina had balled her hand into a fist. Not that she blamed her sister-in-law in the least, given Alvina would continue to come up lacking until she eventually produced an heir.
“I’ll just take these into the morning room and review them to determine which functions we will attend.” She turned and breezed out of the room as if nothing were amiss and that she’d not insulted a soul.
A collective sigh from the remaining occupants followed her disappearance.
“Your townhome isn’t so small that I couldn’t move in as well, is it?” Moira pitched her voice low on the off chance her mother might overhear her. “You are my guardian after all, Nyle. Shouldn’t you be the one in charge of me?”
Alvina genuinely smiled. “I would love to have you, you know that.”
“But,” her brother interrupted, “Mother would visit even more often than she already does, and I don’t wish for my wife to run off to the country without me just to get away from that woman.”
“Why should I suffer alone?” Moira thrust out her lower lip.
“I’ve suffered more years than you. Simply marry some fellow, and then you can live under his roof.”
Moira grinned. “That is exactly what I plan to do, as soon as I find the right gentleman.”
“And compromise him, I hear.”
Moira stiffened at the cold, hard tone of her brother’s voice. Rarely did she hear such from him, and it had never been directed toward her. “It was a jest.” Sort of. “And said only to Alvina. I don’t know why you should be concerned.” She should have known Alvina would have mentioned her plans to Nyle. Within the first year of their marriage, Moira quickly learned that if anything was said to Alvina, it was being said to Nyle as well.
“Because my wife wasn’t the only one who heard you.”
Moira shrugged. “What does it matter?” She reached forward to pick a cake from the tray.
Nyle leaned in as well. “It matters because your little comment prompted a notation in the betting book at White’s.”
“I beg your pardon?” Her fingers sank into the moist sponge and her stomach rumbled in anticipation. “What book?”
“The infamous betting book at Whites,” he ground out.
As she was a lady, she’d certainly never been in the gentleman’s club, and she certainly didn’t know they had a betting book.
“Gentlemen, with little else to do, are often making bets over the most inane matters. This time, and because you were overheard, one gentleman wagered another.”
“They wagered over me?”
Nyle nodded solemnly. “And the penniless Lord Lydell. The wager involves you compromising the fellow before the Season is done.”
Moria’s heart pounded. What an awful turn of events. “Who is Lord Lydell?” she asked, though she was afraid of the answer. She returned the cake to the plate, no longer hungry.
“A marquess,” Nyle replied. “So you could do worse for a title, not that I want you compromising anyone.”
A marquess. Honestly, the man’s title meant very little to Moira. “Does he have an estate in Scotland?”
“Scotland? What does that have to do with anything?” her brother raged.
Alvina reached over and gently touched
Nyle’s arm. “It doesn’t matter.”
Maybe Alvina didn’t tell Nyle everything.
He met Alvina’s eyes and his shoulders relaxed before turning back to Moira. “Lord Lydell does not have an estate in Scotland.”
“Then I shan’t compromise him,” Moira assured her brother, enjoying the various flushed tones to his skin, and picked up the cake once again.
“You won’t compromise anyone,” he roared.
“Hush, before Mother hears you.” The last thing Moira needed was her mother getting wind of her plans or the scandalous bet in the infamous book. She wouldn’t be allowed out of doors the rest of the Season. “I don’t know the marquess. Why should he be attached to my name?”
“Lydell needs an heiress, as do a number of other gentlemen in society. Any one of them would be happy to be your willing victim, I’m sure.”
“Heiress? I’m not an heiress.” That was the most ridiculous thing she had ever heard. Certainly she had a dowry, but it wasn’t outrageous, was it?
“Father left twenty thousand pounds for your dowry,” her brother answered grimly.
“That is a bloody fortune.”
“Moira Rose Kirkwood, take yourself upstairs right now. A lady does not use foul language, even in the privacy of her own home.”
Mother was back.
“I apologize,” Moira muttered. Blast, she really did need to learn to think before she spoke. A trait she apparently inherited from her mother and needed to curb before she turned into that woman. A shudder ran through Moira at the thought. The last person in the world she wanted to emulate was the Dowager Countess Hearne.
Moira stood and swiped two biscuits off the plate before going to her chambers.
Gideon thumbed through the stack of invitations on his desk. Almost half of those he’d received were in the receptacle beside his desk. Now he needed to determine which of the remaining were for meeting a future bride.
Lydell wasn’t the only one who wished to find a wife this Season, but at least Gideon didn’t need an heiress. Not that Gideon had any intention of announcing his plan to wed. Such a statement would have women circling around him like vultures.