Read To Marry The Duke Online

Authors: Julianne Maclean

Tags: #Historical

To Marry The Duke (2 page)

Whitby moved to stand beside him. “You know as well as I do that Bertie enjoys a novelty, especially one with wit and beauty, and what the Prince wants, the Prince gets.”

“And the Set is only too happy to oblige him.”

At that moment the heiress laughed, revealing perfect, straight white teeth.

Whitby raised his chin at her. “She and her mother are residing with the Countess of Lansdowne for the Season.”

“The Countess of Lansdowne, of all people,” James replied dryly. “Another American huntress—one who has already bagged her title. She’ll coach the new recruit, I suppose.” James knew the countess all too well, and subtlety was not her strong suit.

James and Whitby walked together across the room. James wasn’t even sure why he had decided to come here tonight. He despised the London Marriage Mart, for he was not seeking a wife, nor did he wish to seek one. He loathed being pursued by the avaricious mothers of single daughters, who would marry their babies off to a reputed monster just for the pleasure of knowing their own blood would run in the veins of a future duke.

Yet this evening, something had lured him out into society…

James paused beside the marble mantel, draped with a gold-fringed valance and topped with a vase full of carefully arranged white feathers. He couldn’t help looking at the American again, all flash and glitter.

“You’ve met her?” he said.

Whitby watched her as well. “Yes, at an assembly three nights ago.”

“And what about the Prince?”

“He met her last week at the Wilkshire Ball. He danced with her twice—in a row I might add—and from what I hear, her silver salver has been overflowing with ivory cards ever since.”

James leaned an elbow upon the mantel and watched her converse easily with their host.

“You’re not declaring an interest, are you?” Whitby asked, sounding surprised.

“Of course not. I rarely declare anything.”

But perhaps tonight, he thought, there was some element of
interest
shifting around inside his head. Shaking things up. She certainly was exceptional to look at.

He let his gaze wander leisurely down the length of her gown, over the soft curves of her body. Such slender arms she had, beneath those long, tight white gloves.

His experienced eyes roamed over her graceful hand—holding on to a champagne glass, sipping from it all too rarely—along to her dainty elbow, then up to her smooth, opulent shoulders and across her enticing collarbone. Her full breasts were tightly constrained by the close-fitting evening gown, and he imagined what they would look like, free from the constraint and falling out into his waiting, hot-blooded hands.

“Is your mother still nipping at your heels about taking a wife?” Whitby asked, interrupting his private observations.

James brought his mind back around. “Daily. Though I doubt I’ll have to answer questions about any Americans. Mother enjoys running the house too much. She’s hoping for some little insignificant chit— British, of course—who won’t complain or attract any attention, one who’ll be content to stay in the shadows.”

James nodded amiably at Lady Seamore as she passed by on her way into the gallery, where a recently acquired Rembrandt was on display. It was widely known in the best houses of London that the painting had come from the Marquess of Stokes—who had been forced to sell off a cartload of art to keep his estate from falling into disrepair. (And it was indulgently whispered in drawing rooms everywhere that his wife had not spoken a single word to him since.)

“An American, especially one as flashy as her,” James added, trying not to think any more of the Marquess of Stokes and his money problems, for it hit too close to home, “would be Mother’s worst nightmare. My worst nightmare, too, I suppose. If I ever decided to marry, I would choose a woman who would fade into the wallpaper and let me forget that I’d
been
married.”

A group of gentlemen in the far corner laughed at some private joke, then the room fell to a conversational murmur again.

“You’re the only peer I know who says ‘
if
I was ever to marry,’” Whitby commented. “You are such a rebel, Wentworth. You always were.”

“I’m not a rebel. I just don’t have it in me to be anyone’s doting husband. I want to put it off as long as possible, or perhaps even avoid it altogether.”

“Oh, how hard could it be? You live in a house big enough that you’d never have to see her, except when you wish it.”

James scoffed at the simplicity of Whitby’s opinions. “Women are a little more complicated than that, my friend. Most don’t like to be ignored, especially if, God forbid, they fancy themselves in love with you.”

Whitby nodded at a gentleman as he passed, then leaned in closer to James. “A wife can be a business matter, if you handle it right.”

“Perhaps. But I am fortunate enough to have a younger brother to fall back on if I wish it, as far as an heir is concerned. Martin will definitely marry. He’s not like me or Father. He’s softhearted and he enjoys falling in love.”

For somehow, Martin had escaped what James had inherited—the passionate nature that had dragged his ancestors into a dark, inhuman hell on earth. James couldn’t help hoping that his younger brother’s calmer nature would put an end to the cycle of violence. At times, James felt as if he was merely holding down the fort, so to speak, managing the dukedom until Martin was old enough and wise enough to understand that he was the family’s greatest hope—the most promising link in the hereditary chain.

Whitby conceded, and James knew he had distracted the man from asking any more intrusive questions.

The heiress turned to glance his way then, and he found himself locked in a titillating moment of acknowledgment.

They gazed at one another. God, her eyes were enormous. Feeling his brow furrow with bewildered awe, James noted the paradox of her full, dewy lips. They were sweetly innocent, yet at the same time brimming with bewitching, irresistible sexuality. He found himself imagining all kinds of things he would like to do in the dark with those appealing, wet lips.

A base, masculine instinct to take the steps necessary to indulge himself with her shook him from the inside out and unnerved him exceedingly. He had not felt a pull quite like it in years. Since he was a defiant adolescent, to be exact. These days, he never played games with young, marriageable women. He kept his affairs discreet and respectable—limiting himself solely to lovers who were already married.

After a time, the heiress nodded cordially toward him. He inclined his head in return, then she calmly returned to her conversation with Lord Bradley.

That was it.

She touched her host’s forearm, reacting to something he had said. Lord Bradley glanced down, quite evidently shocked at her informality. He recovered fast, however, with an ardent blush and a new sparkle in his eye that made him look ten years younger.

James felt the corner of his mouth turn up slightly.

Indeed. He couldn’t remember the last time a woman had stirred the long-buried embers of his susceptibilities.

For a fleeting, reckless moment, he ignored his principled inner voice—the voice that told him to look away—and thought he might like to meet her after all. To be properly introduced that is, and see where a casual acquaintance might lead. He had been complaining of boredom lately.

But was it really boredom? he wondered with some uneasiness. He wasn’t altogether certain. He’d become so adept at strangling his desires that he couldn’t really remember what they felt like anymore.

Better that than the alternative
, he thought, further reminding himself that he was still the son of a hot-tempered beast and the grandson of a paranoid killer, and to unleash his passions—passions of any kind— would be perilous.

With that, he quickly crushed the impulse to meet the heiress and prudently joined a group of gentlemen in the gallery discussing politics.

Mrs. Beatrice Wilson watched helplessly from across the crowded drawing room as the handsome Duke of Wentworth walked out. She glanced up at her daughter, Sophia, conversing attentively with an aging marchioness, blissfully unaware of anything going on around her. In particular the departure of the most prestigious and difficult catch in all of London. Hadn’t Sophia noticed that he was leaving the room?

When the marchioness excused herself, Beatrice led Sophia to a quiet corner. “Darling, let us go and find the countess. You
must
be presented to the duke. What’s the matter? Why are you looking at me like that?”

Sophia pressed a hand to her forehead. “Mother, I’m afraid I don’t feel very well.”

“You don’t
feel
very well? But the Duke of Wentworth is here, and from what I’ve heard, he rarely attends drawing rooms. We cannot let this opportunity pass us by.”

It had been a long year of struggles for Beatrice Wilson, who was growing tired and weary of the exertion. Sophia, in her innocence, did not understand the importance of her marriage—how crucial it was that she marry
well
. She did not know that romance and passion would not last through the years. She still believed that she should marry for love and love alone, and that nothing else mattered.

Beatrice loved her daughters too much to let them make poor choices and have to live unhappily with those choices. Beatrice wanted security for her girls, safety, and she knew how easily money could come and go, and how easy it was to be cast out of good society when the money
went
.

British titles, however—there was something that would last. Here in the aristocracy, all a woman had to do was birth her babies, and her child’s social position would be guaranteed.

“Are you ill?” Beatrice asked, touching her daughter’s forehead.

“I might be. I don’t think tonight is a good night to meet the duke. Can’t we go home?”

There it was again—that immovable resistance. Sophia had always been strong-willed.

There was, however, something else tonight— something different in Sophia’s disposition. Beatrice wished she could put her finger on it. “Didn’t you like the look of the duke? I thought he was very handsome.”

Her daughter considered the question. “To be honest, Mother, I didn’t. He is not the sort I’m looking for.”

“How can you make that judgment without even speaking to him? It will not do any harm to be introduced. Then you can decide whether or not you like him.”

“I don’t want to be introduced.”

“Sophia, you must give the man a chance. You cannot afford to be so picky. The Season will not last forever, and your father has invested a great deal to—”

“Mother, you promised you would let me make my own choice.”

Beatrice’s heart squeezed painfully at the reminder. Yes, she had promised.

Feeling drained and in no mood for a battle, Beatrice cupped her daughter’s chin. If she wasn’t feeling well, she wasn’t feeling well. What could be done? “Let’s get our cloaks then.”

She walked out with her daughter, wondering if she should have stood her ground and insisted upon an introduction to the duke. Once again, she felt the uncomfortable weight of her shortcomings. Her husband had always said that she was too easy on her daughters, that she spoiled them. But how could she help it, when she loved them so very much?

The next morning, James went thoughtfully to his own study to read the
Morning Post
and deal with correspondence. As he settled into his chair and leaned back, his gaze fell upon the oak-paneled wall, and for some reason he thought of the American heiress.

He wondered what she would accomplish while she was here—what chubby little impoverished lord she and her mother would snare. They certainly wouldn’t have any problem charming the ones they wanted. Lately, the American girls were putting the average country squire’s daughter to shame. The Americans, after all, were off traveling the world, learning science and art and languages from the best tutors money could buy and seeing for themselves the beauty of the Tempietto or the Sistine Chapel, while the English girls were being educated by a governess or two in a drafty, second-floor schoolroom in the rural English outback.

James was suddenly angry at himself. He was probably one of many gentlemen sitting in his study this morning, staring at the wall and thinking of
her

No more.

Efficiently, he dealt with the first letter on top of the huge pile, then reached for the next. It was from one of Martin’s instructors at Eton—the headmaster in fact.

James read the note. Martin was in trouble again. He’d been caught with a bottle of rum and a laundry maid in his room. The headmaster intended to suspend Martin, and wished for instructions as to where the boy should be sent.

No, not Martin.

Tipping his head back in the chair, James contemplated how to handle this. Martin had always been the quiet, well-behaved child. What was this about?

Perhaps it was simply the natural recklessness of youth. “Boys will be boys,” some said.

James, who had always kept his distance from his family and had no intentions of altering that habit, knew he was not the person to provide guidance to Martin. James had been the victim of harsh discipline all his young life, and he would not put himself on the other side of that fence. Nor did he know of any other alternative methods, for he knew only the example set by his father.

After some consideration, he decided to send Martin to their aunt Caroline in Exeter—his mother’s sister— who would be better equipped to deal with this kind of thing. James penned the necessary letters, then firmly swept that problem from his mind and reached for the paper folded on his desk, still warm from the butler’s iron.

He had just glanced at the front page when a footman knocked and entered, carrying the gold-trimmed salver. He held the small tray out to James. “This just arrived for you, Your Grace.”

James took the letter and recognized the handwriting. It was from his agent, Mr. Wells. The footman departed and James broke the seal.

My Lord Duke,

I regret to inform you that there has been some damage to the roof over the state room. A few days ago, it sprung a leak, causing some unsightly stains in the carpet and furniture. The carpenter I sent for was a rather portly man, and the roof collapsed quite violently under his weight. We now know that the roof was thoroughly rotted, which leads me to wonder how the rest of it will fare over the coming winter.
 

As you are aware of the state of the finances, I will refrain from repeating the gravity of the situation. I am only hoping you will make a decision regarding the sale of the French tapestries in the west wing, as well as the works of art we discussed in the gallery.

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