Page 8
K it stood motionless as his valet, Piggott, adjusted the back of his jacket.
Easter had come and gone, and the Season was in full swing.
Kit barely had a moment to himself these days, and still not one likely marriage prospect in sight, nor had he seen hide nor hair of Lady Mary despite diligently searching Polite Society’s entertainments without arousing unwanted interests. He heaved a sigh.
“Busy day, sir?” Piggott asked.
“Not as bad as some. I’ll take luncheon at my club, after which I am promised to my grandmother. She’s expressed a desire to be driven in my new curricle.”
“The dowager, sir? In your curricle?”
The corner of Kit’s mouth twitched in an attempt to curve into a smile. He was certain Piggott’s jaw would have dropped, were such a display not beneath any valet of quality. “Don’t sound so scandalized. She’s not a day over seventy. Been full of fun and gig her whole life.”
“Yes, sir. So I’ve heard.”
Kit cracked a laugh. “M’father swears he’s the only man he knows who got gray hair from his mother instead of his children.
” He grew suddenly tired of Piggott’s fussing.
“Finish up. I must be on my way. I don’t wish to be late for my engagement.
After I see my grandmother, I’ll be at Dunwood House, then I have two balls to attend this evening. One is Lady Bellamny’s.”
“Everything shall be ready, sir.” Piggott handed Kit his gloves, hat and cane.
Kit opened the door into the corridor to find one of his father’s younger footmen getting ready to knock.
“If you please, sir, his lordship requests you attend him immediately. ”
How odd. He’d seen his father just the other day. Kit frowned. “Has anything happened to one of my brothers or sisters?”
The lad shook his head. “Don’t think so. I was told only to come and get you.”
“Yes, sir.” The footman dashed down the stairs and out the front door. “I wonder what could be the matter.” He glanced over his shoulder. “Piggott, send a message round to Lord Evesham telling him I’ll be a bit late.”
A quarter hour later, Kit entered his father’s study. A decanter of brandy and a half-full glass sat before Papa on the desk. Kit had never known his father to drink this early in the day. At least not brandy. Something must be terribly amiss. “What’s wrong?”
Papa ran a hand down his face. “You might want to sit, my boy.”
If this had something to do with him, Kit thought he would rather not. “I believe I’ll stand.”
His father took a sip, then leaned back in his large, dark leather chair.
The exact same position Papa had taken the few times Kit had ever been in trouble.
His father cleared his throat. “I realize you have been reluctant to marry. One might say you’ve been avoiding choosing a bride.
Is there a particular reason you have been so hesitant? ”
Other than not having seen Lady Mary, the only woman with whom he could consider living the rest of his life, for a long time, no reason at all.
It occurred to Kit that he’d never realized how important his marrying was to his father.
Perhaps he should have been more assiduous about finding a mate. He would do so this Season.
He shrugged lightly. “Why?”
After taking another sip of the brandy, his father stared at him.
“I want you to tell the truth. I do understand youthful indiscretions. We went through more than a few with Crispin. Too many of them, to be honest. You have not caused anywhere near the worry he did. In fact, your behavior has been exemplary, and I promise neither your mother nor I will be upset. We’ll find a way to make the best of it. ”
Make the best of what? Why was Papa bringing up his dead brother?
Unlike Crispin, whose behavior had been nothing short of scandalous, Kit had made a point of never courting any type of scandal at all.
He would never willingly put his parents through that sort of anguish again.
“Sir, I think you’d better just tell me what it is you’re talking about, because I haven’t the least idea. ”
“Kit, are you already married? ”
His breath stopped as if one of Jackson’s punches had landed square in the middle of his stomach. Hell and damnation. “ Married! What the deuce gave you that idea?”
His father poured brandy into a second glass, pushing it across the desk to him. “You’d better have some of this.”
Kit took a sip, then set the tumbler down. This was no time to have his brain muddled. That would come later when, for only the second time in his life, he would drink himself into a stupor. “Where did you get the idea I had wed?”
“Lady Bellamny was in Northumberland to fetch her goddaughter’s daughter, whom she is sponsoring for the Season. While she was there—”
The hairs on the back of Kit’s neck prickled. “Where in Northumberland?”
“Rosebury.”
Rose Hill .
His father raised a brow. “May I continue? This will go much more quickly if you allow me to tell you what I know, and then ask questions.”
A flush crept up Kit’s cheeks. “Yes, sir. I’m sorry I interrupted.”
“As I was saying . . .” Papa took another drink. “When Lady Bellamny was there, she met a female calling herself Lady Mary Featherton who is residing at Rose Hill. That’s the property you inherited from your great-aunt, is it not?”
“Yes, sir.” That told him nothing. Mary must be the most common name in England, if it was indeed her real first name, which it probably was not.
That the impostor had used the name of the woman he wished to wed made him want to strangle her.
A dull ache began in Kit’s jaw and he unclenched his teeth.
“Have you been up there recently?”
“No, but that will change.” Immediately . “When did you speak with Lady B?”
“I did not. She told your grandmother, who was typically cryptic when she spoke to me, after which your mother did a very good job gleaning all the pertinent facts from Lady B. I, therefore, felt no need to approach her.” Papa took a sip of brandy. “I take it the lady is not, in truth, your wife?”
“Is she a lady?”
“From what I was told, there is no doubt. ”
Who the devil could she be? Kit couldn’t think of any lady who would engage in such an outrageous stunt, and he certainly didn’t want to think of the scandal this would cause if it got out.
Particularly now that his sister appeared to have decided on a suitor at long last. “How do we contain the news until I can meet with the woman and discern what game she is playing at?”
“I’ve been assured Lady Bellamny will not mention it to anyone.”
All well and good, but what about the girl she was sponsoring?
Young ladies were known to blurt out almost anything going through their heads.
What if he were introduced to the young lady that evening?
Or someone mentioned him and she happened to mention the person at Rose Hill?
Beads of sweat broke out on his forehead as he imagined the scandal.
He pushed aside the brandy and stood. “If you’ll excuse me, I shall make arrangements to leave on the morrow at the latest, though I shall try to cancel my engagements for the next few weeks and depart this afternoon. ”
His father nodded. “You may take my new traveling coach and use the horses I have posted along the Great North Road.”
He bowed. “Thank you. I’ll have Piggott send word when the trunks are ready.”
“Oh,” Papa said. “Before I forget, your grandmother cried off from her ride with you this afternoon.”
Now that was a surprise. Kit couldn’t keep his eyes from narrowing a bit. “Did she give a reason?”
“I believe she knew you’d want to depart as soon as possible, and Lady B requires assistance in rigging out the young lady.”
Relief swept through him, and he grinned. “Ah, yes, shopping over a carriage ride. Tell her it would be my great pleasure to tool her around when I return.”
“Kit.”
He focused on his father’s grim countenance.
“Let me know if you need assistance.”
“I will. Thank you.”
He strode out of his father’s office and house. How the hell could a woman just move in and pretend to be his wife? Well, she wouldn’t be there for long.
Seething with anger, Kit clenched his fists as he left Featherton House and made his way to Brooks’s, where he was meeting Marcus, Rutherford, and Huntley for luncheon.
The footman led Kit to their usual table tucked into the far corner of the dining room, where their conversation was unlikely to be overheard.
Marcus glanced at Kit and waved him to a chair. “I ordered for you. I take it something is amiss?”
Kit pressed his lips together for a moment, trying to decide how much to tell his friends.
“You could say that.” He sat back as the waiter poured a glass of claret for him and refreshed the other men’s glasses.
Once the servant left, Kit said, “It appears I’ve picked up a wife without my knowledge. ”
Raised brows and silence answered him.
Rutherford took out his quizzing glass. “Indeed?”
Kit relayed the story, then said, “I’m off as soon as may be.”
“Would you like me to give Phoebe your regrets?” Marcus asked.
“No, of course not. I want to meet Wivenly’s bride, and would not miss seeing Beaumont and Serena’s baby. Will Phoebe mind if I don’t stay long?”
“Give me leave to tell her what has happened and she’ll have your trip planned for you before your man can pack.”
Table of Contents
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- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8 (Reading here)
- Page 9
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- Page 29
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- Page 39
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- Page 47
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- Page 57
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- Page 63