Captain Russell approaching that makes you look so sour?"
Honoria made out Derrick's form a moment after her cousin
spoke. She caught a gleam of gold hair in the lamplight and a pale
oval of face, a suggestion of broad shoulders. Was that a hint of
desperation underlying his confident swagger as he moved closer?
She turned her back, ostensibly to speak to Lady Asqwyth.
This didn't stop him. "I must speak with you, Honoria.
Alone."
The intensity of Derrick Russell's whispered entreaty when
he came up behind her was more annoying than disturbing. He had
bad breath as well. Too much wine, and not only from tonight's
meal, she thought, was the cause of the sour stench that hung about
him. Possibly it was an outward manifestation of his rotten soul.
Lady Asqwyth put her hand over her mouth and tittered at the
sight of Derrick Russell standing so close behind Honoria. Lady
Asqwyth, of course, knew that they had once been betrothed.
Almost everyone else in the music room did as well. Everyone was
watching. Was
he
in the room? Did he care who she was with or
what she did? And did she care if he cared, or not? She decided that
she did—if she could in any way hurt him. Such maliciousness was
foolish, she supposed, since the man was heartless and soulless and
had no personal interest in her at all. If she could manage to get
even some small measure of revenge, would it be sweet? She had
no way of knowing, having never even contemplated revenge
before. The thought that she might make him uncomfortable was a
pleasant one. Of course, showing Derrick any attention might make
Marbury think he could still use Derrick against her. She would
disabuse him of the notion, if necessary. Right now, it would be
politic to disabuse Derrick of any notions he might have as well.
She'd managed to fight her grimace into almost a smile when she
turned to face Derrick. "Alone?" she questioned, as coquettishly as
she could manage. "That would hardly be proper, Captain Russell."
That she could pronounce his name with anything approaching
civility delighted her.
"We have a past relationship." He sounded as if he thought
that what they had once meant to each other somehow granted him
private privileges. "I hope to renew that relationship," he added for
everyone nearby to hear.
He spoke with a sincerity that twisted in Honoria's guts. Her
soul and heart might have been affected as well, if another
apparition from her past were not occupying those hollow, aching
spots.
"Derrick," she said quietly to her former fiancé "you are such
a nuisance." She sighed and stepped toward the garden door. "All
right. Five minutes." He hesitated until she glanced over her
shoulder upon reaching the glass door. Apparently Captain Russell
had forgotten that she was as used to giving orders as he was.
Oh, that's right; he had
never
known that side of her. Her
smile was quite genuine and sharp as a sword when she said,
"Come along, Derrick. Cousin Kate," she added imperiously, "we
need a chaperone."
She did not wait to see if they followed her as she went into
the garden. She did hear a man's hearty laughter as she exited, but
she refused to think who the man might be.
Cousin Kate wisely stayed on the terrace while Honoria
marched to a bench in the middle of the garden. She was aware of
roses and moonlight, but the scene was incongruous with her mood.
When Derrick put his hands on her shoulders, she shook him off.
"Don't you dare," she snarled, so fiercely that the Scourge of
Barbary took a startled step backward. Scourge, indeed. She had to
force down a bitter laugh before she could go on. "How
dare
you
come to my father's house?" she demanded.
He gestured dramatically. She could barely make the
movement out in the dim light with her dim vision. "I was invited.
Your father invited me himself." He sounded smug, pleased, sure.
Her voice was deadly calm. "And why do you think he
invited you?"
"Because you need a husband. You have not wed, Honoria."
"That is in no way relevant to you, Captain. You requested in
your letter that I forgive you," she went on, before he could make
some false declaration of tender sentiment toward her. "Very well,
I forgive you. I didn't think it was possible, but having laid eyes on
you again, I see that holding a grudge against such a pathetic twit
as you is not worth the effort. It would be beneath me." No, she
would save her hatred for the one who deserved it the most. She
could spare some contempt for Derrick Russell, however.
"I have had my solicitor make inquiries about your current
circumstances, Captain. Unfortunately, I was not able to present the
results of those inquiries to my father in time for your invitation for
tonight's function to be withdrawn. I assure you, there will be no
further invitations."
Derrick stood very straight and tall. She supposed that he
probably looked quite fierce—not that she cared.
"You love me," he announced.
"Irrelevant," she responded. She clasped her hands before her
and added coldly, "Also, your tense is incorrect."
"Your father will accept my suit. We will be betrothed
again."
"The information about your gambling debts will be on
Father's desk in the morning, along with information of a less
savory nature. I was unaware that there were any brothel keepers in
London quite so foolish as to extend credit to their customers.
You've run up quite a bill for services rendered."
"Honoria!"
She had no idea why the man sounded so horrified, but took
delight in shocking him. "I realize a long, and unsuccessful, sea
voyage can exacerbate certain tensions common to the male
anatomy, but really, Captain Russell, such excess is hardly sensible
for a man of your limited funds."
"How can you speak so, so—"
"Frankly?" she supplied. "Maidenly modesty is something I
lost years ago. I hardly need to remind you of that, since it was at
your suggestion."
"Honoria," he went on doggedly, as though reciting from a
memorized scenario, "I have come to rescue you from a lonely
spinsterhood. To offer you my hand in honorable marriage. And—
and—"
"The pleasures of the flesh? The comfort of the marriage
bed?" she asked with a sickly sweetness.
The smug satisfaction returned to his voice. "Precisely."
"I'd rather not risk the pox, than kyou very much, Captain
Russell."
"A maiden should not know about such things."
"I am not a maiden." Why did she have to keep reminding
him of this indelicate fact?
He took a sly step closer. He lowered his voice
conspiratorially. "But your father does not know that you were
dishonored. The world does not know the truth."
She ignored the threat of blackmail, well aware that she could
play the game better than he could. "You are a desperate man with
a ruined career who wants my fortune and the place in society I can
give you."
"Yes," he had the grace to admit, adding with a very poor
show of sincerity, "but that is not all I want from you, Honoria. I
was wrong. I have wronged you."
He sounded as if he had just played his winning card.
Honoria could not hold back her laughter. "Oh, Derrick, go away."
"Go away?"
He came toward her again. She put a hand out to hold him at
arm's length. "You lied to me when you told me you loved me."
"I do love you."
"You never loved me. You told me so yourself."
"That was the lie."
"Please. I have eaten a rich dinner; I cannot bear to pour such
treacle on top of lobster."
"You always did like to eat."
"That's my Derrick: remind me that you think I'm a cow. A
stupid, spotted bovine. No, you didn't call me bovine—I don't think
you actually know any words with Latin roots. Cow is a good
English word, and you used it quite plainly to describe me."
"I was ill. Delirious."
She responded with several short, rude words of Anglo-
Saxon derivation that any sailor was sure to recognize. "Go away,"
she repeated. "Attempt to contact me again, or attempt to inform
my father of your version of our shared past, and not only will my
solicitor's report make its way to the Admiralty, but I will
personally draft a letter detailing your abominable behavior in
Algiers. I will send this letter not only to the Admiralty, but to the
Prime Minister, the newspapers, the Queen. Dear old Lord
Wellington might find it amusing to call you out as a coward, cad
and traitor."
She felt light as a feather, happier than she'd been in years.
The threat of revenge was proving to be quite delicious.
"You would not dare!"
"If my father is in any way hurt, I most certainly will."
"You could not bear the public humiliation any more than I
could."
"Do you want to find out?" she asked. Her words were soft,
but he seemed to hear the danger at last.
Derrick backed up a few steps. "You are distraught," he said
in the mild, polite, insufferably superior tone a male used when a
woman made any show of opposing him. "It has been many years
since we have seen each other."
"Not enough."
"I will give you time to recall what we meant to each other.
To reflect. To remember." He whispered the words, as though they
would conjure up memories of sensual delight. "I'll leave you now.
The Season is only beginning, Honoria," he went on relentlessly.
"We're sure to see quite a bit of each other. Given time and
association, you will realize that you still love me."
Fortunately, Derrick finally chose to make a strategic retreat
before she called for footmen to eject him bodily from Pyneham
property.
"That felt good, didn't it, fox-hair?" James murmured from
the concealment of a topiary bush. He could tell by the tilt of her
head and the spring in her step as she rejoined her
duenna
and went
back inside. The conversation between Honoria and the fool had
been intense, but not loud. He had had to get very close to overhear
as much as he had. He and his father had made their farewells and
left by the front door only moments after Honoria had marched the
idiot outside. James had had to rush around to the back of the
house, jump over the garden wall, and stealthily speed to his hiding
place. He'd had a few moments of furious worry that he would
arrive to find Honoria in her "dear Derrick's" arms and he was still
tense and snarling, even though the kiss he'd imagined had not
happened.
It's not jealousy
, he told himself, despite the tightness around
his heart, the anger that clawed inside him, and the discovery that
his fists were balled in tight knots. And all that only at the thought
of the fool's touching Honoria.
James made himself assess the scene with a cooler head. He
had not been forced to use the scheming, devious part of himself
for some time, but that did not mean he had lost the capacity to
study the weaknesses and strengths of others, or to know how to
use those strengths and weaknesses to his own advantage.
She had made it clear she would not be blackmailed. James
rubbed his chin thoughtfully. That was not good. Then again, she
had also said that she would not let her father be hurt. Her father
was her weakness—that was good.
Having Russell in the picture was most definitely not good.
Russell seemed to think that he could charm his way back into
Honoria's good graces. Who was to say that the fool was not right?
She had thought she loved him once; they had a history together.
They had their place in the British aristocracy in common. Russell
was right about having many opportunities of seeing Honoria as the
Coronation Season progressed. He would be there, at parties and
balls and at the theater, in his dress uniform and medals, smiling
and dancing attendance on the woman whom he had once tricked
into thinking she loved him. Who was to say Russell would not be
able to trick her again?
"Me," James Marbury said. He was not jealous, but Honoria
belonged to him. "I paid good money for her," he added, and
looked up at the upper stories of the duke's townhouse. He did not