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Authors: Unknown
amenable. What had happened to her?
He covered his face with his hands and groaned. Hell, even he
knew that. She’d changed after he’d destroyed their marriage. It
was ironic that her newfound courage was all his doing. He went
and closed the door, took the opportunity to pace the carpet,
hands clasped behind his back.
Perhaps if he kept out of her way and allowed her this small
victory, this «visit,» she’d leave without delving into their shared
past again. He stared out of the window into the wintry street
below. Damnation, what was the matter with him? He’d allowed
Sokorvsky to best him and now he was bowing down to Jane?
He let out his breath, watched it condense on the window
pane. Surely there was a better way to ensure that Jane wanted to
go home with all the speed she could muster? He smiled slowly
as an idea occurred to him. A glimpse into the hellish world he
inhabited would probably be enough to send her away screaming,
forever.
Jane found her way to the pretty little sitting room at the back
of the house her mother had used as her primary domain. To her
surprise it hadn’t been altered at all. It still retained the faded
yellow silk wall coverings, white paneling and lace- draped
windows. With a sigh of relief, she rang the bell and then sat
down in one of the comfortable wing chairs by the fireplace.
«Yes, my lady?»
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She smiled at her old friend, Broadman, the butler Minshom
had inherited from her parents when they’d given them the
house as a wedding gift. She was somewhat surprised that her
husband had kept him on.
«Good morning, Broadman. In future, can you make sure a
fire is lit in this room even’ morning and a tea tray available at
ten?»
The butler didn’t quite meet her eyes. «Begging your pardon,
my lady, but I’ll have to check with his lordship, to see if that is
acceptable.»
«Of course, or ask Mr. Brown. I’m sure he’ll be more
agreeable.»
«Are you staying then, my lady? Not that it is any of my
business, of course.» The butler bent to light the fire and then
wiped his hands on his handkerchief.
«For a while.» Jane smiled with more confidence than she felt.
«At least until his lordship throws me out.»
The butler nodded gravely. «Ah, well seeing as he hurt his ribs
not so long ago, I can understand him not wanting to exert
himself.»
Jane blinked at the answer. She’d meant her comment as a
joke. «Lord Minshom hurt his ribs?»
«Indeed he did. I’m not sure how, my lady, but his lordship
was laid up for a couple of weeks, and right grouchy about he
was too. I almost felt sorry for poor Mr. Brown having to deal
with him.»
Jane chuckled. «So do I. His lordship is not an easy man at the
best of times.»
«Really.»
Jane covered her mouth with her hand and looked over
Broadman’s shoulder right into the face of her husband, who
leaned negligently against the door frame, blue eyes frosty, his
mouth a hard line.
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Kate Pearce
«My lord, I didn’t see you there!» The butler took a hasty step
away from Jane toward the door and then stopped.
«Obviously, or you wouldn’t have been indulging my wife’s
passion for gossip.»
«Mr. В road man and I are old friends, and he was hardly
gossiping. I am your wife, after all.»
Jane tried to keep her tone light, while wondering what on
earth had prompted Blaize to come after her. She nodded at the
obviously terrified butler.
«Please bring me some tea and some fresh ink, if you have
any. I doubt the inkwell in the desk here is usable after all this
time.»
«Yes, my lady. Excuse me, my lord.»
Jane waited as Broadman inched past her husband, who
immediately shut the door behind him.
«Can I help you with something, my lord?» She gestured at the
chair opposite hers. «Would you care for some tea when it
arrives?»
«No, thank you.»
His expression of distaste made her want to smile. He’d never
shared her passion for tea, preferring coffee or the stronger lure
of alcohol. He took two paces toward her and then stopped.
«If you insist on staying, insist you come out with me to my
favorite brothel so that you can see how happy I am with my life
and how little I miss or need you.»
She fought not to wince at such a blunt statement of
disinterest and found the courage to smile instead.
«And if I agree, you will attend some balls and events with me
in return, yes?»
«I didn’t say that.»
She held his gaze. «Yet it seems only fair.»
«Since when has ‘fair’ ever been a measure between us?»
God, that hurt. He insisted that what had happened between
them had no relevance to his present way of life, but he couldn’t
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resist bringing up her mistakes at every opportunity. Perhaps it
was time to acknowledge that, to try to get through to him again.
«You’re right. I wasn’t fair to you. I wasn’t fair at all.»
His expression froze. «Dammit, don’t you dare apologize to
me. That wasn’t what I meant at all.»
«But...»
He headed for the door and slammed it shut behind him.
Jane sighed. He was proving far more difficult to deal with
than she had anticipated. It was as if he’d encased his softer
emotions in a hard shell. If she hadn’t known him better, she
would’ve believed he was completely callous. But she’d seen him
at his worst before, seen him despair and yet still find the
strength to offer her comfort, which she’d spurned.
With renewed purpose she opened her mother’s old desk and
took out some writing paper. It was time to reconnect with her
friends and find out the true state of affairs, whether Blaize liked
it or not.
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Kate Pearce
3
«Jane, my dear, how are you?»
Jane allowed herself to be drawn into a crushing hug by her
much taller companion and kissed the powdered, scented cheek
closest to her. She hoped her rain-dampened clothes didn’t
offend. She’d decided to brave the blustery weather and walk the
short distance from Hanover Square to Crescent Place.
«Emily, you look so well.»
Her friend laughed and pretended to pout, drew Jane toward a
chaise longue designed in the Egyptian style. The large sunny
drawing room was decorated in fashionable homage to the
current craze for Egyptian artifacts. Yellow silk hung on the walls
and a variety of fantastical golden objects graced the mantelpiece
and the furniture.
«I look well enough for a woman with three children. You,
however, still look like a blushing virginal debutante. Are you
sure Minshom was capable of consummating your marriage?»
Emily gasped and clapped her hand to her mouth. Jane
hurried over to remove Emily’s fingers from her lips.
«It’s all right, Emily. I know you were joking.»
Emily sighed and returned the pressure on her hand.
«Goodness. Jane, I’m sorry, that was quite uncalled for. It
appears that living in London has sharpened my wits beyond
what might be considered amusing.»
Jane sat back and took a good look at Emily, admired the
saffron yellow of her silk gown and the pale blonde curls framing
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her face. Despite her modest upbringing, Emily had done very
well for herself and married the heir to an earldom. From what
Jane could see, she hadn’t let her new rank change her easy and
friendly ways.
Jane smiled brightly. «How is George, and how are your
children—in good health I hope?»
«They are all well. The children are in the countryside with my
parents, and George and I are enjoying ourselves in Town
without having to worry about them all.» Emily sighed. «Not that
I don’t miss them terribly, mind, but it is nice to be away from
them.»
«I can imagine.» Jane looked fondly at her best friend. She
couldn’t imagine ever wanting to leave a child, but perhaps that
was just her, and she knew Emily was truly fond of her brood.
Emily poured them both some tea and sat down, her
inquisitive brown eyes fixed expectantly on Jane.
«So what brought you to London? Did Minshom finally come
to his senses and ask for you?»
«No, I came by myself. He was as surprised to see me as you
are.»
«But not quite so thrilled, I’ll wager. I don’t think most of the
ton even knows he is married.» Emily rolled her eyes. «The recent
scandal about him and Anthony Sokorvsky has been the talk of
the town for weeks.»
Jane set her teacup to one side. «That’s one of the reasons I
came to see you first, Emily. I knew you’d have the best gossip.»
«I always do, don’t I?» Emily laughed, «Even at school I was
always the first to know which teachers were leaving, who was
having an affair with whom, who had inherited a fortune.»
She sat forward. «Well, as I told you in my letters, your
husband had a ‘relationship’ with Anthony Sokorvsky for quite a
while, but, recently, Sokorvsky ended it and went off with a
woman. It was quite a surprise to everyone. Minshom bragged
that he’d have Sokorvsky on his knees begging to be taken back,
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Kate Pearce
but it didn’t happen, and now some people are laughing at
Minshom and I suspect he doesn’t like that at all.»
«I suspect you are right.»
Emily refilled Jane’s cup and then her own. «And there are
new rumors that he and Sokorvsky actually fought. That part is a
little unclear, but it is true that your husband retired to his bed
for two weeks after his last encounter with Sokorvsky at a house
party.»
Jane nodded. «It might also explain why Minshom didn’t
follow through with his threat to personally eject me from his
house last night.»
«He threatened to throw you out?» Emily’s eyes widened and
her mouth opened. «That man deserves to be thrashed. I can’t
imagine why you stay married to him.»
«Because I don’t have the necessary family connections,
money or power to blacken his reputation and petition for a di-
Emily shuddered. «And you wouldn’t want to be divorced,
darling. No woman wants that stigma.»
«So you think that living apart from him is the perfect solution
for me?»
«I don’t know.» Emily frowned. «It seems unfair that
Minshom gets to cavort around London behaving abominably
while you are stuck moldering in the countryside.»
Jane suppressed a smile. «I hardly ‘molder,’ Emily. There is
plenty to do in a house as big as Minshom Abbey, and I have
some wonderful friends.»
«You’ve always had a gift for making friends, Jane, but,
remember, I’ve met most of these acquaintances of yours and
they are not quite in the same class as your peers here.»
«But I hardly know anyone in London,» Jane protested. «I
didn’t have a Season, like you—I married Minshom instead.»
«And more fool you.» Emily leaned forward to add hot water
to the teapot. «You should have insisted on having both.»
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Jane shrugged. «In truth, my father tried to use the lure of a
Season to stop me from marrying Minshom. He offered to give
me the most lavish come-out he could afford if I’d put off
making a decision about tying the knot.»
«He was right to do so. You should’ve pretended to agree
with him and then had both. Or you might have met a better
man in London and told Minshom the engagement was off.»
Emily sighed dramatically. «Lord, I wish you’d never met that
man, and at my eighteenth birthday party of all places! I’ll never
forgive my brother for inviting him.»
«Can you imagine how Minshom would’ve reacted if I’d done
that to him?» Jane’s smile died. «And, in truth, I was so in love
with him by then that I couldn’t have abandoned him if I’d
tried.»
Emily’s teacup rattled into its saucer. «You were too young to
make that choice and he was too old for you.»
«I was seventeen, Emily. You were or.ly two years older than
me when you wed George, and George is ten years older than
Minshom!»
«George was already settled and looking for a wife. Minshom
was in his mid-twenties, far too young for a man like him to
settle down, if you ask my opinion. I always felt Minshom never
really came to terms with his need to marry you.»
Jane sat back and considered her friend. Despite Emily’s
sunny exterior, she was very intuitive about people and their
behavior.
«I can’t argue with you about that. I think he married me
despite himself.» She sighed as the memories crowded around
her. «It was if he was always looking for a reason to leave me.
And, of course, as soon as I gave him one, he was off.»
«I’m sorry, Jane. As I said, the man deserves to be
horsewhipped.» Emily reached across and patted Jane’s knee.
«Now, really, what are you going to do about him?»
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Kate Pearce