Read Regency Christmas Pact 02 - A Gentlemen's Pact Online
Authors: Jerrica Knight-Catania
“It’s time we return to the house
. We have an invitation to dine with Sir Walter and Lady Cooper,” Stephen announced.
“You aren’t taking Jane out
calling this close to her time, are you?” David asked.
“No, she and I will remain at home. The four of you will be going.”
Northcotte closed his eyes. How delightful. He would be required to spend an entire evening acting the proper escort. “I do hope this isn’t another of Jane’s machinations to put Lady Miriam and me together.”
Stephen held up his hands. “We are innocent of any scheming in this, I assure you. We dine with the
Coopers quite often. They’re a jovial pair, quite entertaining. You might be required to be polite to Lady Miriam, but I assure you it will go no further.”
Northcotte didn’t fully trust him in the matter, but his fears were relieved when he met the
Cooper’s two sons and three daughters. All three of the girls were in need of husbands, and were quite excited to have an eligible gentleman in their midst. If Lady Miriam wanted his attentions, she’d have to fight for them.
“Mama, may we have dancing before supper? Mary can play for us. Please say we may.”
Lucinda, the ginger-haired eldest daughter, nearly bounced with restrained excitement.
“I see no reason why we shouldn’t,” Lady
Cooper replied. “We have enough ladies for a quadrille, if I play the pianoforte so Mary may dance.”
The three young ladies squealed, took Lady Miriam by the hand
, and nearly dragged her to a small grouping of chairs in the corner. “We hear you recently came up from London. You must tell us the latest,” Lucinda said.
“I, well…” Lady Miriam surprised him by looking his way as if she needed rescue. He was not
venturing down that road. He wouldn’t sacrifice himself to a group of sirens unless it was a matter of life and death.
Joanna motioned
with her head towards their hosts and grinned hideously at Northcotte. He took the message and smiled. “Sir Walter, Lady Cooper, it was kind of you to include me in your invitation.”
“Don’t be silly, dear boy. Any friend of the Lumleys is a friend of ours.” Sir Walter clapped a hand on his shoulder. “
Come tell me what the latest is from the House of Lords.”
They sat near the fire
with Lady Cooper, David, and Joanna joining them. Joanna and Lady Cooper managed to steer the conversation away from politics, and Northcotte found himself watching Lady Miriam and the young girls. He couldn’t hear everything they said, but Lady Miriam had the Misses Cooper enthralled. Her face beamed with laughter, and the lamp behind her created a golden halo around her head.
The image struck him
like a blow in the gut from Gentleman Jackson. Such a beautiful creature, she glowed with joy and light.
“Robert.” His sister’s sharp whisper
called his attention away.
“Northcotte, Lumley here tells me you might have a mare suitable for my youngest daughter.” Sir Walter watched him expectantly.
“Yes, more than likely, I do.” He listened to the man describe what he wanted from the horse. “I can have a man deliver a pair of mares that might suit you, and we can work out the details if one is to your liking.”
Lucinda rushed over to her mother’s side. “Mama, may we dance now?”
“I see no reason why not.” She rose and instructed the boys to move the chairs at the far side of the room, clearing a space. “What shall we start with?”
“Play Kate’s Delight,” one of the boys said.
Two of the girls and Lady Miriam lined up opposite the two Cooper boys and Northcotte. The lighthearted music began and Lady Miriam stepped towards the center where the older Cooper boy circled about her. They returned to their places and Northcotte took his turn in the steps.
The color in Lady Miriam’s cheeks was bright.
He called out to her when she drew near. “You enjoy dancing.”
“I do, but not any more than
most young ladies. Do you not care to dance?”
“I don’t despise it, but neither do I miss it when I don
’t have the opportunity.”
She nodded. “How diplomatic of you. May I ask when you last had the opportunity?”
When they stood close again, he said, “I believe it was at the ball celebrating my sister’s engagement.” He couldn’t prevent the grin that followed.
“I see. And they’ve been married these three years past, haven’t they?”
“Yes, that sounds correct, three years.” He should just say he hasn’t danced in a lifetime, except for one waltz with his sister at her betrothal ball, but he was enjoying this repartee with Lady Miriam.
“We have that in common, then. I haven’t danced since the last ball I attended, either.” She raised one eyebrow before turning away
as if daring him to question her.
“And how long ago was that?”
“Four weeks, give or take a day.”
Northcotte studied her graceful moves, the way her hands flowed in each stage of the dance.
“Hmmm, I will wager to guess you have missed dancing in that time.”
S
he looked off towards the pianoforte for a moment. “Actually, I don’t think I had time to miss it. There was the summons from my grandfather, the invitation from Jane, and all the arrangements to be made to avoid the one visit and attend to the other. I can’t say dancing entered my thoughts.”
“Yes, I can see why not.” He recalled the weeks before his mother and sister would travel, even for a
mere week at the race meeting in Newmarket. Servants ran above and belowstairs from dawn until long past dusk, carrying gowns to be cleaned, stockings to be mended. His London home felt like a tomb in the days following their departure, and that was not necessarily a bad thing.
“You hesitated when I asked how long it had been since your sister married.” Lady Miriam’s slight smile and half-lowered lids hinted at teasing or flirtation. “I wonder…can you tell me how many foals your mares were delivered of during that time?”
“Eight,” he said with no hesitation. As he did, it dawned on him what that revealed. He couldn’t allow that idea to go unchallenged. “That does not imply my sister is less important to me than my horses.”
Lady Miriam shook her head, the loose curls around her crown swaying with the movement
, her gaze still friendly. “Of course not. I never meant to say so. It is the weakness of your sex to concentrate on business rather than the mundane areas of life. That is not a character flaw.”
The music ended, but Northcotte didn’t wish to lose her attention. He offered her his arm and led her to the table where a punch bowl was set up. Handing her
a glass, he said, “I’m uncertain whether or not I should take offence at the implication I consider marriage mundane.”
“I didn’t mean it to say you, or any man, doesn’t care about the
everyday events of life. Rather, a gentleman is expected to provide for his family, to keep his estates profitable. Aiding in the marriage of one’s sister is a milestone, but once accomplished, it no longer need be examined.” She took a sip of her punch as they strolled around the edges of the room. Her eyes danced about, almost nervously, looking at him and flitting away towards various spots. “On the other hand, you breed runners, and I heard you discussing the sale of a mare with Sir Walter earlier. A man in your position would need to know the number and age of the horses at his disposal at any given time. I imagine you could tell me which race meetings you will enter next year, which horses you will run, and who their biggest competition will be.”
“I could, but I never imagined a lady would care to speak of such things.” Northcotte was most intrigued. Was this insight from an interest in business, or did she take time to study the men she met to discern the workings of their minds?
This couldn’t be a common trait in women. He couldn’t imagine his sister ever taking these variances into consideration. Joanna hadn’t spoken much about her feelings for David, even when fighting for the right to consider his proposal. Now he wondered what he’d missed all those years.
Miriam
smiled knowingly, her eyes lighting with restrained laughter. “We don’t normally care to. But not all men have learned that. If one listens in any gathering, one might learn as much from what isn’t being said as from the subject at hand.”
What a curious minx she was.
She was playing havoc with his determination to make her dislike him. Obviously intelligent, to be reading more into a conversation than polite discourse from gentlemen who obviously didn’t care to stick to the weather. He wondered how she’d made him out, given his disinclination for small talk. Beyond the business of horses, how did she see him? That wasn’t something he could ask in a setting such as this with so many ears to overhear. He’d have to wait until they had another chance at being somewhat alone.
And knowing the scheming minds of his sister and her cousin-in-law, he wouldn’t have to wait long.
Miriam took a bite of her toast, listening to the conversation around her as they ate breakfast a few days later.
“It’s such a lovely day, shall we visit the folly this afternoon?” Joanna looked first to her husband, then her brother, then Miriam.
Miriam’s gaze also circled the table, landing on Northcotte, and darting away when he looked up from his plate. The warm feeling spreading through her had nothing to do with the coffee, and everything to do with her conversation with
him at the Coopers’ home. He’d been unusually friendly there, acting as her escort rather than a fellow guest at Hambleton Cottage. “That sounds delightful.”
Joanna turned to Jane. “Do you mind? Will you be all right alone for a few hours?”
Jane set down her cup. “I’m never alone. There are always servants underfoot.”
“But they have their work to do,” Stephen said.
“I will have Maggie bring her mending into my sitting room. Do not fuss. I have three more weeks before your son or daughter will make an appearance.” Jane pressed a hand to her lower back and stretched awkwardly. “Although I wouldn’t have any objection to the day coming sooner.”
“If you are certain…” Stephen’s voice showed he was not. “We may ride out to the folly for a few hours, I suppose.”
“Splendid,” Joanna cried. “Miriam, did you bring a riding costume?”
Laughing, Miriam caught Jane’s eye. “Jane informed me the Lumleys never walk when they can ride, so I came prepared.”
“Do you ride often?” Lord Northcotte asked.
“No, I don’t. Father was not fond of horses, preferring the carriage. Mama felt it important we learn, though, so we had lessons when we stayed in Town.”
“I shall request my most docile mare for you,” Stephen assured her.
“Oh dear, and will a groom walk beside me and hold the lead? You all will be returning from the folly by the time I arrive there.” Miriam laughed at the scene she imagined, a short, plodding pony lifting one
hesitant hoof at a time through the field.
“No, that would be Harry
’s horse.” Jane chuckled. “Angel Face has a smooth gait, but don’t expect her to trot.”
“I believe she and I shall suit each other well.”
When they finished eating, Stephen ordered the horses be saddled, and Miriam and the others went to dress. When she descended to the courtyard she found the Lumleys mounted and a groom standing beside a stool next to a small horse. “Is this one for me?”
“Yes, milady,” the young man said. He helped her mount and handed her the reins.
Northcotte came out the door and swung himself easily onto the back of a tall gelding. “Shall we be off?”
Miriam nudged her heels into the horse’s flanks and allowe
d it to fall in behind the Lumleys. Northcotte rode beside her, which gave her a small bit of comfort. He couldn’t catch her if she fell, of course, but if the horse suddenly broke into a run the lord would be close enough to catch him easily.
She flexed one hand, then the other, shifting the reins as she did.
“Is something amiss?” Northcotte asked.
“No. My fingers are a bit cold. Or, I’m more nervous than I realized. I feel as though my hands are in knots.”
“There is nothing to fear.” His hat shaded his eyes, but his lips were tilted upwards in a relaxed smile. “It is not very far removed from riding in a curricle.”
“I beg
to differ. In a curricle my feet are firmly on the floor boards, and the rocking doesn’t threaten to toss me at every turn.” She exaggerated a bit, but all of her concentration was required to feel certain she was balanced well. Her confidence wasn’t helped by the fact Northcotte’s nearness had her head filled with wool. She couldn’t think straight when he was close by.
“You are doing well. Just allow the mare to make her own way and you’ll be fine.”
She might not fall, perhaps, but she was a long way from fine. She couldn’t think of a thing to say, finding herself as tongue-tied as when he’d asked her to dance so many years ago. As he hadn’t mentioned that night, she could assume it meant nothing to him.
And why should it? He’d saved her from a moment of embarrassment, not from a burning building. What a foolish young girl she’d been. And she’d thought herself ready for marriage.
Her sister, Harriet, had married at eighteen and now had a daughter to dote on. Harriet and Archie were madly in love after their whirlwind meeting and hurried betrothal.
Miriam hadn’t thought her younger sister was more mature than she was, but she could think of no other reason it had taken so long to find a
husband of her own. She’d tried to convince herself she was no longer comparing other gentlemen to Lord Mystery, but with him sitting beside her so tall and proud in the saddle, she knew it for a lie. No one held a candle to this man.
She sighed before realizing what she
was doing.
“Are you more comfortable now?” Northcotte asked.
“Yes,” she lied. Not to please him, of course, but to keep from having to explain the reason for her sigh. She could never admit her fear that if no man ever lived up to him, she’d never be able to marry. “It is a lovely day, isn’t it? I’m pleased there is no breeze to chill us.”
“If we are too cold, we can light a fire at the folly to warm ourselves.” He urged his horse ahead and led the way down a narrow, rocky stretch across a creek.
Miriam’s mare stumbled but quickly regained her footing. Miriam squeaked her dismay. After a moment’s panic, she realized she was still safely balanced on the sidesaddle.
Northcotte turned in his saddle and looked back at her. “Are you all right?”
“Yes, just a little stumble. My stomach fell but the rest of me stayed in place.”
He paused beside the path and waited for her. “We can return to the house, if you prefer.”
She would rather die than admit to this group of equestrians she was afraid to ride a horse. Her lessons had been on the side streets of London before the traffic grew heavy, or in Hyde Park during the morning hours. No hills or rocks to cause a pony to stumble. “If I quit now, I will never be comfortable on a horse again.”
He continued to study her when she halted her horse beside his. At this distance she could see the blue of his eyes, and see the absence of his polite smile. Was he upset with her?
She chewed the inside of her cheek. “I am keeping you from enjoying your ride. And the others have left us behind, which is highly improper. If you would prefer to ride on ahead with your sister, I can find my way back to the stables.”
“I would never think of letting you ride back alone.” His voice rang sharply. His lips clamped together, a thin, pale line forming above them. “I’m certain my sister hoped we would find ourselves alone, so this
fits right into her plan.”
She cringed at his tone of voice
. “I begged them not to plan anything, and they said they wouldn’t. No one asked you to remain behind with me. You brought this on yourself this time.” Her chest tightened, making it difficult to draw air down her throat, which burned with the need to cry.
She would not cry.
“My lord, I have no intentions of finding myself in a compromising situation with you, no matter how irresistible you find yourself.” Miriam jerked on the reins to turn her horse back to the stables, and kicked her heel into the mare’s side. Startled, the horse jumped into a run. Miriam cried out as she flew into the air, unable to tighten her leg on the pommel in time. The ground rushed up at her and she landed hard. Her vision grew dark.
When the darkness cleared, Lord Northcotte was beside her. “Can
you hear me?”
“Yes,” she mouthed. She had no air in her lungs to speak. A stabbing
pain in her side made it difficult to inhale. She pushed against the dirt and attempted to roll onto one hip. Her head spun.
“Wait, you shouldn’t move
, you might have broken something.” He gently squeezed down the length of each arm, watching her face as he did. “Do you hurt anywhere?”
“Only where I landed, and I shall not give you permission to poke me there. I’m certain there is enough cushioning there to prevent a break. If you will help me stand, I can ascertain any seri
ous damage.” She held an arm up for his assistance.
Rather than take it, he swept her into his embrace and stood.
“What are you doing? You’ll hurt yourself. Or me. Or my reputation. I cannot stand for any of those actions.” She threw an arm around his neck to keep from falling. Her heart beat faster now than it had when she was falling. Crushed against his chest, she felt his warmth beneath his cloak, and the hard muscles of his chest. The scent of his soap washed over her. He was close enough to kiss. So close, all she needed to do was lean forward and press her lips to the smooth skin of his jaw, just a hair’s breadth away…
He turned his head, and that inch closed. His skin brushed against her lips, the bristle of his whiskers sharp on her tender skin. It wasn’t a kiss, just the happenstance tou
ch of her lips to his face. That is what she told herself as she buried her face in his cravat. “Please, put me down.”
Northcotte shifted her in his arms but didn’t release her
. “You cannot walk until I’m certain you are not injured.”
She released a sharp breath of frustration, but couldn’t say if it was because of his stubbornness or his lack of reaction to her kiss that was not a kiss
. “Then we are at an impasse. You cannot carry me all the way back to the house.”
“I’m ce
rtain we’ll run across a stable hand or someone before we reach the house. You see? There’s one.” He whistled, the shrill sound piercing her ear.
Northcotte set Miriam down
on a rock and waved at the young man, who came running. Once the man had gone to fetch a wagon, Northcotte glared down silently at her.
She
held up a hand against the bright halo behind him. “If you must stand over me like that, please do so on the other side. I cannot see you for the sun.”
“Forgive me.” He stepped around her. “Are you certain you are not injured?”
“I wish you would let me stand so I may learn what my injuries are. Nothing is causing me any pain.” Although, her heart ached beyond reason. But that wasn’t from the fall. She would never tell him that, for she couldn’t understand it herself. She wanted nothing more than to be in Northcotte’s arms again, safe, warm…oh, so warm.
Throwing back the sides of his cloak, Northcotte fisted his hand
s on his hips and looked off in the direction of the house. “This will not work. You are chasing after a lame horse.”
She leaned back to peer up at him. “I beg your pardon?”
“I will not marry you, no matter how hard my sister and Jane push you towards me.”
“What?” Her voice came out as shrill as a harpy. “How dare you.
You are the most conceited, bull-headed, arrogant man of my acquaintance. I wouldn’t marry you if you were the last unmarried man in England. If you believe I would throw myself off a horse to entrap you, you are mutton-witted. If this is how you treat the young ladies you meet, I’m not surprised you don’t receive many invitations in London.”
“How I treat a young lady in London is completely irrelevant to how I
treat a scheming, man-hunting ape-leader. It’s women like you who make men afraid of marriage. Afraid their wives will sneak up on them from behind with a fire poker.” His words came pouring out in a sputtering rush. His arms waved to punctuate his proclamations.
The irony of the situation struck Miriam so hard she burst into laughter. A few giggles at first, a cackle, and then a rush of hysterics that collapsed into tears. This was the man
against whom she had judged all others? A callous, shallow prig she had thought better than all those young gentleman who’d offered their hearts to her. “It’s all too much. I was a fool to wait for you.”
Her head ached even more than her heart by now, but she saw the wagon approach. Without asking for help, she stood abruptly and began to walk to
wards the wagon.
And her vision went dark again.