Read Geek Girls Don't Date Dukes Online
Authors: Gina Lamm
Tags: #Romance, #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Regency, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Time Travel
the dirt.
“Hey,” Ella said, her voice soft and knowing.
“What’s up?”
Leah shook her head. “Don’t worry about me. I’m
fine.” Leah turned away abruptly and cleared her throat.
Between the pain of Kevin’s request and Ella’s gentle
probing, she couldn’t take much more today. Cursing
herself inwardly for the lie, she said it anyway. “I wish
I could stay longer, but Pawpaw needs some help at the
shop this afternoon.”
Ella crossed her arms over her middle, framing her
green- corseted chest. “You going to keep lying to my
face? Because we can play that game if you want.”
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Leah begged Ella with eyes already filling with tears.
“Don’t make me talk about it, please.”
Ella lowered her brows but nodded. “Okay.”
“Thanks for hanging out with me today. I do
appreciate it.”
Ella grabbed Leah’s arm. “Anytime, Leah. I mean it.
Call me.”
The knowing look in Ella’s eyes made Leah feel even
worse somehow. She agreed anyway.
“I will.” Leah pulled free and walked away. She
hoped she was fast enough to keep Ella from seeing the
stupid tears that flowed down her cheeks.
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Two
The bronze bell strung over the door of Ramsey’s
Antiques had long ago lost its clapper, but it still managed
to clang violently whenever Leah pushed through the
door. Pawpaw said that it never sang that loud for anyone
but his granddaughter.
“Pawpaw?” Leah dropped her French hood atop the glass
counter at the front of the store. Scanning the empty sales
floor, she drew in a deep breath, tasting the familiar scent
of ancient leather, dust, and pipe tobacco. “You around?”
His voice sounded far away. “In the back, Leelee.
What are you doing here so soon? I thought you were
at the faire today.”
Leah rounded the corner and collapsed on the stool
behind the counter. The hoops of her farthingale flopped
upward, nearly whacking her in the face. With a frus-
trated groan, she stood and smacked them down again.
“I was. I ran into Kevin, so I left after the coronation.”
“Kevin?” Her grandfather pushed through the
swinging door to the stockroom and set the antique vase
beside the register. “What in the hell was he doing at the
Renaissance festival? I thought he hated ’em.”
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“He does.” Leah leaned on the counter, cupping her
chin in her hands. “He came to see me.”
Pawpaw’s already lined face wrinkled further with
temper. He crossed his arms over his barrel- like chest, his
nostrils flaring. “What did he want with you?”
“To ask me to be Teresa’s bridesmaid.” Her stupid
eyes were watering again. She sniffed and trained her gaze
at the silver spoons nestled inside the glass case below her
elbows. “This is complete and utter crap. I wasn’t good
enough for him to love, but I’m good enough to be her
stupid bridesmaid?” She dashed the tears away. “Sorry, I
don’t mean to dump my problems on you.”
“Leelee.” Her grandfather pulled her upright. “Look
at me, girl. Come on.” He wiped the tears from her
cheeks with his calloused thumbs, demanding her stare
with eyes that were so blue it was eerie— the same eyes
that Leah saw in the mirror every day, only his were
crowned by wiry salt- and- pepper brows instead of neatly
groomed blond ones. Her grandfather, the gold standard
for men everywhere. She just wished she could find
someone as honorable and protective as he was. “That
boy wasn’t ever good enough for you.”
Leah barked a bitter laugh as she averted her
gaze. “Apparently he was
too
good for me. I’m not
Washington caliber.”
“I’m not talking about money and power and all
that hooey. Leelee, you were a bright child, and you’ve
grown into an even brighter woman. It’s going to take
a fine man to be able to make you happy. And Kevin
wasn’t it. Don’t shed another tear over that good- for-
nothin’.” He pressed his lips to her forehead, chasing
some of the chill from her heart.
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She smiled shakily, drawing in a deep, cleansing
breath. “Thank you, Pawpaw.”
He folded her into his arms and she rested her head
on his shoulder, just as she had a thousand times before.
He smelled sweetly, of his favorite pipe tobacco and
aftershave. His broad hands were warm on her upper
back, and she sighed against his familiar, faded, plaid shirt.
Pawpaw was right. He’d always been right.
“Promise me somethin’.”
She looked up at him.
He continued with a half smile, “Promise me you’ll
find somebody you can count on. A man who knows
what it means to work for a living. A man who won’t let
you run over him but will listen to every word you say.”
“I’ve got a grandfather like that,” Leah said with a
laugh. “There can’t be another man like you.”
He smiled, but his voice was serious. “Leelee, listen
to me. A good, strong, honest man. You find him, and
you marry him. I want to know you’ve got somebody
to come home to, so when I’m dead and gone, I know
you’ll be taken care of.”
She pulled free of his arms and shook her head
vehemently. “Why would you say that? You’re healthy
as a horse.”
He shook his head. “I’m not guaranteed tomorrow,
and I want to know you won’t be alone.”
“I can take care of myself, you know.” She tried to
focus on the insinuation of her helplessness instead of the
dead
and
gone
statement. She refused to even consider a world without Pawpaw. And besides, she was an independent woman. While a romance would be wonderful,
she didn’t need it to survive.
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“I’m not talking about money or protection or
anything like that, and you know it, girl.” He stared her
down. “I mean a partner like I had with your grandma,
someone to share life’s burdens with. You haven’t had
it easy, and with Jamie gettin’ married, you’ll be more
alone than is good for you.”
Leah stared at the carpet. She couldn’t look Pawpaw
in the face. While the rest of the world saw the laughing,
adventurous woman she’d chosen to be, she knew that
he saw the lonely child she’d been when he and her
grandmother had taken her in. He knew her too well.
How could any man hope to do a better job of taking
care of her than the man who’d raised her when her own
mother hadn’t cared enough to do the job herself?
Her grandfather sighed. “If you’re going to stay
around here this afternoon, you’d better change outta
that getup. I could use some of your help staging the
new silver I just bought. You’ve always been better at
that than me.”
He patted her on the back and nodded toward the
office at the back of the store.
“Yes, sir.” She caught the hood that he tossed at her
and made her way through the back room. Maybe an
afternoon of manual labor would keep the ugly memo-
ries of Kevin and her worries about the future at bay. Her
throat tightened at the thought of Pawpaw’s words. Why
would he be so worried about her getting married? What
had he meant, dead and gone?
It took most of the afternoon before she could breathe
normally again.
i
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Leah stoically stared at Jamie’s TV, determined to ignore
the pitiful whining of one claiming- to- be- starved grey-
hound. He’d had a bowl and a half of food only an hour
ago, the rotten liar. He pawed at the foot she’d propped
on the coffee table, his high- pitched cries fighting with
the TV for her attention.
She’d volunteered to house and dog sit for the happy
honeymooners, but Baron seemed determined to pester
her to death. Instead of teaching a week at summer
theatre camp, she was moping around Jamie’s house
with a pile of movies, a boatload of snack food, and a
greyhound that refused to get full.
“You are too generous to trifle with me. If your feel-
ings are what they were last April, please tell me so at once.
My affections and wishes are unchanged.” Mr. Darcy’s
eyes melted Leah from the TV screen, that beautiful deep
voice rumbling through her bruised heart. “But one word
from you will silence me on this subject forever.”
Leah mouthed the reply with Elizabeth Bennet. “I am
ashamed to remember what I said then. My feelings are
so different. In fact, they are quite the opposite.”
Baron whined again and pawed at Leah’s hand,
shaking the tortilla chip free. He snatched up the
forbidden snack and trotted happily to his bed beside a
large mirrored bureau. Crumpling the chip bag closed,
Leah tossed it on the side table atop her MacBook and
lost herself in her favorite movie for a few more minutes.
She sniffed and wiped away her tears at the sight of
Mr. Darcy kissing his new bride as they rode away on
the carriage. Why wasn’t life really like that? Modern
guys—
well, the ones she’d dated anyway—
wouldn’t
know chivalry if it bit them in the ass.
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The power button clicked beneath her finger and
the TV went silent. Baron yawned and stretched, then
trotted toward the kitchen, leaving Leah alone with
nothing but her contemplation and half a bag of chips. A
warm tugging began in her chest, a feeling she couldn’t
place at all. She glanced over at the bureau.
Jamie had traveled through that mirror. It was some
kind of time portal, Leah knew. It stood silently— tall,
gleaming, with an almost otherworldly allure. Her
Converse hit the floor with a soft thump, and before
she knew what was happening, she stepped toward the
antique bureau.
The mirror’s gilt edge gleamed at her, beckoning her
onward. She couldn’t keep herself from reaching toward
the glass, and she couldn’t stop her fingers from dipping
into the mirror as if it were the cool waters of a pond.
Her mouth fell open in wonder. She pushed farther,
relishing the tingling feeling that ran through her fingers
and palm. This was insane. She should be scared. Lord
knew what time period this mirror might dump her in.
She should be screaming for help. But she wasn’t, and
she didn’t. She smiled and pushed her arm through up
to the elbow.
Excitement thrummed through her. Jamie had met
her true love— an earl!— after a trip through the mirror.
Leah bit her lip as the pulling grew stronger. Her
shoulder was nearly through now.
A soft whine interrupted her, and reality cracked her
in the skull. What the hell was she doing?
“Oh shit,” Leah said, yanking backward. “Baron,
wait! I can’t…I’m stuck, I’m— ”
Something pushed her from the other side of the glass,
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and Leah popped free. She staggered backward, landing
on the couch with a thump.
“Oh good heavens, Baron, do get out of the way, or
I shall tread on you.”
Leah bolted upright with a screech. Scrambling over the
edge of the couch, she darted for the baseball bat she knew
Jamie kept in the coat closet. Her heart thumped wildly as
she brandished the Louisville slugger at the intruder.
“Who are you? How’d you get in here?”
The bat clattered to the floor when Leah’s brain
finally clicked with what she was seeing. A short, rotund
woman was climbing out of the bureau mirror— out of
the mirror Leah had just tried to dive through.
Whoops.
“What the hell?” Leah’s knees gave way with shock.
She clutched the edge of the sofa for stability as the
woman’s feet hit the floor and she straightened her skirts.
What was going on here?
“Language, dear,” the little woman admonished her
with a motherly smile. She was dressed in a dark gown
made of rough wool. Her grayish hair was done in a
severe pulled- back style, not a wisp out of place. Her
round face held laugh lines at the corners of her eyes,
giving her a pleasant expression. Her simple dress and
hairstyle were appropriate for a high- ranking servant of
the nineteenth century. Only one person Leah had ever
heard of fit the description.
“Are you— ” Leah stopped, swallowing the knot of
confusion that swelled in her throat.