Revealed
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Description
From the acclaimed author of Compromised comes a tale of love and war among the ton.
Phillippa Benning is the unrivaled beauty of the Season. But when another lady challenges her for a marquis’s attentions, Phillippa entices him to a secret rendezvous-only to stumble upon The Blue Raven, England’s most famous spy, lurking at the site of her planned tryst.
The Blue Raven has uncovered an enemy plot directed at upcoming society functions, but he’s unable to infiltrate London society. Phillippa makes an offer: in exchange for entrée among the ton, he agrees to have his true identity revealed at the Benning Ball-guaranteeing her unrivaled notoriety. As the danger draws closer, the mysterious spy and Phillippa give in to mutual desire. But when the game turns deadly, betrayal waits around the corner, and Phillippa must decide once and for all-is it the myth that captured her heart, or the man?”Kate Noble’s writing is smart and sparkling.”
–New York Times bestselling author Amanda QuickKate Noble is the national bestselling, RITA-nominated author of numerous historical romances, including the acclaimed Blue Raven series and the Winner Takes All series. Her books have earned her several accolades, including comparisons to Jane Austen.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-one
Twenty-two
Twenty-three
Twenty-four
Twenty-five
Twenty-six
Epilogue
Berkley Sensation Titles by Kate Noble
COMPROMISED
REVEALED
THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP
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This book is an original publication of The Berkley Publishing Group.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
Copyright © 2009 by Kate Rorick.
All rights reserved.
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BERKLEY® SENSATION and the “B” design are trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
PRINTING HISTORY
Berkley Sensation trade paperback edition / March 2009
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Noble, Kate, 1978-
Revealed / Kate Noble.—Berkley Sensation trade pbk. ed. p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-02475-1
1. London (England)—Social life and customs—19th century—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3614.O246R’.6—dc22
2008048320
To my father and brother, the two wisest
and most unflappable gentlemen I know.
Prologue
THE setting sun reflected off the inn’s bronze door knocker, blazing orange light like a beacon to the weary traveler. He had been on the road for days, on the trail of his enemy, and at last, the inn at the end of the road beckoned him as if to say, “This is it. The final place.”
It would end now. He was certain of it.
The building sat on the jagged edge of land and sea. He felt, he feared, it was the right place. His sinking stomach told him it was. He took a swig of water from the leather pouch he kept hooked to his waist. Squaring his shoulders, he ruthlessly combed his fingers through his hair, willing himself out of exhaustion. Then, as he approached, the building came into focus.
His instincts had been right, and tonight there would be blood-shed. But would it be his or his enemy’s?
His contact’s information was very good, he thought, as he read the choppily carved text beneath the inn’s name on its mast-head. Fin de Rue Poisson. Literally translated, End of Fish Road. His contact had told him that the encoded communiqué they had intercepted had been translated to say “fish fin.” And thus, he had been searching every stall, every ship, every pub in every small coastal village in this northern region of France for a “fish fin.” The Fin de Rue Poisson may not be a literal translation, but as an amalgam of English and French, it fit the bill.
The sea lapped jawfuls of water nearly at the base of the inn. If he looked hard enough, stared long enough, could he see England? Could he see home?
No. All he could see was the water and the looming building, beckoning him closer.
It was time to find the man who had eluded him for so long.
The Frenchman stood at the window in the westernmost room of the uppermost floor of the seaside inn at the end of the rue Poisson. He faced the cobbled street that led from the village to the seashore, the farthest corner of the structure, yes, but it was strategic. Here, he could see what was coming. The copper sun burned his eyes, but he had to remain vigilant, had to stay aware, had to stay alive.
He knew the man they called the Blue Raven was due to arrive. He knew, because he had leaked the clue to the safe house whereabouts himself.
Tonight he would prove his worth.
The Frenchman glanced at his pocket watch. Who knew it would take so damned long?
Movement on the street caught his eye. The Frenchman squinted into the sun and leaned into the glass, searching. His heartbeat quickened, the blood rushing to his temples, his muscles tensing, ready for fight or flight.
The clacking of horse hooves on cobblestones reached his ears as a carriage came into sight, a large, burly man driving the team. His face was shaded by an oversized leather hat, his form covered by a heavy cloak. The Frenchman watched and waited as the carriage approached . . . and turned a corner, out of sight.
A breath held too long fell from his lungs in a staccato rhythm. The Emperor had waved the white flag at Waterloo nearly a fortnight ago, but he knew the loyal were still being hunted. He was still too used to that rush of noise in his ears that woke him up in the dead of night. They would come together again. They would not surrender as easily as their leader. But for now, he kept his hand on the beautifully scrolled pistol at his waist, squeezing its cold, hard length for comfort.
“That will not help you now,” said a deep, rasping voice from the door.
The Frenchman turned, his hand remaining still on his belt, and took his first look at the Blue Raven.
He was dressed in the worn oilskins of a local fisherman, but the ornate pistol leveled at the Frenchman’s fair head was not part of a fisherman’s costume. That deadly weapon, as a matter of fact, was an identical match to the one he held at his waist.
“So,” the Frenchman spoke in perfect if accented English, “the little pigeon has arrived. Finally.”
“I apologize if I kept you waiting,” the Englishman replied in perfect if accented French.
The Frenchman leaned back in the comfortable, leather, winged chair. “I must say, you look different than I expected.”
The Englishman’s eyes narrowed. “You look exactly as I expected.”
“Do I?”
“Yes, but then again, I have the advantage. I saw you once at a distance.” The Englishman cocked the pistol, the metallic click echoing in the small room. “You were slitting the throat of one of my countrymen.”
A sudden flash of feeling ran down the Frenchman’s spine, so unfamiliar, it took him a moment to identify it as panic.
He knew, in that spare second, that he had greatly miscalculated his adversary. He had neglected to factor in the hate he saw burning in the Blue Raven’s eyes.
“You’ve been tracked through cities and across battlefields,” the Englishman said, his voice breaking with bitter spite. “And too many lives have been taken or destroyed by you.”
“Monseiur,” the Frenchman said, managing a cold smile in spite of the wildness of his heartbeat. “Surely we can settle our dispute as gentlemen.”
The Englishman regarded him, his arm and gaze steady and strong. “No,” he replied. “I tire of being a gentleman.”
The Frenchman’s hand came up in a blur of movement, and the air rang with the sound of gunfire.
The Blue Raven remained standing in the doorway until the weight on his leg gave out. The hole three inches above his knee leaked smoke, then a warm red spurt began trickling down his calf. But the Frenchman, the adversary he had hunted for the better part of a decade, who had seduced secrets from England’s top leaders and spilled the blood of those who weren’t so easily charmed, remained seated.
He wouldn’t be getting up any time soon.
The red stain grew and spread on the white lawn of the Frenchman’s shirtfront. His eyes were opened in surprise.
Until the end, he had believed he would win.
The Englishman hobbled over to the Frenchman’s body and removed the pistol from that man’s limp hand. He stuffed it ruthlessly into the waist of his trousers, reuniting it with its mate after so many years. A small glint of metal from around the dead man’s neck caught his attention. He pulled it free of the bloody shirt: a crucifix. Quietly laying it back on the man’s chest, the Englishman took a moment and then gently closed his enemy’s eyes.
The Blue Raven straightened, wincing as his weight fell on his wounded leg. He didn’t have much time; the English had won the war, but he was still on French soil. He could hear the innkeeper’s boots on the stairs already; there was only time for one last detail.
From the pocket of his oilskin overcoat, he pulled out a black feather and laid it gently on the dead man’s lap.
As he departed the inn via a window, he couldn’t keep the elation from flowing, adrenaline overcoming his injury and powering his escape.
It was over.
Finally.
One Year Later
“Will this work?” the first man asked, more nerves in his voice than he liked. He prided himself on maintaining an air of nonchalance, but the jostling evening crowd at the Bull and Whisker and the company of the man next to him had him slightly on edge.
“But of course. While your English imagination is lacking, I see clearly,” his companion answered, his French accent smoothing over the cruel bite of his words. “But I’m counting on your English prejudice.” He rapped his knuckle on the bar once more, and the beefy man behind brought over the bottle and refilled his glass again.
The first man held up his hand, refusing to let his own drink be refilled. “I don’t think imbibing so much is good for our . . . operation.”
“C’est la difference. England seems to have better French brandy than France. Even in this”—he gestured at the crowded, common merriment about them—“place. I will take my share of its pleasure. The pigeon robbed me of much, but he did not rob me of that.”
“But when—”
“When it is necessary that I be sober, I will be. For now, we are nothing more than two commoners meeting for a drink. So I suggest you have another,” the Frenchman bit out. “Non? Fine. As for our arrangement, I am prepared. I suggest you prepare as well.”
And with that he stood, picking up his silver-handled walking stick, and turned, perfectly balanced. He loped to the door with the grace born to those of his nationality, and exited.
The first man turned back to the bar, signaled the man for another drink. He let out a low, unsteady breath.
He knew what he did was for his good and the good of England.
But damned if he wasn’t making a pact with the devil.
Outside the Bull and Whisker, it was a generally quiet evening, as evenings down at the docksides go, Johnny Dicks thought, chewing the stub of his cheroot. He watched as the sober went into the pub, nodding as they doffed their caps to him as they passed, and then watched them leave, drunk and sloppy. Sometimes he had to stand up off his somewhat comfortable stool and keep the rougher sort from entering the Bull; sometimes Marty would poke his head out and bring him inside to remove someone who became a bit rougher with drink than Marty liked.
When he and Marty were mates in the Seventeenth Regiment, he was a rum one for a good fight, but ever since he bought the Bull, he’d said the cost of replacing all the broken chairs and crockery made the fighting a touch less the crack.
So it was that Johnny Dicks was contemplating the last time Marty had bemoaned a splintered chair and how his brother-in-law the carpenter was like to bilk him, when the reedy gent came strolling out the Bull and Whisker, swinging his stick like he owned the world and the sky above it.
“Have a good evenin’, Cap’n,” Johnny Dicks called out and nodded as the man passed. The man swung around wildly, his cane connecting with Dicks’s shin.
“Hey!” he called out. “That hurt, that did!”
“What did you call me?” the reedy man spat out, his Frenchy accent slurred by drink. The man held himself together when walking well enough, but with his temper up, the drink showed through. Johnny Dicks gained his feet. The height and weight that made him an imposing doorman was put to work now, leaning over the Frenchy. But the Frenchy’s face took on a peculiar sheen, a glint of anticipation in his eye.
“I am not your captain,” the Frenchy bit out. He swung out with the stick, like a cricket bat. Johnny caught it in his hand and swung with his meaty fist. But the Frenchman was faster, ducking and landing two quick blows to Johnny’s body, one to his liver and one to his spleen. The silver-headed cane clattered to the ground as Johnny Dicks fell to his knees.
“The pigeon did not end me; neither shall you,” the Frenchy spat out, and with one swift, vicious motion, his heavy Hessian boot landed on Johnny Dicks’s jaw.
Johnny fell back, tasting the grime of the cobblestones. He lay on his side, breathing heavily, his jaw on fire, and watched as the Frenchman picked up his cane and, easy as you please, strolled down the way and disappeared around the corner.
“Oy! Johnny!” came a high, soft voice. Johnny rolled over and saw Miss Meggie, a local “lady”—couldn’t be more than twenty years old, but long since initiated in her professions of part-time prostitute and full-time pickpocket.
“You all right? That bloke just felled you like you was made o’ sawdust!” Miss Meggie said, helping Johnny to sit up. Johnny felt his jaw, happy to find it unbroken, but he found it necessary to spit out a small bit of blood and a tooth or two.
“What’d you say to ’im?” Miss Meggie asked.
“I said good night.”
“Yeah, and I reckon he said it right back,” Miss Meggie snorted.
“Actually he said somethin’ odd—somethin’ about a pigeon.” Johnny’s brow furrowed, only a little painful. “Meggie, you think you can follow the gent? I have a mind to find out more about ’im.”
“No worries, Johnny; there ain’t been a gent yet that Meggie could’na track down.”
And with that, Miss Meggie left Johnny sitting on the ground, ducking into the alley after the gent and disappearing in the shadows.
Fifteen minutes later, Johnny was installed back on his stool outside the door of the Bull and Whisker, two teeth fewer than before and developing three good-sized bruises, when Miss Meggie came walking out of the shadowed alleyway.
“What happened?” he asked.
“I caught up to ’im in the high street, but he hopped in a hansom that was waitin’ for him. It took off too fast for me to follow.”
“Which way did it head?” Johnny asked.
“West.”
“Well, that’s somethin’ at least.”
“Yeah,” Miss Meggie said with a smile, “and so is this.” She pulled out of her skirt pocket a folded-up bit of foolscap. “Ah, ah, ah!” Miss Meggie said with a smile, holding the paper out of Johnny’s reach until he produced a coin and traded her for it.
“What’s it say?” Miss Meggie asked, leaning over Johnny’s shoulder as he unfolded it. Johnny was not the best reader—his talents lay in other areas—but he knew Miss Meggie was no reader at all. Willing to satisfy her curiosity, he concentrated on the slanted, educated writing.
“Its . . . it’s a list,” Johnny replied.
“What’s it a list of?”
“I dunno,” Johnny said. His mind knew he had pieces to a puzzle. A Frenchy who spoke about a pigeon; who hit with the precision of a sharpshooter, even when in his cups; and now this list. He had the pieces, but he didn’t know how it all went together.
He turned to Miss Meggie. “But I know a gent who might.”
One
EVERYONE agreed that Mrs. Phillippa Benning was a beautiful young woman. Stunning even, with her cornflower blue eyes and cornsilk hair. One poetic gentleman had likened her teeth in shape to perfect corn kernels, but that perhaps was taking the metaphor too far.
Mrs. Benning simply sparkled. Her wit and humor and gay joie de vivre, gave her entrée into the most exciting crowds in the Ton, a place that lady enjoyed and intended to stay. So, if she was occasionally seen as being too forward in her thoughts and too ambitious in her flirtations, it was easily forgiven as the capricious combination of youth and beauty, for when Phillippa Benning smiled—a sultry pout known to cause married men to forget their wives’ names—no one could find fault in her.
Indeed, everyone thought well of Mrs. Phillippa Benning. And they certainly would have done so even if she were not so rich and so conveniently widowed.
All the world knew Phillippa Benning’s short marriage had been the stuff of fairy tales, merely lacking the ever after. And after mourning her husband of five days for a full year, Phillippa had discovered it was exceedingly pleasant to no longer require that smothering protection unmarried ladies lived under, and took to her life as a young woman of independent means with verve.
She liked all the same things other women liked but made them artlessly hers. She read the latest gothic novels by M. R. Biggleys and Mrs. Rothschild, but whenever she commented that the hero of one was far too bland for her taste or the setting of another was spine-chilling, it was automatically taken as fact and quoted by scholarly ladies and gentlemen alike as such. She could affect sales of fabric as much as a drought or rainy season would affect a crop: If Phillippa Benning declared lilac watered silk to be déclassé, sales of such material would plummet; conversely, if she was seen strolling the park in mint green sprigged muslin and butter colored walking boots, two dozen such costumes would be on order at the best modistes the next day.
It was uncommon for someone so young to rule the Ton (she was just one and twenty), but when it came to Mrs. Phillippa Benning, it was unquestionable. Her favor could make or break a novel’s success, a modiste’s reputation, a hostess’s event, a young debutante’s popularity, or a young buck’s heart.
And she knew it.
“I absolutely refuse to attend Mrs. Hurston’s card party. She insists on wearing that feathered violet turban, and I have taken the trouble twice to tell her how it does not suit her,” Phillippa said as she looked through her opera glasses, scanning the crowd lined up along the parade route.
Phillippa’s best friend, Nora, clucked her tongue and shook her head, supressing a delicate giggle beneath a tiny hand.
Nora was an adorable little creature Phillippa had picked up this year. She was eighteen, in her first Season, and could have turned out disastrous if not for Phillippa’s intervention. Miss Nora De Regis was very rich, born and raised English, but suffered from a touch of dark coloring inherited from a Greek grand-father and from a mother who refused to allow the child to dress in anything other than eyelet cotton and stiff corsets. Phillippa simply made certain the world saw Nora’s dark eyes and olive skin as exotic and steered her mother to more expansive modistes. Now mother and daughter alike would not be caught dead in anything but the latest fashions. Nora, at the beginning of the season, also had a rather innocent and open nature, which Phillippa was teaching her to suppress.
Nora was proving a very apt pupil.
“No Phillippa Benning at Mrs. Hurston’s party?” Nora replied archly. “She’ll lose more face than if Prinny himself failed to appear. Maybe that will shock the good Mrs. Hurston into taking your advice more seriously.”
“Really,” Phillippa replied, lowering her opera glasses, “you would think they would know by now.”
Normally, Phillippa was not one to partake in organized outdoor activities before noon. But then again, there were very few social events whose express purpose was the ogling of men, and a parade of militia was one of them. Patriotism was all the rage. Her companion, Mrs. Tottendale, could not be roused to attend, but Nora was always game for assessing young men’s attributes. And besides, Phillippa’s other best friend, Bitsy, her Pomeranian, could use the fresh air.
The red woolen coats slashed with gold epaulettes glinted brilliantly in the sun, but none of that distracted Phillippa from her view of a dashing gentleman in a dark green coat watching the processional from the other side of the thoroughfare.
“Did you spot him? The Marquis of Broughton?” Nora craned her neck, trying in vain to see over the throng gathered at the park.
“He’s just across the street, to the right,” Phillippa replied, never looking directly at him but always keeping him within her view. After all, she did have all of these dazzling redcoats to look at. Bitsy shook delicately in Phillippa’s arms, his emerald collar jangling with the dog’s nervous energy.
Nora went up on tiptoes and leaned over far enough into the thoroughfare to nearly be knocked over by an outside fife player. Finally, she spotted the object of Phillippa’s intensely purposeful inattention.
“Oh! He’s simply delicious!”
“I know,” Phillippa purred, letting a small smile play about her mouth, soothing Bitsy with long, gentle strokes. “Where has he been keeping himself? The past few seasons would have been so much more interesting if he had been around.”
“The past few seasons have not been dull for you, Phillippa; admit it,” Nora replied, wide-eyed and mocking.
It was true. Phillippa had thoroughly enjoyed her first season as a widow. Oh, she had enjoyed her original season, too, but it had ended rather abruptly with Alistair’s death, and as such, Phillippa had been determined to regard her emergence from mourning as a fresh start. She knew she would marry again—the hazy vision of a quiet country life with rug rats loomed over her like a cloud threatening rain—but her first season as a widow had been such an overwhelming success, she refused to settle down before giving herself another. She was accountable to no one. Her funds were her own, having inherited her trust upon her marriage. There was something unbelievably luxurious about being untethered. She could flirt with no dreadful repercussions. She could dance until dawn.
Oh, her parents, the Viscount and Viscountess Care, were hopeful that she make a match, of course, and provide them with a few grandchildren to dote upon and make heirs. But Phillippa informed them she required the perfect specimen of man for her to even consider marriage: rich, titled, a leader of the Ton. And until that man arrived, her parents could do nothing more than throw up their hands and go back to their own lives. Her father to the estates and playing the market, her mother to Bath or Brighton, where the waters were as invigorating as the men, she’d say.
But her parents would be very pleased when they learned of the Marquis of Broughton’s arrival on the scene, and how very perfect Phillippa had found him thus far.
“Rumor has it, Broughton’s been locked up at his estate, poor thing,” Phillippa pouted saucily.
“Which one?” Nora asked. “They say he has a dozen.”
“Does it matter? It only matters that he wasn’t here before, and now he is.” A small, satisfied smile lifted the perfect bow of her mouth.
“Well,” Nora conceded, “if he’s as delicious up close as he seems to be from a distance . . . Have you been introduced?”
“Not yet,” Phillippa said, as the last of the militia trooped past, leading cheering revelers in their wake (luckily, the parade had been horseless, else the revelers might suffer a misstep and a smelly fate). “But he’ll introduce himself shortly.”
Nora’s brows shot up in surprise. “How can you know that?”
“Watch.”
As the last of the revelers passed, Phillippa let go of her coyness and turned, catching hold of the Marquis of Broughton’s hawklike gaze and holding it.
One . . . two . . .
She arched a brow, slightly, allowed the faintest upturn to the corner of her mouth.
Three . . . four . . .
Never did his eyes lift from hers. Never did she allow the heat of his gaze to cause more than the faintest of blushes to paint her cheek.
Five.
With one last fractional brow raise, Phillippa pointedly turned away and addressed Nora.
“He’ll introduce himself shortly,” she repeated. She didn’t even attempt to hide the smugness she considered well-deserved. “In the meantime, shall we get some ices? Its unbearably hot among all these”—she flitted her hand—“people.”
Phillippa handed a squirming and eager Bitsy to his liveried attendant for walking, and taking Nora’s arm, she gently steered her toward the shops that lined the park. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw the Marquis of Broughton approach them. He was still a good twenty feet away but moving like a hunter stalking his prey. Surreptitiously, Phillippa reached over and grabbed one of Nora’s gloves out of her hand (she certainly wasn’t about to let her own glove get muddy) and dropped it, all without Nora noticing. The Marquis was behind her now, out of her line of sight.
She slowed, and then counted.
Five . . . four . . .
He would be a few feet from the glove by now.
Three . . . two . . .
Bending down, he’d have picked it up.
One.
“Excuse me, madam?” an unfamiliar, deeply masculine voice addressed them, a warm drawl coloring his expression.
Phillippa turned, sly smile and coy look at the ready to lay claim to . . .
Someone who was not the Marquis.
“You seem to have dropped this,” the incredibly tall man with the deep voice said, holding up Nora’s small, now-soiled glove.
“Thank you,” Nora said, accepting the glove with a polite smile. “I hadn’t realized I dropped it, Mr.—”
“Mr. Worth,” he replied before tipping his hat.
“Mr. Worth,” Nora repeated, doing the conversational duties Phillippa had abdicated.
Abdicated, because her gaze had narrowed and locked onto the Marquis of Broughton, who, like them, had attracted his own barnacle of sorts, as she watched him hand a reticule back to a vaguely pretty female who lightly touched his arm at discreet intervals.
It seemed he had “accidentally” been bumped into by none other than that treacherous harlot herself, Lady Jane Cummings.
Two
THE rivalry between Phillippa Benning and Lady Jane Cummings was of such long standing, no one knew its origin. Some were certain that a young buck must have, at one point in time, favored one over the other. Others with keener memories knew they had been rivals at Mrs. Humphrey’s School for Elegant Ladies, ruling opposing factions of adolescent girls with strong hands, witty remarks, and imaginative pranks, which would have been unbecoming of young ladies of their station . . . if they had ever been caught. Still others thought the rivalry had begun in the womb, as both their mothers were notorious in their own exploits in their beautiful youth. Whatever the cause, Phillippa Benning’s hatred of Lady Jane and vice versa had the effect of setting every tongue in London wagging.
Phillippa, of course, had thought herself removed from Lady Jane at her coming out; Phillippa had debuted at seventeen, and Lady Jane’s mother, the Duchess, would not hear of launching her only daughter into society until she was eighteen. But, while Phillippa married, then mourned, Lady Jane had debuted, and then was shocked into nursing and soon mourning herself, when her own mother took violently ill and suffered for weeks before finally succumbing. And so, the seasons had passed, and Phillippa and Lady Jane found themselves again staring each other down in society.
It was highly annoying.
Phillippa had the advantages of the freedoms of widowhood, but Lady Jane, although the exact same age as Phillippa, had the impression of youth and newness. And there was nothing so alluring to the Ton as something new.
Every lady of marriageable age was either in Phillippa’s camp or Lady Jane’s, and every gentleman knew what it was to walk the line between them. So when one gentleman caught both Phillippa and Lady Jane’s eye, it was certain to cause a commotion.
But due to her great advantage in height, Phillippa was absolutely certain she had seen him first that day in the park.
“The Marquis of Broughton,” announced the imperious butler at the door of Lady Plessy’s parlor.
She also had the good luck to be the only one of them invited to this dinner party.
Lady Plessy’s dinner parties were entirely Phillippa’s arena. The people who populated them were fashionable, eager, and determined to have their fun. Lady Jane would be wholly welcome in that circle, if not for Lady Plessy’s allegiance to Phillippa.
Phillippa Benning was nothing if not determined. They were gathered in the parlor before walking in to dine, milling about talking of the eventful nothings of the day. As Broughton made his bow to their hostess, Phillippa walked directly up to him, extended her hand, and spoke.
“Good evening. I’m Phillippa Benning. And you are . . . ?”
Sometimes the direct approach had its advantages.
Broughton blinked once, then twice, then let out a short guffaw and bowed over her hand, saying, “Broughton, Mrs. Benning. Terribly pleased to see your gloves are none the worse for wear.”
That earned a brilliant and knowing smile from Phillippa.
Having sweetly bribed Lady Plessy with promises of an introduction to her famed mantua maker, Madame Le Trois, Phillippa earned the honor of sitting a mere seat away from that good lady, and therefore opposite Lady Plessy’s other favored guest, the Marquis of Broughton. He was certainly making a splash in society, a mere three days introduced.
Phillippa let him lead the conversation, her clear blue gaze finding his a dozen times throughout the meal. As he spoke of his exploits hunting, his fencing prowess, his pride in Britain’s victories abroad (although he had taken no part in them), and his homes and estates (careful to gloss over their net worth in the way of polite people), he kept turning to her, seeking her out in the flow of words between them. Phillippa couldn’t help but smugly think, Lady Jane doesn’t stand a chance.
He led her to the floor after dinner, his hand lightly brushing the back of her neck and sending a delighted frisson down her spine, causing a small hitch to her breath and curve to her lips. She felt a greater willingness to hold on to his hand through the turns of the quadrille, the effortless stepping of place to place, his movements graceful and perfect.
Lady Jane who?
When the party broke up to go on to others, Broughton leaned over Phillippa’s hand, this time lingering, the heat of his thumb caressing the tips of her fingers.
“I do hope to see you again,” he said in a deep rumble. “At Almack’s, perhaps?”
“Almack’s?” Phillippa replied on a cough.
“Almack’s,” he repeated, a decided twinkle in his eye. “Should I wager for you or against you?”
And at that, all she could do was smile.
“But you hate Almack’s! You always say the patronesses look down their noses at you,” Nora said in a rushed whisper. They were seated in the ladies’ retiring room of the next party—was it the Hurstons? No, Phillippa had refused to attend that one—they were at the Winters’, enjoying the small luxury of gossiping in the relative privacy provided by a number of screened-in alcoves, allowing several ladies the necessary privacy required for the secrets of beauty.
Or just secrets.
“They look down their noses at everyone, but they have never denied me a voucher,” Phillippa replied nonchalantly.
“But—”
“Nora, I’m well aware of my feelings about the place.” And so, apparently, was the Marquis. But he had nearly dared her, nay, challenged her to go. What would he think of her if she were not up to the challenge?
The happy, melodic hum of other women chatting, gossiping, laughing in their own alcoves kept their conversation private, but slowly some voices became more easily distinguished than others.
“Did you see the Marquis of Broughton at the parade? So tall and elegant! He was practically more beautiful than every man in uniform!” spoke a young lady who could only be Miss Louisa Dunningham, by her high-pitched, girlish squeaks.
“Yes, my dear,” spoke her surprisingly deep-voiced mother, “he eclipsed them all.”
“Did you see him after the parade?” another young woman, likely Miss Sterling, said. “Practically mauling Lady Jane Cummings!”
“Now, now,” Mrs. Dunningham replied, “I saw no such thing. You shouldn’t spread such gossip, Penny.”
“But I saw—”
“What you saw was a man fetching a reticule, nothing more.”
That quelled the young debutantes into silence. But only for a moment.
“Oh, he fetched her reticule! How romantic!” Louisa squeaked, causing Phillippa to roll her eyes in a thoroughly exasperated and most unattractive manner. Louisa’s youthful outburst of vicarious emotion was followed by Penny Sterling’s artfully wistful sigh, and “Oh, do you think he’ll fall madly for her? That he’ll be whisked away by her endless beauty?”
“More likely frightened away by her endless nose,” Phillippa whispered to Nora, who unfortunately giggled and then covered it with a snort.
Nora, as much as Phillippa enjoyed her company, had a rather distinctive snort.
The overheard conversation ceased. Then, instead of taking up some other topic with delicacy and grace, the curious Louisa stuck her head around the privacy screen, treating Nora and Phillippa to a view of her eyes going wide.
“Oh! Mrs. . . . Mrs. Benning! How do you do?” Louisa stammered. “Miss De Regis,” she turned to Nora, and in doing so, dropped to a curtsy, forcing Nora and Phillippa from their seats to do the same. They emerged from the private alcove (no sense hiding any longer) to greet Mrs. Dunningham and Miss Penny Sterling.
After a moment of stiff bobbing up and down, Penny elected to speak first.
“We were just talking of—”
“Something that would never happen in a million years!” Nora burst out, much to the shock and surprise of everyone, including Phillippa. “I mean to say,” she continued, “that the Marquis of Broughton is not going to fall in love with someone like Lady Jane Cummings simply because she dropped her reticule, especially not when he has since danced with Phillippa. Twice.”
The shocked and delighted gasps that statement elicited from their audience covered the shocked and appalled “Nora!” that escaped from Phillippa’s mouth. For the first time in many many months, Phillippa felt a faint blush spreading across her cheeks. She would be deeply angry at Nora, if she didn’t look so well when blushing.
“Where! When! How!” Louisa and Penny were squealing, while Mrs. Dunningham was far more silent but still just as interested in any piece of gossip.
“Oh, its so romantic!”
“Was it at a party? Was it as if you were the only two people in the room?”
“What is the Marquis like? He must be incredibly dashing!”
Phillippa smiled. She was more than willing to expound upon Broughton’s virtues. “Dashing is an acceptable word. Delicious is far more appropriate.”
And he was. Phillippa thought back to their long-delayed introduction, only hours ago. His gorgeous blond hair, falling over his forehead in perfect fashion as he bent over her hand; he never took his eyes from hers, lingering slightly overlong but not in a leering way. It was rare that Phillippa was affected by anyone, but Broughton certainly piqued her interest. And then when he asked her to dance, it was a challenge, a dare. Phillippa doubted Lady Jane would prove such a tempting partner.
“Oh!” Louisa sighed, snapping Phillippa back to reality. “Do you think he’ll ask for your hand?” Mrs. Dunningham joined her daughter in delight, “I hear he’s worth half a million pounds.”
“Well, it will match Mrs. Benning’s half a million pounds tidily!” an aptly named Penny Sterling added.
“Ladies!” Phillippa cried, unwilling to let the innuendo go any further. “Goodness, you’d have me married by morning, wouldn’t you? All I can say is that if I choose to bring the Marquis of Broughton to heel, I would do so.”
“But what of Lady Jane? She’s set her cap—”
“Lady Jane?” Phillippa trilled. “Do you honestly think I consider her a threat in any way?”
Nora snorted beside her. “Lady Jane couldn’t catch Broughton with armed gunmen and a net. Phillippa will win him, you’ll see.”
“Nora,” Phillippa said quickly, her smile faltering slightly, “I only said if I wished—”
“Is that so, Mrs. Benning?” A throaty voice, sharpened by wit and edge, said from behind a screened alcove to their left. “Do you really think you can best me in anything?”
Lady Jane Cummings emerged from behind the screen, a few of her closest minions behind her, forming a wedge of pretty, fierce scowls.
An undercurrent of electricity cut through the room. Before Phillippa could open her mouth with a smarting reply, Nora’s mouth got the best of her.
“Of course she can,” Nora said, turning her small body to block Phillippa from onslaught, in a move that Bitsy, her Pomeranian, had performed for Phillippa countless times. Against the foe of squirrels, but still a protective move, nonetheless.
“Why?” Lady Jane answered. “Men only want you for your money. And Broughton has money.”
A sudden chill descended upon the group. No one spoke. No one breathed. Lady Jane had said what no one ever dared. At least, not to Phillippa’s face. Phillippa’s eyes narrowed; her expression turned to marble. She thought it only fair to answer in kind.
“Meanwhile, men only want you for your connection to a title. And Broughton has a title. I don’t know how you think to catch his eye by relying solely on your sparkling personality.”
“Lucky for me, my personality sparkles a bit brighter than yours.” Lady Jane shot back, cool as the Thames on a December day, as she and her entourage floated toward the door and out.
“Oh!” Nora scowled at the now-shut door, “that Lady Jane thinks since she’s the daughter of a Duke she can do and say anything!”
“True,” Phillippa replied, then took notice that she still had an audience of Louisa, Penny, and Mrs. Dunningham, all waiting for her to either crack or cry. Phillippa refused to do either.
“Do you know, I’ve recently read a little Chinese text. Most adorable thing, filled with just the most useful observations,” she said with an easy smile to the crowd around her. “And it says that if someone who is engaged in words leaves before the thing is finished, he has absolutely no ammunition with which to fight.”
The three ladies blinked at each other, until Mrs. Dunningham piped up with, “She’s right, girls! Imagine that! Lady Jane left the room so quickly, before Mrs. Benning had opportunity to retort! She must have been terribly afraid of what Mrs. Benning could say!”
“Absolutely!” “Oh goodness, you’re right!” the younger girls gushed.
“Mrs. Benning, where would one acquire that Chinese text? It would be so useful in guiding the girls through society!” Mrs. Dunningham asked, her face flushed with the anticipation of being able to tell her friends of Mrs. Benning’s recommendation. Phillippa graciously supplied the name of a bookseller, and she and Nora made their exits.
“That was neatly done,” Nora whispered, as they made their way back to the Winters’ drawing room, where several card tables had been laid out in anticipation of a night of genteelly deep play.
“It’s the truth.” Phillippa shrugged.
“But what are you going to do about Lady Jane and Broughton?” Nora asked right before they chose their table for a rubber of whist, playing four with Phillippa’s friend and companion Mrs. Tottendale, who cornered Mrs. Winter and a bottle of sherry to be her partners that evening.
“Its simple, Nora,” Phillippa replied. “I’m going to win.”
Three
WHEN Phillippa Benning entered a room, it was an event. People stopped their conversations midsentence, craned their necks to see. The favored rushed forward to greet her, usher her to the best spot in the room, the one with the most advantageous views, to see and be seen. The unfavored—well, they wouldn’t be invited in the first place. And the admiring throng would part like Moses’s sea as she swept past. It was always the best moment of hers or anyone’s evening.
Yes, Phillippa Benning knew how to make an entrance. It was an incredible show. That was why, upon entering Almack’s, it was so terribly disconcerting to discover that the Marquis of Broughton had yet to arrive.
“But they close the doors in twenty minutes!” she whispered to Nora through a deceptively placid smile.
“How definite was his intention of coming?” Nora whispered back, while nodding to an acquaintance.
“Wholly certain!” Phillippa shot back. Then, musing, she added, “Well, he never did say definitely if he’d show up; he just wondered whether he might see me here.”
“That is difficult to ascertain,” Nora agreed.
“Well, I refuse to be put out by his not seeing my entrance.”
“Bravo!”
“This . . . delay gives me time to greet the patronesses and fix my gown.”
“Is your gown amiss?” Nora worriedly scanned Phillippa’s rather demure gown, a higher-than-normal silk bodice and a chiffon and lace skirt that skimmed her body as it flowed to the floor, all of it the color of a blushing rose, setting off Phillippa’s skin tone delightfully. “I see nothing wrong. Do you want me to send for my mother?”
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Dimensions | 1.0300 × 5.4500 × 8.2200 in |
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Subjects | mysteries and thrillers, suspense thriller books, FIC031020, historical mystery, crime books, detective novels, mystery thriller suspense, murder mystery books, fiction books, suspense books, books fiction, books mystery, mystery and thrillers, romance novels, historical romance books, historical mysteries, regency romance, regency romance books, thrillers, romance, love, thriller, fiction, suspense, mystery, romance books, novels, police, mysteries, FIC022060, mystery and suspense, mystery books, historical romance, mystery novels, thriller books |