The great hall hadn’t looked so beautiful since before her parents’ passing. The enormous Gobelin tapestries on either end of the hall had been cleaned and rehung, their colors more vibrant than Alexandra remembered ever seeing them. The ancient planked floor gleamed with polish, and the huge chamber was ablaze with light from torches mounted between each of the arched stained-glass windows. But what really made the room glitter was the people—all the guests in their gorgeous dresses and handsome evening suits. The ladies’ necks, wrists, and hands sparkled with jewels, and diamonds winked from many a man’s cravat.
The music came to an end. “Thank you for the dance,” the gentleman said with a bow. Lord Haversham, or Haverstock, or Haversomething…she really couldn’t remember.
She smiled and curtsied. “It was my pleasure.”
A row of red velvet chairs beckoned along the oak-paneled wall. She was heading toward one of them when Lord Shelton intercepted her.
“May I have this dance?”
“I’d be delighted,” she told him, ordering her feet to stop complaining. After all, she’d been dreadfully rude the last time she saw Lord Shelton, refusing to serve him ratafia puffs. She could hardly dismiss his invitation to dance. But when he offered his arm to lead her back to the dance floor, she took it and felt nothing.
Nothing.
She could scarcely believe she’d once contemplated marrying him.
Thankfully, the musicians didn’t strike up a waltz, but another country dance. As she took her place across from Lord Shelton, she had to admit he looked handsome in his formalwear. Pale and blond and very, very English. But she still thought his scent was too flowery.
“I’m pleased to see you’ve recovered,” he said. “You suffered from quite a lengthy illness.”
Was that the excuse Griffin had used to keep her former suitor away? Bless him, he was a fine brother indeed. “Thank you. I’m feeling quite myself now,” she assured Lord Shelton.
“May I call on you Monday morning, then?”
Oh, drat. “I’m afraid I have prior plans.” Surely she’d need to wash her hair.
“I should like to resume our courtship.”
So she’d surmised. “I expect you should speak with my brother,” she said, mentally composing her apology to Griffin.
“I shall,” Lord Shelton replied.
The steps then separated them for a spell, and when they came back together, Alexandra launched into a lively discussion of the weather. After she’d exhausted that novel topic, she steered the conversation to talk of the latest fashion in gloves and the best way to keep household account books. When the dance—which seemed to last at least half an hour—mercifully ended, she headed toward the chairs again, only to be stopped by Griffin this time.
“Alexandra, I have an old acquaintance for you to meet.”
“My feet wish for me to sit. They’re protesting my treatment.”
“You can sit tomorrow.”
Groaning inwardly, she put a smile on her face. The purpose of tonight, after all, was for her to meet young men. Just because she hadn’t fallen head over heels for the last dozen didn’t mean the next one might not catch her fancy.
Besides, she owed Griffin, though he had yet to learn it. “Lord Shelton will be approaching you. He wishes to resume his suit.”
“What am I to tell him? You’re obviously in the bloom of health.”
“Oh, you’ll come up with something.” She smiled as a young man approached. “Is this the gentleman you wish me to meet?”
Griffin scowled at her, then switched on the famous charm as he turned to greet his friend. “Lord Ribblesdon, I’d like you to meet my sister, Lady Alexandra.”
“A pleasure,” the young man said, bowing over her gloved hand. “Would you honor me with this dance?”
“I’d be delighted,” she assured him.
Though Lord Ribblesdon wasn’t as handsome as Tris, he was attractive, his hair dark and his eyes a pleasant blue. The musicians were starting a quadrille, so they formed a square with three other couples.
From another square nearby, Juliana grinned.
“The look,”
she mouthed silently.
Alexandra had completely forgotten. Now she dropped her gaze and then raised it, curving her lips in a slight smile as she met Lord Ribblesdon’s eyes.
Looking a bit dazzled, he smiled in return. “Your home is beautiful.”
“I like it. I’ve always felt Cainewood is a special blend of old and new.”
“You would like my estate, too,” he said, and proceeded to describe it in exquisite detail as they danced.
After a few minutes, she glanced at the tall-case clock that sat against a wall. Ten twenty.
Lord Ribblesdon droned on, describing his octagonal breakfast room, which apparently boasted an unusual chandelier. Next he waxed enthusiastic about a pond on his property that was filled with notable fish.
Why did these dances have to go on so very long? An hour passed, and she glanced at the clock again.
Ten twenty-five.
Catching Griffin’s gaze across the hall, she gave him a tight smile. He shrugged and nodded, looking around for another candidate. She figured he’d been successful when he positioned himself at the edge of the dance floor to wait for her.
“I need to sit,” she told him when the dance that would never end finally did. This time she headed for the small room where they’d set up refreshments and took a chair there. “Ahh,” she breathed as she dropped onto it.
He snatched a few marzipan fruits and brought them to the table with two cups of punch. “What was wrong with him?” he asked, sitting beside her.
“The same thing that’s wrong with every other gentleman here. They have nothing to say of significance.” She munched on a miniature apple, hoping the sweet almond paste confection would revive her. “They talk only of themselves. Or their property.”
He devoured a piece of marzipan in two bites. “Their goal is to impress you. What else should they talk about?”
“Why should they think I’ll be impressed by the number of acres they own or the new horse they just bought at Tattersall’s?” She drained the cup of tepid punch, telling herself it was refreshing. “I trust you wouldn’t introduce me to anyone of insufficient means or a gentleman after nothing but my dowry. I don’t particularly care what these men own; I’d much rather know what they think.”
“About what?”
“Life. The state of the kingdom. Walter Scott’s latest book. Anything.”
“Have you asked them?”
“No,” she admitted to both her brother and herself. She hadn’t. She’d let the gentlemen lead both the dances and the conversations, but perhaps it would be best to take the latter into her own hands. “I’ll try that. Thank you.”
“You’re welcome. Ah,” he added, rising. “Here comes Lord Sandborough now.”
The next dance was a waltz, and Lord Sandborough was a superb waltzer. If it felt a bit odd to be held by a stranger, at least he was a dashing one. He had golden hair and merry green eyes, and his evening clothes hung nicely on his well-proportioned frame.
As they glided over the floor, she decided that, yes, she could imagine marrying this gentleman. She considered giving him
the look
, but instead she cast about for a good question, finally remembering one she’d asked Tris. “Do you believe there is only one perfect person for each of us in this world?”
“Indeed.” He smiled, displaying nice teeth. “And I’m certain my person is you.”
They’d only just met! Suddenly he wasn’t so dashing. Stupidity—not to mention insincerity—had a way of tarnishing a person’s appearance.
Griffin introduced her to five more young men, one after the other, and she danced on her aching feet with all of them. Three of them claimed she was their perfect person. Lord Jamestone said yes, he believed there was only one perfect person for each of them in this world, but alas, his lady had died. Though he assured her he was willing to settle for second best, for some reason she couldn’t see herself in that role.
The fifth gentleman—whom she privately christened Lord Sapskull—apparently couldn’t wrap his mind around the question. He simply declared that his mother had often assured him nobody was perfect. Alexandra assumed that was because he was very imperfect indeed.
Though the long great hall could be accessed from the dining room on one end and a corridor leading to the guest chambers on the other, it also had its own impressive entrance in the middle, complete with a grand staircase from the quadrangle. As the dance with Lord Sapskull came to its blessed end, three late guests appeared at the top of the stairs.
“Rachael!” Alexandra cried, hurrying to meet them. “And Claire and Elizabeth!” One by one, she wrapped Rachael and her sisters in welcoming hugs.
Her own sisters appeared, too, and the hugs were repeated.
“We’re sorry,” Rachael apologized. “I was certain we’d be your very first arrivals, but a carriage wheel broke on the way.”
Though their estates adjoined, Cainewood Castle was at one end of Griffin’s property, and Rachael’s home was at the far end of Greystone. It took a good two hours to ride between them in a carriage, even one with all its wheels intact. “I understand,” Alexandra assured her. “You’ll stay the night, won’t you?”
“Absolutely.” Rachael’s smile was impish. “We wouldn’t want to miss the breakfast. Seeing how everyone looks in the morning is much more amusing than the actual ball.”
They all shared a laugh. “All of you look lovely,” Juliana said.
Claire, the middle sister, grinned. “Since Noah wasn’t home to consult, we decided he would want us to have new dresses.” She twirled in hers, white lace over pale violet satin with a neckline every bit as low as Alexandra’s. Her unusual amethyst eyes danced, and she’d teased some of her curly raven hair into little ringlets that framed her face. At fifteen, Claire was already an accomplished flirt. “Do you like it?”
“How about mine?” Elizabeth, a year younger, wore blue and green stripes. They went well with her green eyes and the blue ribbons in her sleek dark hair. She dipped into a deep curtsy worthy of royalty. “My lady.”
Alexandra laughed as she took her hand to help her rise. “You’re more than ready for presentation at court,” she told them, though that wouldn’t be happening just yet. They’d been invited to the ball only because they were family and it was a country affair. “And you’re both stunning.”
But neither of them could match their eldest sister. A dress of poppy-red muslin sprigged with gold clung to Rachael’s slim curves. Double rows of gold lace embellished the bodice and hem, and a broad band of gold lace circled the high waistline. Her hair was tucked into a headdress of gold and poppy satin, and the loose strands that framed her face weren’t curled like her sisters’, but left to fall in soft waves.
“May I paint you in that dress?” Corinna asked reverently.
“When Noah gets home, perhaps I’ll be able to find time to sit.”
“By the lake, I think,” Corinna said, staring into the distance in that way she did when she was envisioning a piece.
Glancing around, Alexandra smiled to herself when she spotted Griffin staring at Rachael. He swiftly turned away, making her laugh again.
“What?” Rachael asked.
“Nothing.” Alexandra knew she wouldn’t appreciate his interest. “I expect dozens of young men are waiting to dance with you all, so let me take your reticules and put them in the ladies’ retiring room.”
She took their three pretty little purses and started across the hall toward the small side room they’d designated for the ladies’ use. A succession of feminine gasps followed by the low hiss of whispered murmurings made her stop and look over her shoulder. Her gaze swept the great hall, searching for the cause of the commotion.
At the far end of the room, Tris stood, his chin held high.
Her first thought was that he’d look better in gray, to match his eyes. Her second thought was that he couldn’t possibly look any better.
His tall, lean form was breathtaking decked out in evening wear. His formal suit was admittedly rather dated—the dark blue tailcoat would always be classic, but the white knee breeches were five years out of fashion, as were the ruffled white cuffs that peeked from beneath the coat’s sleeves. Tris wouldn’t have brought evening apparel along with him, so he must have asked a valet to scare up the outfit. It had likely belonged to her father or her brother Charles. But since several other country gentlemen hadn’t bothered to update their wardrobes to the latest London offered, he didn’t really look out of place.
Yet if the reaction of their other guests was any indication, he didn’t belong here—and his clothing had nothing to do with it.
It wasn’t that anyone confronted him. To the contrary, they all backed away, clearly snubbing him by keeping their distance. By the time she reached him—at the same moment as Griffin—he stood very much alone.
“You’d best turn up your noses,” he drawled in a dry tone, “else your guests may conclude you think me worthy of more than the cut direct.”
“You
are
worthy,” Alexandra returned hotly.
Griffin was much more composed. “I thought you were determined not to attend.”
Tris shrugged his elegantly clad shoulders. “I changed my mind. Quite obviously a foolish decision.” His steely gaze skimmed the disapproving crowd. “It seems they have long memories.”
Alexandra seethed at the sight of so many women whispering behind their fans. “How can they ‘remember’ something that never happened?”
“Regardless of the events leading up to it—or the lack thereof—the scandal happened, I can assure you.” Tris managed a cool smile, which Alexandra sensed was for the benefit of their other guests. “It was very real.”
“It was very wrong.” She wasn’t sure which made her more angry: her rude guests or Tris’s blithe acceptance of their attitude. “Come dance with me. I wish to show them we’re not swayed by their misplaced disapproval.”
The slight shake of Griffin’s head clashed with his plastered-on smile. “I don’t expect that would be wise.”
Tris nodded in agreement. “I shall take my leave before the two of you—and your dear sisters, by association—are irredeemably tarnished.” He swept them a proper bow. “Good evening.”
The guests turned, almost as one, to watch him leave. Instead of escaping down the corridor to his room, he walked, head held high, across the great hall and out the grand entrance. Alexandra supposed he wanted everyone to conclude he’d left Cainewood. But what would he do? Hide in the workshop all night?