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Authors: Sherry Thomas

Tags: #Romance, #Historical Romance, #Adult, #Historical, #Fiction

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BOOK: Beguiling the Beauty
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For herself she did not pray—even if she thought her troubles important enough to bother the Good Lord, the fact remained that she no longer had any idea what outcome she wanted from her muddled revenge. So she lay for a long time, her hands over her abdomen, and thought of the spate of incidents and coincidences—beginning with Hastings coming upon Helena three nights in a row—that had brought her to this time, this place, this quandary.

 

And wished she had a crystal ball to see where it all would lead.

 
CHAPTER 6
 

T
he sea had calmed, but the
Rhodesia
plowed through steady rain and frigid air. Few souls were out and about on the promenade deck. The Atlantic was a vast expanse of cold, misty gray, its dreariness only occasionally leavened by the zestful leap of a dolphin.

Lexington stared at his pocket watch. She was fifteen minutes late for their stroll. He summoned a steward. The man was to convey Lexington’s compliments to the baroness. Not exactly a subtle reminder, but then she already knew he was not a man who greatly valued subtlety.

 

As he was giving instructions to the steward, she rounded the corner, clad in a sturdy, black gabardine. The wind expressed a great interest in her umbrella, jerking it about every which direction. Another woman would have looked frantic and clumsy, but she moved with the
command and drama of a prima ballerina taking center stage.

 

He waved the steward away. “You are late, madam.”

 

“Of course,” she said firmly. Her veil, tied at the base of her throat to counter the wind, blew against her face, hinting at rich lips and high cheekbones. “Ladies are not carriages. We cannot be expected to pull up at the exact appointed hour.”

 

It was the most charmingly ridiculous excuse he’d ever heard. “What is the appointed hour for, then?”

 

“You’ve been invited to dinner, have you not, even though you shun Society?”

 

“I have not thrown myself at the mercy of a London Season, but I do not shun Society when I’m at home. I dine at my neighbors’ houses. I’ve even been known to give dinners.”

 

A stiff squall nearly made away with her umbrella. He clasped a hand over hers to help her hold on to it. But after the wind had dissipated, he did not let go.

 

She gave him a look—a hard look, he imagined. But when she spoke again, her voice was not at all severe. “What were we speaking of?”

 

For some reason, his heart skipped a beat. “Dinners.”

 

“That’s right.” She pulled the umbrella—and her gloved hand—out of his. “You do not sit down to dinner the moment you walk into the host’s house. Instead, you circulate about and engage in pleasantries with the other guests. And so it is when you rendezvous with a lady. You wait, you pace, and you think of her—it makes her arrival all the more momentous.”

 

He was a stickler for punctuality. Such tardiness he
would not have tolerated in another woman. Yet he found himself smiling. “Are you serious?”

 

She tilted her head. “My goodness, you’ve never waited for a woman in your life?”

 

“No.”

 

“Hmm. Let’s not stand here.” She set out at a brisk pace. “I suppose it makes sense that kept mistresses would wait on you, instead of the other way around. But I can’t believe you’ve never enjoyed a liaison with a lady.”

 

“I have, but those who didn’t arrive on time found I’d left already.”

 

He wondered whether he sounded too harsh. He hadn’t meant to reproach her, only to answer her question truthfully.

 

“You are still here,” she murmured.

 

“I very much wished to see you again.”

 

He’d said nothing new. But she dipped her head slightly, then glanced toward him at an angle, almost as if she were feeling shy.

 

“Did you fret that I wasn’t going to come?”

 

He hesitated. Honesty was easy when one’s answer was simply an opinion that revealed little of one’s inner thoughts. But the honest answer to this particular question involved not only an acknowledgment of desire, but a confession of greater attachment.

 

“Yes. I was about to send a steward to remind you that I was waiting.”

 

“And what were you going to do if that did not bring me rushing into your arms?” She paused. “Send flowers?”

 

There was a subtle but unmistakable edge to her voice.

 

He shook his head. “I never send flowers to anyone I wish to know.”

 

Behind the veil, she might have frowned; certainly she had her face turned toward him, as if expecting him to read her expression. Only a moment later—realizing that he could not see anything, perhaps—did she ask, “What does that mean?”

 

“My father was a great philanderer who gave innumerable bouquets in his lifetime. I view flowers as false gifts. I would not give you flowers.”

 

“But you did. You sent a huge vase of them to my suite at the New Netherlands Hotel.”

 

His confusion did not last long. “I see what must have happened. I did order some flowers sent, to a woman whose acquaintance I did not wish to further. But I gave that task and the map you dropped to the same hotel attendant—so your map went to her and her flowers came to you.”

 

The baroness did not reply.

 

“Have I offended you by not sending the flowers?”

 

She laughed, a dry, rueful sound. “Quite the contrary. You offended me deeply when I thought you
had
sent the flowers. I did not like such a bald expression of interest.”

 

“A huge vase of flowers, you said?”

 

“Enormous. Pushy. And rather ghastly.”

 

“I am doubly amazed now that you changed your mind.”

 

She was silent for a while. “This wind is quite defeating me. Shall we go into one of the lounges?”

 

T
he flowers had tipped her from rage into action.

Had they not been delivered when she’d returned to her suite two nights ago, she’d have continued to stew in her fury, imagining his head on a platter, but she would not have set them on a collision course.

 

And now to find out that the flowers hadn’t been for her. At all.

 

Did that still make him a hypocrite, condemning her and wanting her at the same time? Or had he only been stupid, sharing in public opinions that were better kept private?

 

The heated lounge was a shock of warmth after the damp cold of the promenade deck. She untied her veil—the air was becoming too still inside. He led her to a table at the corner, between two potted fronds.

 

“You are very quiet,” he observed.

 

“I’m a little distracted.”

 

“A terrible thing to say to your lover, who is letting nothing distract him from you.”

 

Her heart thumped at the word
lover
. “What would you have done had I bought a ticket on a different steamer?”

 

“I would have had a much less enjoyable crossing.”

 

“There are many other ladies aboard.”

 

“They don’t interest me as you do.”

 

“How can you say that? You know nothing about them.”

 

He turned and looked around the room. “Other than you, there are eleven women in this lounge, two are old enough to be my grandmother, three more old enough to be my mother, and one is barely fifteen, if that. Of the other five, one is recently engaged—she keeps looking at her ring while she writes her letter. The one in the pink frock is thinking only of chocolate—I can see her trying to sneak a piece from the secret stash in her pocket. The one in the redingote is rude to waiters—she sat not too far from me at dinner last night. The one in yellow, Redingote’s sister, dissects every lady’s dress down to the last detail—see, she is whispering to Redingote now, probably about
your
dress. And the woman in brown is a lady’s companion who does not want to be a lady’s companion anymore. But she is very practical. She does not take note of me because I have you by my side; she is looking for a lonely, unattached gentleman who might overlook her humble origins and make her his wife.”

 

He turned back toward her. “See, they don’t interest me as you do.”

 

The veil obscured the color of his eyes, but there was no mistaking the pleasure in his countenance as he looked upon her. Her pulse turned erratic—more erratic, that was. She had yet to know a steady heartbeat in his presence.

 

Belatedly it occurred to her that he was a great deal more observant than she’d given him credit for. And with that realization came a frisson of alarm. “What do you know about me?”

 

“You probably married quite young. Your husband exerted tremendous influence over you—because you loved him very much, because he was a good few years older than you, possibly both. Even to this day you still haven’t quite escaped the shadow he cast. But you do not think of your solitude as a sign that you remain bound to him. If anything, you have been glad to be alone—and safe.”

 

She felt the blood drain from her face. He ought not to know this much about her. “I probably should have remained alone. I’m not sure I am safe with you.”

 

“Tell me what you think of the men in this room.”

 

She glanced at him, not sure what he wanted.

 

“Humor me,” he said.

 

Other than him, there were only three other men. “One of them is glancing toward the girl who loves chocolate with exasperation. He is most likely her brother. Perhaps
their mother is suffering from seasickness and he is forced to play chaperone. The young man who is actually talking to our chocolate lover reminds me a little of my brother: He has that aura of dutifulness to him—someone who takes his responsibilities seriously. I’d say Our Girl of the Hidden Chocolate and her brother have been ordered here by their mother to make a good impression on Responsible Young Man. Except Responsible Young Man is distracted. He keeps looking toward one of the women old enough to be your mother—and who might in fact
be his
mother.

 

“That woman is speaking to a man in his thirties. And I can see why Responsible Young Man might be wary. He taps his foot incessantly and blinks too much. His smiles don’t quite reach his eyes. And his accent shifts: He is trying to pass himself off as an English gentleman, but I can hear traces of American vowels, especially in the diphthongs.”

 

“Aha,” said Lexington, evidently satisfied.

 

“What does that mean?”

 

“You said last night that you mistrust your ability to judge a man. My dear, you can judge a man just fine.”

 

She fidgeted. She was not used to being complimented on her abilities.

 

“Being an astute judge of man, have you witnessed anything in my character or conduct that would lead you to conclude you won’t be safe with me?”

 

“No,” she had to admit.

 

“In that case, would you allow me to offer you a cup of hot cocoa in my rooms?”

 

“It would be very messy, drinking hot cocoa with this veil on.”

 

“I’ll blindfold myself. You can take off the veil.”

 

“That is a very kind offer, but going into your rooms, sir, would encourage you when I have no intention of doing so.”

 

“How can I change your mind?”

 

“I don’t plan to change my mind.”

 

“There must be something I can do. Or give.”

 

She bit the inside of her cheek. “Do you think my favors can be purchased?”

 

“The point is not to purchase your favors, but to prove my sincerity. The knights-errant of old went on their impossible quests to prove that they were worthy of serving their lady. I will do the same here. Name something—anything—and I will find it for you.”

 

“On the
Rhodesia
?”

 

“She is a great ocean liner carrying a thousand passengers, if not more. Chances are, whatever you want, someone has it, or a close enough approximation of it.”

 

But if the duke woos me with a monster of a fossil, who knows how I might reward him.

 

She ought not. He was right. No matter how rare or exceptional an object, there was a chance that someone on board might have it.

 

“You are a naturalist,” she heard herself say.

 

“How do you know?”

 

She swore inwardly: They’d never discussed why he’d been away from England. “I saw the books in your room; I inferred.”

 

“Mysterious
and
sharp.” He smiled at her.

 

Perhaps he’d smiled at her before, but never in the light, with her looking directly at him. The transformation was astonishing. Gone was the last vestige of the iceberg. In its place, the tropics, all warmth and graciousness.

 

Her heart stuttered, to her chagrin. Was it not enough that he had already turned her plan on its head?

 

“Now how is it significant that I am a naturalist?” he asked.

 

She was almost absolutely certain neither he nor anyone else aboard had access to what she had in mind, yet she felt a sting of nerves in her soles. “I want a dinosaur skeleton.”

 

He raised a brow. “You jest.”

 

“Not at all. Do you have one?”

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