Beguiling the Beauty (35 page)

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Authors: Sherry Thomas

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

BOOK: Beguiling the Beauty
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He turned the next page. “Do you never think to yourself,
I won’t do it
?”

 

“Of course I’ve
thought
of it,” she said, suddenly bitter after all these years of placid obedience. But she kept her voice smooth and uninflected. “And then I think a little further. Do I run away? My skills as a lady are not exactly valuable beyond the walls of this house. Do I advertise my services as a governess? I know nothing of children—nothing at all. Do I simply refuse and see whether my father loves me enough to not disown me? I’m not sure I have the courage to find out.”

 

He rubbed the corner of a page between his fingers. “How do you stand it?”

 

This time there was no undertone of accusation to his question. If she wanted to, she might even detect a bleak sympathy. Which only fed her misery, that foul beast with teeth like knives.

 

“I keep myself busy and do not think too deeply about it,” she said, in as harsh a tone as she’d ever allowed herself.

 

There, she was a mindless automaton who did as others instructed: getting up, going to sleep, and earning heaps of disdain from prospective husbands in between.

 

They said nothing more to each other, except to exchange the usual civilities at the end of her performance. Everyone applauded. Mrs. Clements said very nice things about Millie’s musicianship—which Millie barely heard.

 

The rest of the evening lasted the length of Elizabeth’s reign.

 

Mr. Graves, usually so phlegmatic and taciturn, engaged the earl in a lively discussion of cricket. Millie and Mrs. Graves gave their attention to Colonel Clements’s army stories. Had someone looked in from the window, the company in the drawing room would appear perfectly normal, jovial even.

 

And yet there was enough misery present to wilt flowers and curl wallpaper. Nobody noticed the earl’s distress. And nobody—except Mrs. Graves, who stole anxious looks at Millie—noticed Millie’s. Was unhappiness really so invisible? Or did people simply prefer to turn away, as if from lepers?

 

After the guests took their leave, Mr. Graves pronounced the dinner a
succès énorme
. And he, who’d remained skeptical on the previous earl throughout, gave his ringing endorsement to the young successor. “I shall be pleased to have Lord Fitzhugh for a son-in-law.”

 

“He hasn’t proposed yet,” Millie reminded him, “and he might not.”

 

Or so she hoped. Let them find someone else for her. Anyone else.

 

“Oh, he will most assuredly propose,” said Mr. Graves. “He has no choice.”

 

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