Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
“Fredericks,” Sophia said sweetly, “do bring another chair
forward for darling Lord Iveston. He appears quite miserably
uncomfortable.”
“I beg your pardon, Lady Dalby,” Iveston said stiffl y.
“Don’t be absurd. It’s perfectly understandable, Lord Iveston.
I’ve yet to meet siblings who can comfortably share anything so
personal as seating. I should never have put you in this awkward
position.”
Which of course prompted him to glance at Miss Prest
wick again, for when the word
awkward
was used, whom else to
think of?
Miss Prestwick was looking at him most strangely. Not ex
actly daggers. No, hardly that, but rather in a sort of tepid and
lethargic disbelief. In fact, she was looking at him in something
quite close to boredom.
The Marquis of Iveston, heir to the Duke of Hyde, was in no
way accustomed to inspiring boredom in eligible young women.
Or old women, for that matter, eligible or not.
Fredericks offered him a chair. Iveston, by merely a look,
indicated that Cranleigh should take it. He was keeping the
settee, precedence and all that. Cranleigh, grinning, left the set
tee and took the chair.
A small victory, but he did feel he deserved it.
How to Daz zle a Duke
65
“Perhaps I should return another time?” Tannington said
quietly to Sophia.
“If you’d like,” Sophia answered pleasantly, keeping her gaze
not on Tannington, but on Iveston. Iveston could plainly see that
Tannington did not like it in the least.
Fredericks, who had not got fully out of the white salon, stuck
his head back in, a truly abysmal bit of butlering, and said, “Are
you in for the Marquis of Ruan, Lady Dalby?”
“I do believe I am,” Sophia said, her dark gaze fl icking over
Lord Tannington, who was looking more sharkish by the second.
He did seem a most volatile sort. Not the calm eye of reason in
a storm of lunacy that Iveston knew himself to be.
The Marquis of Ruan entered the room with an elegant stride
that halted fractionally when he saw that Lady Dalby was not
alone in the white salon. Indeed, the room was becoming very
nearly cozy with people.
They all rose, Tannington the most slowly.
Bows and curtseys were exchanged, Miss Prestwick looking
very nearly annoyed as she dipped her dark head. Iveston found
that mildly amusing somehow.
“Lord Ruan,” Sophia purred. “What a surprise to see you.”
“Not a delight, Lady Dalby?” he countered, his own voice a
husky purr. “I’m devastated.”
“Have you brought money or goods, Lord Ruan?” Sophia
said, sitting down upon her sofa and arranging her muslin skirts.
“Everyone else has done, Miss Prestwick excluded, and I fi nd it
so much easier to rise to delight when I have something of value
in my hands.”
“I’m quite certain I can accommodate you there, Lady Dalby,”
Ruan purred, his green eyes twinkling devilishly. “I rise to
delight most regularly and can nearly effortlessly induce it in
others.”
Yes, well, that bit was obvious, wasn’t it? Iveston glanced over
66 CLAUDIA DAIN
to Miss Prestwick. Not a blush marred her cheek. She didn’t drop
her gaze or look discomfited in the least particular. No. In fact,
Miss Penelope Prestwick looked intrigued.
Most peculiar behavior for a virgin to display. Which did beg
the question, didn’t it?
Mr. Prestwick stood, as was most appropriate of him, and said,
“I do believe we should be off, Pen. Lady Dalby, a pleasure.”
Miss Prestwick did not rise. Miss Prestwick did not look at all
inclined to leave. Mr. Prestwick did seem to have his plate full
with his unusual sister.
“I’ve a bit of a headache, George,” Penelope said. “I do think
it best if I sit here until it passes.”
“It wouldn’t pass at home, I don’t suppose?” George said. As
they lived just down the street, it was a most logical question.
“I shouldn’t think so,” Penelope Prestwick answered in a
clipped tone.
George sighed, smiled, and sat.
“Are we hosting an event? And here I stand, with mud-spattered shoes.”
They all rose at the entry of the Earl of Dalby, Sophia’s son.
“Darling, if we are hosting an event, it is most awkward to
remark on the condition of your shoes,” Sophia said, offering her
son her cheek to kiss. Dalby kissed it most warmly. “And if we
are not, then it is most awkward to make any remark at all.”
This time, it was Cranleigh who stood.
“No event, Dalby, simply a happy confl uence of well-wishers
and gift-bringers,” Cranleigh said.
“Lord Cranleigh was of the gift-bringer variety,” Sophia said,
looking pleasantly at Iveston. Iveston had yet to stand. He did
not care to leave at present. Certainly there was no rush? “As was
Lord Tannington and the Duke of Edenham, both concerning
minor wagers.”
How to Daz zle a Duke
67
“Wagers, Mother?” Dalby asked, sitting down next to her on
the sofa. They fitted quite nicely together, looking comfortable
in each other’s sphere, as was so unusual in Society as to bear
taking note. “Is it possible that you wager too much?”
“I don’t think so,” she answered pleasantly. “Particularly as I
win so often.”
“Which would explain why some would come to the conclu
sion that you wager too often,” Ruan said.
“The losers, you mean?” Sophia asked.
“Precisely,” Ruan answered. “Lord Dalby, do you wager
against your mother?”
“Not recently, Lord Ruan,” Dalby answered. He was a hand
some man of brown hair and eyes, quite tall and fi t-looking. Still
quite young, though fully in possession of his title. “My father
warned me against taking on my mother; I thought I knew bet
ter, and lost two quid as a result.”
“You don’t mean literally,” Penelope Prestwick said. “You can’t
mean that your mother actually took money from you, your
own money.”
“He who wagers must be prepared to pay his losses,” Sophia
said, looking directly at Miss Prestwick. “I do demand that once
an agreement has been reached, even one bearing the structure
of a wager, all parties play within the fences, so to speak. I’m
quite firm about it, which I can’t think is a surprise to anyone in
this room.”
Iveston did not know Sophia Dalby well at all, but he was
quite aware in that moment that she was speaking very nearly
directly to Penelope Prestwick. One had only to observe the
slightly alarmed look on Miss Prestwick’s face to see that. But
about what?
He had no idea.
Suddenly and quite decidedly, he was determined to know all.
68 CLAUDIA DAIN
“Shall we leave, Iveston?” Cranleigh said softly.
“I should prefer to stay, if you don’t mind,” Iveston answered,
studying Miss Prestwick’s face.
“I never thought to hear it,” Cranleigh murmured.
Cranleigh sat back down with great reluctance. Iveston didn’t
care if Cranleigh were reluctant or not; he wasn’t leaving.
“What did you wager, Lord Dalby?” Iveston asked. “Can you
remember?”
“Can I remember? I can hardly think it possible that I should
forget, Lord Iveston,” Dalby answered. “I wagered that the Duke
of Aldreth’s best hound would whelp less than six pups. My mother
wagered that it would be more. The bitch delivered seven.”
“A woman has an advantage in wagers of that sort,” Sophia
said mildly.
“Regarding bitches?” Ruan asked, also mildly.
“Precisely,” Sophia answered with a languid smile.
It was quite obvious that Ruan was in the process of seducing
Sophia. It was also quite obvious that Tannington was not happy
about it. Edenham, on the other hand, seemed to find the entire
thing amusing.
Miss Prestwick did not. Not amusing at any rate, but fascinat
ing. It was most peculiar, but the girl did not seem to find any of
this behavior, and surely much of it was not proper for her, an
assault upon her sensibilities.
What to do but wonder why?
6
IT was perfectly obvious to Penelope that Lord Ruan was very
near to seducing Sophia Dalby completely. One was left to won
der, knowing what was common knowledge about Sophia, why
it was taking so long. The sooner the better, certainly.
Penelope’s greatest fear, well, perhaps not her greatest but
definitely ranked within the top ten, was that Sophia would scoop
How to Daz zle a Duke
69
Edenham up before Penelope had a proper go at him. That wasn’t
going to happen. She would not have put it beyond Sophia’s plans
to actually have decided that marrying Edenham would only en
hance her, but it was plain now, seeing them together, that they
didn’t have the slightest interest in each other that way. Which,
truthfully, was absurd as they were a most glorious-looking pair.
One never could predict the way these things would fall,
more’s the pity. There was no logic at all to coupling that she
could see, which was why she was approaching it from a truly
logical foundation: that of social prestige and monetary gain.
What other measure was as constant and precise?
Love. Passion.
Ridiculous, ephemeral notions that served playwrights and poets
and no one else.
Still, Sophia clearly being no threat to her plans, Edenham
appeared not at all interested in her. Worse, by returning to Dalby
House at a time when Sophia had expressly not wished her to
come, she had made a quick enemy of a barely made ally.
Bad bit of planning, that. Though, to be honest with herself,
and she did make it a point to be honest with herself at least, it
had not been so much of a plan as an impulse. Horribly untidy
and unproductive, giving in to impulses. She’d known that for
years and here she was, paying the price for impulse.
She’d simply have to make it up to Sophia, that’s all. It couldn’t
be all that difficult, could it? She did seem to like getting gifts, and
apparently had a passion for Chinese porcelain. She didn’t suppose
it could be that difficult to find a pretty enough, expensive enough
vase and present it, groveling if necessary, into Sophia’s lap.
Groveling was the least she was prepared to do to attain
her duke.
The very
least
.
Penelope was quite well aware that Lady Caroline, Sophia’s
daughter, and Lady Louisa, Sophia’s something or other, not to
mention Lady Amelia and the episode in the mews, had each
70 CLAUDIA DAIN
achieved perfectly respectable husbands in a matter of days, if
not hours, by getting themselves well and truly ruined.
How difficult could it be to arrange for Edenham to ruin her?
With Sophia’s aid, it should be simplicity itself.
Oh, most girls of good family, and even those of questionable
family, would look at ruination as being the worst fate that could
befall a girl. Ridiculous. The worst fate to befall a girl was not
getting what she wanted, and in her case, what she wanted was
a proper duke. If she had to get him improperly, well then. What
of it? Once she’d got him, she’d got him. What could he do about
it then?
The thing to do, naturally, was to arrange for Edenham to
ruin her before every man in the ton became aware that ruin
ation had become the new betrothal. Once they had done so, and
she was not so naïve as to believe they could be kept in the dark
about it forever, it would become nearly impossible to lure a man
into anything even resembling a compromising situation, which
surely would turn Society on its head.
How to get him to do it, that was the question facing her now.
Getting him alone was essential. Penelope surveyed the room. It
was so very difficult not to give in to dismay. Was every man in
Town going to be admitted to Dalby House today? It certainly
appeared so.
Fredericks appeared at the door again and Penelope very
nearly groaned, but he was only bringing in more tea things, so
all was saved, or at least not any worse than it had been. The
thing to do was to try and encourage some of these people to
leave. Lord Tannington most definitely. She had never before
met Tannington, but she could discern with no trouble whatso
ever that he was a complete rogue, just the sort to ruin a girl for
the fun of it. At the moment, he was staring insolently and with
overt hostility at Lord Ruan, who was ignoring him completely
to concentrate on Sophia. Lord Ruan must be got rid of as well.
How to Daz zle a Duke
71
He was, she could plainly see, a most experienced, indeed, per
haps even a dangerous rakehell. The type of man who did not
seduce girls for fun, but, worse, did so without actually trying to
at all. What was more dangerous than that?
Lords Iveston and Cranleigh should have left long ago. What
were they lingering about for? Cranleigh had delivered his gift.
Iveston had stumbled over some completely ridiculous remarks
that were in the poorest taste and without a jot of wit. What more
could they hope to accomplish in a single visit?