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Authors: Diane Gaston

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‘Surely it is not as bad as all that?’ his mother said.

His mother was not privy to the whole of their financial distress. He’d taken care that none of his family were.

Guy gave her a steady look. ‘It would be a great inconvenience for you if you were not welcome in your daughter-in-law’s house, would it not? There is nowhere else to live.’

She glared back at him defiantly. ‘She would not dare to toss me out.’

He did not falter. ‘No, she would not be so cruel. Do not be so certain of me.’

Her face paled. ‘You?’

‘I would send you off, Mother, make no mistake about it, but only if you force my hand, only if you refuse to be civil to my wife.’

She began to wring her hands. Guy stepped closer and wrapped his arm around her shoulder. ‘Now, do not fly to pieces. It is not so difficult a request, is it? As I have said before, all you need do is give Emily a fair chance.’

She slanted him a wary glance.

He continued, ‘We have all underestimated her.’ How true a statement that was. Had he underestimated her love of cards?

His mother buried her face into his chest. ‘Oh, I will try, I promise.’

Guy had been as remiss as his mother in attending to Emily. Was it his neglect that sent her off wagering into the night? Well, she would soon have an abundance of his attention, both she and Lady Widow.

 

Half an hour later, Emily and the Dowager walked the short distance to Grosvenor Square, Rogers the footman
accompanying them a few steps behind. Her mother-in-law actually attempted conversation, in a petulant tone, perhaps, the topics forced, but conversation none the less. Emily could not have been more surprised had the squirrel in the square begun to talk. What led to this sudden volubility?

Emily, however, acted as if it were the most natural circumstance in the world, responding exactly as she ought and even making an effort to advance the conversation.

Grosvenor Square was such a premier address, Emily wondered exactly who they might be calling upon. Lady Keating had not informed her. Who might the Dowager know well enough to visit?

Emily, of course, did not presume to ask.

‘Here we are,’ Lady Keating said.

They had stopped in front of one of the finest residences, the one house on the square Emily did not wish to enter, not with her family’s connection to this one.

‘Who—who do we call upon here?’ Emily stammered to her mother-in-law.

‘The Marchioness of Heronvale,’ Lady Keating said. ‘Do you not know whose house this is? She is the daughter of my oldest friend.’ Lady Keating gestured for Rogers to sound the knocker.

Perhaps there was no cause for worry. Perhaps the Marchioness would not even remember Emily.

They soon entered a spacious hall more than twice the size of the Keatings’. The gilt in this hall was not chipped. Indeed, the gilt-adorned walls were painted Chinese blue. Huge Chinese vases held fresh white, orange and yellow chrysanthemums.

After they were announced, a footman led them above
stairs to Lady Heronvale’s personal sitting room, where she lay on a yellow giltwood chaise, a perfect complement to her blonde beauty.

‘Lady Keating, how wonderful to see you.’ She extended her hand. ‘Forgive me if I do not get up. The doctor insists I rest.’

The ethereal Lady Heronvale was quite obviously with child.

She clasped the older Lady Keating’s hand warmly before glancing towards Emily. ‘Oh, Miss Duprey!’ She blinked prettily. ‘Forgive me, I ought to have said Lady Keating to you, ought I not? We all read of your marriage. My felicitations.’

Emily took the Marchioness’s delicate hand. ‘Thank you, my lady.’ The Marchioness
had
remembered her. From the after-the-fact announcement of her marriage, she had also probably surmised the wedding to have been a precipitous one. Emily focused on remaining composed. At least on the outside.

Lady Heronvale invited them to sit, assuring them she had requested some refreshment.

‘How do you go on, my child?’ the Dowager Lady Keating asked with an expression of genuine concern.

The Marchioness laughed. ‘Never better! I feel amazingly well, as if I could walk from here to Westminster and back, but the physician and my husband refuse to believe it.’

‘The Marquess dotes upon you, does he?’ Lady Keating said.

How nice for her
, thought Emily,
to have a doting husband
.

‘Pardon me, Serena.’ A lady’s voice came from the doorway behind her. ‘I do not wish to intrude, but Barclay directs me to tell you that Cook is out of lemon cakes.
She is preparing another confection for you, which will take a little time.’

Emily remained perfectly still. She recognised that voice.

The Marchioness waved her hand and smiled. ‘Come in, dearest. Come meet my friends.’

Lady Heronvale sat up on the chaise, while the lady approached. Emily still could not see her face, but there was no mistaking her lovely figure, the elegant length of her neck, the natural curl of her dark hair.

‘Lady Keating,’ the Marchioness said, gesturing to Emily who rose to her feet.

The lady who entered stiffened.

Lady Heronvale continued, ‘May I present to you my dear sister-in-law, Lady Devlin Steele.’

Her sister Madeleine.

Madeleine turned and regarded Emily with her wide blue eyes. ‘Emily,’ she mouthed.

Emily extended her hand, hoping it did not tremble. ‘Lady Devlin,’ she managed.

Her sister Madeleine clasped her hand warmly, keeping hold of it until Lady Heronvale spoke. ‘And the Dowager Lady Keating…’

Madeleine turned, ‘My honour, ma’am.’

Emily’s mother-in-law did not rise from her chair, but limply accepted Madeleine’s handshake. Lady Keating probably thought, as everyone would, that Lord Devlin had married a woman beneath him, a common sort, perhaps.

Madeleine was far from common, however.

Lady Heronvale made room for Madeleine on her sofa. Madeleine sat facing Emily, looking every bit as uncomfortable as Emily felt.

Correct pleasantries were exchanged, to which both
Emily and her sister contributed, but soon the Dowager and the Marchioness lapsed into a more private conversation about mutual friends and family members.

Madeleine leaned over slightly. ‘Do you like books, Lady Keating?’ she asked Emily.

Such an odd question. ‘Yes—yes, I suppose I do.’

‘The Marquess has a fine library. Would you like to see it?’

Emily immediately understood. ‘Yes, I would. I mean, it would be my pleasure.’

Madeleine interrupted Lady Heronvale’s conversation. ‘Lady Keating desires seeing the library. Do you mind, Serena?’

‘If it does not displease you, ma’am,’ added Emily.

Lady Heronvale smiled. ‘Not at all, but we shall serve some refreshment shortly.’

As if they were two little girls bent on mischief, the sisters rushed down the hallway, Madeleine leading the way. When Madeleine shut the library doors, however, they faced each other with sudden reserve.

Emily longed to embrace her sister, longed to show her how dearly she loved her, longed for that affection to be returned. They had not parted badly last spring, but their encounter had been so brief and much lay unsaid.

‘Madeleine—’ Emily’s voice cracked ‘—it is so good to see you.’

‘Oh, Emily!’ Madeleine rushed up and threw her arms around her.

Both produced a quantity of tears that would have made their sister Jessame proud. They finally pulled apart, still sniffling and groping for handkerchiefs.

Emily blew her nose. ‘How are you, Madeleine? Are you well? Are you happy?’

Madeleine beamed at her. ‘Very happy. I do not much
like being in town, but the Marquess insisted Serena come here for her confinement. I could not refuse her request for my company.’

‘I read the announcement of your marriage, of course. Is…is Lord Devlin well?’

A dreamy look came over her sister’s face. ‘Yes, he is splendid.’ She smiled again. ‘But you are a married lady, too. You must tell me of your husband! How did you meet? Devlin said he knew Lord Keating in the Peninsula, but he’d not had the title then.’

Lord Devlin had known Guy? Had he known Guy was a gamester?

‘I met him in Bath.’

‘Bath.’ Madeleine sighed. ‘You must have seen the Cresent and the Circus. Did you meet in the Pump Room?’

‘No,’ Emily said. ‘In the Assembly Rooms.’ Though that first glimpse of him had been in the Pump Room.

‘The Assembly Rooms,’ Madeleine repeated in awe. ‘The announcement did not say where you were married. Was it at the Abbey?’

‘No.’ Emily paused. How much ought she tell her sister? ‘We had a Scottish marriage.’

Madeleine’s eyes widened and her gaze lowered to Emily’s waist. ‘Are you—’

Emily felt herself blush. ‘No, I am not.’
Far from it
, she thought.

Madeleine covered her mouth. ‘Oh, I am sorry. I did not mean to offend… It is that I know how easy it…I mean, it could happen to…’

Emily grabbed her hand and squeezed it. ‘Do not fret.’ She spoke softly. ‘I remember, Madeleine. I remember why Papa sent you away.’

Madeleine looked away. ‘I am not saying you are like me, Emily. You and Jessame were never like me.’

Emily put her arms around her sister again. ‘No, we were jealous of you, Madeleine. You were so beautiful, even though you were the youngest. We ought to have looked out for you better.’

Madeleine put her fingers to Emily’s lips to silence her. ‘That is all in the past, Emily. It no longer signifies.’

But it signified to Emily. She’d puzzled out what her sister must have been doing in Lord Farley’s room that wretched night. Their father’s wrath had been terrible. The next day, she and Jessame were told that Madeleine had run away and that Lord Farley had been summoned back to London. Emily thought Madeleine had run away with the gentleman, but then, after several days, their father had produced the body of a young girl.

When they buried that body under a stone with Madeleine’s name upon it, her father had declared that Madeleine’s wild ways had led her to destruction. If Madeleine’s spirit and vivacity had led to her death, Emily knew she must suppress any such feelings in herself. She had vowed to always behave with perfect propriety.

What had all that propriety gained her?

‘I ought to have protected you,’ Emily said to Madeleine. ‘I was older than you. I ought to have done something.’

Madeleine gave her another quick hug. ‘It is past, Emily. Think only of the life we have now. That is what I do. And I am so very, very happy.’

More tears flowed, more sniffles and wiping of eyes with damp handkerchiefs.

Madeleine had married well, Emily realised. She had a good life, a loving husband, a darling daughter.

‘I forgot to ask about your little girl,’ Emily said.

Madeleine smiled again. ‘She is very well. She is above stairs, napping at the moment.’ She patted her stomach. ‘Next spring she will have a sister or brother.’

‘How lovely for you!’ Emily exclaimed.

If wantonness brought death, propriety ought to have brought happiness. What had gone wrong? Her sister had been like a vine grown wild, almost lost among weeds, but she’d managed to flower notwithstanding. What had Emily’s strict adherence to correct behaviour gained her? She had all but withered, blossoming only when pretending to be Lady Widow.

There was a knock on the door and both sisters automatically dabbed at their faces again and fussed with their dresses. ‘Come in,’ Madeleine said.

In walked Lord Devlin Steele, Madeleine’s husband.

‘There you are,’ he said, giving his wife a loving glance. He came directly over to Emily and grasped both her hands in his. ‘Emily, it is so good to see you.’

Lord Devlin was more handsome than ever, his green eyes sparkling, his smile showing the dimple in his cheek. He was taller than her husband, but just as dark. At one time his entrance to a ballroom had set her heart aflutter. Surprisingly, she felt none of that now.

‘It is good to see you, too, Lord Devlin,’ she said, meaning it.

‘And I realise I must also wish you very happy.’ He grinned at her. ‘Lady Keating.’

Emily felt herself blush again.

‘I served with Lord Keating for a bit. He is a good man, Emily. A very good man.’

A good man? Yes, yes, he might have been, but the knowledge did not make Emily feel happy.

Devlin released her hands and turned to his wife. ‘Serena wishes you both to return to the parlour for tea.’

‘Wait.’ Emily faced her sister. ‘Madeleine, I have told no one of…of your true identity. No one. But you must know Robert is in town. Do you wish me to tell him about you?’

‘Robert? Oh, how is he?’ Madeleine shrank back. ‘Oh, dear! What if I run into him?’ She gave her husband a reproachful glance. ‘I knew I should not have come to town.’

‘You are not likely to see him if you do not wish it,’ her husband said.

She turned back to Emily. ‘No one knows of me. Only you, Devlin, and the Marquess.’ She nodded her head firmly. ‘I think that is best. I…I would not wish any scandal to befall our family…’

Had not their parents generated scandal enough over the years? Why should Madeleine hide? Emily’s brows knitted together. Of course, she herself had dread of scandal. Why else had she gone into the gaming hell in disguise?

Madeleine went on, ‘We must continue the deception, Emily. Please.’

‘Very well,’ Emily said, depressed. It felt like losing her sister all over again.

Madeleine gave a tentative smile. ‘But may not you and I be friends? As Lady Devlin and Lady Keating? Now we are introduced, may we not see each other a little? Or write letters to each other?’

Emily stepped forward and enfolded Madeleine in her arms again. ‘Nothing would please me more,’ she whispered.

Chapter Eleven

T
hat night Guy departed the townhouse as usual, but waited nearby to see who might pick up Emily and drive her to Madame Bisou’s. He waited near the end of the court for more than two hours, providing Emily with plenty of time to retire, dress and escape.

Through the night mist he heard the watchman’s call, ‘Eleven o’clock and all’s well.’ The damp chill seeped into his bones. Perhaps she would not appear.

He waited another half an hour. No carriage came. Either she was not attending the gaming parlour this night or her means of transport was more inventive than he’d supposed.

Guy shoved his hands into the folds of his caped topcoat and walked a few streets to where he could obtain a hack. If Lady Widow did not put in an appearance at Madame Bisou’s, at least he could try his luck at the tables. He still had a fortune to restore.

He found a hack and directed the coachman to Bennett Street. He’d seen some players who might give him the sort of sport he needed. He could attend to that matter, even if his wife remained at home.

His emotions were much altered when he now saw Em
ily at home. Speaking quietly to the servants. Seated at his dinner table. Playing cards with his great-aunts. All he could think of was her transformation into Lady Widow. Because Emily and Lady Widow were the same, his desire for her had more than doubled. He wanted this chameleon wife of his with all the bone and sinew of his body.

Guy went straight to the game room. It took him a mere glance to see her, seated at a card table. All the candlelight seemed to shine directly upon her. All sound became mere harmony to the melody of her laugh. He could feel the smooth blue silk of her dress beneath his fingers. Could imagine the scent of lavender lingering around her.

She looked up and his heart beat faster. She tossed him a welcoming smile and immediately turned back to her cards.

He felt like a green lad receiving his first smile from a lady. Before this night was over, Guy would indulge in his craving for her company, try to discover if the gambling was her passion, try to discover if other seductions were her aim.

Sloane was also present in the room, Guy noticed, his eyes narrowing. Sloane collected winnings from a table of gentlemen who were all rising to leave. He saw Guy and beckoned him over.

‘Do you fancy a game of whist, Keating?’ Sloane asked.

‘I came to play,’ Guy said with some hostility.

Sloane laughed. ‘Ah, cards or for the lady? I beg you, let us not be adversaries for the time being. Shall we find two well-breeched fellows and deprive them of their money?’

Guy shrugged his assent. He’d seen Sloane play. He could do worse in a whist partner.

Sloane called over to two gentlemen standing at the
faro table. They came across and Sloane introduced them to Guy as two merchants trading in fine goods throughout the Continent, goods that had once been the stock of the smuggling trade during the war. Perhaps these well-breeched gentlemen of Sloane’s had been breeched on illegal trade. In any event, they looked wealthy, judging by the cut of their clothes and the heavy gold chains dangling from their pockets. What did the source of their money matter as long as they had plenty of it?

Both he and Sloane took seats that afforded them an opportunity to keep Lady Widow in sight. A sidelong glance was all it took to watch her charming the fortunate gentlemen at her table, the ones who gladly lost their money to her.

Once the game started, however, Guy’s attention was held prisoner by the cards. These gentlemen were serious players. It would be the best sort of contest, one of wits and luck. Guy hoped both were with him. That familiar pounding of excitement drummed through him, that sense of being at the edge of a precipice ready to leap to the other side. He would either fall or land on his feet.

Guy, Sloane and the two merchants were closely matched. Each game became a close-run thing. Guy’s euphoria increased when he won. His anxiety reined free when he lost. The stakes were driven higher and higher, none of the gentlemen flinching with each increase. It had become as much a contest of who would bet the most outrageous amount of money as who would win the game. Guy felt that same burst of energy he used to feel when charging into battle, that same driving hunger to come out alive.

He soon found himself at the brink, ready to wager all his cash.
Do it. Do it. See how much you can win. The cards will come. Luck is with you.

He was about to push his whole stack of counters to the centre when he heard Lady Widow laugh. He glanced over at her, a vision in her blue dress, her face shadowed by the netting of her elegant hat. She returned his gaze, creating a different sort of heat from the card fever that had almost stolen his senses. At this distance, he could not see the expression on her face, but he could tell she did not smile.

This was his wife! This alluring vision. Would she wish her husband to bet the whole? Lady Widow might laugh off such a reckless act, but he was fairly certain Emily would not.

He took a few coins from his stack instead, throwing them in the centre of the table. At the end of the hand, his opponents were the richer.

Sloane signalled for drinks, and the pretty maid who set down the glasses gave him an inviting look. Guy studied the man while one of the merchants dealt the cards. Women were aware when Sloane entered a room. He’d noticed it in Bath when Sloane singled out Emily for attention. Emily had resisted his charms then, though Sloane had briefly been one of her suitors, but she’d had the constraint of public censure to impede her. With Lady Widow and her mask, there were no such constraints.

After the next game, Sloane signalled for more drinks. Guy drank as little as possible when playing cards and his glass had remained full. So had Sloane’s. The maid brought fresh drinks for their opponents. After the fellows’ third drink, the betting became even more reckless. Guy’s heart raced, and the blood rushed through his veins, as it had when he’d engaged England’s enemy, testing whose sword arm was the strongest, knowing either victory or death would result.

Guy and Sloane had handily won the third rubber when supper was called.

‘I’ve had enough,’ declared one of the merchants, standing on wobbly feet and rubbing his hands.

Guy had won more this night than in a week’s play at White’s. The two merchants merely shrugged off the enormous loss. ‘Good game,’ they bellowed, speech somewhat slurred. ‘Good sport.’

Guy’s emotions plummeted, as was always the case after a close game, no matter if he won or lost. If he’d lost this one, however, he would not be laughing it off like these gentlemen.

‘It was the whisky,’ Sloane said.

‘What?’ Guy looked up at him.

‘You kept your head, Keating. I much admire that.’ Sloane gathered up his counters to give to one of the girls to exchange for cash. ‘Our late opponents liked their whisky. Been drinking all night. I would not have bet on our chances if they’d been sober.’

Sloane addled them with drink? It was less than sporting, true, but a device that had given them an edge.

‘Remind me not to play against you,’ Sloane added.

Guy stood as the maid brought him his cash. ‘Thought we were in it deep already,’ he said. ‘For the lady.’

Sloane laughed. ‘Dear me, I’d forgotten her in the thrill of fleecing some very clever sheep. Shall we find ourselves cut out in the supper room, I wonder?’

 

Sir Reginald, who sat at Emily’s elbow in the supper room, mumbled something she did not hear. She’d just seen Guy and Sloane amble in together, looking very much like schoolboy mates. Her heart skipped a beat.

They looked well pleased with themselves, so perhaps they had won after all.

While her whist opponents had played their cards badly, she’d stolen glances at Guy and Sloane at their game. She’d been enough at Madame Bisou’s to recognise the two gamblers at the opposing chairs as the genuine article, the sort who would never bother with Lady Widow, preferring to engage in real play. She’d watched her husband’s stack of counters rise and fall and had held her breath for fear he would lose his last groat.

With cards in his hand, her husband had no time to spare for Lady Widow. That should have pleased Emily, but Emily could not abide him loving cards so well.

And whether she played Emily or Lady Widow, she resented him so easily dismissing her. Emily pressed her fingers to her temple, as if the gesture might keep the two sides of her together.

She managed to paste on a radiant smile as Sloane and Guy approached her table. The gentlemen seated around her grumbled and shifted positions. They were no match for these new rivals and they knew it.

Sloane flashed his perfect set of teeth at Lady Widow. ‘You are looking remarkably beautiful this evening, my lady.’ He took her hand and kissed it, as usual keeping hold a little too long.

Would her husband take her hand? Would his lips touch its bare skin? She scarcely attended to Sloane, glancing past him to where Guy stood. Guy’s face, for one second, looked grim, but when he caught her eye, he smiled. Not as widely as Sloane, but with much more appeal.

‘Pleasure to see you again so soon, ma’am.’ He bowed and the corner of his mouth took an ironic twist. He did not touch her, however. He also nodded to Sir Reginald. ‘Good evening, sir.’

Sloane, however, was heedless of Sir Reginald and Lady Widow’s other admirers. He picked up a chair from
a nearby table and set it beside her. Guy remained standing.

Would he sit with her? Would he walk away? What should she say to him to entice him to stay?

Emily’s smile remained fixed on her face, hiding the muddle inside. It was not like Lady Widow to be at a loss for words. Once she’d launched this performance of hers, she’d never lacked for confidence. Each coquettish flutter of eyelashes, each pert comment, each trill of laughter had come naturally, almost as if she really were this mysterious creature who wore masks and flirted openly with gentlemen.

But in the presence of her husband, she suddenly felt she’d forgotten her lines. She became Emily again, who relied on silence when she did not know what to say.

Sloane, without realising it, came to her rescue. ‘How do you do this night, my lady?’ he murmured in his overly intimate fashion.

She shook herself back into her role as Lady Widow, who pretended petulance. ‘How might I be? You and your companion have had no use for me all the night.’

Sloane’s eyes flicked over her. ‘I assure you, Lady Widow, I shall always have some use for you. Any night.’

Sloane’s words were shockingly suggestive. Emily shot a glance at her husband, but he’d turned his back to speak to the maid and perhaps did not hear.

She could not allow it to pass. ‘Goodness! Did you hear him, Lord Keating? I have never been so shocked in my life.’

Her entourage of admirers chirped up like a Greek chorus, Sir Reginald barking louder than the rest. They all avowed they’d certainly heard the fellow. Shocking. Shocking.

Guy turned to her, the hint of strain peeping into the
corners of his eyes. ‘Forgive me, my lady. I was not attending.’

Sloane looked amused.

Emily fussed with the sleeve of her dress. ‘Well, I suppose it was all flummery.’ She sighed.

Sloane’s smile fled.

Emily glanced back at her husband. His penetrating gaze had not left her, and she felt caught in it. Sloane might undress her with a glance, but a look such as Guy Keating gave could steal a woman’s soul.

She lowered her lashes and tried to slow the rapid beat of her heart. He’d been looking at Lady Widow, she must recall. Not his wife. Still, her breath had quite caught in her throat.

‘I thought to fix a plate, my lady,’ her husband said, his eyes unwavering. ‘May I bring you anything?’

Her flock of gentlemen all assured her they would be happy to bring her her heart’s desire—as if they could.

She gave Guy her most appealing smile. ‘More champagne, perhaps?’

The others were half out of their chairs, but sat back down when Guy bowed to her and left to do her bidding. She watched him walk away, and the gentlemen around her watched her watch him.

Sloane spoke, his voice low. ‘You seem much taken with Lord Keating, my lady.’

Emily blinked and turned her gaze upon him. ‘Do I?’ She glanced back at Keating, pretending to study him thoroughly. ‘He is a well-looking man, is he not?’

Jealousy flashed though Sloane’s eyes. ‘A paragon,’ he said.

At least she had the satisfaction of making Cyprian Sloane jealous. But what about her husband? Could she
make him care? If not for Emily, could she make him care for Lady Widow?

She forced a laugh at Sloane. ‘Come now, Mr Sloane, you will convince me you have a
tendre
for me, which I know is a mere hum.’

‘Have I not been attempting to convince you of this these many nights?’ He glared at the men around her until they all shifted in their chairs again. ‘I wonder if you gentlemen might give me a private moment with the lady,’ he said in a deceptively smooth voice. ‘You have monopolised her company quite enough.’

Amazingly, the gentlemen at her table all rose and bid her pretty words of farewell.

Only Sir Reginald hung back. ‘Feel I ought not to leave you alone with this fellow,’ he said. ‘Say the word and I won’t leave your side.’

‘Don’t be silly, sir!’ she exclaimed. ‘This is hardly a private place, and your friend Lord Keating will be returning any moment. I shall be well chaperoned, I assure you.’ It was not that she wished to be alone with Sloane, but rather she wished to limit the distractions around her when her husband returned.

Sir Reginald clutched her hand, kissing it with much more feeling than was comfortable. ‘I am at your service, always, good lady.’

When he’d left, Sloane drawled, ‘Can’t see how you tolerate that encroaching prig.’

She affected a deep sigh. ‘He is my gallant.’

Sloane gave a snort. ‘Enough sauce from you, my dear…’

Lady Widow’s brows rose at that familiar endearment.

‘I wish to speak with you before your besotted Keating returns.’

She feigned mild interest.

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