Season for Temptation (18 page)

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Authors: Theresa Romain

BOOK: Season for Temptation
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Julia continued to turn in that odd way. “I'm not sure,” she said over her shoulder. “Simone had me all prepared like a perfect town lady, and then I was trying to be so careful as I came down the stairs, thinking that I mustn't miss any of them, that I concentrated too hard instead of just going down normally, and I forgot how to move my feet properly. So I actually did miss one of the steps and my foot slid onto my hem, and now I'm afraid I've ripped it.”
She stood straight at last, flushing the embarrassed pink he knew by heart. “Could you check it? It's the part in the back just next to the train. I can't twist around quite far enough to see it.”
“Of course,” he replied. He crouched at her feet like a supplicant, his eyes not seeing her dress. The position gave him another welcome few seconds to hide his face for fear of what his expression would show her.
He took another deep breath, then cleared his throat as he stood slowly. “Your gown is fine. You look very nice.”
He still couldn't trust himself to say more, or even to meet her eye. He pretended to check the arrangement of his cravat again in the glass.
At the edge of the glass, he could just see Julia's reflection. She lifted her chin and smiled at his lukewarm compliment, cool and proud, looking for all the world like a princess.
“Thank you,” she said, sounding not quite like her usual self.
He turned to face her again, his face schooled into what he thought was a look of normal, friendly interest. “Why were you so worried about your dress?”
She grinned at him—her regular, everyday Julia grin—and its brightness hit him like a punch in the gut. He pitied the poor bachelors who would soon be vying for her hand.
“I'm just nervous,” Julia admitted, the self-deprecating grin still on her face. “It's my first real ball, you know.” The grin crumpled, and she shuffled one of her dainty slippers on the floor. “Even so, I suppose I've let myself dwell too much on things I shouldn't.”
James allowed himself to place one finger under her chin and tip her face up to his. Even through his glove, he could feel the heat of her smooth skin. “I know the feeling you mean,” he whispered huskily.
Her lips parted as if to reply—and of course she had a reply, because she always had a reply—and he drew his fingertip up to cover her lips for a moment. He'd never allowed himself such a liberty before, and he swore to himself that he never would again.
Probably.
“No protests,” he said, using mock seriousness to hide his deadly earnestness. “I simply must have a dance tonight.”
“Of course,” Julia replied softly, her eyes wide and fixed upon his. “As many as you like.”
She blinked and laughed suddenly. “In fact, please watch over me throughout the ball, and come to rescue me with that dance if I prove to be too unpopular. I would hate to be a wallflower, tonight of all nights.”
It was too much. She was actually asking him to watch her all evening and seize her for dance after dance. Good Lord, he wasn't a magician who could just . . . not be made of flesh for several hours. He had obviously gone soft in the head, and how he was going to get through this evening without making an utter ass of himself, he wasn't sure.
Luckily for his presence of mind, Lady Irving marched down the stairs just then and drew all attention to herself. Her ladyship was resplendent in ruby satin and sporting an unusually garish brocaded, bejeweled, and ostrichplumed violet turban on her head.
“Let's go,” she commanded, thumping James on the back with an imperious hand. “I want Lady Alleyneham to see me with this . . . this
thing
on my head before my curls are completely crushed.”
Noting her niece's gaping mouth, she explained, “Ever since we were girls together, Sylvia has copied me in everything, so I must have my bit of fun. I'll take this off as soon as we greet her, but ten to one the silly creature will be sporting a plumed violet turban for her next at-home.”
James was amazed to see her literally rub her hands together in anticipation, and he couldn't honestly call her laugh anything but a cackle.
“Will Louisa be ready soon?” James asked smoothly, pretending he hadn't heard a word.
Guilt stabbed through him. Once again, he knew there was a God, because there wasn't a mind reader in this house. No one but he would know what a cursed fool he was.
“Oh, she's not coming. Didn't you know?” Lady Irving said distractedly, gazing at her reflection in the much-used pier glass and prodding at the arrangement of her ostrich plumes. “Sick headache, or some such nonsense. If you ask me, all that girl needs is a good—”
She broke off suddenly, darting her gaze at James, then meeting Julia's puzzled eyes in the glass, and said, “Well, never mind what she needs. Anyway, we're free to leave anytime. Is your carriage waiting, Matheson? Come, Julia, my girl; gather your wrap and things.”
“But I should go to Louisa,” Julia interjected. “I didn't know she wasn't feeling well. Maybe I should speak to her, or even stay home with her tonight if she's ill.”
Her expression was so worried that James's heart turned over in sympathy. Feeling even guiltier that he hadn't spoken up first, he, too, made an offer. “Certainly we can spare all the time needed for you to run up to your sister. In fact, I'd like to speak with her myself. She seemed well the last time I saw her. I hope it is nothing serious.”
“Don't bother,” Lady Irving said, as she collected her wrap and began to walk toward the street door. “Either one of you. She told Simone that she was going to lie down, and she didn't wish to be disturbed at all this evening. By anyone, and that includes both of you.
And
she said to have a wonderful time and not worry about her.”
She noticed neither James nor Julia was following her, turned on her heel, and looked expectantly from one face to another. “What are you two waiting for? An order? Very well, I order you to follow me, get in the carriage, and come have a marvelous time this evening. Heaven knows, if Louisa is ill, she will have a much better time here at home than getting overheated in the middle of a crowd of shoving nincompoops. And if she doesn't want company, which she doesn't, then
you
will have a much better time at the ball than you would fluttering around her, plaguing the life out of her, and getting no thanks for it.”
Faced with such logic, James allowed some of his guilt to melt away. Louisa should be here at his side. He knew that. But if she didn't want to be there, he still could accompany her relatives. It was perfectly proper to do so.
He met Julia's eyes and shrugged. “Cinderella must go to the ball,” he joked lamely, willing her to agree.
Julia bit her lip nervously and glanced upstairs toward Louisa's chamber.
“It feels wrong,” she murmured.
James said something sympathetic as he took her arm and led her out to his carriage, but he wasn't sure if he meant it.
He was too far gone. The only thing that felt wrong, at all, was how right it felt to have her hand on his arm.
Chapter 19
In Which the Viscount Eventually Dances
The turban was an immediate success.
Lady Alleyneham, Charissa's mother, stared with covetous eyes at Lady Irving's dazzling headdress. Lady Irving pretended not to notice, patting her violet monstrosity absently as she made Louisa's excuses.
“Of course, she'll call on you at your next at-home to deliver her regrets in person,” Lady Irving said with a feline smile. “As the season's begun in earnest, I'm sure you'll have new garments for the occasion, if I know you, my dear. You are always so elegant.”
Next to her aunt, Julia reeled. Lady Irving had spent the entire carriage ride to Alleyneham House nattering about The Affair of the Turban, as Julia now thought of it. Now that her ladyship had triumphed over her foes—or more accurately, her friends—Julia hoped she could be left alone in silence for a few blessed seconds. Just enough time to come to terms with the fact that Louisa wasn't here.
And James was.
But before Julia could slip away in search of a quiet place to think, her aunt seized her by the elbow and began steering her into the ballroom, hailing a series of friends and acquaintances as she strode.
“Might as well get all the use I can out of this creation,” she muttered, giving her plumed turban another pat as she nodded to an elderly nobleman. “Good evening, Haverley. Am I not looking ravishing this evening?”
The countess turned to James with a dazzling smile. “Well, we'll see you later on, Matheson. Perhaps at supper. I'm sure you want to find the card room, or whatever it is that unnecessary young gentlemen do during balls when they're not dancing.”
Julia's mouth dropped open. James was her lifeline; her aunt couldn't send him away. James looked taken aback, too, and seemed about to reply, but Lady Irving waved a dismissive hand at him and began to drag Julia away in her talon-like grip.
“He can't do you any good this evening, my girl, as he's already taken,” she explained in a voice that was not nearly quiet enough, considering the number of people pressing against Julia and carrying her away from James. Two dozen perfect strangers, at least, could hear Lady Irving barking out orders. “We need to find Sir Stephen for you at once, or perhaps that Pellington fellow. Remember what I told you—rich and titled. You've got to keep your eye on the prize.”
This was utter humiliation. Julia's thoughts were still in a tumble from Louisa's sudden illness, and now her aunt was telling half of London that she was on the hunt for a husband.
She began glancing at her surroundings, trying to pretend she didn't know the strange and magnificent woman prodding her in the arm. It was difficult to see much of the ballroom around the crowd of people. Truly, this event would achieve the triumph of being called a mad crush with no exaggeration whatsoever. The size of the room alone was imposing; to Julia's unaccustomed eyes, there seemed to be hundreds of people milling about within its walls.
Peering through the crowds of hot, jostling, elegantly dressed people, she could catch glimpses of a polished dance floor already occupied by what looked like dozens of couples winding their way through the ball's opening minuet. A thicker crowd at one end of the long ballroom indicated the probable location of the refreshments.
The nervousness she'd felt earlier in the evening began to twist through her body again. It choked her throat, made her stomach clench, and caused her feet to feel heavy and clumsy as her aunt pulled her around the ballroom in search of someone with a fat bankroll. James had long since vanished in the crowd, and Julia couldn't spot Charissa either. Without friendly faces around, the crush and the crowd and the scramble for partners lost their magic and excitement.
Simone had been wrong this evening, completely wrong. Julia couldn't hold her chin high and pretend that she loved it here. She was just one of a surplus of inexperienced girls in fancy dresses, and she was hardly the richest, prettiest, or wittiest of the bunch. Yet here she was in London, tasked with finding a husband, grasp and scuttle though she must.
Just as she was beginning to wish she were back in the Grosvenor Square house with Louisa, she felt a gentle touch at her elbow. The one
not
currently being wrenched by her aunt.
She twisted in Lady Irving's grasp to see Sir Stephen's smiling countenance behind her.
“Sir Stephen,” she greeted him, curtsying. This drew Lady Irving's attention, and the countess again switched on her most dazzling smile.
“Sir Stephen,” she echoed, and gave him her hand to kiss. “How delightful to see you. Are you just arrived? Have you had the chance to dance yet?” She raised her arched eyebrows expectantly and looked back and forth from him to her niece.
Julia could have sworn the ostrich plumes on Lady Irving's turban bobbed from one of them to the other as if colluding in her aunt's effort to throw her at the baronet. She supposed her aunt
could
have been more obvious if she had commanded Sir Stephen to dance with, ravish, or wed Julia on the spot (all would probably do equally well, in Lady Irving's mind), but really, this was embarrassing enough.
Fortunately, Sir Stephen picked up the unmistakable hint. “Indeed I have recently arrived, and have only just finished greeting our host and hostess. I have not yet had the opportunity to dance, but would be most grateful if Miss Herington would do me the honor of accompanying me in the next set.”
His eyes turned from Lady Irving to Julia herself. His smile was kind and genuine, as always. Dependable and reliable; that was Sir Stephen.
She wished she could feel as excited about the proffered dance as her aunt apparently did; Lady Irving was practically quivering with her eagerness to throw Julia at the baronet's feet.
Ah, well; it would be nice not to be dragged around by her aunt in search of male prey for at least half an hour.
Ruefully, she rubbed the arm that Lady Irving had just released. “I would be delighted to dance with you, Sir Stephen.”
She smiled back at him and was gratified to watch his amiable face light up. He really was a handsome gentleman, although the crinkles at the corners of his eyes never failed to remind her how much older than she he was.
She took his arm and allowed him to lead her into the dance, her smile growing as excitement began to bloom within her again, as he complimented her on her appearance and swooped her into the line of dancers.
Perhaps she could find something to be proud of, after all. She lifted her chin, just as Simone had shown her.
 
 
Standing only yards away, James was manfully restraining himself from throwing a punch at one of Sir Stephen's eyes. Every male gaze that turned Julia's way rankled him, but the baronet was the worst. He was looking at her so intently, he might as well have been peeling off her gown in front of hundreds of people.
James's fist clenched at his side. Julia
had
asked him to keep an eye on her, after all. He'd already trekked all the way around the ballroom after her, unnoticed by either her or Lady Irving, no doubt cutting any number of acquaintances without even realizing it. He couldn't help it; he was in a fog, drawn after Julia, a moth to her flame.
Perhaps he could intercede if Sir Stephen seemed to be too demanding. And yet he knew the purpose of Julia's season was to contract an honorable marriage.
Even if she'd be better off contracting malaria.
He glowered at the dancing, laughing pair throughout their country set before slinking off to the card room at last for an hour of fruitless play in the company of men he barely knew and never cared if he saw again.
 
 
Following his time in the card room, James returned to the ballroom, and the evening began to seem endless. Hours passed, and James noted—like a good friend and protector—everyone who led Julia onto the dance floor. Far from languishing as a wallflower, it seemed she scarcely had the chance to reach the edge of the ballroom with her previous partner before another young man asked her for a dance. Xavier, Pellington . . . good Lord, it seemed practically every man in London had an eye on her this evening.
Of course, Sir Stephen was the worst of them. Really, could the man not keep his hands off her? For someone so attentive to propriety, it was a positive scandal how he looked at her, and how he asked Julia to dance again and again. The man even monopolized her during the supper dance so he could lead her into the meal afterward. Really, it was too much.
Immediately following the supper, which James bolted down while standing in a corner of the room from which he could keep a strategic eye on that Saville fellow, he followed the pair as they headed back toward the ballroom. Unable to restrain himself any longer, he touched Julia lightly on the arm to draw her attention to him.
She turned to see who was summoning her, and when she looked into his eyes, her cheeks took on the rosy pink he knew as well as his own face.
“James,” she breathed, looking flustered. “Where did you—I've been—that is, I haven't seen you this evening. Have you danced much?”
Was that anxiousness in her eyes? He smiled reassuringly, and took the arm not being held by Sir Stephen.
“I've been around. No, I haven't danced much.” In truth, he hadn't danced at all, but surely he could be forgiven this small lie. “I've been in the ballroom enough to notice you've hardly been a wallflower. Still, I would like to claim that waltz you promised me, if I might?”
He darted a glance at Sir Stephen out of the corner of his eye, counting on the older man to bow out.
Indeed, the baronet did just that, surrendering Julia's arm and kissing her hand lightly as he took his leave. He thanked her very correctly for the honor of their dances and the supper together, and was pleased to leave her in the hands of her dear friend.
James would have rolled his eyes if that wouldn't have been incredibly rude. Honestly, the fellow was like an etiquette textbook. But since he knew his share of etiquette as well, he only nodded his acknowledgment of the older man's words and began to lead Julia toward the other dancers, who, following the supper, began at once to collect again near the musicians and the center of the ballroom.
As the instruments were tuned, James took Julia's hand in his and touched his other to her slim waist. It would be a few minutes before the dance started, but he couldn't help himself. He would have sworn he could feel the shape and warmth of her body through the delicate fabric of her dress. The tingling in his fingers began to return.
Julia drew a startled breath at the unexpected contact of his hand. His usual good humor now returned, he rather enjoyed Julia's response to his touch. “Haven't you waltzed before? I know you have permission.”
“Yes, I have,” she said, blushing again. “It's just . . . I forgot what it is like.” She bit that delicious full lower lip and smiled hesitantly at him. “I suppose I sound old-fashioned, but it's almost shocking that such a thing is permitted in public, is it not? I mean, it doesn't feel so when one is practicing in the nursery with one's sister, but this is rather a different matter.”
“I should hope so,” James replied, stifling a laugh. “But it can't be improper for us, since I am to be your brother.”
Her brother. He shuddered; the very thought was repugnant.
He realized that this was the first time he'd thought of Louisa, even indirectly, since entering the ballroom. And realized that the feeling of Julia's waist under his hand was arousing in him a response that was decidedly unbrotherly.
In his arms, Julia was oblivious to these revelations. She was staring fixedly at the floor.
“Is something wrong?” James asked.
“Not at all,” Julia replied, her voice slightly muffled by her proximity to his chest. She was so close to him; only a breath away from an embrace. His heart began to pound treacherously fast.
Then she explained prosaically, “It's just that I wanted to see how you placed your feet. I can't remember how we start this dance, and it would be horrid if I trod on your toes in front of all these people.”
James mentally shook himself for his foolishness. He managed a laugh and responded as lightly as he could. “For the sake of my feet, I would prefer you not to tread on my toes regardless of the number of people watching. But this is false caution; I know you to be an excellent dancer. Here, the music is about to begin—follow my lead and we'll do splendidly.”
She met his eyes and nodded her readiness. The tune began, its pulsing three-four rhythm sending the eager dancers into whirling motion around the floor. James spun Julia in concert with everyone else, the pressure of his hand at her waist subtly guiding their movement.
With Julia in his arms, the room came alive. Myriad candles glittered off the polished marble of the floor, the heavy pier glasses on the walls, and the cut crystal of the chandeliers hanging from the high, ornately plastered ceilings. Flame upon flame, reflected and multiplied throughout the room, glistened on the pearls at Julia's throat, burnished her fair hair to gold, and added points of light in her eyes.

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