Authors: Mary Balogh
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Romance, #General, #Regency
“The trouble with you, Maycock,” he said, “is that you are a man of surfaces. You see beauty and believe a person to be beautiful. You see plainness and believe a person to be dull and lacking in all the finer sensibilities. You would see an oyster and not even suspect that a priceless pearl was within.”
Maycock was just ahead of him. He verified the fact with a series of fast left jabs, which the man countered in such a way as to leave his chin exposed to a swinging right. He went down like a log.
“Sheer luck,” he said, scrambling to his feet. “I just wish I could have you in Jackson’s Boxing Saloon for one minute on my terms, Darleigh. We would soon see who is the superior fighter.”
“And Gentleman Jackson and all your friends and acquaintances would applaud your superior talents,” Vincent said, knocking him down again.
It was hard to judge exactly where his chin was and where his face. Vincent had tried to avoid the face. There was a family to be confronted above stairs. There was a public reception and ball in two days’ time. But he thought that this time he had connected with Maycock’s nose.
Maycock got up again. At least he was no coward.
Vincent took a hard punch to the jaw, reeled for a moment, and danced back out of reach.
“You saw a lonely young girl, who was uncared for by her guardian,” he said, “and you saw ugliness even though she worshiped you. I cannot even see the grown woman, but I do see all the beauty that is within her, and it dazzles my mind’s eye.”
“Perhaps it is cruel to be truthful,” Maycock said irritably. “If you think it matters, Darleigh, I will apologize to her. I have already told her that she is no longer ugly.”
The man just did not understand, did he? He was probably incapable of understanding. Vincent knocked him down again and he bobbed up within a second or two.
“I have seen her pain as well as her beauty,” Vincent said. “The pain of believing herself to be ugly and unlovable.”
“If you had eyes, Darleigh,” Maycock said, “you would realize—”
Vincent knocked him down with a blow intended to keep him down.
It did.
There was silence except for the sound of his own heavy breathing.
“Maycock?”
There was merely a dull groan.
“A lamp, sir?” Martin asked.
“Yes, light one, please, Martin.”
“He is not quite unconscious,” Martin reported a few moments later.
Maycock groaned again.
“Here, let me help you up,” Martin said. “Sit on the stairs here. I can sympathize. I have tried it with him, without any success. I used to knock him down as often as he knocked me down when we were lads, but that was when he could see. He is more deadly now.”
Vincent had found a towel and was drying himself off. He could tell that Martin was ministering to Maycock.
“Any damage?” he asked.
“Just a trickle of blood from the nose,” Martin said. “It will look a bit like a beacon for the next day or two. A little red and raw about the chin. Not a single black eye. The chest and arms will be sporting bruises in a variety of colors for a while, but no one will see them beneath his shirt.”
“I was brought down here under false pretenses,” Maycock said.
“You were brought down here for punishment,” Vincent told him. “I might have had Martin tie you down, you know. Instead you were given a fair fight.”
“Fair!” Maycock said testily. “You made an ass out of me.”
“I hope so,” Vincent said and grinned. “The simplest explanation we can give upstairs, I believe, is a version of the truth. You and I had a friendly sparring bout after you very sportingly suggested we do it in total darkness.”
“I do
not
enjoy being made a fool of,” Maycock said.
“No one does,” Vincent told him. “But only you and I and Martin need know it happened. And Sophia. I will tell her.”
He heard feet climbing the stairs. The door at the top opened and then closed again.
“He was no sniveling coward,” Martin said. “I am glad of that. Every time I heard him go down I willed him to get up again.”
“
Was
it unfair?” Vincent asked.
“Not as punishment,” Martin said. “He is not badly hurt. Just his pride. And he certainly does not get the point, does he?”
“I think he is incapable,” Vincent agreed.
“You are going to have a nice bruise on your jaw,” Martin said. “Here, let me press this wet towel to it. I said she looked like a boy, sir. When you told me you were going to marry her. Do you need to have a go at me too?”
“You have redeemed yourself since,” Vincent told him. “And you did not say it to her and would never have done. Ouch! That is sore. Besides, she probably did look like a boy, my poor little scarecrow, with her shorn hair. It is growing.”
“You don’t want to exercise further this morning, I take it, sir?” Martin said. “I’ll go on ahead to have your bathwater carried up, shall I?”
“Yes, please, Martin.”
He flexed his knuckles, which felt nearly raw, and he flexed his jaw, which was going to hurt for a while.
He loved her, he thought. The idea popped out at him as if from nowhere.
Well, of course he loved her. She was his wife and they were comfortable together. They talked and laughed together. They were wonderful in bed together, and she was a few months with child by him. Of course he loved her.
But, no. That was not what that sudden thought had meant.
He
loved
her.
And she still dreamed of her cottage in the country.
S
ophia had slept late, and now it seemed to her she would never catch up. Though what there was to catch up with, she was not quite sure. With just two days to go to the reception and ball, everything that needed to be done had been done, and now it was simply a case of waiting for everything to happen and hoping that nothing would go wrong and that nothing had been overlooked.
Nothing
had
been overlooked. They had even ridden yesterday, she and Vincent, to call upon Mr. and Mrs. Latchley—he was the unfortunate tenant farmer who had fallen off his barn roof. Yes, they had
ridden,
she on one side of Vincent, mounted on a sidesaddle on the quiet mare to which she had graduated, Mr. Fisk on his other side, and Mr. Fisk had even remarked at the end of the return journey that they could scarcely have walked the distance in less time.
She liked Mr. Fisk after all. For all his blunt, gruff manner, she often thought she detected something resembling a smile back inside his eyes when he looked at her.
They had persuaded Mr. Latchley to allow them to send the traveling carriage to bring him and his wife to Middlebury on the day of the ball. They would find him a sofa in a safe corner of the ballroom, they had promised, where he could recline and rest his splinted leg while he watched the festivities and chatted with his neighbors. Mrs. Latchley in the meanwhile could dance and stroll about with her friends. They would stay overnight, of course, and be taken home the next day.
Sophia was not hungry. She would miss breakfast, she decided, though she knew she ought not. She had a baby to feed as well as herself. Perhaps a little later. In the meanwhile she would steal a few minutes for herself outside. It looked like a chilly morning, but it was not actually raining. She took a cloak with her.
She strolled in the parterre garden for a while, reluctant to go farther. Her family and Vincent’s were late risers by her standards, but they would be up soon, if they were not already. She must not be gone too long, then. And there were more people arriving today.
She had family of her own! She tested the new thought, and found it as warmly satisfying as ever. She had an
uncle
. She had an aunt and uncle and cousin besides, and they would remain a part of her life because she would refuse to let them go. Some might call her foolish. They were not particularly likable people, none of the three of them, and they had certainly not been good to her, beyond the fact that for three years they had provided a roof over her head and food for her stomach. But she would not hold a grudge. She simply would
not
. Just as she did not hold a grudge against Sebastian. He was an amiable, weak, rather self-absorbed man, and he certainly had not been worthy of a young girl’s devotion, but he was somehow a part of the small dregs of her family, and she was content that he be there.
She was about to return to the house when she became aware of someone hurrying up the driveway on foot. A woman. She turned onto the straight stretch between the topiary trees, and Sophia, seeing that she was Agnes Keeping, went to meet her. It was early for a morning call, but it was a welcome one.
“Agnes,” she called when they were within earshot of each other.
Her friend was smiling brightly and waving a folded paper.
“I could not wait until a more respectable hour,” she said, all out of breath. “The post came early, and so I have come early. I have heard from Dennis after I had given up hope of ever hearing from him again. Men are the more hopeless of correspondents, are they not?”
Sophia smiled, and they both stopped walking. Who was Dennis?
“Dennis Fitzharris,” Agnes explained. “My cousin-in-law. The publisher.”
Ah, the cousin. But Agnes had not said he was actually a publisher. Sophia raised her eyebrows.
“He wants to publish your first Bertha and Dan story,” Agnes told her. “And he wants to look at more. Here. Read for yourself.” And she thrust the folded letter into Sophia’s hands.
He did indeed. He wanted to publish the book. He liked it, both the text and the pictures. He thought it would delight children, and he thought there would be a fair market for it as there were so few books published just for children, especially books that were so thoroughly and amusingly illustrated. He suggested publishing it under the name of “Mr. Hunt, Gentleman,” since Viscount Darleigh would doubtless not wish to have his title associated with something so apparently trivial, and Lady Darleigh would not wish to be considered vulgar. He offered a sum that sounded to be generous enough as an advance against future sales.
Sophia looked up into Agnes’s smiling eyes and smiled back.
Grinned
back, actually. And then they were both laughing and hugging each other and dancing in a circle on the driveway.
“Is it
vulgar
to be an authoress?” Sophia asked.
“Dreadfully, my dear,” Agnes replied. “It is even worse to be a book illustrator. Is there a word more derogatory than
vulgar
? If there is, you are it, or would be if you allowed your name to appear on the cover of your book.”
“The cover of my book.” Sophia stared at her arrested. “
My
book. Mine and
Vincent’s
. Oh, Agnes!”
“I know,” Agnes said. “Wonderful, is it not? But I must hurry back. I told my sister I would be gone no longer than half an hour. I have promised to help her sew new trim onto her best evening gown for the night after tomorrow, and she is convinced the job will occupy both of us for the whole day, horrid thought.”
She turned and hurried back the way she had come, and Sophia made her way back to the house.
“Have you seen my husband?” she asked the footman in the hallway.
The footman believed his lordship was with Mrs. Pearl and Lady March in the morning room, but as Sophia hurried along the corridor of the west wing, he was just leaving the room and closing the door behind him.
“Vincent,” she cried.
He looked in her direction, cocked his head to one side, and frowned.
“What is it?” he asked. “You sound distressed.”
“Merely breathless,” she told him. “The postman just brought a letter to Miss Debbins’s house, and he wants to publish us, Vincent, though not under my name because it would be vulgar.”
His expression did not change except that his frown perhaps deepened.
“He?” he asked her. “The postman?
What
would be vulgar?”
“Using a woman’s name on a cover,” she explained. “Apparently it is not done. And you might consider it trivial to have your title there. So he suggests just plain Mr. Hunt, Gentleman.”
“Kind of him,” he said, grinning suddenly. “Sophie, who on earth is
he
? And
what
on earth are you talking about? What do the postman and Miss Debbins have to do with whatever it is?”
“Nothing whatsoever,” she told him.
He laughed outright and, after a moment, she joined him.
“The letter was to Agnes Keeping,” she told him. “She sent a copy of
Bertha & Dan and the Adventure of the Cricket Ball on the Church Spire
to her late husband’s cousin in London, do you remember? And it turns out that he is a publisher and that he loves the book and wants to buy it and publish it under the name Mr. Hunt, Gentleman to save you from embarrassment and me from vulgarity. He wants to
publish
it, Vincent, for children all over the country to read and look at. And he wants to see more.”
The smile was arrested on his face.
“He wishes to publish your books, Sophie?”
“
Our
books.”
“Then it had better be under the names Mr. and Mrs. Hunt or not at all.”
“Do you think?”
“I think.”
And then his smile deepened again and he opened his arms—he had neither Shep nor his cane with him—and she threw herself into them. They closed tightly about her, and he swung her off her feet and about in a wide circle. He set her down a considerable distance from the morning room door and facing in the opposite direction.
He was laughing. So was she.
“Are you happy about it?” he asked.
“Are you?”
“Yes.”
“Me too.”
And then her smile faded. The light was not brilliant in the hallway, but there was quite enough of it to show her that the left side of his jaw was swollen and discolored.
“What happened?” She cupped her hand very lightly against that side of his face. He winced and pulled back.
“I collided with a door?” He made the answer sound like a question. He also raised one hand to touch the area gingerly with his fingertips.
She took the hand in hers and turned it over, palm down.