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Authors: Claudia Dain

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General

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BOOK: The Courtesan's Secret
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She was dismayed to realize that she was not revolted by it.

He was introduced as Mr. John Grey, though it became immediately clear that everyone in the room addressed him as John.

Simply John. Impossible, really, as she couldn't go about addressing him by his given name; though she didn't suppose she would have any need to address him at all. She rather hoped not. Mr. John Grey looked entirely capable of cutting her heart out of her ribs without so much as a hitch in his breathing.

John Grey was the father of three sons, hardly more than boys in age, really, but again, like Lord Dalby, very forbidding despite their physical youth. George was likely her own age of twenty, and possessed of dark good looks and good height. In all, she was forced to admit, despite his primitive origins, he did rather look the part of a Greek statue. A dark, tousled Greek statue with the most startling dimple in his left cheek, which she knew existed because of his absolute cheek in smiling at her. Really. Hardly appropriate behavior but one entirely to be expected of an Indian, if one could believe the romantic and highly suspect rumors of them.

She was beginning to believe that the rumors might have more merit than she had at first supposed.

John the Younger was the middle son, and a more aristocratic face would be difficult to imagine. Of course, like the others, he was unfashionably dark of complexion, but it did not at all diminish his elegant athleticism. He looked to be about eighteen. Another mere boy when compared to her Dutton.

The youngest of Sophia's surprising nephews was introduced as Matthew, and he was surprisingly stunning in appearance. Young, yes, too young, but with the cleanest features and the bluest eyes set beneath the most classic brows; he looked what he was, that is, an Indian and savage. But therein lay the problem; savagery had never before looked quite so compelling.

It was completely inappropriate for her to take any note at all of these savages when there were two very likely titled gentlemen in the room as well, besides Lord Dalby. They were the guests, apparently, and Sophia seemed quite as surprised and perhaps slightly delighted that they'd joined her son's party.

"One would think you'd ridden to the hunt, Markham. Just look at what treasures you've brought home for me to enjoy," Sophia said, smiling at the Lords Penrith and Ruan, the
treasures
.

"Now, Mother," Dalby, who clearly also answered to Markham, said, "don't frighten them with your particularly odd strain of humor. I told them they'd be quite welcome."

"And so they are, darling," Sophia said. "As to being frightened... have I frightened you, Lord Ruan?"

"I'm forced to admit you have not, Lady Dalby," Lord Ruan said in a low voice.

"Then I shall just have to try harder, Lord Ruan, shan't I?" Sophia answered softly. "Now that you've found your way to my door, I daresay I shall have ample opportunity."

"Let us be precise, Lady Dalby," Ruan said silkily. "I have found my way
past
your door, past all your defenses, which, I find I am also forced to say, were rather more meager than I had expected."

"You had expectations," Sophia said, raising her black Wedgwood cup to her lips. "And they were not met." The contrast to her pale skin was particularly flattering. "Have I just been insulted, Lord Ruan? Shall it be pistols at dawn?"

"If we must duel," Ruan answered softly, his voice a deep rumble of amusement, "I have a sword of which I am particularly fond."

Upon which Sophia let her dark-eyed gaze travel the long length of Ruan's form before saying, "I don't doubt it, Lord Ruan."

Louisa could feel herself blush. This is what came from taking chocolate with a former courtesan; the conversation could not help but be coarse and rife with innuendo. Louisa looked at the Marquis of Ruan: a startlingly tall man with black hair and piercing green eyes in a face that had seen a good share of life. He looked only slightly older than Sophia, and what was more, he looked entirely and inappropriately at ease with the conversation.

" 'Tis obvious you've met," Dalby said in an undertone that could be heard by the entire room.

"Only recently, at the Duke of Hyde's assemblie where Caroline became so delightfully engaged," Sophia said, turning her gaze from Ruan to Penrith. "But you, Lord Penrith, you are an old friend. Tell me, how is your darling mother? Are she and your sister still traveling through Greece?"

"Yes, Lady Dalby," Lord Penrith answered, "and enjoying it immensely according to mother's last letter. They were hoping to visit Lord and Lady Elgin."

"How lovely that will be," Sophia said. "By all accounts Mary, Lady Elgin, is the most pleasant of women. I do envy them their ability to travel so widely upon the world."

"And what keeps you from traveling, Mother?" Dalby said from his elegant slouch upon the milk blue damask sofa.

"Why, my children, darling," she answered with a soft smile. "A mother simply should not leave her children at such a sensitive time in their lives as this."

"Sensitive? Sensitive in what regard?" Dalby asked.

"She means to see you married," Penrith said, his golden green eyes sparkling. Lord Penrith, whom Louisa had never had occasion to meet, was a remarkable looking man. Everyone, absolutely everyone, commented upon it.

He was tall, as fashion preferred, and golden, which fashion perhaps did not prefer but which compelled everyone who saw him to immediately discount fashion. His hair was longish and dark blond. His skin was dark gold. His brows were straight and cleanly drawn over almond-shaped eyes. His nose was shaped with poetic beauty and his brow was noble and intelligent.

But, of course, he could not truly compare to Dutton.

"Married?" Sophia said to Penrith's remark. "Without question, Markham. You must marry, but not yet. You are far too young to marry."

"Thank God we agree on that," Dalby muttered.

"I am quite certain I shall embarrass you by saying that I should be much surprised if we did not agree on absolutely everything," Sophia said. "Take, for example, Lady Louisa."

All eyes, male eyes, turned to look at Louisa. Louisa did not find it in the least agreeable. She lowered her eyes to her cup of chocolate and gazed into its brown depths as if it were the most fascinating object on three continents. Poise at its best, actually, as there was nothing even remotely interesting about a half-drunk cup of chocolate.

"I'll take her," a male voice said. Louisa's head jerked up to connect the voice to the man. It was one of the Indians, the one called George. Impertinence at its most extreme.

"Now, George," Sophia said on a trill of laughter, "you know quite well that things are done differently here in England."

"Too bad," George practically grunted.

Well,
really
.

"I'm afraid that I must be off," Louisa said, laying aside her cup on an elegant little table and rising to her feet. All the men in the room rose with her. She was beginning to feel like a player in a particularly bad farce.

"Now look what you've done, George," Sophia said from her poised perch on the damask sofa. "You've frightened Lady Louisa off. And we were having such a productive conversation."

Louisa sank back down to her seat. The men sank with her.

Frightened off? Hardly. And not by a mere primitive who didn't appear to have access to a good tailor. His coat was a positive lump of fabric that hung from his shoulders to his hips. Distasteful. Sophia really should see her relatives better turned out before she let them loose upon London.

He needed a good shave as well. She could actually see the dark shadow of his beard growing out of his jaw. Savage. Her stomach was quite turned by the sight. She could feel it flipping around even now.

And someone really should tell Mr. George Grey that staring was completely reprehensible. She might just tell him herself.

Someday.

His looking so completely savage was just the tiniest bit off-putting.

"Oh, good," Sophia said softly. "You've decided to stay. How tolerant of you, Lady Louisa. Having no brothers, you cannot image how unruly a house with men in it can become."

"Yes," Louisa said awkwardly, trying desperately to keep her gaze from George and his rather too snug leather breeches buttoned above a pair of soft leather boots. She was only marginally successful. He had spectacular legs and they were compellingly long.

"She's not married," George said, staring at her with his dark, savage eyes, his gaze entirely too direct and his manner disturbingly bold.

"No," Sophia said with a smile. "Not at present."

Not at present?
Sophia made it sound as though she could be picked up and purchased as a matrimonial parcel with just a nod to the clerk. Indeed.

"I have no immediate plans to marry," Louisa said.

"I applaud you, Lady Louisa," Lord Penrith said, his voice a husky murmur.

People talked about that as well, about his voice and what it could do to a woman if she happened to find herself talking to him behind a hedge or a screen. Of course, the women who did talk about it were soon shuffled out of the best houses in London. A respectable woman did
not
go about talking to attractive gentlemen behind the furniture.

"I should say so," Lord Dalby echoed. "It's a rare woman, one of exceptional virtue, who does not make marriage a priority."

"Markham," Sophia said liltingly to her son, "please do try not to appear an idiot. Virtue has very little to do with anything, particularly where women are involved, and most decidedly where women are involved with men."

Lord Ruan laughed under his breath. John, Sophia's startling brother, made some noise, but she couldn't be certain if he wasn't simply coughing.

"I beg your pardon," Dalby, or rather Markham, said to his mother.

"As well you should," Sophia said. "Of course Lady Louisa plans to marry; she is simply wise enough not to rush precipitously into anything as permanent and as costly as a marriage."

"Costly?" Ruan asked.

He was a most compelling man and spoke in that distinctive drawl which showed the world that he had absolutely nothing to do with his time but enjoy it. While Penrith's green eyes were hazy and golden, much like a cat's, Ruan's eyes were like emerald blades, piercing and hard and entirely too knowing. It was a strange relief to find that he could spare his gaze for little beyond Sophia.

Louisa was not in the habit of pleasantly sharing the attention of any man with any woman, but in this case she was more than a little relieved. Lord Ruan looked entirely too experienced and was entirely too unrepentant of that fact.

That Sophia Dalby could manage him wasn't even a question worth asking.

"But of course," Sophia answered Ruan, looking at him rather more intently than was commonly considered proper. Not that Louisa was surprised by that; Sophia made it something of a routine to do things that weren't considered proper. Which was the entire reason for coming to her for aid in obtaining both Dutton and her pearls, now that she thought about it. "You of all people, Lord Ruan, must know that when a man and a woman join there are inevitable costs."

"Inevitable?" Ruan asked in a manner that was just this side of seductive. Louisa felt a slight tingle of feminine awareness in her toes. She jammed her toes into the tips of her shoes and silently insisted that her toes behave.

"Definitely," Sophia said with a small smile.

"The marriage contracts, of course," Dalby said.

"Of course," Sophia said sweetly, looking at her son. "What else?"

"What else, indeed," John said, giving his sister a most peculiar look.

John Grey was even more intimidating a man when giving out peculiar looks. Sophia's wild brother looked quite capable of killing a man for his snuff box. Of course, when a man had a sister who had been a courtesan, he might find that more than the usual number of occasions arose for killing a man. Odd, but she hadn't heard any rumors of men being killed in unusual number while Sophia had been, what must honestly be termed,
in trade
. It was entirely likely that Mr. Grey had remained in America and, since she had never heard of him, continued to do so.

Now, why was that? And what had brought him to England now?

Interesting questions, to be sure, but as they had absolutely nothing to do with Lord Dutton she could hardly be expected to actually
care
about Sophia and her family situation.

"But, as I was saying," Sophia said silkily, "I'm quite certain we can all agree, even you, Markham, that Lady Louisa is possessed of the most luscious shade of red hair that I have seen in twenty years."

Louisa fought the urge to clamp her hands down over her head. Naturally, Sophia had hit upon the one point most likely to prick: her hair. Her hair was the reason her father hated her. And because her father hated her, she returned the feeling in good measure. She was not going to be outdone, and certainly not by her father.

Louisa lifted her chin and her resolve and did
not
put her hands over her head.

"Twenty years?" Ruan said, looking casually in Sophia's direction and yet not looking the least bit casual.

"At the very least," Sophia said. "Such intensity, such brilliance, quite above the mark. Very much indicative of the girl herself, I daresay."

It was fair to say that all the men in the room, and that would be seven if one did not count Fredericks and she most certainly did not count Fredericks, were staring at her. Seven men, staring at her hair. She didn't like it in the least.
This
is what became of girls who called upon disreputable people without a proper chaperone, or even an improper one. What her cousin Amelia would think when she found out about this she didn't care to deliberate.

It was entirely uncertain whether she would tell Amelia anything at all.

"I hope so," George said in a husky undertone that practically echoed off the walls, rebounding the comment into every ear in the room. Lovely.

"I do believe, George, that you're halfway to being besotted by the girl," Sophia said. "Have a care. English women of a certain coloring are rumored to have a certain temperament."

BOOK: The Courtesan's Secret
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