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  “I do not like it any better than you,” Vivian snapped, her weariness, tension, and hunger getting the better of her tongue. Last night had been spent very uncomfortably, sharing a bed at an inn with the unwashed, phlegmy woman who had been paid a pittance to accompany her. She had not slept well. “But I am glad that Captain and Mrs. Twitchen are willing to sponsor me for a season, for marriage is the only way I can at last be free of the so-called charity of relations!”

  Penelope turned to her, jaw agape. “What an ungrateful wretch you are!”

  “Not ungrateful. I shall thank your dear parents every day of my life if they can help me find a husband.”

  “More’s the pity we will not find you one before we return to London, for then I could be rid of you the sooner.”

  “There is no greater gift I could ask from this Christmas season than that! The three kings didn’t bear anything half so precious as a husband would be to me.” Certainly such a mercenary view wasn’t anything out of a fairy tale, princes scaling castle walls to rescue her from the villainous clutches of evil knights, but she had never expected such. A husband was simply someone to whisk her away from her dependence on her family. There needed to be no drama.

  Vivian’s green eyes met Penelope’s. A moment of consideration stretched between them. Vivian’s stomach growled.

  “It’s not truly possible, is it, to find a husband in such a short time?” Vivian asked.

  “I… I’m not sure.”

  “When does the family return to town?”

  “Soon after Epiphany,” Penelope said. “The parliamentary session will begin in January this year, and Papa is an MP, so we must go back.”

  Epiphany was January sixth, the day after Twelfth Night. “It is not much time, less than two weeks. It’s not possible.” Vivian sighed, her momentary hopes sinking.

  “No, perhaps it is.” Penelope had a pink silk rose in her fingers, which she began to tap against her lower lip as she considered. “Are you particular about whom you marry?”

  “I would wed a man forty years my senior who smelled like molding potatoes and had the wit of a particularly stupid rabbit—as long as he had a solid income and could provide me with my own home.”

  “You are desperate, aren’t you? You have no dowry, and no income of your own. You are past the better part of your youth. You might have to make do with such a one.”

  “I expect little better.” And truly she did not. The only things that saved her from joining the ranks of governesses were that her education was insufficient to qualify her, and that most of her relatives would rather have her as a spinster gentlewoman they had to support than as a spinster with an occupation.

  They would rather as well keep her a poor relation than to see her marry below her level, ending up with a man in trade whom they would then have to claim as a relation. Gentry was all that was acceptable, as well as all that was beyond her, given her lack of an inheritance. And what chance had she to go against their wishes and find herself a blacksmith or a carpenter with whom she might make a ruder home? None.

  A woman of her age and station, of her poverty and genteel connections, was subject to the tyranny of her relations. They held her welfare within their purses, tied tight with a drawstring cord, and her only escape was marriage.

  It was only the average prettiness of her face she could sell, and the youth of a body that could still bear children. It was old men who were forever the most eager buyers of those commodities.

  Who said she wasn’t in trade, like the lowest grocer or fishmonger? She would do what she had to to sell herself before she went rotten.

  “There is one possibility of a match,” Penelope said, coming forward and tucking the silk rose into Vivian’s hair. “And he will be visiting us this very night!”

  Chapter Two

  Whatever weariness Vivian had felt was burned away by a new tension. If Penelope had her way, she would be meeting her future husband tonight. And the cruel child refused to tell her anything about him!

  “He’ll be the only single man present. You can find out what you will about him on your own. I shan’t spoil the fun of that for you,” Penelope said, then took the curling tongs to Vivian’s hair.

  As she sat and endured Penelope’s primping and trimming of her, she wondered what it could be about this man of which her cousin was unwilling to speak. She did not fool herself: there had to be something wrong with him. Very wrong. Why else would Penelope believe he might be interested in Vivian’s own impoverished self, and so eager to wed that the engagement could be accomplished in a mere two weeks?

  Penelope was treating her as a large doll to be dressed and rearranged without complaint. No longer did she fret about her Valenciennes lace garbing another, nor about loaning her yellow topaz ear bobs and the necklace that went with them. She dabbed Vivian’s face with powder, and tinted her lips and cheeks with a faint trace of carmine.

  “Shhh,” Penelope said. “Don’t tell Mama I have it.”

  Penelope held a needle over the candle and used the soot to fill in the spots where Vivian’s brows were sparse or uneven. She was as determined as a mama preparing her daughter to snag a young peer at a ball. Her concentration was a testament to her desire to have her season all to herself, yet at the same time it showed a certain pride in her handiwork. Vivian recalled the carefully arranged mountain of sweetmeats and mistletoe, and hoped her own appearance fared better under Penelope’s artistic guidance.

  She also felt a bit of a fool while Penelope fussed over her. She was twenty-five and had never been a beauty even when she had the freshness of youth to her face. She feared that when at last she was allowed to look in the mirror, it would be a caricature of a young woman that looked back at her, and it would be plain to all that she was pretending to be something she was not, and with only one goal in mind.

  There was, though, a small part of her that began to come alive under the attention, watching with interest the way in which Penelope wielded the cosmetics and chose ribbons and flowers for her hair. With a start she realized what it was: vanity.

  And so what if it was? It was long past time she had the chance to indulge in that vice that women were said to have perfected.

  “There. I think that is the best that can be expected of us,” Penelope said, standing back and examining her handiwork.

  At last Vivian was allowed the mirror. She stood in front of the cheval glass and blinked in surprise. She had not been transformed into a beauty—that much even Penelope’s pastes and lotions could not achieve. But what charms she had were brought out while the flaws were concealed.

  Her brow that was too high was shortened now by the dark brown curls that covered it, and that brought attention to her eyes, whose color was brighter for the contrast with the red of her lips and cheeks. The powder helped to conceal the one or two faint pink blemishes, while allowing the whiteness of her skin to shine through.

  “Astonishing!” Vivian said. She touched lightly at her hair, the back brought up in a braided coil, flowers and ribbons tucked around it. It was so much lovelier than the plain chignon she usually wore. She could not quite believe it was Vivian Ambrose in the mirror, it was such a change from the familiar reflection.

  Penelope tucked her chin in, a tight-lipped smile of pride and satisfaction on her face. “Don’t spoil it by acting as if you think yourself plain. He’ll value you as you value yourself, or so Mama has told me a thousand times.”

  At that, the tension crept back, for how could she value herself any higher than what she was ? She saw now the way her collarbones were sharp under her skin, and the boniness of her wrists. Her shoulders were too square and broad, and her jaw as well.

  She had a prodigious appetite that had never been satisfied with the stingy trays of food sent up to her and Miss Marbury. Her cousins’ servants had sensed the disregard with which she was treated, and had in turn treated her accordingly, ignoring requests she made for extra food. The effects showed in the angular body
beneath the lace and silk of this new dress, the powders and the ribbons.

  She looked what she was: a nervous, hungry spinster.

  Noises came from below, voices raised in greeting. Guests were beginning to arrive.

  Vivian felt, all at once, the true loss of those years at Miss Marbury’s bedside. She had had no training in the rules of society, knew little of making pleasant conversation, and even less of how to win the heart of a man. She was going to make faux pas left and right, and the baronet would wonder indeed where this graceless cousin of his aunt’s had come from.

  This, though, was her chance, and she would not—could not—let her lack of experience stop her. She straightened her spine and raised her chin.

  She had spent nine years waiting for her life to begin, waiting to live as other people did. Her patience was worn away, her hunger all-consuming. She wanted a snug house; she wanted children she could spoil as badly as Penelope had been spoiled; she wanted a husband who, however old and smelly, would look upon her as a treasure and call her “my dear.” And she, in return, would make certain he was well fed and that his clothes were fresh and mended, and treat him with tender regard and gratitude.

  If Penelope thought Vivian had a chance at this unnamed man, then perhaps she did. And she would take it.

  —

  “Mr. Brent, it is good to see you again,” Captain Twitchen said. “I hear you’ll be giving us Tories a hard time of it.”

  “As hard a time as I can possibly manage,” Richard Brent said. “What’s the good of buying oneself a seat in Parliament if one cannot obstruct Tories?”

  “By Jove, you’re as blunt as I remember! You won’t go far without a bit of finesse, though, Mr. Brent. Politics, you know. Can’t always say what you think. I shouldn’t go about advertising my seat was from a rotten borough, if I were you.”

  “I don’t see why not. I am always honest about my corruptions.”

  “Ha! Ha! And so you are. If nothing else, you’ll be an entertainment this session; that you will.”

  “I’ll do my best to distract you and your cohorts from your duties,” he said, grinning. He couldn’t help but like the bluff old captain.

  “That you will!” the man agreed.

  “Richard, you naughty man,” his sister Elizabeth said, coming up and taking his arm. “Talking politics? I’d say you should know better, only that would encourage you all the more. Come, there is someone you should meet.”

  “Must I?” he asked, and the question was not in jest.

  “You must. Captain Twitchen,” she said, nodding her head to her uncle-by-marriage.

  “Lady Sudley,” the captain acknowledged with a brief bow.

  “Who now?” Richard asked as Elizabeth led him away. He was visiting her and her family at Haverton Hall for the Christmas season, a tradition he had been faithful to since she had married some five years previously. In that time he had met a goodly number of the eminent citizens of Dorset County, and of Corfe Castle, the small village named for the ruined keep that loomed above it.

  “You shall see.”

  Worrisome words. Elizabeth was forever trying to reform, if not his behavior, then at least the appearance his actions took, and her chosen method was unfortunately matrimonial. Despite the evidence that no well-bred gentlewoman would have him, Elizabeth persisted in thinking one would.

  Her disappointment was greater than his when most declined so much as even a dance with him.

  Blind Elizabeth—she could not see that her brother’s presence in the same room with gentlewomen was tolerated only because his family had rank and he had money. For that kind, honest toleration of society he was suitably kind in return, and he gave its hypocrisies the respect they deserved.

  “You’re not going to frighten some tender young creature by introducing me to her, are you?”

  “No one who knew you could possibly be frightened of you, for all your growling.”

  “So you are introducing me to one,” he said.

  “She may be different.”

  He sighed. “At least she will have a tale to share with her friends of how she was forced to speak to that dastardly Richard Brent. I shall not disappoint her.”

  “Be kind, Richard.”

  “I shall be completely myself, for did you not just say that no one could possibly be frightened of me if they knew me?”

  Elizabeth made a rumbling noise in the back of her throat, most unladylike. Then her expression lightened, her smile softened, her grip on his arm loosened, and he knew that the victim was at hand.

  “Miss Ambrose, there you are,” Elizabeth began as they came up to a dark-haired woman dressed in pale yellow. “I would like to introduce to you my brother, Mr. Richard Brent.”

  The girl stared at him, blinking great sea green eyes, then raised her hand for him to take.

  “Miss Ambrose,” he said, taking her fingers and bowing over them. They trembled in his grasp, and when he looked up from under his brows he saw the faint sheen of perspiration on her upper lip and the plane of her bosom. Not that he allowed his eyes to linger there. “How do you do?”

  “How do you do?” she whispered back, her voice cracking on the words.

  “Miss Ambrose is cousin to Mrs. Twitchen, and newly arrived from Shropshire,” Elizabeth said, as he released the young woman’s hand.

  “Do you find Corfe Castle any improvement?” he asked. She looked to be one of those nervous girls who, if she was not careful, would grow into a sinewy, discontented old woman around whom one could never relax. She was probably thinking disdainful thoughts about him at this very moment.

  “I like the people better,” she said.

  “Do you?” he asked.

  “I think the food looks to be better here, as well.”

  He startled himself by laughing. Miss Ambrose gazed at him with widened eyes, as if not understanding why he found her amusing. Elizabeth smiled and excused herself.

  “Let’s hope Cook has not tried to be fancy and created a gothic mess of a meal, with four sauces for every dish,” Richard said. “I can never decide if a free dinner should be counted as a gift or a curse. I think it is only the meager excitement of discovering which it shall be that draws me into accepting what few invitations come my way.”

  Miss Ambrose’s lips parted, and she stared dumbstruck at him for several seconds. “You came only for the food?” she finally managed to ask.

  “You look a hungry sort of girl,” he said, intentionally being as blunt as his reputation had him. She would scamper off, and he would be free of another young miss who lived her life by the rules, not by the truth of her heart. “Aren’t you looking forward to sitting down to dine more than you are to any songs on the pianoforte or games of whist?”

  She gaped at him as if he were an exotic animal, then leaned forward confidentially and whispered, “I am perishing of hunger. I could eat an entire goose, were one to wander in and conveniently fall dead at my feet.” Then she pulled back and put her fingertips to her lips as if she could push the words back in. “A lady is not supposed to admit to such things, is she?”

  “I hardly think the scandal sheets will pillory you for it,” he said, utterly surprised by her answer.

  She flashed him a grateful smile, and he wondered if she was ignorant of his minor infamy. He had not killed anyone, he had not cheated anyone of their wealth, he had not ruined any virgins, yet for his past and present choices gentlewomen had closed ranks against him and counted him a nefarious fellow, unworthy of their daughters. He knew he had been a frequent topic of the crudest sort of gossip. But it did not bother him much; he had not found any daughters worthy of him.

  The announcement came for dinner, and he gave this new young woman his arm. After the briefest of hesitations she took it, and he saw that it was shyness that had stayed her for a moment, not offended honor. She really might not know anything about him! He was surprised by his pleasure in that thought.

  Mrs. Twitchen indicated with a bene
volent nod that he should sit beside Miss Ambrose at the table. Miss Twitchen sat on his other side, the young girl exchanging a long, meaningful look with Miss Ambrose before smartly turning all her attention to the gentleman farmer who sat on her other side. The look sent Miss Ambrose into blinking blushes, and she stared at her dish of soup as if she had never seen such a thing before.

  And perhaps she hadn’t. The pea soup had chunks of blue-veined Stilton cheese, half-melted, floating about in it.

  “Oh, dear,” he said from the side of his mouth. “Cook has been creative.”

  Her spoon clattered into her dish, and she gave a snort of nervous laughter. She peeked at him, a wary look in her eyes.

  Had Miss Twitchen spoken of him earlier, and Miss Ambrose not connected the topic of that conversation to him until that long look? How disappointing. He had started to think he might get through a meal with an attractive female companion and not feel as if she thought he might give her fleas.

  For Miss Ambrose was attractive, in those moments she began to relax and the tendons in her neck smoothed out, and the little worried frown between her brows disappeared. He put her age at about twenty, six years younger than he himself, but even for that age there was a remarkable lack of polish and ease about her.

  Ah, well. She’d have her London season, and then her unaffectedness would be gone forever in the name of social graces.

  “I would have my dinner backward if I could,” she suddenly said in a very soft voice.

  “How’s that?” he asked, glad she was still speaking to him. His meal need not be passed in icy silence, after all. What had that long look with Miss Twitchen meant?

  “Dessert and sweatmeats first. I do think pea soup with Stilton should be left as a final deterrent to gluttons who are overlong at table.”

  For the second time he was surprised by his own laughter. Heads turned in their direction. “Are you going to eat it?” he asked.

  “Oh, I must,” she said, picking up her spoon. “I could not embarrass Mrs. Twitchen by not doing so. And I am hungry-enough that I don’t think even clippings from Cook’s toe-nails in the soup could put me off.”