A Daring Liaison. Gail Ranstrom
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Название: A Daring Liaison

Автор: Gail Ranstrom

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

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СКАЧАТЬ his lips. Did her passions run hotter now that she was an experienced woman? How fierce would she be in making love?

      Sarah noticed his approach and smiled a welcome. “Ah, I thought you’d be here, Charles. With your imminent appointment to the Foreign Office, you could scarce afford to miss this event. The American ambassador—perhaps you will be sent to America.”

      His imminent appointment? Now, why hadn’t he heard this? Another of Wycliffe’s ploys to convince him to investigate the Widow of Kent? He forced a smile and bowed. “Dear sister. Mrs. Huffington.” He greeted the ladies. “I trust you are well?”

      Sarah turned to Mrs. Huffington, deferring to her for an answer.

      “Very well, thank you,” she said. Her full lips curved in a smile both wise and innocent.

      Charles knew when a woman was attracted to him, and knew by her smile that she recognized the attraction was still mutual. The question was what she would do with that knowledge. Time to test the waters.

      “Have you taken care of your business in town, Mrs. Huffington?”

      “I’ve done no more than make appointments, sir. I think all of London must be waiting on someone or other.”

      He laughed at her assessment. “Then you will be with us for a while yet?”

      “So it would seem.”

      “And I am doing my best to keep her diverted,” Sarah said. “I am taking her to my modiste tomorrow.”

      Ethan slipped his hand into Sarah’s, an endearing gesture that belied their four years of marriage. “Her favorite establishment,” he explained. “Though I always suspect there is some manner of mischief afoot there.”

      Sarah nudged him. “Tease! The only mischief is to your accounts. Marie is simply the best dressmaker ever. One has not truly arrived in London until one has had a gown fashioned by Madame Marie. Her judgment is unerring.”

      Ethan read Charles’s expression, smiled and edged a knowing glance toward Mrs. Huffington. “Have you seen the Hawthorne gardens, Mrs. Huffington? The topiary is extraordinary.”

      “I’ve not had that pleasure, Lord Ethan.”

      Taking the cue, Charles offered his arm. “Allow me to show you the grounds, Mrs. Huffington.”

      She hesitated, then blinked and took his arm, her hand trembling just a little, and he surmised she had been about to refuse. Did she realize he was on to her “poor widow” act? That his interest in her now was due to his suspicion of her? Or was she remembering their last encounter in a garden?

      “Bring Georgiana back before long, Charlie. I really must introduce her around,” Sarah called after them.

      He gave his sister a sardonic wink. Sarah had admonished him more than once for his rakish ways, but he was not about to lie just to set her mind at ease. Instead, he led Mrs. Huffington through the ballroom and out to the terrace.

      “I fear I’ve appropriated you with falsehoods, Mrs. Huffington,” he admitted.

      “You have no knowledge of topiaries?”

      He smiled down at her, a bit diverted by the subtle scent of her perfume—a note of flowers blended with ambergris—similar to the scent his former mistress had used. But on Mrs. Huffington it was quite heady. Lush and seductive. “None,” he admitted. “Absolutely none.”

      “Then we shall have to bumble along on our own, shan’t we?”

      Quite adventurous of her. He’d just given her the perfect excuse to return to the house, and she hadn’t taken it—not that he’d have let her escape. Perhaps she had her own reasons for wanting to speak to him alone.

      They strolled deeper into the twilight, guided by the lantern-lit paths. She did not prattle on like most women in like situations. To the contrary, after her initial reluctance, she seemed composed and calm, and he supposed that was due to the familiarity of such a walk. Had her husbands strolled with her through gardens before going down on bended knee?

      They reached a path of hedges trimmed in various forms. He paused at one with a sharp spire. “Here we have the ever-popular boxwoodicus pointum.”

      She laughed, a sound that sent a shiver up his spine. “I shall commit that to my memory, Mr. Hunter.”

      He led her a bit farther from the house, curious how far he might take her. Far enough for privacy? “How have you come to know my sister?”

      “I am not long in her acquaintance,” she admitted. “Miss Eugenia O’Rourke—oh, sorry, Mrs. Hunter since her marriage to your brother, but she was an O’Rourke when I met her—introduced us.”

      “And how do you know Gina?”

      “Last fall when Aunt Caroline and I came to town, we met in mutual company. I was previously acquainted with the Misses Thayer, who made the introductions.”

      “Hortense and Harriett? Aye, the twins know everyone between the two of them. Did you all go about together?”

      “Occasionally.” She paused and looked up at him as if she would say more, then glanced down again and the moment passed. “Not long after our arrival, Aunt Caroline and I returned to Kent. There was … trouble. And Aunt Caroline felt we should go home.”

      Trouble? Was that how she thought of her most recent conquest’s death? Aye, he’d wager that would send her back to the countryside to hide. He stopped and took her hand, mildly surprised by its softness and warmth. “May I offer my condolences on your aunt’s death? I am told time will ease the loss.”

      Tears welled up in her eyes and she brushed them back with her free hand before they could fall. “It was quite unexpected. I do not believe she was much in pain.”

      As they continued to stroll in silence, still holding hands, Charles was surprised that she hadn’t sought to break the contact. All the better for him, since accustoming her to his touch was a part of his plan. Her little half smile was back and he breathed a little easier. He’d learned that the more a woman smiled, the less suspicious she was.

      After a moment or two, she spoke again. “Did I hear your sister say that you are bound for the Foreign Office?”

      “It has been mentioned to me as a possible option, but I have not made a decision. I have unfinished business where I am.”

      “And where is that, Mr. Hunter?”

      “London,” he told her without a twinge of conscience. Though it was no secret that he was with the Home Office, he perpetuated the myth that he was a minor clerk to Lord Wycliffe at Wycliffe’s suggestion. Only his brothers knew the extent of his activities.

      “The Foreign Office sounds wonderfully exotic. I think I would love to travel, though I have not done enough of it to know.”

      Charles shrugged. “My family has always believed in service to one’s country. All of us have traveled extensively, and allow me to assure you, Mrs. Huffington, that there is no place on earth like England.”

      “Still, I have nothing left to hold me here, СКАЧАТЬ