Название: Wicked:
Автор: Noelle Mack
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Исторические любовные романы
isbn: 9780758247841
isbn:
She held up the cloak with both hands for a final inspection and turned to go back in to the curtained room.
He could not help himself. Semyon stepped forward, slipping his coat off and holding it in his arms and giving a discreet cough to warn her of his presence.
“Back so soon, Jack?” she murmured, putting the cloak she’d picked up over the one already on the dressmaker’s figure.
“No,” said Semyon.
She gave a start at the sound of his unfamiliar voice and regarded him with wide, wary eyes that he thought were green.
“Where did you come from?”
He nodded in the direction of the ballroom, nonplussed by the directness of her question. “I was dancing—it is quite warm—”
She seemed uninterested in his stammered explanation. “How long have you been standing there?”
“Not very long. I am sorry if I startled you, Miss—?” he paused, hoping she would tell him her last name. Her face seemed faintly familiar, but then he had been staring at her hungrily from the first second she’d opened the curtain.
“Miss Harrow.” She seemed to take his respectful address for granted at first, then gave her head an infinitesimal shake as if she’d had second thoughts about that. It occurred to him that even if she was now a servant, she had not been born into that class. “Or if you like, just Angelica. That will do,” she said in a composed voice.
“As you wish.” Knowing her first name, another man might have attempted further liberties with her, but Semyon remained respectful—and suddenly very curious. Only a well-trusted maidservant would be given the task of seeing to expensive cloaks and furs at a grand ball, but there was nothing servile about her.
Her pride and breeding showed in the way she held herself. Not haughty but confident. And so beautiful that she would outshine all other women present tonight. She belonged on the dance floor in the arms of one adoring partner after another, not behind a curtain at the end of a hall. Semyon wondered how on earth he might speak to her where there was no chance of interruption by a returning footman or anyone else.
Not now, evidently…she was looking at him in a way that did not invite him to talk to her. He felt unnerved by the steadiness of her regard.
“Ah yes—my coat. Here you are.” He held out his coat. “As I said, it is rather warm in the ballroom.”
She came closer and inclined her head in a gracious nod that effectively dismissed him as she took it from his hands, quite careful that there was no inadvertent contact. No doubt she was accustomed to wandering men propositioning her at parties just like this one or angling to touch her in some way and she probably hated it. He glanced in to the room as she went back in, noticing with chagrin that there were no other men’s garments in sober black to be seen.
Everything else was embroidered, sequinned, furred, and patterned—all women’s things. She must think him a fool for having come here at all.
He managed a smile and made the briefest of bows, turning around to go back until he heard her soft voice.
“Sir—”
“Yes?”
“I do not know your name.” Her lips pressed tightly together as if she was trying not to laugh. “And if other men take it into their heads to do what you have done, then I might mix up your coat with someone else’s.” She reached for a small pencil and a piece of paper, placing it on a book for a hard surface to write upon and looking at him expectantly.
Semyon nodded, as if the matter was of grave importance. “I understand. If you like, I’ll take it to wherever it is supposed to be—”
She shook her head and gave him a small smile. “No, that is not necessary. But I would like to know your name.”
“Semyon Taruskin,” he said. “At your service.”
She wrote it down as if she knew how to spell it—or, indeed, knew him. Again that faint feeling of familiarity nagged at him, but he just could not place her.
With a swift gesture, she tucked the piece of paper in the pocket of his coat. “Enjoy the ball, sir,” she said matter-of-factly, essentially dismissing him.
“I shall. And I expect my coat will not mind keeping company with so much feminine frippery.”
She nodded, acknowledging his jest with only a nod.
He found himself envying the damned coat for the way she was holding it. Not too tightly. Absently stroking it with just a fingertip while she looked steadily into his face.
Her eyes were green, a springtime shade, but they held shadows. Of fear? Sadness? He could not begin to tell. A feeling of unreality stole over him, as if he had been spirited into this out-of-the-way chamber and not walked there on his own two feet, simply because he was following a footman going about an ordinary duty.
Of course, it was not by his own will that he had come here tonight at all, but his older brother Marko had dropped too many hints to ignore. Kyril, the oldest of the three Taruskins, would have insisted: the wolf-blooded Pack of St. James had to keep up public appearances while they handled other, private matters for the king—matters that required an equal measure of discretion and viciousness.
Semyon, the not very dutiful youngest of the three Taruskins, had given in, not knowing he would have to dodge the unwanted attentions of a romantic girl, or that his effort to do so would cause him to wander down a hall at random and find a veritable goddess behind a golden curtain.
A goddess who seemed to be losing patience with him at the moment.
“Thank you, Miss Harrow.”
She lifted a very elegantly arched brow.
“Angelica, I mean.” He turned away from her with an effort and strode back through the hallway, toward the distant music of a quadrille.
It was an hour later when he returned, as soon as he thought it was not too obvious an attempt to talk to her again.
He had glanced about for Jack, hoping the footman would not interrupt him with Angelica, and spotted him under the stairs, sipping from a flat brown bottle with Kittredge. No doubt it was or had been filled with whiskey. They were red in the face and laughing together.
The ball was in full swing, nearly a riot by any estimation. Puffed-up bucks were down to their waistcoats and shirts, essaying leaps and other embarrassing steps to ever-louder music, while the women looked on from behind fluttering fans. The crush of guests on the side was close to unbearable and the stench of too many people in too small a place revolted him.
No one would notice his departure and he wasn’t leaving, really. If anyone saw him leave the floor where he’d taken an obligatory turn or two with the better dancers, they would assume he was swilling punch somewhere or vomiting СКАЧАТЬ