Evelyn Richardson

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Authors: The Scandalous Widow

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THE SCANDALOUS WIDOW

 

Evelyn Richardson

 

Chapter One

 

“Naturally, I cannot help but find it mortifying in the extreme. Surely there is something that can be done to stop it. Do you not agree, Charlmont…? Charlmont…? Lucian!”

The sound of his own name jerked Lucian rudely back to the present in a way that could not be ignored. He had, for the moment, been so wrapped up in calculating his horse’s chances of winning at Newmarket that he had completely succeeded in wiping all consciousness of his present situation from his mind. What madness had possessed him to make him agree to appear at Almack’s this evening?

He loathed the place, and the company—dull, predictable, and smug. And he had assiduously avoided it since his salad days, when he could have been forgiven for not knowing any better. He glanced hopefully around the room, but the dowagers putting their turbaned heads together sharing scandal broth and the half-eager, half-shy glances of young misses in their first Season only served to confirm his worst fears. This was not a dream. He truly was at Almack’s. It had not changed the slightest bit. And he was waltzing. His eyes focused at last on the full red lips and delectable bosom of his partner, also his latest mistress, the thoroughly delicious and very lovely Lady Granville.

“I beg your pardon. I was not attending.”

“I am well aware of that, you dreadful man.” His partner’s lips pursed in an enticing moue of frustration.

He was tempted to kiss those lips at that very moment. They were certainly far better suited to kissing than to conversation; besides which, he was beginning to have the very distinct and thoroughly unpleasant sensation that those lips were about to ask him to do something that he did not wish to do.

“And what, pray tell, was preoccupying you to such a degree?

The playful note in his partner’s voice was sharpened by just a hint of irritation.

“I was wondering what in God’s name I was doing here and thinking that nothing but the presence of the most beautiful, the most enchanting woman in all of London could have drawn me here, as it has.” He grinned as he watched the spark of annoyance in her blue eyes melt into gratified amusement.

“It was you who suggested we meet at Almack’s.”

“Did I? I must have been crazed…or thoroughly foxed.”

“Well, certainly the latter. But you had such excellent reasons for doing so that I was convinced you knew what you were about. You assured me that it was bound to insure the success of my reputation in the
ton
if I were to appear here, especially in your company.”

Lucian glanced quickly around. “The last is debatable. Certainly my company has got you noticed, for it is a well-known fact that nothing—well, almost nothing, would induce me to visit an establishment where the entertainment is so utterly tame. On the other hand, it is precisely because I seek out other, er, less tame amusements that make the success of this foray somewhat dubious. When people see you here with me they will wonder what sort of woman you are, aside from one who is extremely beautiful and turned out in the highest kick of fashion. Why, at this very moment I see Mrs. Drummond Burrell glowering at us. Come, my dear, let us beard the dragon in its lair.”

And taking his partner’s arm in his, Lucian led her through the crowd with the confidence of a man who truly did not give a damn what was going on behind the vacant stares of the people who parted to make way for them. “But, forgive me, I quite forgot. Something was troubling you. What was it you wished to ask me?”

However, there was such a crush of people at Almack’s that evening it was impossible to converse as they made their way across the room, and by the time they had reached Mrs. Drummond Burrell, Lucian’s partner was too bemused by it all to realize how effectively he had forestalled any possibility of her reopening the discussion.

“Well, Charlmont, to what do we owe this dubious pleasure? I had thought you considered us far too respectable to appeal to your rackety taste.” The stately patroness fixed him with a glare that would have reduced lesser men to stammering incoherence.

Lucian smiled sweetly. “I admit that I have been remiss in my attentions, but that should make you all the more delighted to welcome me back to the Marriage Mart—prodigal son sort of thing, you know. In truth, my presence at Almack’s is solely attributable to the fact that I knew Lady Granville would be here and I knew that as someone new to London who has just received a voucher, and someone far too modest to put herself forward, she was in need of encouragement. So here I am.”

“Maria!” Mrs. Drummond Burrell snorted. “She is softhearted to a fault.”

“Lady Sefton may have been responsible for procuring Lady Granville her voucher, but everyone knows that only you can convey the true seal of approval. Surely the wife of Lord Granville, a man so respectable that he chooses the careful administration of his estates over pursuit of a frivolous existence, is worthy of your notice. Until now, Lady Granville has led such a sheltered existence and knows so few people in London that she is in need of a powerful sponsor such as you to offer her guidance in a milieu that can be truly terrifying to the uninitiated.”

“Ah.” Almack’s most cantankerous patroness surveyed the lady in question thoroughly. Truly she made an exquisite picture in her simple yet fashionable frock of British net draped over a blue satin slip. Elegant yet unpretentious and clearly in the best of taste, it was a gown designed to appeal to Mrs. Drummond Burrell’s critical eye. In fact, the patroness became so absorbed in gauging every detail of the supplicant’s appearance that she quite forgot to wonder how it was that the Marquess of Charlmont, who had only recently succeeded to his brother’s title, and had previously shown very little inclination for any of the haunts of good society, was the one responsible for bringing Lady Granville to her attention.

Lucian could not help admiring Lady Granville’s calm endurance of the patroness’s scrutiny, a scrutiny that was thorough to the point of rudeness. In fact, in anybody else it would have been condemned as rudeness. This show of courage in the face of such outright callousness proved beyond a doubt the level of Lady Granville’s determination to win a place for herself among the very highest ranks of the
ton
, no matter what it cost her.

It was this determination, coupled with the lady’s undeniable beauty, that had caught Lucian’s attention and piqued his interest in the first place. Her appearance on the scene had also coincided somewhat fortuitously with developments in his own life.

Lucian had become rather bored with his previous mistress, an opera dancer whose tastes had begun to run to the expensive, bordering on rapacious, and whose demands had crossed the boundary from flattering to incessant. Therefore, he had been casting around rather aimlessly for a replacement when Lavinia, Lady Granville, had suddenly appeared on the scene.

Lucian had first caught sight of her at the opera, where her pale blonde hair and fragile beauty had instantly captured most of the masculine attention, while her magnificent pearls and a gown whose style and décolletage appeared to have come directly from Paris excited the envy of the female contingent. But it was her half-flirtatious, half-defiant air that had intrigued Lucian and made him wish to know more about this latest arrival to the metropolis.

The more he inquired, the more he discovered that very little was known about Lady Granville except that her husband, an obscure gentleman from some northern county, had recently succeeded to his uncle’s estate near Bath, as well as an estate in Somerset and sizable interests in mines and canals.

Those who had met the lady in question had pronounced her charming enough in her own way but had withheld their final approval until more could be discovered about her antecedents. And it was these antecedents, as Lucian soon found out, after he had managed an introduction, that were responsible for the defiant lift of the chin and the determined set of her ladyship’s delicately rounded jaw. Quite simply, there were none. Or, to be more exact, there were none who lent any cachet or credibility to someone who had set her sights on becoming a glittering ornament in the very highest circles of the
ton
.

For the beautiful and elegant Lady Granville was nothing more than a provincial banker’s daughter, an enormously wealthy and powerful banker’s daughter, but a provincial banker’s daughter nevertheless. And though she had certainly captured the attention and admiration of one and all at every local assembly when she had first made her come out, there had been no one there whose interest was worth attracting. None of the neighboring landowners had titles or estates worthy of a woman who was determined to become a diamond of the first water.

Desperate for a wider audience, Lavinia had begged her papa for a Season in London, but Mr. Matthews, banker that he was, could not foresee a large enough return on an investment that would require a considerable outlay of capital. It was only after the forcible representations on the part of Mrs. Matthews that her husband finally agreed that Bath offered a far better ratio of exposure to eligible society in relation to expense than did London or the provinces.

It was in Bath that Lavinia had managed to snare the marginally eligible Hugo Granville, who, if he had neither title nor vast estates, was at least first in line to inherit a considerable amount of both. And with that Lavinia was forced to content herself, for she had discovered that no matter how much eligible gentlemen might admire a beautiful face or indulge in flirtation with a charming young lady, they never could be persuaded to commit themselves to anything more binding than the reservation of a dance at the public balls on Tuesdays and Fridays. Gentlemen were more than happy to feast their eyes on a provincial nobody, but they were not about to ally their families or their futures with one.

While it was true that Hugo Granville’s wife was now welcomed in far more select company than Miss Matthews ever had been, it still did not begin to resemble the future that Lavinia had envisioned for herself. But fate had been kind; not a year after the marriage. Lord Granville had died, struck down in his prime by a putrid fever contracted while riding home in the rain. The donning of mourning clothes, purchased from the most fashionable establishments, seemed a small price to pay for having gained a title and an estate to call her own at last.

But for Lavinia, the estate and the title were only the means to an end. And that end was to take what she considered to be her rightful place in the most select gatherings of the
ton
, a place where her beauty, her taste, and the exquisite manners she had cultivated her entire life would have their proper setting.

However, much to her dismay, she soon found that estates and title were not sufficient to get her what she wanted. She had her box at the opera and invitations to the larger balls, routs, and masquerades, but the rest continued to elude her until Lucian, Marquess of Charlmont, appeared in her box at the opera one evening in the company of one of the
ton’s
most lively young matrons.

Lady Robert Thornhill’s manners might hover on the edge of scandalous, but her birth was impeccable and her position as daughter of Lady Widmore, one of the arbiters of Bath society, and Lord Widmore, owner of most of the land near Bath that did not belong to the Granvilles, assured her of the sort of position in the
ton
that Lavinia so desperately craved.

“My dear Lady Granville, I was not aware that you had arrived in town or I certainly would have called on one of Mama and Papa’s nearest neighbors.”

It was the merest fabrication of course. Lady Robert Thornhill had endured only the briefest of introductions to Lavinia when a visit to her parents had happened to coincide with the new Lord and Lady Granville’s ceremonial calls on the local gentry in the vicinity, and she had never done anything subsequently to acknowledge the acquaintance. But fabrication or not, it was a miracle, and Lavinia knew instantly that the source of this miracle was the tall dark-haired gentleman standing at Lady Robert’s side. There was something about him—Lavinia could not decide whether it was the knowing glint in the deep set gray eyes or the ironic twist of his lips—but something about the man told her that he had observed and understood her predicament completely.

Ever since that moment, doors had begun to open, slowly at first, but steadily enough to reassure Lavinia that she was well and truly on her way to taking her place in the
ton
. She had never asked Lucian why it had amused him to pave her way but had simply taken it as her due, the natural result of being born a beautiful woman, a beautiful woman who knew just what to do to capture and hold a man’s attention.

Pleasing men had never been Lavinia’s problem; bringing them up to scratch had. Men were always eager to pay homage to her lovely face and exquisite figure; however, they were far less eager to ally themselves permanently with someone whose background smacked of trade.

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