Read Sin and Sensibility Online
Authors: Suzanne Enoch
“And lovelier than Aphrodite,” Thomas Chesterfield added as they passed each other again.
So that was it. He was merely comparing her to goddesses in general, and not to naked ones in particular.
Though technically Venus and Aphrodite were one and the same, depending on whether one followed Roman or Greek mythology.
Eleanor shook herself. She was supposed to be flattered, for heaven’s sake. A handsome young gentleman happened to be complimenting her, and all she could think of was whether he’d confused his mythology or not.
Apparently some of Deverill’s jaded view of life was rubbing off on her.
The rows of dancers crossed again, and she found herself taking Charlemagne’s hand. “Who’s your partner?”
she asked as they turned.
“Lady Charlotte Evans,” he returned. “Who’s yours?”
“Chesterfield.”
“Blockhead,” he replied, and was gone again.
Well, that was nice. She’d only agreed to dance with Thomas, not marry him. And Chesterfield had a reputation as being an upstanding young man with a future in the House of Commons, if he so chose. It wasn’t his fault if he was a little…bland. Hm. Everyone was bland when compared with the Marquis of Deverill.
She was still ruminating on why Thomas Chesterfield wasn’t more enticing to her when the dance ended and he
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led her to the refreshment table. “Thank you, Mr.
Chesterfield.”
“It was splendid, dancing with you,” he said, his words stumbling over one another a little. “I was wondering whether…if, that is…you would care to join me on a picnic.” He flushed. “I have a great many prospects, you know.”
“Yes, I’ve heard,” she answered. “I—”
“I believe everyone has prospects of some sort or other,”
Deverill’s low drawl came from behind them. “Perhaps you should have claimed aspirations.”
The fair skin of Thomas’s face reddened. “But I do have pros—”
“Keep them to yourself,” the marquis interrupted. “I have a waltz.”
With that he took Eleanor’s hand and wrapped her fingers around his arm. Behind them Chesterfield stammered for a moment, then wandered toward the gaming room with its well-stocked supply of liquor.
“Was that really necessary?” she asked. “He only asked to take me on a picnic.”
Valentine slowed. “Was he one of your potential husbands?” he asked, lifting an eyebrow. “My apologies. Go back and finish your conversation. You must be desperate to know what his prospects are.”
“You’ve made him so nervous now that I’ll never have a decent conversation with him.”
His lips curved. “I doubt you could have before.”
The waltz began, and he faced her, slowly sliding his hand around her waist and tugging her a little closer than propriety dictated. Her heart hammered, both with excitement and anxiety—she needed to tell him her plan tonight, if she wished to accomplish it. At the same time, Sin and Sensibility / 199
she wondered what it was that made him so much more appealing to her than other men, even more decent, proper gentlemen.
“Deverill, give me a compliment,” she said, gazing into his lazy green eyes.
“A compliment?”
“Something you would say to impress a young lady.”
His smile deepened. “Most of what I would say wouldn’t be appropriate in public.”
“Give it a try, will you?”
He sighed. “Very well.” They waltzed in silence for a moment. “A compliment. Hm.”
“Oh, stop it,” she protested, blushing. “Surely you can think of something.”
She waited for the inevitable comment about her eyes, or her hair, or her resemblance to one or other of the goddesses of love. Instead, Deverill’s gaze became surprisingly serious.
“You are the most interesting female I’ve ever encountered,” he said.
And that was probably the best compliment she’d ever received. “Considering the number of females with whom you are acquainted,” she said, smiling so he wouldn’t notice her stammering and see that he’d nearly left her speechless, “I’ll merely say thank you.”
“You might also tell me which adventure you’ve decided on,” he said in a lower voice, tugging her a breath closer.
Goodness
. If Melbourne and Deverill hadn’t been friends, the marquis would be in a great deal of trouble with the Griffin brethren right now. And so would she be. She blinked. Being in his presence had become rather…distracting. Again.
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“Yes. I’ve been trying to think about what I would most like to do, and I realized that it’s something I used to do, but can’t any longer.”
His gaze studied her face. “Enlighten me, then.”
She drew a breath. This was the embarrassing part. “I want to…I want to go swimming.”
“Swimming.”
“Yes.”
“That’s easy enough. I have to admit, though, I’m a bit disapp—”
“It’s what I want to do,” she cut him off.
Disappointed
.
She’d disappointed him. And that bothered her to a surprising degree. “I’m sorry if it’s not something…spectacular, but it’s important to me.”
“Why?” he asked.
Eleanor tightened her lips. At least he wasn’t making fun yet. “I…when we were children, we used to go swimming in the lake at Melbourne Park nearly every day during the summer. Half the time we were completely naked. No one cared—we were children, and it was fun.
I want to feel that way again, Valentine.”
“‘Naked’,” he repeated.
He
would
seize on that word. “That’s not the point. I hardly think I would do that again. But I would like to go swimming. In a pond.” She drew a breath. “At midnight. In Hyde Park.”
Slowly he closed his mouth, and she thought he might even have paled a little. In the same moment, as they twirled about the room, the distance between them abruptly became proper again, though she hadn’t been aware of him pulling away.
“Is something wrong?” she asked in a whisper, feeling heat flood her cheeks. She wasn’t being ridiculous. If that Sin and Sensibility / 201
was how he saw it, she wouldn’t be able to hold another conversation with him without embarrassment.
“It’s more spectacular than you might think, Eleanor,”
he finally murmured. “That’s a very public place.”
“It will be completely dark.”
“You’re determined, then?”
“I am. I would like you to…assist me as my lookout, but if you don’t want to be involved, I’ll find another way. It’s not—”
“When?” he interrupted.
“You’ll help me?”
“I’ll help you.”
Abruptly she was more nervous than before she’d told him anything. Now it was real. Now she had to go through with it, or both she and Valentine would know she was a coward, and that this rebellion of hers was nothing but a sham, a plea for attention or some other pitiful thing.
“I looked at the almanac,” she said, her voice beginning to shake despite her best efforts to remain as calm and cool as he seemed to be. “Tomorrow night is supposed to be both good, mild weather, and a new moon.”
He grinned, humor touching his eyes. “You’ve done your research. That’s quite admirable.”
“I know how much trouble this could be for me.”
“It won’t be. I won’t allow it to be.”
The waltz ended, but he wrapped her fingers around his dark sleeve. “Can you get out of Griffin House without anyone knowing?”
“I’ll manage it.”
With a glance in Melbourne’s direction, he nodded.
“My coach will be waiting for you around the corner from Griffin House at midnight. If you change your mind, send me a note.”
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“I won’t change my mind,” she whispered, forcing a smile as Barbara joined them again.
Deverill released her to her friends, and moved away to observe from a distance.
Jesus
. He’d expected something wild, something closer to the adventures he’d suggested previously. But a swim—he would never have suspected that. On the surface, it sounded simple and naive and childlike, and that was probably why it bothered him so much. Of all the things Eleanor Griffin might have chosen, she wanted a simple, private gesture just for herself.
She meant this rebellion. It wasn’t a boast, something with which to antagonize her brothers or to make her the center of Society’s attention. Hell, she had that regardless of what she might be wearing or with whom she might be dancing.
No, this was something she meant, very seriously. And if he had any sense of self-preservation, he would march straight over to Melbourne and tell him everything that had transpired, starting with Belmont’s and ending with their conversation this evening. But he knew that he wouldn’t do any such thing.
Across the room Lydia, Lady Franch, sent him a glare.
She was clinging to the arm of Earl Pansden, so apparently she hadn’t spent more than a night or two with only her husband for company. What had made her decide to seek out a lover after her marriage? Had the decision been a difficult one? She was jaded and cynical and held a grudge, but that was now. She’d been married for six years, and they’d been lovers on and off for nearly two.
He was fairly certain he hadn’t been her first, but the whys and wherefores had never occurred to him before.
Until the past week or two, the mathematical equation had been simple: He wanted something, or someone, and Sin and Sensibility / 203
he either achieved his goal or he didn’t. Now, though, he’d become acquainted with Eleanor Griffin—not the girl he’d always thought of her as, but the young woman she’d become. And the equation didn’t seem quite so straightforward any longer.
Eleanor wanted things that weren’t tangible, that couldn’t be counted among conquests or wealth or property. Everything he’d seen, everything he’d learned from his father and from observing the parade of females in and out of the old marquis’s bedchamber—and his own—had taught him that women were scheming manip-ulators, and that they thought of nothing but their own security, freeing him to think of nothing but his own pleasure.
“You feeling well, Deverill?” Shay asked, relinquishing his dance partner and freeing a glass of port from a footman. “You look as though you’ve inhaled a bug.”
“I’m fine,” Valentine said absently, watching as Eleanor’s next partner joined her circle of friends by the refreshment table. “Just contemplating.”
“Gads. I suppose Nell’s to blame for that. Any idea what she’s plotting now?”
Forcing a chuckle, Valentine claimed his own glass of port. “Do you think she would trust me with anything?
I’m the incarnation of sin, if you’ll recall. I give advice; I don’t listen to confessions.”
“Yes, well, I shudder to think what advice you’d give her. She’s not talking to us at all, except for those pronouncements that we can’t tell her what to do.”
Looking down at the ruby liquid in his glass, Valentine felt the pricking of his conscience, or rather of his strong sense of self-preservation. Sternly he locked it back up again. “How often do you tell her that, anyway?” he asked.
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“Tell her what?”
“What to do, or what not to do.”
Charlemagne frowned. “What kind of question is that?
We’re her brothers. We all tell each other what to do or what not to do.”
“So why is
she
rebelling, and not Zachary, for example?”
“I’m not sure I like this line of questioning, Deverill.
Melbourne asked you to keep her out of trouble. The rest of it really isn’t any of your affair.”
Male aggression was something Valentine very much understood, but even though inside he was preparing for battle, he offered Shay a loose shrug and a grin. “I just thought if I knew what she was rebelling against, I might have a clue about her intentions here. Which means I might not have to keep chasing her all over the damned town.”
His shoulders visibly lowering, Shay took another sip of port. “If I had the least idea what she thought she was doing, I could probably head this off myself. But I don’t.
I mean, what good brother wouldn’t be concerned over who his sister spoke with or danced with? We don’t want some bloody fortune hunter marrying her and then bleeding the lot of us dry, now do we?”
“So that’s your concern? Her association with unacceptable men who might inconvenience you?”
“I wouldn’t word it that way,” Shay grumbled, “but I suppose so.”
Valentine wondered whether Melbourne thought the same thing, and whether the brothers had any idea at all that this had very little to do with men and with whom she was allowed to dance. No wonder they’d been so baffled by her rebellion. And no wonder the duke had had to call in reinforcements, even in the sorry person of himself. If Eleanor didn’t find what she was looking for soon, the
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Griffins were going to be in a great deal of trouble. And he’d be right at the forefront.
“Uh-oh,” Shay muttered. “Nell’s looking this way. I’d best go elsewhere; don’t want her to think we’re conspir-ing or something.”
“No, we wouldn’t want that.”
As Charlemagne strolled away, Valentine turned his full attention once again to Eleanor, now dancing a quadrille with Thomas Atherton. She smiled as she turned, obviously enjoying herself. Atherton was quite the charmer, but Valentine doubted she’d be going on any solitary drives with him. Not after Stephen Cobb-Harding.
He wasn’t doing any more dancing tonight himself, so with a sigh that he refused to acknowledge might be regret, he left the dance floor and headed downstairs to summon his coach. It looked as though he had twenty-four hours to find a pond in Hyde Park where a young lady might go swimming without being discovered.
E
leanor slid between the covers of her soft, warm bed and closed her eyes while Helen pinched out the candle on her bedside table and left the room, shutting the door quietly behind her. Then Eleanor counted to one hundred to make certain the maid would be well downstairs and nowhere close to the bedchamber door.
“One hundred,” she whispered, and flung off the sheets.
Hurrying to her wardrobe, she selected a simple, plain gown and pulled it on over her night shift, then padded in her bare feet to the dressing table to comb her hair into a long, wavy tail that she coiled up and pinned to the top of her head.