The knuckles on the maid's hand whitened around the serving bowl, but she calmly continued around the table.
Georgina had never noticed the reactions of servants to dinner-table conversation before. She had scarcely noticed them at all, but her empathy was immediate. She wouldn't have been so controlled as to walk away with a soup tureen after a comment like that. Tiny shredded noodles would be dangling from her dinner partner's nose had she been that maid.
"It's the Jews that are the troublemakers. They keep driving up their prices as if they're better than anybody else. They scrape and cheat and make damned awful profits, then turn around and buy up everything they can get their hands on. If we're not careful, they'll be buying the town right out from under us. There ought to be laws against foreigners owning land."
Georgina pushed her noodles around in the bowl. "I thought that's why our ancestors came to this country, because they couldn't buy land in their own countries. They were immigrants escaping religious persecution, just like the Jews and the Irish."
"Georgina." There was a warning in Peter's voice as he passed the rolls.
She glanced over at her parents to see how far she could push the subject without being read a lecture later. Her mother was nervously twisting her napkin into knots and staring at her soup as if it would explode in her face at any minute. Her father was engrossed in some discussion with the mayor and heard nothing.
With curiosity she glanced at Daniel to see if he had heard. He wasn't looking in the least bit pleased about something, but she had the feeling it wasn't her. He was frowning at the ceiling in that absentminded way he had, and she could see the bespectacled journalist behind the facade of the elegant stranger.
With deliberate daring she smiled innocently at Peter. "Why, your father is Irish, darling. Should we ban him from owning land?"
"My grandfather was Irish. My father lived here all his life. Now find another topic, Georgina." Peter turned his back on her and asked the woman beside him if she had attended the theological lecture the previous evening.
Georgina waited for the woman's polite response before speaking again. "I'm thinking of joining the Ladies' Society after we're married, Peter. It's all very well for them to bring in religious and scientific speakers, but I think it's time we broadened our horizons. I think we ought to hear what Susan Anthony has to say, for instance."
Her words fell into a sudden vacuum. Heads turned to stare. Georgina calmly buttered her roll. A man on the other end of the table immediately began a diatribe on women not having the intelligence to make the important decisions required in a voting booth. Georgina contemplated her roll with a little more interest.
Peter grabbed her wrist and removed the weapon. "Don't you dare," he hissed. "Remember you're in someone else's home."
Georgina stared at his large hand on her small wrist. "Yes, of course, you're quite right," she murmured apologetically. When he released her wrist, she raised it to her forehead with a small moan. "Oh, my. I don't feel well. I must have overtaxed my poor brain. Oh, please, help me."
And she fell into a limp heap against her chair back.
Georgina heard Peter cursing under his breath as he lifted her from the chair. She heard her mother give a squeak that meant she would have a spell to keep everyone on that side of the table occupied. She heard exclamations of excitement from other members of the party. And she heard Daniel's uproarious laughter.
It was all she could do to keep from laughing with him. There were cries for a physician and murmurs about brain fever and knowing tsk-tsks about too much education for a woman as Peter carried her into the parlor. She was stifling chuckles, and she knew full well that Peter wasn't fooled. He was furious. Only Daniel seemed to understand the statement she had made.
It had been a childish thing to do, but she felt good about it. Once deposited on the sofa, Georgina sat up and looked around with the same eager brightness she usually displayed. Looking at the crowd of people who had followed her in, she asked blithely, "Oh, my, is dinner over? I don't remember a thing!"
Her father had already bundled her mother into the arms of a servant and was shoving his way through the crowd. "Peter, get her into the carriage. I'll take her home."
Georgina pulled her arm out of Peter's hands and smiled. "I'm not ready to go yet, Papa."
"You've caused enough disruption for one evening, and it's time to leave, young lady." George gave Peter a meaningful look.
A tall man parted the crowd on the arm of Loyolla Banks. "I daresay the young lady is just hungry. Back home, we'd take her into the kitchen and make sure she ate a good meal. A mite of a thing like her needs lots of nourishment."
Georgina glared up into the laughing eyes of Daniel Martin. He was implying that she was too small. She wanted to tell him that most men didn't find her small, but then, most men thought she didn't have a brain in her head either. So much for the opinions of others.
"Come along, Georgina." Loyolla took the situation out of the hands of the men. "Dinner is getting cold. George, you had better take Dolly home. I'm sure Peter will be able to look after your daughter for the rest of the evening. You know how girls are. They bounce right back."
The rest of the evening went comparatively mildly after that. Georgina instigated a discussion on freedom of the press after dinner that escalated into a screaming fracas, but Daniel amused himself with a stereoscope he'd found on a parlor table and didn't join in. At some point, Peter quietly confronted Daniel and demanded a retraction of the newspaper article, but Daniel merely smiled indulgently and told him that the truth never hurt anybody, especially in this town.
When Georgina attempted to intervene, Peter told her she was to have nothing further to do with "that man," and steered her away.
It was in that moment that Georgina knew what she was going to do. While Daniel vaguely retreated to some idle conversation and Peter manhandled her toward the door, Georgina discovered the courage that she had been lacking.
She had no sympathy whatsoever for the victims of her plot. If men didn't care what she thought, she could return the favor—with a vengeance.
Chapter 11
"Have you discovered who ABC is yet?" Georgina whispered as she and her hostess recovered her evening wrap.
"Mulloney," Loyolla whispered back, finding the taffeta pelerine and placing it on Georgina's shoulders. "You should have asked Peter. He could have told you."
Fury was an ugly emotion, Georgina decided as she smiled graciously, adjusted her wrap, and replied with calm, "That would have ruined the surprise. Thank you so much, Mrs. Banks. I had a wonderful evening."
This last was said in the presence of her host and Peter as they waited at the door. She didn't even look to see if Daniel noticed she was leaving. He had been as insufferable as every male in here all night, and she no longer cared what he thought. She had hoped he would set this company on its ears and force them to open their minds, but he had done nothing but evade argument all evening. She had hoped he would stand by her side and support her when she attempted to voice her views, but he had laughed at her instead. She didn't know the man who had appeared tonight under the guise of newspaper editor, and she didn't want to know him.
Georgina let Peter take her elbow and steer her into the humid night. There was a rumble of thunder in the distance and a flash of heat lightning on the horizon. Her father had sent the carriage back for them, and Peter assisted her into the covered interior, climbing up behind her with athletic ease. Peter was a wealthy, handsome man. He would have no trouble finding another wife.
He certainly wouldn't want her as one when she got through with him.
Artemis Mulloney owned ABC Rentals, Inc. Artemis Mulloney had hired a thug like Egan to terrify his tenants into paying. Mulloney was responsible for the squalor and misery his tenants lived in. And Mulloney told his eldest son everything.
It was more than Georgina could stomach. This whole evening had showed her that she didn't belong in this society any longer. She had thought Peter the best to be had, but now that wasn't good enough. She had thought her father a reasonable and kind man, but his actions of late had proved her wrong. She was obviously no judge of character, but she finally knew what she wanted and what she didn't want. She wanted to help those people in those tiny houses, and she didn't want to marry Peter Mulloney. And she didn't want to live under her father's thumb any longer.
Peter's smooth baritone broke the oppressive silence. "Your father is right. I think we need to move the date of our wedding to the first of the month. We can take a long honeymoon and learn to know each other better without the constraints of our families around us."
She wondered if Peter would kiss her if she agreed. Now that she had decided to be rid of him, she was curious about what she would miss. She didn't have much experience at kissing, just a few furtive attempts by slightly inebriated young men at parties. She had fantasized for years about how Peter's kiss would feel. But there had only been an occasional peck on the lips to feed her fantasy these past weeks since her return. She wanted more.
"Whatever you think best," she replied meekly, knowing the darkness would hid her lie. She was beginning to think she'd lied to Daniel when she'd told him she couldn't lie.
"Georgina..." Hesitantly, Peter reached for her gloved hand. "I don't want you to be unhappy. Is there something I can do or change?"
He could disown his father, pay his workers better, give them shorter hours, and stools to sit on. He could fire Egan and repair those rental houses. There were probably innumerable corrections he could make to the mill and the gas plant and who knows what other places his family owned. But that wasn't what he was asking.
"I don't suppose you could disown your father?" she asked, just as a sap to her conscience, to say she had tried to communicate her problem.
Peter chuckled and lifted her chin with his fingers. "He's not that bad. And we'll have a house of our own. You never asked about that, Georgie. Do you want to see it?"
Before she could reply, he placed his lips against hers.
It was an interesting experience. He'd been smoking a cigar and drinking brandy, she decided. She could taste the flavors on his mouth as he pried at her lips with his. His tongue came out to taste the seam of her mouth, and she gasped slightly at the sensation. It seemed an incredibly vulgar thing to do, but she knew Peter was far from being vulgar. She allowed it briefly before pulling away. So that was what it was liked to be kissed.
It hadn't been unpleasant. She had hoped for more and so felt slightly disappointed, but slight disappointments were as nothing anymore. She had all she could do to deal with the major disappointments she had run into lately.
Peter was quiet as the carriage rolled up the drive. He continued to hold her hand, but there was no further demand for attention. Perhaps he was satisfied that she was in his control now. Men had that attitude, she'd noticed. She wore his ring. Soon, if he had his way, she would live in his house and have his babies. That somehow made her his possession in the minds of men. She would want for nothing.
It was a much better life than most. She would be a fool to throw it in his face.
Georgina made a gracious farewell in the foyer and left Peter to join her father in the study, no doubt to discuss the impending nuptials and whatever marriage contract they had decided on. She knew her grandmother had left her part owner of Hanover Industries. Her father had the controlling shares, so she was owner in name only, but Peter might be intent on changing that. It didn't matter any longer.
She went upstairs and quietly began packing her bags.
It was difficult to decide what she needed to take with her to her new life. She wasn't at all certain that her family would allow her back to remove anything she had left behind. They would be so furious that they might never speak to her again. That was her intent, but the notion was painful, nonetheless.
She consoled herself with the knowledge that it was for everyone's good. Peter deserved a supportive wife, and she would never be one. Her mother didn't need a daughter who would constantly disrupt her life and make her ill. Her father wanted a dutiful daughter and she wasn't. And Daniel... Well, what she was about to do wouldn't really hurt Daniel at all. Men only increased in reputation by this sort of nonsense.