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Three Weeks With Lady X(7)

By:Eloisa James




       

"Tenor?" He looked as if he was about to start laughing.

His expression sent pure irritation up India's spine. "Given your  circumstances," she said, "your house must be not only charming, but  also impeccably refined."

He looked as if he was about to say something derisive, so she added,  "Another way to put this, Mr. Dautry, is that every detail must speak to  your father's family, and not to your mother's."

At that, his eyes narrowed in a scary way, and Adelaide put down her  teacup with a sharp click. "India, dear, there are ways to communicate  one's opinion, and I would beg you to be more respectful." She rose,  wrapping her lacy shawl around her shoulders. "Mr. Dautry, would you be  kind enough to bring me to your butler so that I might powder my nose?"

India knew that by leaving the room, Adelaide hoped to bring an improper  subject to a close. But Dautry returned from escorting Adelaide, walked  straight back to the sofa, sat down, and said, "I gather you are trying  to inform me that Miss Rainsford is above my touch?" His tone still  held a hint of mockery, and the last of the simmering heat India had  felt on first meeting him dissipated. This man was breathtakingly  arrogant and quite dislikable.

"I think we can both agree on that point, Mr. Dautry." Since he was  setting her teeth on edge, she gave him a deliberately patronizing  smile. "You have made an excellent choice, but your social deficit means  that you face obstacles in winning the lady's hand."

He folded his arms across a chest that was far broader than it should  have been. He had to be fifteen stone, and all of it muscle. "I'd be  grateful to know what considerations you think make the lady such an  excellent choice," he said. "I suspect that our reasons differ."

Dautry couldn't have made it more obvious that he was prodding to see whether she was too missish to speak the truth aloud.

"It scarcely matters, does it?" India asked, stalling.

For his part, Thorn was reconsidering his conviction that ladies were  tedious. This one, in particular, seemed to have a fiery temper that  matched Vander's. And she became even more beautiful as her color  heightened and her eyes sparked with irritation.

"One might say I fell in love at first sight," he said, quite  untruthfully. "I met Miss Rainsford in Kensington Gardens and was so  enchanted that I cannot imagine marrying another. But that doesn't  explain why you consider her such an excellent choice."

She raised an eyebrow, revealing patent disbelief in his declaration of  love. But he had managed to goad her into an answer. "Your birth  presents an obvious and unavoidable challenge: you cannot marry just  anyone. At the same time, your father is a duke, which means that your  children-if you marry well-will be accepted in society by all but the  most rigid sticklers."

"Good to know," Thorn said dryly.

"I fail to see why you are feigning naïveté," she snapped.

"So Miss Rainsford is of birth sufficient to paper over my ‘deficit,' as  you termed it? I generally think of it as bastardy, but I know there  are some ladies who do not care for the word."

Lady Xenobia didn't even flinch. She was dressed in a white, fluttering  thing that made her look impossibly young, but it was becoming  increasingly clear that, whatever her age, she had a steel backbone. No  wonder Eleanor liked her.

"As I'm sure you're aware, Lady Rainsford served as a lady-in-waiting to  the queen. Yet her daughter is not pretentious in the least. Hopefully,  she will not mind your disheveled appearance . . . much."

"I gather it does bother you," Thorn said, letting his amusement show.

The lady ignored that. "Insofar as Lord Rainsford is not well off, and  you have no need for a large dowry, this is an ideal match. I suggest we  meet in two days to assess the condition of Starberry Court. I would  estimate that the work will take from one to two months, depending on  the state of the plumbing."

She was clearly in a temper. Her eyes had turned squinty, which  paradoxically just made her more attractive. It was hard not to wonder  what all that passion would be like in bed.

When Lady Xenobia had first entered the study, Thorn had noticed her  figure and her mouth-no man alive would ignore that mouth. But he had  been thinking of this as a cursory interview with a faux-titled  charlatan who would demand a great deal of money for beautifying  Starberry Court.

Now, though, he had a strong suspicion that if he checked Debrett's, "Xenobia" would appear, likely engraved in gold.

His indifference had evaporated. Something about those furious blue eyes  was giving him an erection. A very unwelcome erection, since he hadn't  bothered to put on a coat when the ladies were announced.                       
       
           



       

Damn it, there was a reason men wore coats, and his reason was getting  bigger every moment. Thank God they were sitting down. He had to get his  body under control before Lady Adelaide returned and he was forced to  stand.

"That was a very enlightening assessment, Lady Xenobia. And I appreciate your approval of my chosen spouse."

Her eyes flashed again, and Thorn felt an answering throb in his cock.  Damn it. "But inasmuch as you are unable to refurbish my house in a  fortnight," he continued, "I am forced to reconsider."

"No."

He raised an eyebrow. "I beg your pardon?"

"I said no."

"You seem not to understand me. I'm sure I can find someone to smarten  up the house within the next two weeks. I'm grateful for your advice,  and I will certainly instruct whomever I engage to remove any trace of  debauchery they may find." He couldn't stop himself. "Swinging chairs or  a mirrored ceiling, for example."

He had the keen sense that most young ladies would-at the very  least-look curious at this glimpse into the further reaches of erotic  customs. Not Lady Xenobia. Her eyes flared again, though she took a deep  breath, clearly making a valiant effort to overcome her temper.

"No."

"No?" No one contradicted him. Certainly not a woman.

That lush mouth of hers pressed into a flat line and she rose. Hell.  That meant he too had to stand. His prick was still trying to burst his  breeches, even though he was dueling with a she-devil.

"I am withdrawing my request that you refurbish my house," he said.  "Starberry Court merely needs to be made habitable; it needn't be  transformed into a residence fit for a duke."

Luckily, she was busy glaring at his face. "You are wrong, Mr. Dautry.  If your house is not impeccably furnished and adequately staffed, Lady  Rainsford will not agree to this betrothal, no matter how much money you  have. What's more, the house is not your only challenge. It will take  you at least a month to acquire a wardrobe that will persuade Laetitia's  mother you are a gentleman."

Her eyes swept over him, from hair to boots.

Shit.

But she didn't appear to notice anything untoward-other than his lack of  a cravat and coat. "You should think of Starberry Court as a background  that will disguise who you really are," she continued, seeming to  discard the idea that he could conceal his true status with a new coat.

A man would probably spend a lifetime teasing her just to get that  heated look in response. Thorn gave her a smile that-he had been  reliably told-made women weak at the knees, and therefore was  practically guaranteed to make her even more furious. "Do tell me, Lady  Xenobia: who exactly am I?"

Her eyes glittered. "Are you attempting to intimidate me?"

"Absolutely not. I'm merely attempting to clarify your thoughts on the  subject. Because since I haven't managed to sack you-not that I ever  officially hired you-I might as well know my new employee's opinion of  me."

She looked at him with about as much warmth as you might expect from a  wild boar. That was the way it was in the peerage: they were all  man-eating carnivores, to his mind. Except his father. And Eleanor. And a  few others.

"First, Eleanor hired me, not you. And second, you are the bastard son  of a duke," Lady Xenobia said bluntly, showing that she had balls, to  put it equally bluntly.

"Do you realize that you are the first lady who has ever said the word ‘bastard' aloud to me?"

She looked him straight in the eye. "The word has more than one  meaning." It seemed she applied at least two of those meanings to him.

Thorn grinned. "Are all daughters of dukes like you?"

"I'm the daughter of a marquess, not a duke. And precisely what are you implying?"

He saw over her shoulder that Iffley was helping Lady Adelaide with her  pelisse. "You are the first person I have employed who refused to be let  go."

"I am extremely fond of your stepmother. I promised her that I would  help you, and I shall. Your parents are rightfully concerned about your  prospects for a respectable marriage."