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His Contract Bride (Banks Brothers Brides 1)(4)

By:Rose Gordon


"Of course not. He might be besotted, but he does have his pride,  Regina." The mock indignation in her father's tone made her excitement  grow all the more. "For the sake of protecting the man's pride, I shall  only tell you what you need to know. He came by today to request your  hand in marriage. Of course, I gave him my permission. Surely, if you'd  made such an impression on him in one afternoon that he'd come to  request your hand only a week after the ending of his mourning period,  he must surely be taken with you."

Regina nodded mutely, taking in everything her father had just said. The  reason she hadn't seen him at all last Season was because he'd been in  mourning. That also explained why he'd been dressed in solid black and  didn't wish to participate in the games when he'd come to Sloan's.

"You'll still need to honor the two invitations you've accepted for next  week," Aunt Florence said, reminding Regina of her presence.

"Of course," she murmured. She'd attend them or not attend them. She  didn't care. All that mattered was that in two weeks she would be  rescued from enduring another Season by Edward Banks.

"And," her father added. "Once you're married, you'll be expected to  host such events, too. A breakfast would be a fine event to start with,  wouldn't you agree?"

"Of course," she murmured again, barely paying him any mind. She was far  too excited by the recent turn of events. The best part was that unlike  all the other debutantes who'd made their come out with her, she-Regina  Harris, the daughter of a cit in trade-was to have the most coveted  thing of all: a love match.





~Chapter Two~





Two days later

Watson Estate



Edward Banks, Baron Watson, shifted in his seat to avoid the gaze of his  fourteen-year-old brother, John. Which was ridiculous considering they  were in his study, not John's.

"You didn't even bother to go see her while you were in London?" John repeated.

"No. Her father said she wasn't home."

John shook his head. "Edward, I swear you are hopeless."

Frowning, Edward spun the empty snifter on his desk. "I did fund a Season for her," he pointed out before he could stop himself.

"Yes, you did," John conceded. "Though why you did that, I'll never  understand. It's not as if you were there to dance with her or call upon  her."                       
       
           



       

Edward swallowed the lump of raw emotion that had settled in his throat.  "I wanted her to have something to do while I was in mourning."

John nodded and wisely chose to keep his mouth shut.

Of the two, Father's death had been harder on Edward than John. Perhaps  it was because he'd been older and had spent more time with their father  before he'd lost interest in anything but drinking. Or perhaps it was  because Edward had grown up knowing that one day his father's title and  all the responsibility that went along with it would one day be his.  Either way, despite the two not being on the best of terms at his death,  Edward still had moments where he fought to breathe under the crushing  weight of responsibility on him now and wished his father had given him  more advice on matters of importance.

"I suppose I see the sense in that," John said a moment later. "But I  still don't understand why you didn't at least try to meet her while in  London. At least that way, if she's as attractive as Aunt Mildred,  you'll know to double the amount of spirits you order for the wedding  party."

Edward pursed his lips at his brother's remark. Thank the good Lord that  John's latest suspension term from Eton was almost to a close and John  would be returning to school again soon. Otherwise, Edward might  throttle the insolence right out of the boy himself since obviously John  had more than any birching by Mr. Sweeny could knock loose.

"I did meet her once. Last April I went to the girls' school she  attended, and I can tell you, there will be no need to overindulge at  the wedding."

John's eyes widened. "You always did have an incredible amount of luck,"  he said, shaking his head and falling into what Edward knew to be one  of the two most uncomfortable chairs to ever be manufactured. "What of  her personality? Is she a dragon in disguise, or is she as agreeable as  her looks?"

"More so." An image of Regina Harris wearing a blue muslin day dress and  a white bonnet, grinning in his direction, flashed into his mind. Like  John, he hadn't expected her to be so attractive and was pleasantly  surprised when he first saw her. No, there would be no need to  overindulge.

John's boyish laughter filled the room. "She must be attractive, indeed.  I do believe that is the first time I've ever seen you grin so boldly  about something that didn't have to do with acceleration or  procreation." He paused, then frowned. "You're not marrying this woman  just for the purpose of procreating, are you?"

Edward stopped spinning his glass and snatched up the stack of notes  he'd been studying before Trouble―also known as John―had come in to  bother him.

"No." He mindlessly flipped through the pages. The undeniable truth was  the day he'd made the journey to London to speak to her about when their  wedding would take place, the pressing fact that he needed to secure an  heir had been a large part of his motivation to go see her that day. He  might have only been nineteen, but it was up to him to secure an heir  or, heaven have mercy, John would inherit. But once he got there and saw  her... Well, his heir was still important, but how he'd acquire said  heir didn't seem to be the daunting task he'd once thought it might be.

"Then why are you marrying her?" John challenged.

Edward studied his brother. From his light blond hair to his pale blue  eyes, and even the slightly crooked smile on his face, they looked  nearly identical. Their interests, however, were not. Edward enjoyed  logic and science. He liked to take things apart, discover how they  worked then put them back together, or to spend time growing plants and  flowers to see if he could get them to change properties with the next  generation. John could care less about such interests, because as he  claimed, they made for boring conversation.

He was right, of course. To most, Edward was a bit of a bore. Even so,  John had tolerated him fairly well, and though he didn't share in his  boring interests, he never condemned Edward for having such interests.

Odd. His betrothed, Regina Harris, seemed similar to John in that  regard. Clearly she had no real knowledge of science or she wouldn't  have mistakenly categorized a reptile such as a turtle as an amphibian.  But she'd made an effort to stir his interest nonetheless, and perhaps  it was because of that that he knew they'd suit just fine.

John cleared his throat, bringing Edward from his fog.

"Right," Edward clipped, brushing a swath of imaginary dust from his desk. "I think we'll suit."

"You do, do you?" John asked; his brows lifting slightly. "And does she agree?"

Edward dropped his gaze and shook his head. Why was he even having this  conversation with a boy whose voice still cracked mid-sentence-and not  from emotion? His courtship with Regina was none of John's concern. The  fact was the two had been betrothed longer than he could remember. Why  did it matter if he spoke to her about their impending marriage? He'd  tried the day he'd gone to her school in London. He wanted to explain  about his father's recent death and tell her that as soon as he was out  of morning, he'd marry her.                       
       
           



       

"You didn't speak to her that day, did you?"

Edward started and then scowled at his brother. "Of course I did." Just  not about their marriage. He waved his hand through the air. "It's  inconsequential, anyway. The ink on our marriage contract dried before I  even knew what an amoeba was."

"You didn't say that to her, did you?"

"Of course not," Edward said with a chuckle. "I might have never courted  a young lady before, but even I know not to say that to her."  Truthfully, when he'd first learned of his prearranged betrothal  agreement to Regina, he'd been relieved that he'd never have to court  and woo a young lady into giving him her affections-or at least her hand  in marriage. This way, all he had to do was arrive at the church and  repeat his vows. It was all very simple. As for his brother John... He  shuddered at the thought of what he'd have to do to secure a wife.

"Edward, did you say anything to her?"

The seriousness in his brother's voice gave Edward pause. "Yes."

John gave a stiff nod. "Was it about one of your plethora of  experiments?" he asked, waving a hand at the large stack of notes Edward  held.