His wife looked at him with those diamond eyes. “Don’t you think that if I can forgive him, you should, too?”
“Huh.” He was huhing a lot since marrying Hero. Rather lowering for one’s self-esteem, that. A devious thought suddenly presented itself. Griffin widened his eyes. “If I endure what will no doubt be a horrible dinner with Thomas, will you kiss me?”
She narrowed her eyes. Lovely, but no fool, was his wife. “I always kiss you.”
“Not,” he said silkily, “that kind of kiss.”
He watched as pink rose in her cheeks. Married a week and he could still make his wife blush, by God! One had to take one’s victories where one could.
“Are you trying to blackmail me?” she hissed incredulously. “That’s rather low, even for you.”
He straightened the cuffs on his coat. “I prefer to think of it as an incentive.”
She snorted delicately.
“Just one kiss.” His eyelids drooped lazily at the thought of her kissing him there. “One tiny, little kiss.”
It was a delight to see her cheeks flame pinker. “Rogue.”
He smiled lazily. “Tease.”
“Will you go?”
“Will you kiss me?”
She bit her lip, and his cock stood at attention. “Perhaps.”
Which was why, several hours later, Griffin found himself mounting the steps of Mandeville House. Not even the remembrance of Hero’s eyes as she’d murmured that “perhaps” improved his mood. He knocked, half hoping that his brother wouldn’t answer and he could just go home to his wife.
But the door opened, and he was admitted and escorted into a dining room. Griffin looked around. At one end of a long mahogany table, his brother was seated. One other place setting lay at Thomas’s right hand. Otherwise the table was empty.
He hadn’t seen Thomas since the day they’d argued. In the intervening weeks, they’d both married, and Thomas—in an interesting role reversal—had endured something of a miniature scandal for marrying the notorious Mrs. Tate.
Griffin strolled toward Thomas. “Where is Lavinia?”
Thomas, who had stood on his entrance, picked up his glass of wine and took a deep drink, eyeing Griffin sourly over the rim. “She said it would be best if we dined alone.”
Griffin dropped into his chair. “Hero wouldn’t come either.”
Thomas’s gaze lowered. “I’m truly sorry for hurting her.”
“As well you should be,” Griffin growled. He looked away. “She says she’s forgiven you.”
Thomas sighed. “I’m glad.”
Griffin stared at his glass for a bit. If he drank it down, he might keep drinking and on the whole, he’d rather be sober when he returned home to Hero and her kiss.
Thomas cleared his throat. “Lavinia says I must tell you that I believe you.”
It took a moment for Griffin to work out that complicated comment; then he straightened in his chair. “You do?”
Thomas nodded, sipping his wine.
Griffin slammed his palm down on the table. All the dishes jumped, and a fork fell off the edge. “Then why the hell didn’t you say so earlier?”
Thomas scowled. “She always liked you.”
“Anne?” Griffin asked incredulously.
Thomas nodded.
“So? You were the one she married.”
“But if I hadn’t had the title—”
“But you did have the title,” Griffin near roared. Of all the stupid, soft-brained—
Thomas slammed his own hand down. A glass crashed to the floor. “You don’t understand! You’ve never understood. I might have the title and Father’s affections, but you have Mother’s and everyone else’s!”
Griffin blinked. “You were… jealous? Of me?”
Thomas looked away, a muscle ticking in his jaw.
And it was suddenly too much for Griffin. He shouted with laughter, holding his belly, doubled over the table.
“It’s not that funny,” Thomas said when Griffin paused to take a breath.
“It bloody well is,” Griffin assured him. “You’ve barely talked to me for over three years and all because you were jealous. Jesus, Thomas! You’re richer, older, and scads more handsome than me. What more do you want?”
Thomas shrugged. “She always liked you better.”
Griffin sobered. “Who? Anne or Mater?”
“Both.” Thomas stared moodily into his glass. “When Father died, I thought I’d be the one in charge. I was the marquess, after all. But then we realized Father’s debts, and she called you home from Cambridge.”
“I do have the better head for business.”
Thomas nodded stiffly. “You do. You did. Even though you were only twenty—and two years younger than I—you immediately set to improving our finances.”