“Yes, but . . .” He teetered, literally teetered, then pulled back. Stepped back—away from her and the terrace. He met her gaze as, amazed, she looked back at him. “They’re all couples—older than us.”
Baffled, she glanced again at those ambling on the terrace, drenched in moonlight and clearly visible through the long windows. “They’re not that much older.”
“But they’re . . . courting.” He said the last word as if it was one not uttered in polite company.
Mary stared at him. She couldn’t believe this was happening. She couldn’t count the number of times gentlemen—admittedly not quite as young as Randolph—had attempted to inveigle her out of ballrooms onto shadowy terraces.
Now she’d engineered such an interlude in a perfectly acceptable way, and offered it up to Randolph—her hero—and he was balking?
No—worse—he was backing away!
“I, er . . .” Randolph gestured over his shoulder, up the ballroom. “I should get back or they’ll send the cavalry . . . well, you know what I mean.”
She was, indeed, starting to see the light. Randolph and his ilk were frightened of . . . young ladies like her.
Young ladies seeking a husband.
“Ah . . .” As if realizing that just leaving her standing there after she’d voiced a wish to stroll on the terrace probably wasn’t the gentlemanly thing to do, Randolph halted his backward drift but, if anything, looked even more hunted. “I suppose . . . if you really want to—need to—get some air, then . . .”
For a fleeting instant, hope bloomed.
Randolph raised his gaze and looked around. “Perhaps we can find someone to walk with you.”
Mary dragged in a breath. Held it. Spoke through her teeth. “Randolph—”
“Aha!” Randolph’s eyes lit. “Just the person!” His heartfelt “Thank God” didn’t need to be said; his expression relaxed as he looked past her. “Miss Cynster’s feeling faint—she needs some air.”
Mary’s eyes widened as her suddenly jangling senses informed her just who had materialized behind her left shoulder.
“Indeed?” rumbled a deep drawl she recognized only too well. “Perhaps I can be of assistance?”
Turning her head, she looked up, up, into Ryder’s handsome face. She met his eyes, read the amusement therein, and hung on to her temper. “Good evening, Ryder.”
“Mary.”
His eyes, a crystal medley of intense greens and browns, held her gaze . . . and as had happened the previous evening he seemed to effortlessly snare her senses so that the rest of the world fell away. . . .
Abruptly blinking free of his spell, she tartly stated, “Randolph and I were—”
She glanced at Randolph, only to discover him already gone; all she could see was the back of his head as he cleaved his way through the increasingly dense crowd, hurrying up the ballroom to the safety of his friends.
Ryder murmured, “I did warn you.”
She was still staring after Rand, but he heard a distinct humph.
He allowed her a moment to stew on her failure. Despite his focus on her, on his pursuit of her, he’d arrived at Castlemaine House late, as gentlemen of his ilk normally would; he had no wish to alert anyone to his novel direction. As with Lavinia the previous night, if he adhered to his normal practices, all would assume, or could easily be led to believe, that he was merely looking for his next lover.