Isidore was silent. Harriet hardly took a breath, so fascinated was she by the charged sexuality that flared between them.
“I have never considered myself in need of a prince,” Isidore said, finally.
“I shall have to…persuade you of your need,” the duke said. And he smiled. He was by no means classically handsome, in an English sort of way. He had a big nose, and all that tumbling black hair, and that golden-dark skin. But Harriet realized her mouth had fallen open anyway.
“A wedding,” the duke said. “The kind of wedding celebrated in Gondar, from which I just returned. My mother is preparing the estate and invitations will be delivered all over England. We may have to send a special invitation to Mr. Cope, of course. For some reason I think my mother may not know his name.” His eyes slid to Harriet, and she realized with a start that she was simply standing there like a dunce.
“I would be honored,” she said weakly.
“You’ll forgive me for not taking your arm? Under the circumstances?” There was a devil laughing in those eyes.
Harriet fell back and bowed, and Cosway swept Isidore through the door into the drawing room. There was a moment of dead silence and then a clatter of tongues that she heard straight into the antechamber.
Chapter Thirty-one
In Which Lord Strange’s Reputation Takes a Strange Turn
February 20, 1784
T he next night it started all over again—a table of half-drunk Oxford professors together with some odd and highly intelligent actors, Lord Pensickle and Mr. Nashe. Villiers came to dinner and stayed for port. Everyone talked of little other than the Duke of Cosway’s return, and the way he swept his duchess away to London after one evening at Fonthill.
“I suddenly realized something,” Harriet said to Jem. He was sprawled next to her in a chair. Now they had a routine. Once the ladies left he moved down the table and sat beside her without a word. It allowed him to do naughty things with his hands.
They felt happy sitting together. They never said it, but silence didn’t make it any the less true.
“What?” he asked lazily. He was watching Mr. Nashe play chess with Lord Pensickle. Pensickle was a little the worse for port, and kept picking up the wrong pieces and galloping them across the board.
“The only dissolute persons in your house are women.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t say that,” Jem said. “Look at Villiers, for instance.”
“No, I mean it,” Harriet said. She looked around the room. There were perhaps twenty men around the table. Down to the left, two of the Oxford professors were chattering about a recent visit to the Duchess of Portland’s collection at Bulstrode Park. Sir Joseph Banks, the President of the Royal Society, was talking about something called a Banks Florilegium—and the need to raise funds for the project. His audience looked unconvinced. Nashe and Pensickle were playing chess.
Sullenly congregating in the drawing room (the ladies had made it clear that they did not approve of the new custom of separate evenings), were the Graces, Sophia Grafton and the rest.
“Your house gains its reputation from the women you invite.”
“That is true of any house,” Jem said, with a flash of anger in his eyes. “It’s one of life’s great unfairnesses. Mr. Avery, for example, maintains Mrs. Mahon in royal style. She’s doubtless out in the drawing room right now boasting about the little silver boxes he’s bought her. But is his reputation any the worse for it? No.”
“It’s grotesquely unfair.”
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