Free Read Novels Online Home

A Duke for the Road by Eva Devon (6)

Chapter 5

Lady Harriet pulled on her long, white evening gloves and fairly gamboled with excitement. Which was saying something given she was sitting at her white dressing table covered with silver-backed hairbrushes and vials of perfumes. She grinned at herself in the polished mirror.

It was here! Finally! After years of preparation and waiting, the time had come for her to be unleashed upon society. She was to have her first presentation at court and, from what she could tell, it was going to be a most promising affair.

The Cornwall family, which had been political for hundreds of years, had been in remarkable favor ever since the Glorious Revolution. They’d come out on the right side of things and been rewarded with a dukedom for it. Ever since, they had been at the forefront of society, setting the fashion for clothes, art, ideas, and politics.

And the rounds of fetes and parties she’d been allowed to attend the last year had all been sumptuous and marvelous affairs. But because she had not been out, so to speak, she’d not really been allowed to do much more than stand on the fringes and long for action. Any kind of action to change the ever-plodding sameness of her days. She wasn’t bored. Only boring people were bored, as her mother said. She was quite capable of finding entertainments but she longed for a bit more. Was that so very terrible, she mused?

Oh, her life was an exceptionally good one, no doubt envied by most of the young ladies in England. And she’d rather accepted her life would never be like the breathtaking, shockingly titillating novels she read daily. But one could hope for a bit of excitement every now and again.

Still, despite her occasional lapse into contemplation of what she wished was, she was well aware of her astonishingly good fortune. How many could claim what she could?

Her mother was one of the most important, intelligent, and beautiful women in society. And, well, her brother was a notorious rake, a political force, and a duke. Her family was a close, loving one. And, truly, aside from the death of her father, she had not known much suffering in the entirety of her life.

What more could she ask for?

Nothing. She should not dare even think of what more she might attain. Such a thing was tantamount to avaricious greed.

So, as she took one last look in her oval-shaped, gold-edged mirror, and eyed the diamond earbobs that danced against her slender neck, she grinned.

She’d never been allowed to wear diamonds before this night. She’d peeked at the collection of jewels that belonged to the Harley ladies whenever her mother had allowed. But now, she could wear them!

And at long last, her hair had been curled high upon her head, diamond pins winking in the waves, with a single, long curl dancing over her shoulder and teasing her amply propped bosom.

Really, a lady’s gowns were a wonderfully delicious scandal nowadays. She could not imagine wearing the cages her mother had been forced into but a few decades ago.

Why, her own silk gown skimmed her hips and thighs, the hem teasing about her beribboned slippers. There was little fabric covering her body at all when contrasted to the layers and layers her mother had once donned. No, she had on but a thin chemise, over a slight corset, then her ivory silk gown. A simple ivory band, embroidered with silver roses, was tucked under her bosom, cinching her to emphasize the hourglass curves of her body. And the only constricting thing about the whole ensemble was the court train, a dauntingly long affair, which she’d fastened about her upper waist.

If one was to ask her, she thought she looked quite smashing. And a bit naked given the way the gown bared the shadows of her body and exposed most of her bosom. She loved it. It was so very freeing!

This was going to be a very good year, indeed.

Most of her years had been good, in point of fact.

Her large family was a warm cocoon of boisterous affection and she’d cut her teeth on friendship with her brother and numerous sisters. Unlike many she knew, she’d always been surrounded by friends.

“Are you ready, my dear?”

Her mother, Lady Barbara, Dowager Duchess of Harley, stood in Harry’s bedchamber doorway, a picture of resplendent decadence. Her mother was not quite seven and forty years of age and was still a stunner. Her emerald court gown was shot through with gold thread and a large emerald broach was pinned just at the center of the belt which propped up her mother’s ample bosom. More emeralds dripped from her ears and dazzled at her ivory neck.

Not a touch of grey marred her honey-blonde hair studded with diamond stars.

“I am ready,” Harry replied, shocked that her voice was a bit breathy. She was so shocked, she blinked. Had she truly sounded so nervous? She couldn’t ever recall being thus.

Harry nodded to herself, rallying her confidence. Her own curled and styled hair felt a bit precarious with its jewels and feathers. She’d never truly understand why court hair need be so elaborate, but there it was. The definition of court etiquette. Nothing could be simple. After all, one had to elevate oneself from the rest of the world. Or else what was the point of a court at all?

Striding for the door, her skirt whispering about her long legs in the most subtle of dances, she paused. Her maid, Agatha, had been on an errand of some kind. The maid slipped forward from the hall. She picked up Harry’s long, embroidered train and handed it to her. Harry smiled back at the young woman who had helped her choose her hairstyle and gown and been with her every step of the way as she’d learned all she’d need to know not to make a silly piece of herself tonight.

“Thank you, my dearest Agatha,” Harry declared, touching her maid’s hand.

“You’ll do us right proud, my lady,” Agatha said, beaming.

She beamed right back, determined to do just that. For it was a truth universally acknowledged, that a family’s reputation could be increased by a successful daughter. Her own mother was a perfect example of such a thing. Once a daughter of a baronet, she had scaled to the highest echelons of society with her marriage.

“Let us go, Mother,” Harry said as she adjusted her heavy train over her arm.

Her mother linked her gloved arm in Harriet’s free one and escorted her down the wide, shadowed hall, over the burgundy carpet to the landing where Harry’s younger sisters stood near the balustrade waiting in their night robes.

Her mother had promised them that they might watch Harriet depart as a special treat.

So it was that Mary, Calliope, and Edith stood with hands on the balustrade, fairly humming with anticipation.

“You look so beautiful!” Mary exclaimed, her cheeks quite pink with happiness.

Calliope eyed her up and down, far more reserved, her blonde hair in a long plait. “Very nice.”

“You look like a princess,” said the youngest, Edith, bouncing on her toes.

“Thank you, my darlings,” she said as she bent and gave each a kiss on the cheek.

“Dance every dance,” Mary proclaimed, fairly an edict.

“Don’t trip on your train,” Calliope instructed.

In truth, Harriet had spent weeks walking about in a train, her head bedecked with feathers, for this very reason. She had no intention of taking a tumble.

She’d never forget the story of Lady Wellby who’d set her hair on fire by leaning too close to a candelabra. And then there had been Lady Paxton who had toppled backwards when being presented as her shoe caught on her gown.

No such catastrophes for her. Oh no. She was a Cornwall. Cornwall’s didn’t trip or accidentally set themselves ablaze. They were the fire to which everyone looked. They did not get burned.

Edith threw her small arms about Harry’s corseted waist, pressing her face against the embroidered silk. “Good luck tonight. Maybe you’ll meet him!”

“Who?” Harry gently teased, having an idea, but wanting to give her sister the delight of saying it aloud.

“You’re future husband!” Edith announced, her eyes sparkling. Then she leaned forward and whispered. “Just like in Pamela.”

She did not laugh, but nodded gravely, taking her sister very seriously, loving her as she did.

They were all obsessed with the new novel, having read it to each other aloud, night after night, in the long winter months. One could play only so many games of cards or turn about the room so many times, after all.

Much to their good luck, their mother and eldest brother were proponents of educated females and didn’t rely on dry sermons for their edification.

Oh no. Shakespeare to Fielding was the rule of the day at Harley House.

So, she gave her sister a squeeze and nodded. “I promise not to muck up the first meeting like she did.”

Edith laughed.

Unlike poor Pamela in the novel, her family had raised her for this moment. And though she had not been much in the company of strange men, she had not been kept from them. Not like some of the girls she knew who had all but been kept in nunneries abroad until the moment of their presentation. Some even had been kept in convents until but a few weeks before to assure their purity.

Powerful women needed powerful upbringings, her mother had always proclaimed. And her brother had always duly agreed.

So, with a last, absolutely enormous hug to her sisters, she had to stop herself from skipping down the stairs. Instead, she allowed her tight stays to keep her shoulders back, and lifted her head with the turn of a queen and descended with her mother, out through the grand foyer, surveyed with approval by the upstairs servants all the while.

It was a glorious moment, knowing her life was about to begin.

As she climbed into the coach, accompanied by her mother, she let out a sigh of pleasure. Yes, this was the beginning of everything. And she could not wait.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Bella Forrest, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Piper Davenport, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Secrets of a Teenage Heiress by Katy Birchall

The Omega Team: Saving Summer (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Tiffani Lynn

Shatter by Erin McCarthy

Tyler Johnson Was Here by Jay Coles

Slick (Significant Brothers Book 3) by E. Davies

Corrode: A Second Chance Romance by Ella Fields

Unspeakable (Beyond Human) by Croft, Nina

One Week with the Marine (Love on Location) by Allison Gatta

The Flame and the Flower (Birmingham Book 1) by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss

Coming to Hale: Hale Series Book 1 by Marie James

Laird of Darkness: A MacDougall Legacy Novel by Eliza Knight

Every Inch of You by Kayley Loring

My San Francisco Highlander: Finding My Highlander Series: #2 by Aleigha Siron

The Guardian (A Wounded Warrior Novel) by Anna del Mar

Want You by Stacy Finz

The Kiss at Midnight: A Highlander to the Rescue Romance by Sue-Ellen Welfonder, Allie Mackay

Hate to Love Him by Jody Holford

Promises Part 4 by A.E. Via

Lifestyles of the Fey and Dangerous (The Veil Book 3) by Danica Avet

Brayden: The Stanton Pack—Erotic Paranormal Cougar Shifter Romance by Kathi S. Barton