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Lord of Pleasure (Rogues to Riches Book 2) by Erica Ridley (16)

Chapter 16

Despite standing in the center of a wide, vaulted chamber, Boney’s battered blue carriage was almost completely obscured by the dense crowd of eager Londoners swarming about the vermilion wheels and painted panels like bees buzzing about a hive.

Michael was not one of them.

He stood in the far corner, near the tall side windows, his focus not on the spectacle before him, but lost deep in thought.

“Lord Wainwright, Lord Wainwright!”

A quartet of giggling, blushing debutantes fluttered their eyes at him over their painted fans as if they were in the ballroom at Almack’s rather than crowded walkway between Napoleon’s washbasin and bedstead.

“Ladies.” Michael gave as elegant a bow as the cramped space permitted. “I trust you are enjoying the exhibition?”

They tittered at each other as if the question had been the most amusing anecdote ever spoken.

A stern-faced matron strode up behind them and marched the girls a safe distance away before any of the chits could swoon into Boney’s toilette box.

Michael didn’t mind silly young ladies. He supposed there might have been a time when any gentleman had once been an equally silly young lad.

After his conversation with Miss Grenville, he wasn’t entirely certain he had managed to outgrow the phase.

Addressing her had been spontaneous… and, perhaps, ill-advised. But she had been standing not a hand’s width in front of him amidst a queue as long as the Serpentine, and he had just thought…

Had he thought? Of course she would be stand-offish. The sum total of their prior interactions had included him calling her sister a termagant, Miss Grenville inventing burn-in-hell Bible verses to shame him, followed by a heated exchange at the circus.

The back of his neck heated. He had never before made such a muck of simple encounters, and he hoped never to repeat the experience. No wonder Miss Grenville believed him incapable of comporting himself properly for forty days.

He had been speaking the truth when he told her he’d forgotten about the wager. Not that he didn’t want to win. He had to win. ’Twas simply that, since the night he’d met Lady X, she had become all he could think about. He hadn’t even danced with another woman since, much less flirted with anyone else.

He acknowledged the irony. He hadn’t had to try very hard to stay out of the scandal columns—his obsession with Lady X had achieved that for him.

Although there had been a few near misses. Particularly when there was a Grenville about. They had good reason to dislike him. He ran a hand through his hair in dismay.

Until the wager, he hadn’t given much thought to how others perceived him. Michael had always done his best to compliment every lady and befriend all the gentlemen simply because he liked people, not because he sought any particular reward or notoriety. But things didn’t always go as one wished.

“Mmm, if it isn’t the earl,” cooed a female voice behind his ear. “My favorite flavor.”

Bloody hell, not the widow Epworth on one of her relentless prowls. Blast. Michael heroically refrained from fleeing through the closest exit.

“Mrs. Epworth.” He kept his tone pleasant but distant. “Are you enjoying Napoleon’s carriage?”

She licked her lips. “I would enjoy the view far more if you and I were in the back, taking full advantage of that plush satin squab.”

Michael edged slightly to one side. Say what one would about the widow Epworth, she certainly didn’t waste time making one guess where her interests lay.

“I am afraid I shall have to decline your generous offer.”

“Too public a place? My townhouse is much more private. You should pay me a visit. It’s been years since last we… ‘talked.’” She gave a suggestive, open-mouthed wink, lest he not have quite followed the subtleties of her innuendo.

He tried to think of a demurral that would neither offend her sensibilities nor intrigue her into trying harder to ensnare him. “I’m afraid I am no longer on the market.”

“Pish-posh. A leopard cannot change its spots. Nor would I wish you to.” She turned away, only to blow him a kiss over her shoulder. “You know where to find me when you change your mind.”

Once, a comment like that would not have bothered him. Indeed, in Michael’s younger days, he had gone so far as to cultivate a debonair, rakish demeanor. He hadn’t minded at all that his harmless flirtations and pleasurable assignations had garnered him a dashing but scandalous reputation as an accomplished rake.

After all, his actions with respectable young ladies had always been those of a gentleman. And his activities with the demimonde had always been mutually desirable. Women like Mrs. Epworth were already “fallen.” Everyone won. He was a bachelor, he was rich, he was titled—gossip was just noise, not something that actually mattered.

Except perhaps it did.

The Grenville sisters had clearly found him lacking. Unlike the rest of the ton, Miss Grenville didn’t find the wager a jolly spot of fun at all. She thought him worse than scandalous. She believed him to be heartless. A cad.

He frowned. What would his mystery lady think? It hadn’t mattered because outside of the masquerade, they were strangers. But what if he did discover her name, or she his? He had indulged fantasies about seeing her again, of being with each other as their true selves.

But what if his overblown reputation was simply too scandalous for that to be possible? Michael’s fingers went cold. What if he told her that she was all he ever thought about… and she didn’t believe him?

He ground his teeth in frustration. On the surface, his past history spoke for itself. His affections rarely lasted longer than an evening—because the women who had lain with him had not expected anything more. He, too, was often little more than a fling to boast about.

His jaw set. Regardless of what Miss Grenville and her sisters might believe, he had never seduced an innocent. London contained too many experienced women who knew exactly what they wanted for him to risk getting too close to a marriageable female. With the demimonde, even knowing each other’s names was superfluous. Why pretend either party had designs on the future?

Except now he did pretend. He dreamed about sharing many more moments with Lady X, in the bedchamber and out. He wanted to kiss her lips at the bank of her river, just as they’d imagined when he’d held her in his arms on the stone folly beneath the stars.

The fantasy was delightful, but no longer sufficed. They were capable of so much more. If he could only divine her real name…

Would their blossoming romance have a chance outside of the masquerade? Or would it all come crashing down about them?

The damp edge of a wet parasol snagged the tail of his coat.

“Lord Wainwright! I beg your pardon. I was so startled by the stuffed birds on the shelf behind the carriage that I didn’t see where I was going.” A young lady turned slowly scarlet beneath the brim of her bonnet.

He bowed. “Why, good afternoon Miss Digby. There is nothing at all to forgive. I myself was just wondering what brilliant artist had decided stuffed beasts needed to be displayed in metal cages. One should hope we’re in no danger of them coming back to life.”

“Never fear,” Miss Digby whispered. “I am armed. If they attack, I shall strike them with my wet parasol.”

He gave a delicate shudder. “I myself live in fear of the unpredictable nature of your majestic parasol. The stuffed beasts haven’t a chance.”

She grinned and tucked the instrument safely out of harm’s way. “Thank you for being so kind. I trust I have left no lasting damage?”

“Only to my pride,” he assured her. “Enjoy the exhibition, Miss Digby.”

“You as well, Lord Wainwright.” She bobbed a curtsy before disappearing into the crowd.

Michael tried to return his attention to Boney’s carriage. For as long as he’d stood in the exhibition hall, he had yet to examine the luxurious spoils of war.

Yet his gaze went not to the Imperial arms and gold candlesticks, but to the eldest Grenville sister. From the corner of his eye, it appeared the trio were making their way toward the exit.

He pushed back his shoulders in determination. He had been out of sorts in more ways than one these past few weeks, and the middle sister had suffered for it. Despite the horrendous day he’d had, despite the inexplicable vehemence she’d displayed to him from out of nowhere, a gentleman should not snap at a lady.

Perhaps this was the perfect moment to apologize for insulting her. Michael straightened his beaver hat and hurried outside, a hopeful smile playing at his lips. They could finally put the awkwardness behind them.

He caught up with the sisters just as they were hailing a hackney. “Ladies, if you could grant a brief moment, I believe I owe one of you an apology.”

All three women stared back at him with identical blank expressions, as if he were not an infamous earl but a forgettable servant whose function they could not recall.

See? No rancor this time. He was positively growing on them.

He swept off his hat and faced the middle sister. “I apologize for the thoughtless words before your dinner party. There is no excuse for such rudeness. I should never have called you a termagant.”

“Of course there’s an excuse,” she said with a sigh. “You would never have reacted thus, had I not called you a soulless cretin and implied you couldn’t read.”

Michael blinked in surprise.

“I provoked you. I meant to.” She winced at the memory. “It was not at all well done of me, but I was just so angry with you…”

“Angry with me?” He tried to think. “For requesting you refrain from whinnying at my soirée?”

“Not the whinnying.” She waved an impatient hand. “I can whinny anytime I wish. What I cannot do every time I wish is raise funds to cover the operating costs of my school for wayward girls. Without sufficient donations, dozens of young ladies will find themselves back on the streets, back in the nightmarish environments they’ve only just escaped.”

He frowned at the sudden shift in topic. “It sounds like a worthy cause.”

“It is. That’s why I was furious with you for ruining it.”

He stepped backward in surprise. “I ruined it? This is the first I’ve heard of it.”

“That is the point.” Her smile was brittle. “One month ago, I presented the charity opportunity to an interested group of socially conscious society ladies at the Blaylock soirée. All had previously expressed their intent to donate funds once they learned more about the project.”

“That sounds wonderful,” he said hesitantly. “I don’t see how I—”

“You interrupted our gathering, complimented the ladies on their beauty and accomplishments, and cautioned them to beware creating more competition.” She pulled a face. “I presumed you were jesting. The others did not. Every single promised donation was rescinded the moment you left.”

His stomach sank in horror. He didn’t recall the conversation in question. He wasn’t even certain what night it might have been.

But, to his chagrin, he could not claim to be surprised. He attended so many events, greeted countless people. The words were automatic.

Michael had always believed the only sane way of managing innumerable social interactions was to be kind to all guests and keep the conversation superficial. Admire a gentleman’s new hunting box, compliment the embroidery on a lady’s reticule. He had been trying to avoid problems, not to create one for someone else.

“I didn’t mean…” he began.

She lifted a shoulder. “I know. My sister pointed out that was likely the case. Yet the consequences remain the same.”

He swung his gaze to the eldest Grenville. The one who had quoted false testament at him in Hyde Park and later expelled him from her house and onto his ear after overhearing his remarks to her sister. He could not blame her.

His throat grew thick. She hadn’t thrown him out because of his thoughtless comment in the midst of his foul mood. She’d thrown him out because it was one more straw in an endless stream of slights. From him, from the world at large. She’d thrown him out because she could. Because their home was the one place she and her sisters had any say at all.

“I apologize,” he said again, though words had never once solved anything. He hoped they realized he spoke the truth. “I won’t keep you any longer. Enjoy the rest of your day.”

The two youngest sisters mounted the step into the hackney and disappeared inside without taking their leave. The elder Miss Grenville gazed at him for a moment longer before doing the same.

He stared back at the blank dusty walls as the door swung closed and the hack rattled away. Miss Grenville’s silent gaze had unsettled him for reasons he could not say.

Perhaps because unlike the rest of society, she did not see him as a rake to be reformed or a bachelor to be won. Nor did she see him as the empty-headed Adonis depicted in the caricatures.

Miss Grenville didn’t give a damn about his title or his money. Her sensible heart didn’t flutter at the thought of hearing her name on his lips or having him press a kiss to her gloved hand. She cared about things that mattered. Like sticking up for other people. Like taking care of her family.

He had meant his apology. The Grenville sisters might not trust his sincerity. He would not blame them for skepticism. But he would do everything within his power to ensure he was never so careless with how his words might affect someone else again.

Michael snugged his beaver hat back onto his head and strode to his carriage. As soon as he returned home, he would have his man of business determine which bank held the account for the school, and ensure an anonymous deposit was made forthwith.

If there was one thing that was certain after today, it was that the pleasure-seeker he had once been was not the man he wished to be. Not for the Grenville sisters, not for Lady X, and not for himself. The future had changed course, and he wanted Lady X to be part of it.

He was not merely out to win a wager. He was out to win a countess.

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