His eyes slid away from Jemma as he turned to Vesey. “Yes, eleven. He has specified that age.”
“I always thought he was a blackguard,” Vesey grunted. “His father was the same. Hope you managed to head him off, Your Grace?”
“Luckily, while Stibblestich doesn’t give a damn about the opinion of elected officials, he’s still cowed by my rank.”
“Oh God,” Jemma whispered. That was what Elijah had been doing at dawn, when he left her without a note.
He turned away as if he were too tired, or too disgusted, to even look at her any longer.
Corbin launched into a meandering monologue that touched on everything from the newest hats to the price of shoe buckles, as Elijah and Lord Vesey continued their conversation.
“Surely this meal is almost over,” Jemma said, interrupting Corbin a moment later. “It seems endless.”
“Not even the rather extraordinary sight of our host flirting so outrageously with the marquise helps your ennui?” Corbin asked. “Her husband will learn of this by next week, even if he is in France. Just look how Lady Vesey keeps peering at them.”
Well, that was what the marquise wanted. And in a way, the Duke of Villiers was an even better person for such a rumor, as Henri would never believe that Villiers wouldn’t seduce his wife, whereas Elijah’s Puritanical reputation might blunt the marquis’s jealousy.
“I have such a headache,” Jemma said, truthfully.
“I’m afraid that the dear marquise probably feels worse,” Corbin said thoughtfully. “She’s looking quite white. And swaying. Oh, dear.”
In the fracas that followed the Marquise de Perthuis’s collapse from her chair, Elijah appeared at Jemma’s shoulder. “You look exhausted.”
Wonderful, Jemma thought. She looked like an old hag compared to the luscious, drunken marquise. “In truth, I should like to go home,” she said, rising.
Elijah was nothing if not efficient. Two minutes later they were sitting in the carriage, heading home in total silence.
She spent most of the trip reminding herself that there were many reasons that people didn’t like being married, and this just proved their point: spouses suffered black moods, and one simply had to endure them.
“Will you retire directly?” Elijah asked, helping her off with her pelisse after they entered the house.
The only thing she wanted was to get away from all these emotions that she didn’t understand. “I was intending to repair to the library,” she said. “I have a new chess set that I’m eager to try out.”
He prowled after her, without saying whether he would play or no. Fowle had set the chessboard by the fire. The pieces were made of gorgeously carved ivory and jasper, each one a small work of art.
Jemma sat down quickly. “Isn’t it lovely?” She picked up the king. He was standing with one leg forward, arms crossed, a ferocious scowl on his face. His body was dwarfed by his crown, which loomed over him: a remarkable sphere, carved with open work.
“You see,” she said, holding it up, “if you look inside you’ll see another sphere, and another, smaller and smaller.”
Elijah took it from her while she looked at a knight. He too was the embodiment of rage: riding his horse with a small hand raised above his head in a posture of utter fury.
“Where did you acquire this?” he inquired.
“Oh, it was a gift,” Jemma said. “Look, Elijah, the rook has a tiny person inside the window.”
“Would you say that I am a restrained person?”
Jemma looked up. Her husband sounded as if he were speaking through clenched teeth. “Yes, of course I would, Elijah.”
“In short, my face never takes on a seething expression like that on the face of this king.”
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