Chapter 11

FITZ SAW THE luggage piled in the front hall as he entered the house and silently groaned. Not that his mother’s schedule was ever certain. She did very much as she pleased when she pleased.

As a footman approached him, he handed over his hat and gloves. “Where’s the dowager duchess?”

“In the breakfast room, Your Grace.” Not so much as a glance for his master’s disheveled appearance.

“Has she been here long?” Although it couldn’t have been long or her luggage would have been carried upstairs.

“No more than twenty minutes, Your Grace.”

“Did she say why she arrived early?”

“I believe she told Mallory she missed London.”

A platitude. “So what’s the ever popular Pansy having for breakfast?” Fitz muttered, running his palms down the front of his wrinkled waistcoat.

The young man’s lips twitched. “Fresh beefsteak, Your Grace. Cooked three minutes on a side.”

Fitz rolled his eyes. “I should have known. I’ll announce myself, Norton. Bring me a brandy.”

A few moments later, he shoved open the double doors to the breakfast room at the back of the house and entered the sun-filled chamber.

“You darling boy!” A slender, elegant, russet-haired woman whose youthful beauty was still much in evidence, gazed up from the breakfast table and opened her arms wide. “Come give your adoring mother a kiss!”

Ignoring Pansy, who was racing at him, yapping like a banshee, Fitz smiled. “You’re early.”

“I couldn’t wait to see you, so I took an earlier packet. You haven’t slept much from the look of things,” Julia Montagu sweetly said, surveying her son’s rumpled evening clothes and lack of tie with a twinkle in her eyes. “Pansy, be good now. Hush. Don’t growl like that. You know Georgie.”

“I expect the truth was you were bored,” Fitz lightly countered, thinking how satisfying it would be to launch the pesky lapdog across the room. “And you needed a change of scene.” Bending down, he held his hand out to be inspected by the odious little animal.

“Perhaps,” the dowager duchess said with a coquettish smile. “But you’re always the main reason I come home.”

He glanced up from under a wave of black hair as Pansy licked his fingers. “Is Kemal in town?”

“We traveled together from Paris.”

That answered all his questions: his mother’s sudden change in plans, her ostensible annoyance with Lady Montrose, her early arrival. Kemal must have some urgent business in the city. Picking up the dog after it had decided Fitz smelled familiar after all, he carried it to the table, handed it to his mother, and kissed her cheek. “Are you staying long?” Taking a chair beside her, he held out his hand for the brandy Norton was carrying his way.

She smiled. “Some people would think that an insensitive question.”

“You know very well it’s not.” He smiled back. “You’re my only love. I was simply wondering whether we have any common social engagements in store, whether you’re on your way to Green Grove or planning on settling in.”

His mother waved her slender hand in a fluttery little gesture. “I have no plans.”

“You’re waiting on Kemal, you mean.”

“Only partly. I wanted to spend some time with you, darling.”

Fitz drank down half the brandy in one swallow. Not that he didn’t adore his mother, but she had no compunction interfering in his life. Which always required he give the appearance he had nothing of interest for her to meddle in.

“I hear you’ve been unable to charm some young lady into selling you her bookstore. I thought your seductive charms were quite unrivaled.”

He almost choked on his brandy. “Good God, mother,” he said, swallowing to clear his throat. “You don’t believe that rubbish.”

“Of course I do. Everyone does. And why shouldn’t they? It’s no secret you’re much in demand with the ladies. So tell me, what does this young lady not like about you?”

Not very much, he decided, recalling last night with an unexpected jolt of pleasure. “It’s not about me,” he said, taking pains to show no emotion. “She doesn’t want to sell her store.”

“You haven’t offered her enough.”

“Yes, Mother, I have. Apparently, it’s not about money.”

The dowager duchess’s brows rose. “You don’t say. The cardinal virtues are not yet dead,” she sardonically noted. “I expect she’s holding out for more,” she cooly added.

“If you don’t mind, Mother, Hutchinson is very capable of taking charge of the situation. You and I need not bother ourselves.”

“I heard you may lose ninety thousand if your development has to be suspended.”

“You’ve heard a great deal it seems.”

“You needn’t be grouchy. I’m simply concerned. I’m your mother. I want you to be happy.”

“I am happy. Rest easy in that regard. As for this bookstore, all will be resolved in good time,” he gruffly said.

Julia Montagu smiled sweetly. She knew better than to continue to press her son when he spoke in that tone. “Were you with anyone I know last night?” she pleasantly inquired. “Clarissa perhaps?” She reconsidered. “Of course not-her husband’s back in town, and he does have his rules, doesn’t he? What a strange little man. But then he’s in biscuits or something, isn’t he?”

“Soap,” Fitz corrected.

“You don’t say.”

“I do. It’s very good soap according to all reports,” he mildly noted. Clarissa, the fourth daughter of an impecunious earl, had married one of the new multimillionaires recently brought into the peerage thanks to the Prince of Wales’s penchant for gambling. Wales liked to surround himself with arrivistes who didn’t mind lending him money-never to be repaid, of course.

But unlike the aristocracy who had learned long ago to discreetly look the other way when it came to the little peccadilloes of marriage, Lord Buckley insisted Clarissa keep him company when he was in town.

“So,” the dowager persisted in honeyed accents, “if not Clarissa, was she anyone I know? And you needn’t look at me like that. I’m sure the news is circulating below stairs as we speak and the whole town will know by teatime.”

“For heaven’s sake, Mother. Since when have you become a voyeur?”

“Don’t tell me then,” she soothingly replied, recognizing whomever he’d been with was not someone of her acquaintance. As aware as she that gossip traveled at lightening speed, Fitz normally would in some minimum fashion at least tell her who he’d been with since inevitably everyone in society would soon know anyway.

Musical beds was not only common but also habitual in the aristocracy. Once a wife had done her duty by providing her husband an heir, she was allowed her pleasures. And while everyone knew who was sleeping with whom, as long as wives and husbands discreetly ignored the details as it pertained to them, conjugal harmony was maintained.

“I’ll be out this afternoon,” Fitz declared, fending off further questions by changing the subject. “Hutchinson might have some new information for me as it relates to this bookstore. Are you dining at home tonight or are you going out?”

“We’ve been invited to Bunny’s.”

He didn’t have to ask who she meant by we. “In that case, I’ll see you at breakfast tomorrow. Have you met my new secretary Stanley?”

“I have indeed. A most lovely young man. Do you like him?”

He smiled. “How could I not since you arranged for him to enter my employ.”

“Dear Abigail is in such straits I knew you wouldn’t mind helping her son. A shame she has a husband so bloody poor at cards.”

Fitz instantly thought of Edward St. Vincent and his wife-particularly his wife-when he shouldn’t. It took him a fleeting moment to shake off Rosalind’s image, and when he spoke his voice was unexpectedly husky. “Don’t worry about Stanley.” Quickly clearing his throat, he went on in a normal tone. “I’ll see that he is well compensated, and if the boy wishes to move on to larger endeavors at some point I promise to see him properly placed.”

“Thank you. You’re a darling. You’re my darling,” she softly said, wondering who he’d been thinking of a moment ago when his voice had gone soft. Her son was not a man of sentiment, other than in their relationship, where he was most tender. She’d have to speak to Sarah. Darby never gave up a clue when it came to her son, but she and Sarah had been close for years. Hadn’t they both been mother to Fitz? “Have you eaten, sweetheart?” she politely asked, intent on putting her son at ease, purposely not commenting as he held his empty glass out for a refill. “I believe all your favorites are on the sideboard.”

“I’ll eat later.” He handed a flunkey his glass and said, “To the rim.” He was finding it difficult to ignore the images of Rosalind that had come to mind when his mother had unfortunately mentioned gambling. The kaleidoscope of graphic, sexually explicit scenes was deeply unwelcome. Swivelling around, he searched for the flunkey. Where the fuck was his drink?

Julia wasn’t particularly concerned that Fitz was drinking his breakfast. That wasn’t uncommon for men of his class. But she’d not seen that shuttered look in his eyes in years. Having survived all the bad times with the former duke, she and Fitz were extremely close. She knew when he was unsettled. “Tell me about the design of your new development, darling,” she interposed, hoping to assuage his moodiness with something of interest to him. As one of the largest property owners in Mayfair, Fitz usually enjoyed discussing his urban projects.

“Later, Mother. Once things are resolved.” And having received his brandy, he lifted the glass to his mouth and drained it.

“Did you get my letters from Antibes?” she brightly queried. “You must come with us sometime. You’d love the sailing, and the weather is lovely beyond words even in the summer.” Antibes was fashionable in the spring.

“Yes, thank you, your letters came. Kemal’s villa sounds very… like those on the Bosporus,” Fitz finished in lieu of the phrase a benighted pile of gilded domes and flamboyant ornament that had come to mind.

“I know it looks like a frosted wedding cake,” Julia noted, recognizing her son’s tactfulness, “but it represents the comforts of home to Kemal.”

Does it remind him of his many wives as well? While Fitz liked Kemal, he was protective of his mother.

“I will never marry again,” she flatly said, “so you needn’t scowl at me like that. I don’t require your protection.”

“I know, Mother. It’s a reflex.”

“Furthermore, you’re not in a position to even think of chiding me about nuptial ties when you’re the third party in any number of marriages,” she crisply noted.

“You’re quite right, Mother. I stand corrected. And I like Kemal. Who wouldn’t? He’s intelligent, affable, and damned good at baccarat.”

Julia held her son’s gaze for a telling moment, then smiled. “Forgive my temper. I just don’t need you to take on the role of knight errant for me.”

Fitz laughed. “You’re years too late. Knight-errant types have peach fuzz on their cheeks and a rosy optimism. I’m a cynic.”

“You certainly are not.”

“I am. But there’s advantages in seeing the world with unclouded eyes. You needn’t worry, Mother. I’m quite content.”

“You don’t look content.”

“I’m just tired.”

“Then be sensible. Go upstairs to bed.”

“I might.” Suddenly, a wave of exhaustion washed over him. All for a good cause, though, he decided, no longer even trying to dismiss the carnal memories of the lovely Mrs. St. Vincent that were racing through his brain. “Wake me if you need anything,” he politely remarked as he came to his feet. “It’s nice to have you back, Mother,” he added with a warm smile. “The house seems lived in again.”

The dowager duchess watched her son as he walked away, a faint frown on her face. Something was amiss. It might just be the Monckton Row project that was in peril, although she rather thought it was another matter. Fitz didn’t as a rule concern himself overmuch with business affairs. While he kept abreast of his various pursuits, by and large, Hutchinson took care of the day-to-day issues.

As the doors shut behind her son, she said, “Come, Pansy, let’s find Sarah. She’ll know what’s bothering Georgie.”

Pansy wagged her tail, and barked yip, yip as if she understood.

And maybe she did.

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