MARJORIEmight have acquiesced to their scheme, but she remained unconvinced; every time Helena returned to her escorted by St. Ives, Marjorie behaved as if he were a wolf in temporarily amiable mood, but certain, when hunger struck, to revert to type.
“There is nothing to fear, I assure you.” Beside Marjorie, Helena squeezed her arm. They were standing in Lady Harrington’s ballroom surrounded by holly and ivy; trailing leaves swirled about the ornate columns while red berries winked from garlands gracing the walls.
St. Ives had just arrived. Announced, he paused at the top of the steps leading down to the ballroom’s floor, scanning the crowd, noting their hostess, then searching further . . . until he saw her.
Helena’s heart leaped; she told herself not to be silly. But as he descended, languidly elegant as always, she couldn’t deny the excitement flaring in her veins.
“He’s just helping me decide on a suitable husband.”
She repeated the phrase to calm Marjorie, even if she’d never believed the “just.” She might have told him she would not be his lover, but he’d never agreed or accepted that. He had, however, said he would help her find a husband—she believed he was sincere. It wasn’t hard to see his reasoning. Once she was safely married to a suitably complaisant lord, he, St. Ives, would be first in line to be her lover.
And in such a position he’d be doubly hard to resist.
A thrill of awareness—a presentiment of danger—flashed through her. Once he’d helped her to a marriage such as the one she sought, he’d be even more dangerous to her.
Then he was there, bowing over her hand, speaking politely to Marjorie, then asking her to stroll. She agreed; danger or not, she was already committed and could not easily draw back.
Easily escape his net.
The realization opened her eyes, had her attending more closely. He sensed it; she felt it in his glance, the brush of his blue eyes over her face.
“I have no intention of biting,mignonne —not yet.”
She slanted him a glance, saw the amusement in his beautiful eyes, and humphed. “Marjorie is worried.”
“Why? I have said I’ll help you find a husband. What is there to concern her in that?”
Helena narrowed her eyes at him. “You would be wise not to attempt ingenuousness, Your Grace. It does not become you.”
Sebastian laughed. She continued to delight him, continued, at some level few had ever touched, to engage him. He steered her through the crowd, stopping to chat here and there, to point out this one or that, to admire the ice sculpture of an angel standing in a bower of holly on the terrace, the pièce de résistance of her ladyship’s decor.
He wished he could increase the pace, curtail this phase and hurry on to the stage where he could touch her, caress her, kiss her again, but given his intent, that wouldn’t be wise. He was a past master at playing society’s games, and the outcome of this particular game was of far greater moment than that of any previous dalliance.
Once they’d circled the room, he steered her to one side. “Tell me,mignonne, why were you still at the convent all those years ago?”
“My sister was ill, so I stayed behind to help nurse her.” She hesitated, then added, “We’re close, and I didn’t want to leave her.”
“How much younger is she?”
“Eight years. She was only eight then.”
“So she is now fifteen. Is she here in London with you?”
She shook her head. “Ariele was sickly as a child. Although her chest is much improved and grows better with the years, it seemed foolish to risk bringing her to England in winter. Our winters are much milder at home.”
“And where is home?”
“Cameralle is our major estate. It’s in the Camargue.”
“Ariele. A pretty name. Is she pretty, too?”
Two ladies rose from a nearby chaise, leaving it empty. Sebastian guided Helena to it, waited until she settled her amber skirts, then sat beside her. Given the difference in their heights, if she became pensive and looked down, he couldn’t catch her expression. Couldn’t follow her thoughts.
“Ariele is fairer than I.”
“Fairer in coloring. She could not be fairer of face or form.”
Her lips twitched. “You seem very certain of that, Your Grace.”
“My name is Sebastian, and, given my reputation, I’m amazed you dare question my judgment.”
She laughed, then looked around them. “Now you may tell me, why is it that, given your reputation, they—the mesdames, the hostesses—are not . . .” She gestured.
“Overreacting to my interest in you?”
“Exactement.”
Because they couldn’t imagine what he was about and had given up trying to guess. Sebastian leaned back, studying her profile. “They’re still watching, but thus far there’s been nothing worthy of anon-dit to be seen.”
The softly drawled words sank into Helena’s brain. Another premonition of danger skittered over her skin. Slowly, smoothly, she turned her head and looked into his blue eyes. “Because you’ve ensured that that’s so.”
He returned her regard with an enigmatic gaze, steady, direct, but unreadable.
“You’re lulling them, waiting them out, until they grow bored and stop watching.”
It could have been a question, yet even in her mind there was no doubt. Her chest felt suddenly tight. It was difficult to breathe, difficult to say, “You are playing a game with me.”
A hint of what that meant to her must have colored her tone; something flickered in his eyes. His face grew harder. “No,mignonne —this is no game.”
She hated and abhorred the games of powerful men, yet here she was, having escaped one such man, entangled in a game with another. How had it happened—so quickly, so totally against her will?
Although he remained relaxed, elegantly at ease, a frown had darkened his eyes. They searched hers, but she’d learned long ago to keep her secrets.
His gaze sharpened; he reached for her hand.“Mignonne—”
“There you are, Sebastian.”
He looked up; Helena did, too. She felt his fingers close about her hand—he didn’t let go as a lady, a large English lady with a round face framed by brown ringlets, swept forward. She was so weighted down by jewelry one barely noticed the odd shade of her gown. Helena thought she heard Sebastian sigh.
The lady halted before the chaise. Slowly, his very slowness an indication of his displeasure, Sebastian uncrossed his long legs and rose. Helena rose with him.
“Good evening, Almira.” He waited. Somewhat belatedly, Almira bobbed him a curtsy. Inclining his head in reply, he glanced at Helena. “My dear comtesse, allow me to present Lady Almira Cynster. My sister-in-law.”
Helena met his gaze, read his irritation very clearly, then looked to the lady.
“Almira—the comtesse d’Lisle.”
Again Sebastian waited; so did Helena. With ill-concealed annoyance and little grace, Almira curtsied again. Her temper prodded, Helena smiled sweetly and showed her how the curtsy should have been performed.
Straightening, she caught an appreciative gleam in Sebastian’s eyes.
“I understand St. Ives has been introducing you around.” Her gaze flat and cold, Lady Almira surveyed her—blatantly, rudely.
“Monsieur le duc has been most kind.”
Lady Almira’s lips tightened. “Indeed. I don’t believe I’ve had the pleasure of meeting monsieur le comte d’Lisle.”
Helena smiled serenely. “I am not married.”
“Oh. I thought—“ Lady Almira broke off, genuinely puzzled.
“Under French law, in the absence of male heirs, the comtesse inherited the title from her father.”
“Ah.” If anything, Almira looked even more puzzled. “So you’re not married?”
Helena shook her head.
Almira’s face darkened; she turned to Sebastian. “Lady Orcott is asking after you.”
Sebastian raised one brow. “Indeed?”
His retort made it clear he was totally uninterested.
“She’s been searching for you.”
“Dear me. If you come across her, do point her this way.”
Helena bit her tongue. Sebastian’s caustic retort had no discernible effect on his sister-in-law.
Almira shifted, facing Sebastian fully, giving Helena her shoulder. “I wanted to tell you—Charles has started climbing stairs. He’s growing sturdier by the day. You must call and see him.”
“How fascinating.” Sebastian shifted his hold on Helena’s fingers; raising her hand, he glanced her way. “I believe, my dear, that Lady March is signaling us.” He flicked a glance at Almira. “You must excuse us, Almira.”
It was a command not even Almira could miss. Disgruntlement clear in her face, she bobbed a curtsy to them both and stepped back. “I’ll expect you in the next few days.”
With that piece of impertinence, she turned on her heel and swept away.
Along with Sebastian, Helena watched her go. “Is Lady March—whom I have never met—truly signaling us?”
“No. Come, let’s go this way.”
They strolled again; Helena glanced at his face, at his politely bored mask. “Lady Almira’s son—is he the one who will eventually inherit your title?”
Not a flicker of emotion showed in his face. He glanced down at her, then looked ahead. And said nothing.
Helena raised her brows faintly and asked no more.
They merged with the throng, then another large, lean, darkly elegant gentleman spied them and moved to intercept them. Or rather, he spied Sebastian. Only when he stepped free of the crowd did he see her.
The gentleman’s eyes lit; he smiled and swept her a leg almost as graceful as Sebastian’s.
Sebastian sighed. “My dear comtesse, allow me to present my brother, Lord Martin Cynster.”
“Enchanté, mademoiselle.” Martin took the hand she offered and raised it to his lips. “Little wonder my brother’s been so hard to find.”
His smile was open, amused, and devil-may-care. Helena smiled back. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, my lord.”
Martin was considerably younger than Sebastian, yet from his manner it was clear he stood in no awe of one whom all others she’d thus far met approached with a degree of circumspection.
“I had meant to ask,” Sebastian drawled, drawing Martin’s gaze from her, “whether you had recovered from your night at Fanny’s.”
Martin flushed. “How the dev—deuce—did you hear about that?”
Sebastian merely smiled.
“If you must know,” Martin continued, “I ended the night ahead. Dashed woman marks the cards, though—take my word for it.”
“She always has.”
Martin blinked. “Well, you might have warned me.”
“And spoil your fun? I’m not such a curmudgeon and am no longer, thank God, your keeper.”
Martin grinned. “It was fun, I must admit. Took me awhile to see through her tricks.”
“Indeed.” Sebastian glanced at Helena. “But I fear we’re boring Mlle d’Lisle.”
“Well, this isn’t exactly a scintillating venue.” Martin turned to Helena. “It’s a pity you’ve arrived so late in the year, too late for Vauxhall or Ranelagh. Mind you, there’s old Lady Lowy’s masquerade coming up—that’s always a night to remember.”
“Ah, yes, I believe we have a card. The costumes will be intriguing.”
“What character will you be masquerading as?” Martin asked.
Helena laughed. “Oh, no, I’ve been warned not to tell.”
Martin took a step back, eyeing her as if committing her physical characteristics to memory.
“You needn’t bother,” Sebastian informed him.
“How else am I to find her?”
“Simple. Find me.”
Martin blinked twice. His lips formed an “Oh.”
“Ah, there you are,ma petite .” Marjorie came up, smiling but, as always, wary in Sebastian’s presence. She smiled more easily at Martin and gave him her hand, then turned again to Helena. “We must go.”
Reluctantly, Helena made her adieus. Sebastian bowed over her hand. “Until tomorrow night,mignonne .”
His murmur was too low for the others to hear; the look in his eyes was likewise for her alone.
Helena rose from her curtsy, inclined her head, then turned and, wondering, left him. Joining Marjorie, she glided into the crowd.
Martin stepped to Sebastian’s side. “I’m glad I found you.” All levity had flown. “I don’t know how much more of Almira’s nonsense you can stomach, but George and I have had enough. Her behavior’s insupportable! The way she’s carrying on, you’re already underground, and Arthur, too, come to that. God knows why he ever married her.”
“We know why.” Sebastian looked down, straightening the lace at one cuff.
Martin snorted. “But the why never eventuated, did it? She never was pregnant—”
“Look on the bright side. We do therefore know that Charles is indeed Arthur’s son.”
“He may be Arthur’s get, but it’s Almira who has him in hand. Good God—the lad’s been hearing nothing but Almira’s rantings from the moment of his birth. You know how she hates us.”
“She doesn’t hate us.”
“She hates all we are. She’s the most bigoted person I’ve ever met. If you and Arthur go, and Charles inherits as a minor . . .” Martin blew out a breath and looked away. “Let’s just say that neither George nor I sleep all that well o’nights.”
Sebastian looked up, studied his brother’s face. “I didn’t realize . . .” He hesitated, then said, “Neither you nor George need worry.” He grimaced. “Nor Arthur, come to that.”
Martin frowned. “What . . .?” Then his face cleared; light returned to his eyes. “You’re going to do something about it?”
“Disabuse your mind of the notion that I approve of Almira as the next Duchess of St. Ives.”
Martin’s jaw dropped; his eyes widened. “I don’t believe it. You’re truly serious?”
“I used to believe I had an iron constitution—Almira proved me wrong. I had hoped that motherhood would improve her.” Sebastian shrugged. “It appears I was overly optimistic there, too.”
His mouth still open, Martin looked in the direction in which Helena had gone. “You’re looking for a wife.”
The glance Sebastian shot him could have cut glass. “I would greatly appreciate it if you could refrain from letting such words pass your lips. To anyone.”
Martin stared at him for a moment; then understanding dawned. “Hell’s bells, yes!” His grin returned. He glanced around at the glamorous throng, at the eyes, the smiles that even now were surreptitiously cast their way. “If that little tidbit ever gets out—”
“You’ll be even sorrier than I. Come.” Sebastian started for the door. “There’s a new hell opened in Pall Mall—I’ve an invitation if you’re interested.”
Martin fell in by his side, grinning even more widely than before.
“To my mind,mignonne , you could do much worse than Lord Montacute.”
Helena threw Sebastian a glance as they strolled beneath the trees. She and Marjorie had come to walk among the ton on what seemed likely to be the last fine afternoon of the year. Sebastian had joined them and offered her his arm. They’d left Marjorie chatting with friends to enjoy the Serpentine Walk. Along the way, Sebastian had introduced her to a number of potential husbands.
“I do not believe,” she said, “that I could stomach a gentleman who wears virulent pink coats and compounds the sin by adding pink lace.”
Her gaze swept Sebastian’s dark blue coat with its restrained use of gold at cuffs and pockets. His lace, as always, was pristine white and finely made.
“Besides”—she looked ahead—“there is the matter of his title.”
She felt Sebastian’s gaze touch her face. “He’s a baron.”
“Indeed. But my guardian has stipulated that any man I choose must be of a station at least the equal of mine.”
She glanced at Sebastian—he caught her gaze. “Earl or above.” He sighed, raised his head, looked around. “Mignonne, it would have been helpful if you had told me this before. There are not so many earls or marquesses, let alone dukes, languishing unwed among the ton.”
“There must be some—thereare some.”
“But we have other criteria to satisfy, do we not?”
Her criteria weren’t the same as his, but unfortunately, satisfying her criteria would also satisfy his. An acquiescent husband who would allow her to rule their marriage would not raise a fuss should she decide to take a lover. Indeed, who knew? She might. But any lover she took would be of the same ilk—a man who pandered to her wishes rather than expecting her to pander to his.
In other words, not the man walking by her side.
“Let us start with the title first. It will narrow the field.”
“It will indeed.” He considered the knots of people scattered over the lawns as they strolled slowly along. “Will your guardian’s stipulations stretch to viscounts? In most cases they will, after all, eventually be earls.”
“Hmm—it is possible, I suppose. If all other criteria were met.”
“In that case let me introduce you to Viscount Digby. He’s the heir to the Earl of Quantock, who has considerable estates in the west of the country. An estimable man, so I hear.”
He led her to a group of gentlemen and ladies, introducing her generally, then, as only he could, “arranged” for her to stand beside the young viscount. After ten minutes coping with the viscount’s tongue-tied adoration, Helena caught Sebastian’s eye.
“Well?” he asked as they strolled away.
“He’s too young.”
That got her a stony glance. “I was not aware there was an age minimum.”
“There isn’t. He’s just too young.”
“Viscount Digby is twenty-six—older than you.”
Helena waved dismissively. She looked around. “Who else is here?”
After a moment Sebastian sighed. “Mignonne,you are not making a difficult task any easier.”
Nor was he. It occurred to Helena that spending so much time with him, with his often too-perceptive understanding and his accumulated experience in all manner of social intercourse, was not conducive to showing other men—younger, less experienced men—in any favorable light.
If one was accustomed to gold, one was unlikely to be dazzled by tin.
He introduced her to another viscount, a hedonistic youth almost too taken with his own beauty to notice hers. After listening to her opinion on that encounter with a resigned, somewhat paternal air, he led her to another group.
“Allow me to present Lord Were.” Sebastian waited until they’d exchanged bows, then asked Were, “Any news from Lincolnshire?”
Were was, Helena judged, close to Sebastian’s age. He was dressed well but soberly and had a pleasant countenance and a lively smile.
He grimaced. “Nothing yet, but the leeches tell me it’ll be any day.”
Sebastian turned to Helena. “Lord Were is heir to his uncle, the Marquess of Catterly.”
“Old devil’s about to pop off,” Were informed her.
“I see.” Helena spent the next ten minutes chatting on general subjects with his lordship. Beside her, she was conscious of Sebastian’s growing impatience. Eventually he drew her away.
She went reluctantly. “He seems a kind man.”
“He is.”
She glanced at Sebastian, unsure how to interpret the hard note in his voice. As usual, his face told her nothing.
He was looking ahead. “I’d better return you to Mme Thierry before she starts imagining I’ve kidnapped you.”
Helena nodded, willing enough to return; they’d been strolling for about an hour.
Despite knowing his ulterior motive in finding her a complaisant husband, she had, on reflection, concluded that there was no point refusing his aid. Once she’d found the right candidate to fulfill Fabien’s stipulations and hers and married him, any subsequent relationship between herself and Sebastian would, after all, still be at her discretion.
She would still be able to say no.
She was far too wise to say yes.
Over the past week she’d spent enough time with him, seen how others reacted to him, to be confident that, regardless of all else, he would ultimately accept her refusal. Despite his reputation, he was not the type of man to force or even pressure a woman to his bed.
She glanced briefly his way, then looked down to hide her smile. The idea was laughable; he had too much pride and too much arrogant self-assurance to need always to win.
The thought reminded her of Fabien. Sebastian and he were much alike, yet there were indeed differences.
A bevy of ladies resplendent in elegant walking gowns hailed them. They stopped to chat. Helena was amused that as the last week had progressed, her acceptance by the female half of the ton had steadily increased. She was still viewed as a too-beautiful outsider by some—primarily the mamas with marriageable daughters to establish—yet many others had proved eager to welcome her into their circles. Contrary to Marjorie’s oft-stated opinion, St. Ives’s squiring of her had helped rather than hindered.
She chatted with the Ladies Elliot and Frome, then turned to Lady Hitchcock. The group formed and re-formed several times. Eventually Helena turned to find the Countess of Menteith turning her way.
The countess smiled; Helena had already accepted an invitation for a morning visit. The countess glanced across the group to where Sebastian stood talking with Mrs. Abigail Frith. “I’ll lay odds St. Ives will be driving out to Twickenham tomorrow. You don’t have any engagements planned with him, I hope?”
Helena blinked.“Pardon?”
Still smiling at Sebastian, Lady Menteith lowered her voice. “Abigail’s on the board of an orphanage, and the local squire’s threatening to force the magistrate to shut it. The squire claims the boys run wild and thieve. Of course, it isn’t so—he wants to buy the property. And, of course, the vile man has chosen this week to make his push, no doubt hoping to turn the orphans out into the snow while no one’s about to see. St. Ives is Abigail’s—and the orphans’—last hope.”
Helena followed her gaze to where Sebastian was clearly questioning Mrs. Frith. “Does he often help with things outside his own interests?”
Lady Menteith laughed softly. “I wouldn’t say it’s outside his interests.” Her hand on Helena’s arm, she lowered her voice still further. “In case you haven’t yet guessed, while he might be the devil in disguise in some respects, St. Ives is a soft touch for any female needing help.”
Helena looked her puzzlement.
“Well, he’s helping you by introducing you around, lending you his consequence. In a similar vein, half of us here owe him gratitude if not more. He’s been rescuing damsels in distress ever since he came on the town. I should know—I was one of the first.”
Helena couldn’t resist. “He rescued you?”
“In a manner of speaking. I fear I was silly and naive in those days—I’d recently married and thought myself well up to snuff. I played deep and thought it fashionable, as indeed it was. But I’ve no head for cards—I ended losing the Menteith diamonds. God only knows what Menteith would have said, and done, had he heard. Luckily, he didn’t—not until I told him years later. At the time, I was deep in despair. St. Ives noticed. He dragged the story out of me, then, the next day, the diamonds were delivered to me with his compliments.”
“He bought them back for you?”
“No, he won them back for me, which, considering the blackguard who’d taken them from me, was far, far better.” Lady Menteith squeezed Helena’s arm. “He rarely gives money, unless that’s the only way. To many of us, he’s our white knight. He’ll drive to Twickenham tomorrow and have a chat with the magistrate, and that’s the last we’ll hear of the orphanage closing.”
The countess paused, then added, “I wouldn’t want you to think ladies run to him with every concern. Far from it. But when there’s no other way, it’s immeasurably comforting to know there’s one last person who, if the thing’s possible at all, will help. And with the utmost discretion. Even if you ask him outright about the Menteith diamonds, even after so many years, he won’t say a word. And by tomorrow evening he’ll have forgotten all about Twickenham.”
Helena was fascinated. “Does he do the same for gentlemen in distress?”
The countess caught her eye. “Not that I’ve ever heard.”
Helena laughed. Sebastian crossed to her side, one brow arching. She shook her head.
“We had best get on. Mme Thierry will be anxious.”
An understatement; Helena nodded. They made their adieus, then walked quickly back to the carriage drive. Their appearance together, Helena noted, drew little attention, even from the most rabid scandalmongers perched in their carriages swapping the lateston-dits .
They reached the carriage, and Sebastian handed her in. Although relieved to see her return, even Marjorie seemed less concerned than previously. Sebastian bowed, then left them, strolling languidly to where his own carriage waited farther along the avenue.
Helena watched him go. She couldn’t imagine Fabien helping anyone for no reason.
Now that her eyes had been opened, Helena saw a great deal more. At Lady Crockford’s soirée that evening, she watched Sebastian make his way toward her, watched as he was stopped again and again, by this lady, then that. Before, she had assumed that it was he who stopped to speak—now she saw it was they who spoke first, who caught his eye with a smile.
Gentle words, grateful smiles.
The ladies were not, in the main, the sort one might imagine would catch his roving eye. Many were older than he, others too awkward or plain ever to have been likely candidates for his less-acceptable attentions.
He’d cut a swath through the London salons with a double-edged sword. Sheer arrogant masculinity on the one hand, unexpected kindness on the other.
He neared, and his gaze met hers. She fought to quell a shiver.
Joining them, he exchanged bows, spoke a few words with Marjorie and Louis, then turned to her. One brow arched.
She smiled and gave him her hand. “Shall we promenade?”
His expression was indulgent. “If you wish.”
Sebastian guided Helena through the throng and tried to ignore her nearness—the subtle warmth of her slender figure, the light touch of her fingers on his. Tried to block out the French perfume she wore, that wreathed about her and none too subtly beckoned the beast, urged him to seize and devour.
Spending so much time with her was fraying his reins, raising expectations yet leaving them unfulfilled. Only his supreme dislike of conducting his affairs in the full glare of the ton’s attention held him back from pursuing her overtly. The news he was to wed would cause a sensation, but if he waited just a few weeks more until Christmas drew close and the ton quit the capital, then the necessary formalities of his offer and her acceptance could be played out in private.
Infinitely preferable, given he was not entirely sure of her.
A surprise and a challenge—she continued to be both.
Taking advantage of his height, he scanned the guests, noting any gentlemen potentially useful for passing the time—for distracting her. Carefully avoiding Were. That had been a misjudgment; Were was a friend. He had never been one to fashion rods for his own back. Helena would not get another chance to consider Were, not if he could help it.
They were leaving a group of ladies who’d waylaid them when George emerged from the throng. One glance at his brother’s face was enough to tell him Martin had opened his lips to one person at least.
George’s delight was unfeigned; he beamed at Helena and didn’t wait for an introduction. “Lord George Cynster, comtesse.” He bowed extravagantly over the hand she extended. “I’m enchanted to meet you, quite enchanted.” The light in his eye declared that no lie.
“And I am equally glad to make your acquaintance, my lord.” Amused, Helena shot Sebastian a glance. “How many brothers do you have, Your Grace?”
“For my sins, three. Arthur, Almira’s husband, you’ve yet to meet. Arthur and George are twins. Martin’s the youngest.”
“No sisters?” Helena shifted her gaze to George. He was not quite as tall as Sebastian but of similar build. He had darker hair but the same blue eyes. The same somewhat dangerous aura hung about him. In Martin that had been less pronounced; in Sebastian it was more powerful, more blatant. Helena concluded that the characteristic developed with age and experience—she judged George to be in his early thirties.
“One.”
The answer came from Sebastian. Helena glanced up to find his gaze fixed on the crowd behind her.
“And unless I miss my guess—”
He stepped sideways, reaching through the crowd to close his fingers about the elbow of a lady flitting past.
Tall, elegantly dressed, with her brown hair piled high, the lady turned, brows rising haughtily, ready to annihilate whoever possessed the temerity to lay hands on her. Then she saw who it was. Her expression changed in a blink to one of joy.
“Sebastian!” The lady clasped his hand in both of hers and stepped free of the crowd. “I hadn’t expected to find you still in town.”
“That, my dear Augusta, is patently obvious.”
Augusta wrinkled her nose at him, at his censorious tone, and let him draw her to join them. She grinned at George. “George, too—how goes it, brother dear?”
“So-so.” George grinned back. “Where’s Huntly?”
Augusta waved behind her. “Somewhere here.” Her gaze had come to rest on Helena. She glanced briefly at Sebastian.
“Augusta, Marchioness de Huntly—Helena, comtesse d’Lisle.” Sebastian waited while they exchanged curtsies, then added to Helena, “As you’ve no doubt gathered, Augusta is our sister. However”—his gaze shifted to Augusta and sharpened—“what I fail to understand, Augusta, is why you’re gadding about London given your present state.”
“Don’t fuss. I’m completely all right.”
“You said that last time.”
“And despite the panic, it turned out perfectly well in the end. Edward’s thriving. If you must know—and I suppose you’ll demand to—I was quite moped in Northamptonshire. Huntly agreed just a little socializing would do no harm.”
“So you travel to London to attend balls and routs.”
“Well, what would you? It’s not as if there’s any socializing in Northamptonshire.”
“It’s hardly the far end of the world.”
“In terms of entertainment it might as well be. And anyway, if Huntly doesn’t mind, why should you?”
“Because you wound Herbert around your finger before you were wed and have yet to set him loose.”
Far from denying it, Augusta replied, “It’s the only way to keep a husband, dear Sebastian, as I think you well know.”
He caught her gaze, held it. Augusta tilted her chin at him but shifted, then glanced away.
Helena stepped into the breach; she caught Augusta’s gaze. “You have a child?”
Augusta beamed at her. “A son—Edward. He’s at home at Huntly Hall, and I do miss him.”
“A situation easily rectified,” Sebastian put in.
Helena and Augusta ignored him.
“Edward’s just two. He’s a scamp.”
“He takes after his mother.” When Augusta pulled a face at him, Sebastian’s lips curved; he tugged a lock of her hair. “Better that than prose on like Herbert, I suppose.”
Augusta pouted. “If you’ve a mind to be disagreeable over dearest Herbert—”
“I was merely stating a fact, my dear. You must admit that Huntly is singularly lacking in, er . . . devilment, while our family is, if anything, overendowed.”
Augusta laughed. “You can talk.”
“Indeed. Who better?”
Helena listened as, between them, Sebastian and George extracted a list of Augusta’s likely engagements and the date she planned to return to Northamptonshire.
“Then we’ll see you at Christmas at Somersham.” Augusta glanced at Sebastian. “Do you want me to bring Edward?”
Both her brothers looked at her as if she’d grown two heads.
“Ofcourse you’ll bring him!” George said. “We’ll want to see our nephew, won’t we?”
“Quite,” Sebastian said. “But I apprehend you’ve been talking to Almira. Pray discount anything she may have said regarding my wishes over Christmas or anything else. I’ll naturally be expecting Edward at Somersham—aside from all else, Colby’s been searching out a present for him and would be disappointed if he didn’t appear to claim it.”
Helena watched Augusta’s expression change from guarded to relieved to happy, but at the mention of Colby’s name she frowned at her brother. “Nota horse—he’s too young. I’ve already forbidden Huntly even to think about it.”
Sebastian flicked a speck of lint from his sleeve. “Herbert did mention your restriction, so I’ve instructed Colby to look for a pony—one small enough for Edward to sit on and be led. He’s old enough for that.”
Helena hid a smile as Sebastian pretended not to notice Augusta’s struggle between maternal delight and maternal disapprobation. Then he slanted her a sidelong glance. “You may thank me at Christmastime.”
Augusta threw up her hands. “You’re impossible.” Leaning on his arm, she stretched up to plant a kiss on his cheek. “Utterly.”
Sebastian patted her shoulder. “No, I’m merely your very much older brother. Take care,” he said as she pulled away and drew back, nodding to Helena and George, “and do bear in mind that, should I hear you’ve been overdoing things, I’m quite capable of packing you off willy-nilly to Huntly Hall.” Augusta met his gaze, and he added, “I’m not Herbert, my dear.”
Augusta wrinkled her nose at him, but all she said was, “I guarantee I won’t put you to such inconvenience, Your Grace.”
As she turned away, she murmured sotto voce to Helena, “He’s a tyrant—beware!” But she was smiling.
“All very well,” George grumbled watching Augusta disappear into the crowd, “but I’ll keep an eye on her just in case.”
“No need,” Sebastian said. “Herbert might feel unable to rein Augusta in, but he’s well aware I suffer from no such constraint. If he wishes her to retire from the capital early and she proves difficult, I’m sure he’ll let me know.”
George grinned. “He might be a prosy sort, but old Herbert does have his head screwed on straight.”
“Indeed. Which is why I approved of Augusta’s choice.” Sebastian caught Helena’s gaze. “You’ve been very patient, my dear. Shall we dance?”
She’d been perfectly happy listening, learning, drinking in their interaction and all it told her of him, but she smiled and gave him her hand, exchanged nods with George, then let Sebastian lead her into the nearest set.
As usual, dancing with him was a distraction—a distraction so complete she lost touch with the world and there existed only the two of them, circling, bowing, gliding through the figures, hands linked, gazes locked. At the end of the dance when he raised her, her heart was beating just a little faster, her breathing just a little shallower.
Her awareness as she met his gaze was more acute.
Acute enough to sense the thoughts behind the innocent blue of his eyes, behind the heavy-lidded gaze that dropped from her eyes to her lips.
Her lips throbbed; she looked at his, long, lean . . . and remembered, too clearly, what they’d felt like against hers.
The tension between them drew tight, quivered, then his lips curved. He turned her from the floor, glancing about them once more.
Helena barely had time to draw breath before another lady—this one black-haired and black-eyed—swept up.
“Good evening, St. Ives.”
Sebastian nodded. “Therese.”
The lady was in her early thirties, striking rather than beautiful, and dressed to take advantage of her unusual looks. As Augusta had, she stretched up and kissed Sebastian’s cheek. “Do introduce me.”
Helena sensed rather than heard Sebastian’s sigh.
“Mademoiselle la comtesse d’Lisle—Lady Osbaldestone.”
Her ladyship curtsied prettily; Helena curtsied back, conscious of her ladyship’s sharp black gaze.
“Therese is a cousin of sorts,” Sebastian added.
“A distant connection I take shameless advantage of,” Lady Osbaldestone corrected, speaking directly to Helena. “Which is why, having heard that St. Ives’s latest start was to introduce a comtesse into society, I had, of course, to meet you.” She slanted a glance at Sebastian; Helena couldn’t interpret the look in her black eyes. “So interesting.”
Looking back at Helena, Lady Osbaldestone smiled. “One never knows what Sebastian will be at next, but—”
“Therese.”
The softly spoken word held enough menace to halt the flow of Lady Osbaldestone’s not-quite-artless discourse. She grimaced and turned to him. “Spoilsport. But you can hardly expect me to be blind.”
“More’s the pity.”
“Anyway”—much of her ladyship’s sharpness evaporated—“I wanted to thank you for your help in that small matter of mine.”
“It’s been settled satisfactorily, I take it?”
“Eminently satisfactorily, thank you.”
“And would I be correct in assuming Osbaldestone remains in blissful ignorance?”
“Don’t be daft, of course he doesn’t know. He’s a man. He’d never understand.”
Sebastian’s brows rose. “Indeed? And I am . . . ?”
“St. Ives,” her ladyship promptly retorted. “You’re unshockable.”
A faint smile curled Sebastian’s lips. Lady Osbaldestone turned to Helena. “The mind boggles at the number of ladies’ secrets he keeps.”
Helena’s mind boggled at the fact they trusted him with such secrets at all. The notion of any lady willingly trusting Fabien was beyond ludicrous.
She chatted with Lady Osbaldestone, who had recently visited Paris. It transpired they had acquaintances in common; despite her sharp tongue, her ladyship was both interesting and entertaining. Helena enjoyed the short interlude but was conscious that Sebastian was alert, his blue eyes beneath their heavy lids fixed on her ladyship.
Lady Osbaldestone proved equally aware; she eventually turned to him. “All right, all right, I’m going. But I take leave to tell you you’re becoming transparent.”
She bobbed a curtsy to him, bowed to Helena, then swept away.
Helena glanced at Sebastian as he retook her hand. Did she dare ask what about him was becoming transparent? “She seems very well informed.”
“Unfortunately. I don’t know why I bear with her—she’s the most enervatingly astute woman I know.”
Helena debated whether to ask for an explanation, then realized she’d spent most of her evening thus far with him, learning more about him, becoming more fascinated—which was not necessary at all. She lifted her head, looked around. “Is Lord Were here, do you know?”
An instant’s hiatus ensued; she could have sworn Sebastian tensed. But then he murmured, “I haven’t seen him.”
Was she imagining it, or was there steel beneath his smooth tones? “Perhaps if we stroll . . .”
He steered her along the side of the room, skirting the crowd congregating at its center about a monstrous decorative piece formed of gilded, star-shaped lanterns surrounding and supporting a gilt and porcelain setting of the Nativity. Viewing the closely gathered ladies, Helena noticed that, presumably in celebration of the season, many had taken to wearing bright red or forest green.
Among the throng she spied Louis, keeping an eye on her. Dressed as usual in black, emulating his uncle Fabien, he stood out against the multihued crowd. He was usually hovering somewhere in sight. Despite Sebastian’s reputation, Louis hadn’t overtly interfered in his squiring of her.
They were nearing the end of the room. She couldn’t see past the outer ranks of the crowd; she knew that Sebastian could. “Can you see—”
“I can’t see anyone you would wish to meet in furthering your goals.”
To her surprise, he drew her on and then to the side, to where an alcove partially screened by potted palms looked out over gardens. The alcove was deserted.
The day had been fine; the night was, too, cold and frosty. Beyond the glass, the shrubs and walks were bathed in silver-white moonlight, the barest touch of snow crystallizing like diamond frosting on each leaf, on each blade of grass. Helena drank in the view; it shimmered, touched by a natural brilliance infinitely more powerful, more evocative of the season, than the effort of mere mortals at her back. The scene, so reminiscent, whisked her back to that moment seven years before—the moment they’d first met.
Quelling a shiver, she turned to find Sebastian regarding her, his expression indolent, his gaze intent.
“It occurs to me,mignonne, that you have not yet favored me with a complete list of your guardian’s stipulations concerning the nobleman he will accept as your husband. You’ve told me this paragon must bear a title the equal of yours. What else?”
She raised her brows, not at the question—one she was ready enough to answer—but at his tone, for him unusually clipped and definite, quite different from his customary social drawl. Much more like the voice in which he spoke to his sister.
His lips quirked, more grimace than smile. “It would help in determining your most suitable suitor.”
He’d softened his tone. Inwardly shrugging, she turned back to the windows. “Title I’ve mentioned. The other two stipulations my guardian made concerned the size of my suitor’s estate and his income.”
From the corner of her eye, she saw Sebastian nod. “Eminently sensible conditions.”
Hardly surprising he thought so; he and Fabien could be brothers in some respects—witness his despotic attitude to his sister, even if he was moved by caring rather than some colder reason. “Then, of course, there are my own inclinations.” She stopped. There was no need to tell him exactly in which direction her inclinations lay.
A wolfish smile touched his lips. “Naturally.” He bowed his head. “Your inclinations should not be forgotten.”
“Which is why,” she said, turning from the windows, “I wish to seek out Lord Were.”
She intended to return to the room and do so.
Sebastian stood in her way.
Silence stretched, suddenly tense, unexpectedly fraught. Lifting her chin, she met his gaze. His eyes were hooded, so blue they seemed to burn. Her nerves flickered, senses older than time screaming that she was baiting something wild, unpredictable—something well beyond her control.
Dangereux.
Marjorie’s warning whispered through her mind.
“Were.”
A statement uttered in a flat tone she had not before heard. He held her with his gaze; she couldn’t break free.
Raising a hand, he slid one long finger beneath her chin and tipped her face to his. He studied her expression; his gaze fastened on her lips, then rose once more to her eyes. “Has it not yet occurred to you,mignonne, ” he murmured, “that you could do a great deal better than a mere marquess?”
Helena felt her eyes flare, in shock, in reaction to what she sensed rather than knew. His fingertip was cool beneath her chin; his blue eyes were hot, his gaze heated.
Her heart thudded, racing—then a commotion behind him drew her gaze.
At the edge of the crowd, Marjorie shook free of Louis’s restraining grip; from her frown and the quick word she threw him, he’d been holding her back. Twitching her shawl into place, Marjorie swept forward.
Sebastian had turned his head and looked; his hand fell from her face.
“Ma petite,it is time we left.” Marjorie shot him a censorious look, then turned to Helena, her expression determined. “Come.”
With barely a nod to Sebastian, Marjorie swept away.
Puzzled, Helena curtsied, then, with one last glance at Sebastian and a murmured adieu, she followed Marjorie.
As she glided past him, Louis was scowling.