Chapter Five

VW

With Adam conspicuously absent, Athena was unquestionably the belle of the ball.

The gentlemen were swarming. And if the eager looks she was receiving from all and sundry were any indication, Athena’s reign as the Diamond of the Little Season would be short-lived.

She would be married before Christmas at the rate she was collecting swains.

Harry made a concerted effort not to think about Athena’s success as he made his way around the ballroom.

There was one gentleman in particular to whom he was anxious to introduce Athena.

Eligible, a gentleman, conversant, and at least minimally lighthearted.

Those were Athena’s only requirements, to date.

It certainly was not enough to prevent disaster.

He shook his head at himself. When had he taken on the role of deliverer from self-created disasters?

“Miss Lancaster certainly seems to have been declared a peerless diamond.” Mr. Charles Dalforth spoke from beside Harry, sipping casually from a champagne flute.

“I was only just thinking precisely the same thing,” Harry admitted.

He had grudgingly conceded that Dalforth did, indeed, have a great deal to recommend himself after speaking with him a handful of times since the Hardfords’ musicale.

And though Harry had spent the better part of an afternoon attempting to find Dalforth’s fatal flaw, he had not discovered anything to discredit the gentleman, Harry’s junior by not more than two or three years.

“It will be enlightening, however, to see how many of her eager admirers desert the field when His Grace of Kielder makes another appearance,” Dalforth observed.

Harry had to smile at that. “I predict a mass disappearance.”

Dalforth chuckled. “Every one of Her Grace’s sisters will, I believe, be required to marry gentlemen who are almost ridiculously courageous. Or, at the very least, do not feel the usual pull of self-preservation.”

Courageous. Harry silently thanked Dalforth.

It was another character trait Athena ought to be searching for.

Not simply because a cowardly beau would never summon the courage to approach Adam to ask for her hand, but, more importantly, because a lily-livered husband would inevitably ostracize Athena from her family.

Adam had no patience with cowards and would make the hypothetical gentleman excessively uncomfortable whenever they were in company.

In the end, it would mean estrangement between Athena and her sisters.

“Miss Lancaster is dancing with Mr. Howard,” Dalforth said, motioning subtly toward the dance floor with his chin. “I do not believe she will thank you for that introduction, Windover.” Dalforth was smiling amusedly.

Harry laughed in spite of himself. “I did not make the introduction in order to secure her gratitude.”

Dalforth turned an inquisitive glance on Harry. “You wished to upset her?” he asked, censure lacing his tone.

“Not at all,” Harry reassured him. Apparently Dalforth considered himself something of a protector where Athena was concerned.

Harry didn’t like that thought one bit. “The young lady is quite inexperienced with the world,” Harry explained, “and knows little of people and characters. I believe she will benefit from knowing a variety of gentlemen, so she can make a more informed decision when the time comes to bestow her affections.”

“And you felt she would benefit from making the acquaintance of an absolute bore?” Dalforth chuckled, his good humor apparently restored.

Harry smiled. “So she would come to appreciate the importance of a gentleman who does have some of her same interests.”

“Or any interests at all,” Dalforth added, laughter bubbling just below the surface. “Mr. Howard is something of a dull dog, but he is harmless.”

“Precisely,” Harry answered, feeling an unasked-for rapport with the gentleman.

“You seem to fit very naturally into the role of avuncular guide.”

Avuncular? The irony of that word choice was enormous. His feelings for Athena were as far from that of a fond uncle as seemingly possible. But Dalforth’s words proved Harry was putting a convincing face on his interactions with her.

His eyes followed Athena as she and Mr. Howard passed down the line of dancers in their set.

The look of confused surprise most people wore around Howard momentarily crossed her features, and Harry wondered what the man had said to bring that look to her face.

Perhaps another tree? Harry smiled at the thought.

Howard was making more than one point on Harry’s behalf. Being conversant was all well and good. But the ability to engage in conversation that was intellectual on even a minimal level was far preferable. Athena, Harry was certain, was beginning to see that.

Out of the corner of his eye, Harry spotted the very person he’d been on the lookout for all evening.

Mr. Cameron Peterbrook met all of Athena’s expressed requirements.

As the younger son of a viscount, he was certainly a gentleman.

He was unattached and socially acceptable and, therefore, eligible.

Harry knew he was reasonably intelligent, not averse to conversation, and not overly serious.

Everything Athena could possibly wish for, it would seem.

Harry held back a mischievous grin and strode across the ballroom.

q

Harry appeared to be in a good mood. Not that Athena had ever seen him in anything but good spirits. He simply seemed to be smiling even more than usual. Perhaps, she thought to herself, he was simply happy for her. This ball—the second of her Season—had been a far better experience than her first.

Just as he had at the Debensham’s, Harry had claimed her supper dance and was, therefore, accompanying her and Persephone to the supper room.

“Thank you, Mr. Windover,” Athena said as he laid her plate in front of her.

Formality was needed in a social setting unless their voices were lowered enough not to be overheard.

“Most especially for the macaroons.” She smiled.

“I seem to remember they are a favorite of yours,” Harry replied, his eyes laughing. “Artemis, you will recall, has predicted you will die of overindulgence in macaroons before you reach the age of twenty-five.”

Athena and Persephone both laughed at the memory of their youngest sister’s scold. Artemis, at nine, was far too outspoken for her own good. But she was such an absolutely darling little girl that one could not possibly hold anything she said against her.

“Artemis will certainly run us all a merry chase over the next ten years or more.” Persephone smiled, shaking her head in amusement.

They all smiled at the truth of that statement and began partaking of the delicacies provided by their hostess.

“Windover, old chap, here you are,” a voice drawled, pulling Athena’s attention from her supper.

A gentleman stood beside their table, one hip cocked out, hand fisted and resting against it, a self-satisfied smile on his face.

He was dressed to absolute perfection, not a single wrinkle marring his impeccably tailored black jacket.

His almost blindingly white cravat was so symmetrical it might very well have been carved by the hand of a sculpting master.

And there was absolutely no denying the gentleman was astoundingly handsome.

“Ah, Peterbrook,” Harry replied, smiling up at the stranger.

“Well met. Well met. Your Grace,” Harry turned toward Persephone, “may I present to you Mr. Peterbrook of Caddelford in Lancashire.” Persephone inclined her head ever so slightly.

She was remarkably good at being a lofty duchess.

Athena nearly always had to fight a smile when Persephone slipped on her social mask.

“Peterbrook, might I make known to you Her Grace, the Duchess of Kielder.”

They exchanged the expected pleasantries after which Persephone introduced Athena and Mr. Peterbrook to one another.

Harry then invited Mr. Peterbrook to join them, an invitation Mr. Peterbrook accepted with a dashing smile.

After Mr. Howard’s discussion of the finer points of elms—which took the better part of the country dance he’d engaged Athena’s hand for, despite his having only spoken half a dozen times—Athena was anxious for a real conversation.

Despite her original intention not to create a checklist for husband requirements, she was finding herself compiling one.

The ability to converse was certainly high on the list. And, though she hadn’t considered it consciously before, she found herself adding “handsome” to her requirements as well.

“Weston, isn’t it?” Harry asked Mr. Peterbrook, inclining his head in the approximate direction of Mr. Peterbrook’s evening jacket.

“Most certainly,” Mr. Peterbrook replied, an eyebrow raised as if in shock at the question. “You certainly didn’t suppose I had patronized an inferior tailor. Did you?” Again, the shock.

“Not at all,” Harry reassured him with a smile. “I was simply confirming what I knew to be a certainty.”

“A gentleman cannot possibly underestimate the importance of a competent tailor,” Mr. Peterbrook informed them with an air of authority.

“Is that so?” Harry replied. Athena glanced at him, something in his tone striking her as strange. The interest she heard in his voice seemed too great to be real, and yet she didn’t detect laughter behind it. That, alone, was unusual for Harry.

“Indeed.” Mr. Peterbrook stared across the table at Harry, his expression shifting from surprise to something resembling pity. “If one is to look one’s best, which is, as we know all, entirely essential, the fit of one’s coat is paramount.”

“I do not believe that rule can be applied universally, Peterbrook,” Harry answered, a smile touching the very corner of his mouth. “I daresay, for a lady, the fit of her jacket is not a consideration.”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.