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“You do realize if word gets out that you attended the viscount’s ball, it would be seen as if you are giving him the stamp of approval and welcoming him back into the fold.”

She allowed one side of her mouth to lift in a smile. “Perhaps he should never have been cut for wanting to be happy,” she said softly. “If I recall correctly, his wife is the daughter of a most respectable vicar, and she is quite lovely and intelligent. Perhaps the ton should have helped Lord Pottinger celebrate his good fortune instead of rebuking him so severely.”

“Good God, you are entirely serious. Where in Hastings is this blasted ball?”

“Netherfield.”

“You are aware Hastings is miles from where you live?” he asked drily.

“Hmm, Lady Blanchet has a quaint little manor there. I will prevail upon her to spend a couple days. I’m sure Nicolas will enjoy a change of scenery.”

“You are determined to go, then?”

Her stomach flipped at the prospect of seeing Rhys again. “Why, yes, I believe I am.”

Her brother scowled. “Your judgment and conduct are beyond the pale, and you are absolutely ungovernable.”

“You compliment me, brother.”

She laughed at his light growl.

He pushed his fingers through his hair, sighing roughly. “Georgie, are you attending because Mr. Tremayne’s mother is involved? It is madness to be attracted to Mr. Tremayne. I could see… I saw something between you two the night he brought home Nicolas. I do not believe you should respond to this invitation.”

She stood and walked over to him. “I am frightfully drawn to him,” she admitted. “But I will be careful. Now, will you please stop this ceaseless worry about my person. I will always be directed by my desires. I’ve lived far too long ignoring them.”

Her time with Rhys would be too short and precious for her to be hesitant.


The last few days had been filled with work for Rhys. He had brokered a deal with the Greeks for guns. It seemed war and tension hovered on the horizon, and they wanted to make ready. He now possessed the deed to an estate in the moors of Scotland. Perhaps he could convince his duchess to visit with him there soon. Remember this is temporary…

It had almost been a week since their night together, and he had devised many ways he could see the duchess in his imaginaton but had discarded them all. It seemed she was just as uncertain about their unorthodox liaison, for he’d received no letter from her, either. The only thing he was certain of was that she was upholding her promise. Lydia had been amazed to receive several invitations for balls for the rest of the season. The hope that had blazed in her eyes had filled him with such gratitude. She had accepted an invitation to a ball from one Lady Nelson, and Lydia was already making herself sick with worry about how she would be received.

He glanced down the table to see how Lydia was faring this morning. Her fingers were flying with speed as she laughed. His sisters chattered away as they ate their breakfast.

Their housekeeper, Mrs. Wiles, entered and went to his mother. “Excuse me, ma’am, this came for you.” She handed his mother the letter and then departed.

His mother quickly opened it. Her loud, dramatic gasp had everyone lifting their gaze to her. With a frown, Rhys set aside the freshly ironed newssheet he’d been pretending to read. “Are you all right, Mother?”

His mother appeared dazed. “She accepted. I cannot credit it. I never thought or even imagined she would.”

“Who accepted, Mamma, and accepted what?” Grace demanded impatiently, no longer concerned with the scone she had been eating.

Even Lydia and Joanna had paused in demolishing their breakfast.

“Her Grace, the Duchess of Hardcastle.”

He never knew silence could be loud. “Invitation to what?” he asked, despising the way his heart started to lurch.

“An invitation to Lord and Lady Pottinger’s annual ball in Hastings. I had prevailed upon William to send her an invitation.”

“And she said yes?” his sisters chorused.

“I can hardly believe such an assertion,” Grace said, pushing from her chair and rushing to grab the vellum paper from their mother.

A few seconds later she glanced up. “Oh no, she did accept. A duchess at such a lowly country ball? No one will know how to behave. I won’t know how to behave,” Grace all but wailed, panic lining her features.

Joanna’s eyes widened in alarm. “The prospect of an introduction to a duchess fills me with panic. I do not believe we are ready to meet a lady of such stature. I am still learning how to take tea with decorum according to our tutor.”

Lydia’s fingers leaped to life. “I believe this is the opportunity our brother has been working for.”

“This is all our mother’s interference,” Rhys interjected wryly.

Lydia’s chin lifted. “I’m certain this is because of you. We will all attend, and I promise we will not shame you, Rhys.”

A fist closed over his heart. He stood and moved around to the table where Lydia sat. “There is nothing you could do in this world that would shame me. The duchess is…she will be a pleasant surprise.”

Everyone exploded into speech after that pronouncement. His mother still appeared poleaxed, and Rhys smiled. Breakfast was then finished at an alarming rate, and he was herded into the drawing room with a command to stay. He woofed his obedience, and the girls laughed. For the next two hours, they drowned him with questions about the duchess, and he had to patiently sit in the room as they demanded their lady maids drag dress upon dress from their armoires for his inspection, since he’d been mixing with the ton at high-society events. His assertion that he’d attended only two balls was soundly ignored. At some point, ribbons somehow ended up around his neck, but all he felt was a deep satisfaction that they were happy. Even Joanna couldn’t hide her excitement. Then there was that thrill in his heart at the thought of seeing Georgiana again. Why had she accepted? Such an event was far below her notice.

He let out his breath again and scrubbed his hand down his face, wishing the memories of her smile and passion didn’t haunt him so much. What was it about her? The loneliness in her eyes fled when she was with him, and he felt a sense of peace and happiness from simply being in her presence. He froze as that awareness shot through him.

“Will you attend, Rhys?” his mother asked softly, shifting on the sofa so that she could scrutinize his every expression.

“Perhaps.”

His mother sighed. “You haven’t been to our local ball now in years, though we have had a house in Hastings some five years now. I believe it would be better for you to be there when the girls meet Her Grace—that is, if we are granted the privilege to meet her.”

Though her voice was mild, his mother’s eyes glowed with an excitement he’d not anticipated. It had never occurred to him that she missed her life amongst the aristocracy. “I’ll be there,” he said softly, now wondering if his mother needed to be encompassed in his plans.

“Have you informed the duchess that you are the nephew of Viscount Westcott?”

“I never saw the need.”

Her lips pinched. “I will find a way to delicately insert it in any conversation we have.”

“That is not necessary.”

“We are not a family without connections, and it must be known.” Then she launched from the sofa to help Grace decide between peach or green ribbons. Why were they even wearing ribbons?

Free to wander, his thoughts perplexingly turned to Georgiana and not to business. He stood and walked over to the windows overlooking the small back garden of their townhouse. What would he feel upon seeing the duchess again? He thought of her soft skin, how it would feel beneath his palms, under his body, how she would taste. Would he still want her with the same intensity, since he’d already feasted on all she had to offer?

He frowned, realizing he’d never had a lover whom he had made love to so many times. There had only been a few women he had

tupped more than once, and even now trying to snatch memories of those times was an exercise in futility. Rhys had enjoyed at intervals having a woman beneath him whenever the need to slake the lust rose inside him. Those women had understood he had nothing to give, wanted nothing more, and were only interested in the pleasures he could give them or his money. He’d never had the time or inclination before to pause…to savor and to learn a woman’s likes, her dislikes, her pain, and joy. Yet the need was a living entity, a relentless ache to spend more time with the duchess. And not just with her sheathed on his cock.

A singularly foolish desire, for where would it lead? Rhys did not believe in investing his energy and time on a subject that would not yield positive results. The duchess was such a unique complication. He wanted her, quite fiercely, but the futility of wanting a woman like her was evident, yet the reward of loving a woman like her, even if for a few months, was inescapable. And as simply as that, he craved to touch, and take, and taste. Never had he encountered such a chaotic hunger for a woman. If it had simply been for her body, he could have moved past the need. But there was a curiosity in his soul to know what had placed the cool guardedness in her beautiful eyes. Why was her smile barely there, instead of wide and glorious? Rhys frowned. He was turning into a damn poet.

Yes…I’ll have an affair with you.

And he wanted it, too. More than his next business deal, and more than the secrets that had been offered concerning members of parliament. Christ, he was losing his senses, and damn if he wanted to reclaim them.

Chapter Twelve

Three days later, Rhys, his sisters, and his mother were standing together within the large, elegant, and overcrowded ballroom of Lord Pottinger. It seemed as if the entire respectable population of Hastings had tried to cram themselves into the public spaces of the man’s country home. The wealthiest titled landowner close to the village where they had their country home was Lord Pottinger. Somehow his wife had befriended Rhys’s mother and sister, and they had been invited to the annual ball for the last several years.

They had arrived promptly at seven, along with the rest of Hastings. An hour later it appeared as if the throng was uncertain what to do with itself. Rhys was amused. No one seemed interested in dancing or playing cards. They waited with bated breath for their most important guest to arrive.

“Do you believe she has changed her mind?” Joanna asked, fanning herself.

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