**********episode 1b***************
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Perhaps you should heed his advice,” Mariah told
her. “For once.”
Roselie ignored her. Much as she ignored Lord
Howers.
Not that Mariah was done. Good heavens, her friend
had worked for Lady Essex for far too long. She
was starting to sound like the persistent old gel.
“Ask for his help.”
“He won’t.” Roselie turned to her. “The first thing
he’ll do is to tell me to stop. Immediately. Then
he’ll lecture me as to the impropriety of it all. And
then, I imagine, he’ll tell me I don’t know what I am
doing.”
Mariah, on the other hand, did not share that
opinion. “He’ll surprise you.”
“I doubt it.” Shaking off her own misgivings,
Roselie continued in a different vein. “Abigail will
be off tonight. She’ll no longer be in danger. We’ll
have everything she’s gathered and have a full
report to Howers before the end of the week. And
then—”
A matron came by, slanting a glance at the two,
and the pair smiled back. Only after she was well
out of earshot did Roselie continue. “And then
Asteria will quietly retire.”
“Yes, of course she will,” Mariah said, sounding
anything but convinced.
“She, um, I will.” Roselie straightened and smiled,
for here was Lady Essex glancing over at them.
Asteria.
Oh, what a ridiculous nickname those fools in the
Home Office had come up with for the mysterious
lady who’d often been spotted with some of
London’s less-polite denizens.
How she’d like to tell them, one and all, that she
was certainly no goddess and definitely not
immortal. Still, better a fool’s moniker than having
one of them actually discover her true identity.
Like Brody. She’d eluded him more times than she
could count and he’d nearly caught her twice.
Nearly.
But more disarming was the very notion that he’d
never once recognized her.
Her. Roselie Stratton.
Yes, yes, it was entirely contradictory that she didn’t
want him to know what she was doing, but oh,
good heavens, she’d like to take him by both
shoulders and shake him until his teeth rattled. How
can you not see me?
No, instead he found Asteria entirely fascinating,
and her? She knew all too well his opinion of her.
Then again, he hadn’t really looked at her, not in
years. Not like he had when they’d been children.
Not since she’d been trundled off to school in Bath,
and he’d been sent away to Eton.
Oh, but truly, the worst of it was that she saw him.
And knew.
Knew what it was like to have him kiss her.
Thoroughly, recklessly. To have him touch her, and
leave her trembling.
Twice now, he’d caught her. Twice, she’d escaped
him.
But not without collecting those damned memories
of those stolen moments. His lips. His touch. The
way he drove her mad until she was trembling and
quaking.
Asteria, that is. Proper Roselie Stratton wasn’t
supposed to have such ruinous experiences.
It was her curse, her punishment, she supposed.
Outside, she must appear the demure, innocent
miss, while inside blazed a courtesan’s heart and
desires.
But how she longed to see Brody’s gaze filled with
desire for her. That dangerous promise in the turn
of his lips.
Longed to see him look for her. Roselie.
If Asteria dared to continue, certainly one night,
Brody would come to realize the truth. She knew
that.
But this would not be that night, she vowed. It was
impossible.
Or so she told herself.
“Is it my mistake, or are we completely
outnumbered?” Captain Benedict Hathaway asked as
he stepped to the front of the line.
“Tonight is Lord John’s Folly,” Chaunce provided as
he took his place beside his brother, glancing with
his usual droll disdain and unruffled demeanor at
the scene before them that would have sent most
men running for the borders of Scotland.
For every man in the room, there were at least five
young ladies. And all of them seeking husbands.
And they were ably reinforced by their equally
determined mothers.
“So are you telling me, that while the rest of
London’s male company is cavorting with every
pretty petticoat and willing Cyprian over at the
earl’s, we are here?” The captain glanced over his
shoulder at the third member of their party.
“Rimswell, I demand an explanation for this
dereliction in duty.”
Brody, having inherited his title two years earlier
after the untimely death of his brother, was now
quite used to such scrutiny, though even he had to
admit that tonight offered the added ghastly sense
of being tossed into the Coliseum with a pack of
hungry lions.
Still, it wouldn’t do to show any fear. Instead, he
grinned at Chaunce’s brother. “For a man who
boasts of never having lost a battle, you look rather
bilious, Captain,” he teased. “Afraid of a few chits?”
“A ‘few chits’? Good God, man, I’ve never faced
such odds,” the captain admitted. “The French have
the decency to shoot at you.”
Lord Budgey, bringing up the rear, had stopped
behind the captain and was now blinking owlishly
around the much taller man. “Devilish odds, you
say? I do like them when they are in my favor.” The
man shouldered his way to the forefront with far
more bravado than one would have expected from
the rather mild-mannered viscount.
“How is that?” Brody asked, wondering how much
Budgey had imbibed before they’d found him at
White’s to make him so pot valiant. “Have you
finally decided to take a bride, Budgey, my good
man?”
It was an old joke, but apparently a jest no longer.
“Mother’s quite keen I marry, and I suppose if I
must, I might as well do it now. After all, tonight I’ll
actually be in demand.” He made—what he
probably assumed was—his triumphant march into
the very bosom of London’s Marriage Mart.
Brody and Chaunce exchanged a glance and
followed their friend quickly. It was never a good
idea to leave Budgey to his own devices.
“I thought you didn’t want to marry,” Chaunce
reminded him when they caught up with him. Most
likely hoping to nudge the man into a hasty retreat.
Budgey blinked. “I don’t. But—”
“Mother says—” Brody and Chaunce chimed in at
the same time.
Budgey ignored them. “This is no time for your
japery. Rather, I’d appreciate your opinions on the
present company and then a glowing introduction to
the future Lady Budgey.”
“I’m not sure you’ve thought this through, Budgey,”
Brody told him. “Every chit in this room already
knows who you are.”
Budgey pursed his lips. “Indeed? Oh, bother, that’s
rather unfortunate.”
“Why is that?” Captain Hathaway whispered in an
aside to his brother.
No matter, Budgey heard the question. “If you
haven’t noticed, I’m a bit of a nobcock.”
Captain Hathaway was polite enough to feign
surprise. “No, no, not in the least.”
Budgey shrugged. “Obviously I’m not trying hard
enough tonight.” He looked around again and then
leaned closer, confiding in a low voice, “You might
not have realized it, but my foolish demeanor is a
rather clever disguise.”
Brody and Chaunce exchanged bemused glances,
for this wasn’t the first time they had heard this
explanation.
Budgey continued confidently, “Yes, well, the more
foolish I appear, the less I’m bedeviled by chits
scheming to be the next Lady Budgey. A most
enviable position, I assure you.” He glanced up at
Captain Hathaway. “You should try playing the fool,
sir, if you want to survive the night.”
Chaunce opened his mouth as if to add something,
but his brother staved him off with a quick warning.
“Don’t you dare—”
“But—” Chaunce continued, for this was such a
golden opportunity to bring his puffed-up younger
brother down a notch or two.
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To Be Continued.