think we’ve neglected the possibility that she injured her head in that fall,’ Josie said to Annabel and Tess.
Tess sighed. It was obvious to everyone that Draven Maitland didn’t really give a pin for Imogen, and it was equally obvious that Imogen wouldn’t countenance marrying anyone other than Maitland. Either she or Annabel would have to give Imogen a home until their little sister finally gave up her fruitless adoration.
‘Our marriage was fated in the stars!’ Imogen announced, looking as dramatic as any heroine in a melodrama.
Annabel was standing before the glass, pulling her honey hair in a great mass over her shoulder. ‘Darling,’ she said, giving Imogen an amused glance, ‘you keep your idea of how marriages are made, and I shall keep mine. From everything I’ve seen, the best marriages are those between practical persons, entered into for practical reasons, and with a reasonable degree of confidence in compatibility.’
‘You sound like a solicitor,’ Imogen said.
‘An accountant,’ Annabel responded. ‘Papa made me into an accountant, which means that I can’t help looking at life as a series of negotiations, of which marriage is the most important.’
She smiled at herself in the glass and twisted her hair into a great shining pile on her head. ‘Do I not look like a duchess?’ She struck a pose. ‘Make way for Her Grace!’
‘Make way for a goose!’ Josie said, and then shrieked and ran for the door as Annabel made a swipe at her bottom with the brush.
I mogen’s hands weren’t shaking. She was quite proud of that. Any other girl would be trembling like a leaf under the circumstances: she was about to meet her future mother-in-law for the first time, and perhaps see Draven too …
She brushed her hair until it crackled, and pinched her cheeks until she looked feverish, and then practised demure smiles in the mirror. There was no reason to be nervous, given that fate had obviously brought them together. She practised her smile again. She must use just the right smile when meeting Draven’s mother: a smile that was not grasping, socially aggressive, or any of those undesirable qualities. She had decided to aim at adorably shy and very young.
It took a while (adorably shy not being one of Imogen’s natural characteristics), but finally she was fairly certain of success. If she merely curled up the very edges of her mouth and let the smile tremble on her lips, she looked positively Juliet-like. Thirteen at the most.
Josie stuck her head in the door just as Imogen was practising a deep, yet bashful, curtsy before the mirror. ‘One can be certain,’ Josie said in her customary acerbic tone, ‘that your darling Maitland will be out at the race-track. So you might as well save your adoring glances.’
Imogen didn’t bother telling Josie that she had already figured that out herself. If a race were being held within fifty miles, Draven wouldn’t be at home. He wasn’t the sort of man to hang around his mother’s apron strings, not an out-and-outer like himself.
‘I truly don’t see what appeals to you about Maitland,’ Josie continued disagreeably.
Imogen turned back to her mirror and dropped another cursty. It was no concern of hers that her sisters were unable to see Draven’s manifest virtues. Why, he had so many that it was hard to catalogue them; they were jumbled in her mind. Of course, he was handsome, with a rakish air of danger. He drove his horses to an inch, and he always looked as if he should have a whip in his hand, even when he was in church. Just thinking of him made her feel giddy with pleasure.
‘It will do you no good to snip at me,’ she told her little sister, sweeping past her out the door. ‘Someday you’ll understand love, and until then, we need not discuss the subject.’
It felt as if they had been sitting in the drawing room for hours before the door finally swung open, and Brinkley announced, ‘The Lady Clarice Maitland.’
In the doorway was a lady dressed in the very first stare of elegance, her head cocked to the side and her hands making all sorts of elegant circles before she even said a word. Her nose had a narrow, chiselled look that was echoed by her high cheekbones. She looked coiffed, sharp-tongued, and inexpressibly expensive.
‘Holbrook, darling!’ she trilled, sweeping in the door before the butler. ‘You needn’t announce my son, Brinkley, we’re positively members of the family.’
The man who stood at Brinkley’s shoulder made Imogen’s heart stop in her chest for a full second before it started beating again.
He was singularly beautiful, with his wide square jaw, that little cleft in his chin, his deep blue eyes … She stood up, but her knees felt weak.
‘Remember, the man is betrothed!’ Tess whispered, as they moved forward to curtsy before Lady Clarice.
Of course, a distant acknowledgement was all that Draven deserved. He was promised to another, no matter how many four-leaf clovers and stars she’d wished upon in the past two years, since she first caught sight of him. She could feel her mouth spreading into a smile that hadn’t even a shadow of demureness about it.
‘You caught me in the nick of time.’ Lady Clarice was shrilling as she held out her hand to be kissed by their guardian. ‘I was just off to London to see my mantua-maker when I received your summons. Luckily, I judged your state more desperate than mine! And these must be your wards.’
Lady Clarice was wearing a dress more gorgeous than any garment Imogen had ever seen. It was fashioned of twilled sarsenet in a rich crimson with three rows of ribband trimming shaped into small wreaths along the hem.
They were all wearing horrid mourning gowns, of dull bombazine with only a narrow strip of white lace lining the neck, and that the gift of the seamstress in the village, who said that she couldn’t see her way to sending them off to the wilds of England without a bit of trimming, and never mind that they couldn’t pay.
Lady Clarice had lace flying from her hair and trimming her hems and her reticule, but she had a sharp face to go with all that decoration. Imogen blinked, pushing away that thought. She was Draven’s mother.
As she and Tess sank into deep, demure curtsies, Imogen looked at Draven’s boots. Even his boots were beautiful, of a rich, brown leather that looked as shiny and perfect as himself.
‘Allow me to present my ward, Miss Essex,’ the duke was saying, ‘and one of her sisters, Miss Imogen. We are all tremendously grateful for your assistance.’
Lady Clarice peered at them as if they were curiosities in a travelling circus. ‘I can’t imagine what your father was thinking to send you here without—’ she half shrieked, and then paused as a thought apparently strayed into her mind. ‘But of course, your father is no longer of this world, is he? Then he isn’t thinking about chaperones. Best leave that to the living!’ She beamed at them.
Imogen opened her mouth and shut it again. She would have to meet Draven’s eyes in a moment. He was betrothed, she told herself again. He had told her in as many words that they had no future together. But then -
‘Where are the other two girls? You did say four, didn’t you? Holbrook,’ Lady Clarice screeched, ‘do you have four wards or not?’.
The duke started visibly and turned back from greeting Draven. ‘There are indeed four of them,’ he confirmed, running a hand through his hair.
Tess beckoned to Annabel, who was standing to the side of the room flirting with the Earl of Mayne, and then to Josie, who was hiding behind the piano.
‘Just look at these four young ladies!’ Lady Clarice cried, once they were all standing in a line. ‘Exquisite! You shall have no problem whatsoever firing them off on the market, Holbrook. I would say that we can achieve at