Liz Tyner

The Wallflower Duchess


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said.

      ‘I’m sure you have not. A discussion of marriage shouldn’t distance us.’

      ‘It hasn’t, Edgeworth.’

      ‘You don’t call me that often. You call me Lord Lionel, or Edge—as my brothers do.’ His eyes were walled. ‘And not long before my accident, you called me Edgy, which served its purpose and took days to forgive. I usually have no reason to forgive anyone.’ He stood like a pillar beside her.

      ‘That was childish of me. Please forget I said it.’

      With the barest of forward movement, he leaned in closer to her face. He’d not really needed to. No one could possibly hear his voice but her.

      ‘I do have a question. Something I’ve wondered for years,’ he said.

      She waited.

      ‘What is a booby-head?’

      She squinted and leaned towards him. ‘What? What is a—?’ She could not fathom what he was thinking.

      ‘Never mind. I suppose I know.’ She heard a smile in his voice and this time she was included but she didn’t know why. ‘I think it best to forget the question.’

      His eyes showed nothing. No humour. No irritation. Just the calm demeanour of a man who might as well have been alone.

      If she could change one thing in her life, it would have been the moment she told the newspaper man about his father’s illegitimate child. Edgeworth must never find out she was the one who told. He’d never forgive her.

      He left, leaving her with a polite manner groomed from centuries, and she felt as if she had been jilted at the altar.

      * * *

      Her sister dashed into the room without knocking. ‘Did you notice Foxworthy must have looked into my eyes for a full minute, when our dance stopped?’ Abigail sat on the bed, depressing the mattress. ‘I suppose it could have been longer. What do you think?’

      ‘It was a night to remember.’ She couldn’t recall much about Abigail’s actions at the soirée. Different memories lodged in her, creating a pleasant and unpleasant feeling mixed deep inside.

      Her sister waved a hand. ‘Lord Foxworthy... Really, did you notice how he looked at me? And after our dance we stole away to the library and he kissed me.’ She shivered. ‘That lasted much longer than a mere five seconds.’

      ‘You do not need to tell me all the gory details,’ Lily muttered. ‘And you are not to be alone with Fenton Foxworthy.’

      Abigail sighed. ‘Isn’t Fenton the most elegant name?’

      ‘No more elegant than, I don’t know, Lionel.’

      Abigail grimaced. Then she spoke softly. ‘He looked deep into my eyes. Deep. Something happened. It could have been love. On his part.’

      Lily snorted. ‘Don’t fall in love with him. He has had so many women’s names linked with his it would be easier to count the few he hasn’t romanced.’

      ‘Love.’ Abigail smiled and her eyes lost focus. ‘I could not say I am entirely in love. But enough. Just deliciously in like.’

      She whooshed up from the bed and her gaze locked on Lily. ‘I hope you’re not jealous of my friendship,’ Abigail said. ‘I noticed you standing very close to him.’

      Lily’s heart thumped an extra beat. The Duke’s face moved through her thoughts.

      Abigail’s face peered close. ‘Yes. What were you and Foxworthy talking about?’

      Lily glanced at her sister, then answered, ‘Foxworthy?’

      Abigail chuckled. ‘That was much more pleasant than when you spoke with the Duke. It is a good thing your faces didn’t get stuck that way.’ She moved to the door. ‘On the other hand, if Foxworthy’s face had locked for ever when he looked at me...’ She took in a deep breath and didn’t complete the sentence.

      ‘It’s time for breakfast,’ Abigail said. ‘Father’s already at the table and probably finished eating by now.’

      Abigail left and Lily rushed through her morning ablutions.

      * * *

      By the time she stood at the table, her father was lost in his paper. Abigail sat on his left side, hardly touching her food, her fork designing shapes in the jam. ‘Fox seemed to think the Duke is truly not interested in me,’ Abigail said.

      Lily slid into her seat. ‘I received the same conclusion.’

      Their father lowered his paper, but didn’t speak.

      ‘Fox says I am too lovely and too vivacious to waste my time on his stuffy cousin.’

      ‘Nonsense. He’s a duke,’ her father said. ‘He is not a waste of your time.’

      ‘Perhaps we misunderstood His Grace all these years,’ Lily said.

      ‘Couldn’t have,’ her father said. ‘I saw the book.’

      ‘What book?’ Abigail asked.

      ‘The deportment one. The one Abigail put in the library.’

      ‘I put it there, Father,’ Lily said.

      ‘What were you doing with Abigail’s book?’

      ‘Book?’ Abigail’s voice challenged.

      ‘Edgeworth gave me a book on deportment.’ Lily shrugged the words away.

      ‘He did?’ Her sister’s head snapped around to Lily and her eyes widened. ‘You never told me.’

      ‘The note...’ Her father studied her. ‘It was for you, Lily?’

      ‘I never put any note in a book.’ Abigail’s nose wrinkled. ‘What did it say?’

      ‘Something about you becoming a duchess,’ he answered.

      ‘Oh,’ Abigail put her hand over her mouth. ‘Oh.’ She looked at Lily and then at her father. Her eyes gleamed with laughter. ‘Lily. Lily’s note.’ She jumped to her feet and leaned over the table. ‘Father.’ She stretched her arm and pointed her finger almost into Lily’s face. Lily batted it away. ‘It was hers.’ She laughed. ‘The Duke. They were whispering in the corner. Foxworthy was trying to distract me and tell me how beautiful I was—right out of the blue. We all know that’s true, but Foxworthy kept saying all his normal balderdash, and all the while Lily and the Duke were nose to nose in the corner. You didn’t notice?’

      ‘They’ve always—’ He stopped, irritation fading. He tapped his fingertips together, staring at Lily. ‘It was your note.’

      ‘A jest,’ she said.

      ‘Well...’ He stood and perused both his daughters. ‘This may change plans for the two of you. But it doesn’t really change mine. I want your fortunes to increase with marriage.’ He rested a hand on the back of a chair. ‘Remember, money can’t buy happiness, but a rich person who is miserable has to work at it.’

      He turned. ‘I want Edgeworth for a son-in-law. I don’t care how the two of you sort it out.’

      Lily watched him leave the room.

      ‘So...’ Abigail swooped, laughing. ‘You are all set to steal my beau.’

      ‘No.’ She shook her head, wishing Abigail would stand still enough to swat. ‘Edgeworth has—had a misunderstanding.’ She couldn’t have so much attention on her. People would sneer. The blacksmith’s daughter who married a duke.

      ‘Well, I should be upset that he prefers you over me, but I’m really rather relieved. Particularly since I prefer almost everyone over him.’ Abigail grimaced. ‘Edgeworth is a little—I mean, he acts ancient. I prefer someone more lively.’

      ‘He’s