Julia London

The Scoundrel and the Debutante


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their opinions, it made him very curious.

      The women looked as if they were poised to ask more questions, but the coach began to slow. Roan leaned forward a bit, could see a row of whitewashed cottages with red and purple flowers spilling out of the window boxes. They’d arrived in a village he’d seen earlier today, and if he were not mistaken, there was nothing here but a change of horses. Yet he, for one, could not wait to be disgorged from this coach.

      They rolled into the village, and the coach swayed to one side as the coachman hopped down from the seats atop to open the door and release the step. Roan was always a gentleman, but today, he could not help himself from launching out of the interior of the crowded coach and taking several steps away to drag some much needed air into his lungs, and hopefully, erase the feel of Miss Cabot against him from his flesh. By the time he turned about, the coachman had helped all the passengers from the interior, and the boy was assisting the old man onto a bench. The two ladies, likewise regurgitated from the coach, stood in identical fashion, their hands on the small of their backs, bending backward...and still talking.

      Miss Cabot was standing apart from the others, holding a small wrapped package. She looked remarkably fresh, cheerful as a bluebell in her blue traveling gown.

      The driver strolled into their midst with the posture of a mayor in spite of his dirty breeches, worn shoes and a waistcoat that seemed two sizes too small. “Beggin’ yer pardon, ladies and gents!” he announced grandly. “The coach will depart at a quarter past two.”

      Roan glanced around him. There was a small public inn and a smithy, but very little else. He would very much like to drown the morning with a pint or two, but instead began striding down the road, needing to stretch his legs and shake off the exquisitely torturous feeling of having a lovely young woman pressed practically into his lap for the past hour and a half. It wouldn’t hurt him to find the last tattered remnants of his patience, either. He paused, searching for it. It was not available.

      Roan was not generally an impatient man. On the contrary—he thought most would say he could be depended upon to be the center of calm in the midst of a storm. But he was devilishly out of sorts—he’d been in England for all of two days and could still feel the sea swells beneath his legs after a month at sea. He’d been turned completely around by the fellows in Liverpool, who, he’d realized after some minutes of trying to understand them, were actually speaking English to him. Those lads had sent him on this fool’s errand, sent him south when he should have gone north.

      Moreover, Roan was a man accustomed to fine carriages and better steeds. Not stagecoaches on rutted roads, squashed in between a dirty squab and a woman with skin that felt as smooth as butter.

      He came to a full stop in the road and breathed deeply of the warm air. The short walk had not improved his mood as much as he would have liked. He turned his face up to a bright blue sky and roared his frustration with his missteps, with his sister, with everything in general.

      Now he felt better.

      Roan pivoted about and strode back to the little hamlet.

      He spied Miss Cabot perched on top of a fence post. She had opened the package she’d held protectively in her lap and appeared to be eating something. Next to the fence, the sisters were seated side by side on a trunk, each with a pail in their lap. They, too, appeared to be eating.

      Roan strolled to Miss Cabot’s side. He tried not to ogle what was in her lap, but he couldn’t resist it, particularly as a quick review of the past twenty-four hours reminded him that he’d not eaten.

      Miss Cabot glanced up, turning her head so that he could see her hazel eyes from beneath the deep brim of her bonnet. “Oh. Mr. Matheson.”

      “Miss Cabot.”

      She held up the brown cheesecloth so that a variety of small bites were displayed just below his nose. “May I offer you a sweetmeat?”

      He peered more closely at the contents. They looked like the fried cakes that Nella, his family’s longtime cook, often made. “No, thank you.” He wasn’t so out of sorts as to take her food.

      “No?” She took one and popped it into her mouth. “Mmm,” she said, and closed her eyes a moment. “Delicious.”

      Much to his consternation, Roan’s stomach grumbled.

      Miss Cabot smiled and held up the cheesecloth a little closer to him. “You must at least try one.

      “You don’t mind?” he asked, but he was already reaching for one.

      She watched him closely as he put the morsel in his mouth. Good God, she was right—it was delicious.

      “Have another. Have as many as you like.”

      “Perhaps one more,” Roan said gratefully, reaching. When he opened his palm, he found three instead of the one he’d intended.

      Miss Cabot laughed, the sound of it crystal and light. “One might think you’ve not eaten today, Mr. Matheson.”

      “I’ve not eaten since yesterday morning.”

      “What! Why ever not?”

      He shrugged. “I’ve been traveling and it’s not always convenient. Frankly, I thought I would have reached my destination by now.”

      Miss Cabot hopped down from the fence and squatted down beside a small bag by her feet, which she opened and rummaged in before removing another cheesecloth. She handed that one to him.

      Roan unwrapped it. It was bread.

      “I’ve cheese, too.”

      “No, I—”

      “I must insist, Mr. Matheson! My youngest sister put it in my bag.” She smiled up at him, her eyes sparkling like diamonds in the sunlight. “She wanted me to be properly provisioned. She has high hopes that we will be set upon by highwaymen and forced to live in the woods.”

      “She has hope of that?”

      “She has a keen sense of drama. Please, help yourself. There is more.”

      “I’m grateful,” he said, and went down on one haunch and tore off a chunk of the bread. He ate it much more savagely than he intended as Miss Cabot climbed back onto the fence railing. He helped himself to the cheese, too, surprised by how ravenous he suddenly realized he was.

      “Yoo-hoo!”

      The two sisters wiggled their fingers at Miss Cabot, even though they sat only a few feet away. “We’ve solved the mystery!” one of them trilled loudly.

      “We have indeed! It was quite a puzzle—”

      “Quite,” said the more robust of the two.

      “What mystery?” Miss Cabot asked.

      “Well, you, my dear. But we have deduced it. You are Lady Altringham!” she said proudly.

      “Oh dear me, no,” Miss Cabot said laughingly. “She’s twenty years my senior.”

      “Oh,” said the woman, clearly disappointed once more.

      “But I am acquainted with her,” Miss Cabot said. “Her daughter and I were presented together.”

      “Ooh,” said the smaller one, her eyes lighting with delight.

      “Presented?” Roan said uncertainly.

      “To the king, sir!” one of the women said crossly, as if he should have known it.

      Roan looked up at Miss Cabot curiously. “Why? Did you do something of note?”

      Miss Cabot burst into a delightful laughter. “Not at all! It was all I could manage to curtsy properly.”

      “I should like to know from where you hail, sir, for you seem quite ignorant,” said one of the women.

      “Doesn’t he, though?” agreed