Part 3 (1/2)
Justin drained his gla.s.s, and then stared into it for a while. ”All right, since you're being so insistent, I'll admit it. I am hiding, perhaps just a bit. I didn't expect Molton's response. Some of the others, yes, I did expect idiots to be idiots. But not Molton. He was friendly enough when we were in Vienna. We worked together with the Austrians, securing Marie Louise's condemnation of her husband so that the Allies could brand him an outlaw.”
”But now you're both in Mayfair. Molton will follow the pack, perhaps even more so if he fears that someone will remember he'd been seen with you in Vienna.”
”At least Chalfont hasn't asked me to remove my unacceptable self from the premises. There is that.”
Tanner turned his back to the rail, looking in at the bright, overheated ballroom. ”Are you serious?” he teased his friend. ”His wife is in alt, confident she has scored the coup of the Season, having you here. Her ball will be on everyone's lips tomorrow. She was mortified, she was horrified, she feared her dear husband might at any moment draw his sword and order you out at the point of it. But as you'd already killed the once...”
Justin also turned about, to lean back against the railing. ”So you're saying I'm too outrageous to be in polite company, but too dangerous to exclude? How interesting. I might even like that. Shall I take to dressing all in black, do you think? Apply myself to developing a scowl?”
”You mean to combine a bit of Brummell's severe attire with a hint of Byron's pout? The ladies might enjoy that.”
Justin did a fairly good imitation of a dark scowl. ”Ladies always enjoy the thought that they might be part of some t.i.tillating drama or the other. It's their bread and b.u.t.ter. How else did George collect an entire treasure box filled with locks of pubic hair, for G.o.d's sake. Women are fools. And then we have to defend their idiocy.”
”Sheila was one of Byron's conquests?”
Justin shrugged. ”I never inquired. Couldn't bring myself to really much care either way, frankly, as long as she didn't do anything so publicly stupid as Caro Lamb. I've had eight long years to refine on my mistake. I failed my wife, Tanner. I wed Sheila's beauty, not concerned with more than scoring such a coup, having her on my arm. It was only once we'd gotten to know each other that we both realized we'd each married a stranger and, at heart, really didn't even like one another. Let that be a lesson to you, my friend. Admire beauty, take it to bed if you must. But marry it? No, don't do that.”
Tanner knew he had to ask this next question. ”You've danced twice with Lady Lydia, Justin. You admire her beauty?”
The baron pushed himself away from the railing, to look carefully at Tanner. ”Am I poaching on already-fenced property, my friend? If so, you've only to tell me. My friends do not appear to be so thick on the ground at the moment that I would risk alienating one of them.”
Tanner didn't know how to answer that question. Was it only a few hours ago that he'd blithely told Rafe he would gladly welcome compet.i.tion from somewhere other than the grave?
He'd watched Lydia and Justin as they'd moved around the dance floor in a waltz, and she'd seemed animated, quite happy, the two of them chattering the entire time...unaware of the sidelong looks, the furious whispers.
His friend Justin was handsome, rich, affable, and intelligent. Tanner didn't mind that sort of compet.i.tion. But how does a man compete with someone whose past made him also appear dangerous, even deliciously intriguing? Worse, how did one compete with a friend, dead or alive?
It was rather as if Lydia had bloomed today. First in the Park, then again once Justin had come on the scene. Tanner didn't know what had happened, was happening. Perhaps Lydia had felt herself under her more gregarious sister's thumb, and now felt free?
No, that couldn't be it. Lydia and Nicole were more than sisters, even more than simply twins. They were very good friends. Still, he could understand how comfortable it might be for a basically shy person like Lydia to allow her sister to take the center of the stage, while she watched from the wings.
He'd thought-yes, he would admit it to himself-that, once Nicole was gone from the stage, as it were, Lydia would turn to him for companions.h.i.+p, and that their friends.h.i.+p, founded in tragedy, might grow into something more.
He'd even watch as she was pursued by other suitors, confident enough in his own ability to capture her heart when the time was right, when she could be sure of her decision. Especially now, today, as Lydia seemed to be ready to face life on her own, finally out from behind her sister's shadow.
What a h.e.l.l of a moment for Justin and his wicked smile, his even more wicked wit, and his romantic tragic past to show up on the scene...
”Tanner? Was the question that difficult?”
”What? Oh,” Tanner said, realizing he'd become lost, perhaps even tangled, in his private thoughts. ”Forgive me. I was debating whether I should discuss Lydia with anyone. But you're not just anyone, are you?”
”No. I'm an extraordinarily singular person,” Justin said, smiling that winning smile of his. ”Are you about to make some confession to me?”
”Hardly.” Tanner came to a decision, not that he was particularly pleased with it. ”No, Justin, Lady Lydia and I are friends, nothing more.”
”And now you've disappointed me, and after I've been so forthright and truthful with you.”
Tanner looked into the ballroom, to see Lydia dancing with a fairly well set-up young man he didn't recognize. She was talking to him, smiling up at him, just as she had done with Justin. Definitely a blooming flower, a b.u.t.terfly suddenly shed of her coc.o.o.n, taking flight for the very first time, her new wings glittering in the sunlight.
”She looks very happy, doesn't she?”
Justin turned to look into the ballroom. ”And that's unusual? Tanner, have I ever informed you that I loathe a mystery? And even worse, that I will now feel it my duty to pick at you and pick at you until you've told me what I want to know?”
”I'm sensing that, yes. And I admit it, I'm a poor liar. Very well. Lydia was all but betrothed to a good friend of mine,” Tanner explained, once more turning his back to the ballroom. ”Captain Swain Fitzgerald. He was killed at Quatre Bras.”
”d.a.m.n,” Justin said, also turning to lean his forearms on the railing. ”A deuced tricky thing, stepping into a dead man's boots.”
Tanner's smile was rueful. ”I wouldn't have put it quite that way, but yes, it is. I was the one who was with him when he died, promising him I'd take care of Lydia for him. I was the one who brought her the news of Fitz's death, delivered his personal belongings, what turned out to be his final letter to her.” He drank the last of his wine and carefully placed the gla.s.s on the railing. ”Oh, how she hated me for that.”
”A natural reaction, I'm afraid.”
”I've never seen such grief, Justin. Lydia is a young woman of strong emotions, although she keeps them well tamped down beneath her quiet, rather shy demeanor. I've often wondered since then, would I ever inspire any woman to grieve so over me?”
”Planning on sticking your spoon in the wall, are you? No, don't bother to explain. I understand what you mean. You wondered-wonder-if anyone would ever love you quite so much. We all do, my friend, and we are all, for the most part, doomed to disappointment. But we have begun to digress, so let us return to my original question. Clearly you envision a time when you and the lady are more than friends. Tell me to back away and I will.”
Tanner shook his head. ”No, I won't do that. I have no claim on Lydia.”
”And I'm selfish enough to take you at your word, even as I believe you're still lying to at least one of the two of us. Now please tell me about Miss Harburton. Another very beautiful young woman.”
”Jasmine? She's my third cousin.”
”Yes, she told me that during our dance. She told me about your father's dying wish, as well. A very...sharing young woman, your cousin. She certainly kept me from the burden of cudgeling my brain to make scintillating conversation with a near stranger.”
”Jasmine talks when she's nervous.”
”Really? Then shame on me, for I must then have truly terrified the poor child.”
Tanner laughed. ”Oh, it's good to have you back, old friend. I fear I've been much too sober and serious this past year, living a more quiet life.”
”And yet here you are this evening, with both Lady Lydia, who you say you lay no claim to, and Miss Harburton, whom you have likewise not claimed. That's your idea of a quiet life, juggling two beauties in the same evening? And, then, as if you didn't have problems enough, a handsome reprobate with an appreciation of if not a genuine affection for beautiful women stumbles into the Second Act. Yes, Richard Sheridan wouldn't have been amiss if he'd said he saw the foundation for a rather marvelous comedy of manners, even a true farce to outdo The Rivals. It might have been the remaking of his career, as a matter of fact, poor dead fellow that he is.”
Tanner shot him a dark look, but then smiled. ”Remind me why I'm your friend.”
”You don't see me in the role? I could be the black sheep with a tarnished past but a heart of gold.”
”You have a heart? That's good to know.”
”Ouch! Now I'm wounded to the quick. But, as I seem to be a glutton for punishment, I think we have hidden my shameful self out here long enough. And if I haven't thanked you for standing my friend in there, I do now.”
”What you need, Justin, is a new scandal, to take everyone's attention away from you. That shouldn't take too long, I imagine. In the meantime, you might want to consider not, well, forcing yourself on Society.”
”After this evening, I have no invitations at all, so that's not a worry. But you're correct. I shouldn't be jumping back in with both feet quite so dramatically, should I?”
”I'm sorry, Justin...”
”Don't be. I could have been hanged, you know. Having Molton and a few others dealing me the cut direct is at least not fatal. Ah, and as if I just conjured him up. Tanner, go away. You don't need to be involved in this.”