Miss
Eugenie Belmont waited in trepidation.
Olivia and Marissa had spoken of their ideal husbands, and after
the uproar they caused Eugenie felt her own qualms increase.
Perhaps if she stayed quiet and made herself very small no one
would notice her? The truth was she didn’t have a choice of an
eligible husband. Not a single, solitary one. Where on earth
would she meet such a man in her circumstances? Eligible men
were hardly likely to come calling at Belmont Hall, falling down
as it was, and inhabited by her disreputable and rackety family.
Perhaps her friends would pass her over and ask Tina or
Averil instead. Eugenie said a fervent prayer under her breath.
“Well, Eugenie? Are you going to
tell us the name of your future husband?” Marissa
was smiling a teasing smile, and the rest of her friends leant
forward, their eyes bright with expectation.
Eugenie tried to smile, too,
although her heart was clanging in her chest. The moment she’d
been dreading for weeks had arrived.
“I
haven’t given it much thought, really. What about Tina? I’m
sure she has someone really interesting to—”
“No, no,” Tina retorted,
“we want to hear your choice, Eugenie. Come now,
don’t be coy. Who is it? Do we know him?”
Eugenie took a drink of her
champagne and violently choked on it. They patted her back,
gathering around her. Desperately Eugenie tried to think of a
way of escaping their questions. She could tell the
truth, but the thought of such an embarrassing admission made
her squirm inside. Her friends seemed to know so many suitable
men, all of them husband material. Eugenie longed to be like
them, and she couldn’t help but think that if they knew just
how unlike them she really was then they would no longer
be her friends.
“There now,” Olivia
said, mopping Eugenie’s cheeks and tucking her wild curls
behind her ears. “All better?”
“I-I think so.”
They waited expectantly.
They exchanged glances.
“Come on, Eugenie. Is it
really such a secret? Who is this man?”
“We all agreed to meet
this evening and tell each other the names of the men we mean to
marry. You can’t change your mind now, Eugenie. It wouldn’t
be fair.”
“Tell us, Eugenie,
please!”
They weren’t going to let
it lie. Eugenie sought desperately for a name, someone handsome
and wealthy and titled, someone who
would impress her irrepressible friends. The one that popped
into her head was completely unexpected and in her panic she
gave herself no time to consider the consequences of uttering it
aloud.
“Sinclair
St. John, the Duke of Somerton,” she blurted out.
Smiles wavered. Eyebrows
were raised. “Good heavens!” cried Tina,
always forthright. “Somerton is the most
eligible man in the realm. Aren’t you
aiming a little high, Eugenie?”
“Why shouldn’t she aim
high?” Olivia spoke gallantly. “Eugenie
deserves only the best. And she has royal blood!”
“Dear me, yes,” teased Marissa, showing her dimple.
“I had forgotten that. Was it your grandmamma, Eugenie, who
was a king’s mistress?”
“No, it was my
great-grandmamma. She was a maid in the palace, no great lady,
and she wasn’t at all pretty, so it is quite a mystery how she
lured King George to her bed. Although he was rather ugly
himself . . .”
They giggled.
“And then he made their
son a baronet with property to go with it. The property and the
money are long gone. All that is left to us of great
grandmama’s liaison is the baronetcy, and my father’s nose,
which he insists is pure Hanoverian. We have no reason to boast
about our royal connection, I assure you.”
“But are you acquainted with the Duke of Somerton?”
Averil, serious as always, dismissed Eugenie’s self-effacing
jests.
“Yes. I met him three months ago.” Well that at least
was true.
“Met him only once?”
Olivia gasped.
“No, of course not, that
would be silly.” Eugenie forced a laugh. “Met him for the
first time three months ago, I meant. We have spoken many times
since and-and written.”
She was making it worse.
Eugenie longed for her moment in the spotlight to be over. With
any luck the Duke of Somerton would be forgotten by the end of
the evening and then after a decent time she could bury him.
Averil
was speaking. “I’ve heard he is rather particular in his
choice of friends. A snob, in other words.
I cannot see him sitting down to dinner with a mere baronet!”
“He is a pompous prig who
believes himself too good for the rest of us!” Tina added
hotly. “I have been cut by him.
He looked right through me. Not that I cared, but I think
you might do better, Eugenie. Why would you wish to spend your
life with such a creature?”
“I, too, must express my
doubts as to his suitability to be your husband,” Averil went
on, a little wrinkle of concern creasing her smooth brow.
“He is not someone I know well, but what I do know . .
. Eugenie, he is said to be arrogant and cold, quite unlike
you!”
The final words burst out of her and there was a murmur
of doubt from the others.
“We’ve all heard you
speak about your family, Eugenie,” Marissa went on in an
understanding way. “Are you sure you haven’t chosen Somerton
because he is the exact opposite of them?”
Now Eugenie felt her skin
flush, as it was prone to do when she was feeling emotional. She
knew her wretched freckles would be standing out. It
all came of having a great grandmamma with red curly hair—the
disreputable grandmamma! Although Eugenie’s
hair was more brown than red, she had inherited the tendency to
freckle and to blush.
But it was true. Her rackety
family was the bane of her life. Her friends
knew the trials and tribulations she faced when it came to her
family, and there was truth in what Olivia had said—she did
dream of marrying someone who was the polar opposite of the
baronet, her father.
“There is no point in denying it.” Eugenie sighed
theatrically. “You’re right. I have a desperate desire to be
conventional. And the Duke of Somerton is the
most respectable man I know. Will he love me?
Do I love him? I think I could
love him and I could persuade him to love me. It might be
fun to find out. Just think, I could
be the first Belmont to be respectable.”
They were silent and she
knew they thought she was indulging in wishful thinking.
Why would the most eligible man in England marry her?
Eugenie knew she was no beauty. Small and
slender, with not much of a figure to speak of, her hair was
brown with red tints and curled wildly despite her efforts to
subdue it, while her features were too sharp to be considered
more than interesting. It was true that males
did tend to gravitate toward her at balls and parties, but she
thought that was because she laughed at their jokes and listened
sympathetically to their woes. They felt at ease with her—more
like a sister than a possible romantic partner.
Why oh why had she chosen
such an unlikely man to be her husband? Why had that particular
name popped into her head? But it was too late now. The hole she
had dug for herself was too deep to get out of. She’d just
have to continue on and hope that at some point she could
wriggle out of the mess she’d created.
She
lifted her pointed chin, fixing her friends with her clear green
eyes. “Yes, Somerton is refreshingly
different from my family and I agree he can appear rather stuck
up and-and proud. But that isn’t the real Somerton.
Beneath that chilly exterior is a man who is generous and
kind; someone who isn’t afraid to laugh at himself.”
Olivia grasped her hand.
“And, Eugenie, you are just the girl to bring out the
best in him. But how do you know he isn’t exactly as he seems
to Averil and Tina? Are you so well acquainted with
him?”
“I would not say I know
him intimately, but I have seen him as few people can say they
have.”
It was true.
She had seen beneath the pompous exterior of Sinclair St.
John, the Duke of Somerton. Not in the way
her doubting friends imagined, however. Now was the moment to
convince them that plain and shy Eugenie Belmont was more than
capable of ensnaring a duke.
She
gave a secretive little smile.
“Eugenie!
Tell us! Please!” they begged.
“It
happened three months ago.”
They
all leaned closer.
Soon
they were under her spell. Eugenie told a good story—her
father, the baronet, said she was a chip off the old block,
although she preferred to use her story telling for the pleasure
of others rather than to swindle numbskulls out of their blunt,
as her father often boasted. Now she did her best to amuse her
friends, causing them to gasp and laugh by turns, and
embellishing the scene to the point that even she began to
believe that it really was possible for her to marry a man like
Somerton.
“.
. . and then he took my hand and said I was the most unusual
girl he’d ever met . . .” It was mostly tosh, but her
friends weren’t to know that.
When
her story finally ended, Olivia clapped her hands and Marissa
giggled. Even serious Averil was smiling, while Tina gave an
unladylike snort of amusement.
“So
now you know why I want to marry the Duke of Somerton,”
Eugenia finished gamely, too flushed with her success to stem
her flow of words. “Wait and see if I do not win him over. In
fact by this time next year I believe I will be his duchess!”
“How
amazing,” Marissa said, her eyes widening. “I think I will
have to come and call upon you, Eugenie, and see this unfold for
myself.”
The
others agreed, eagerly, making plans, checking dates.
Eugenie
froze. She hadn’t thought it out, exactly, but she probably
would have waited a month or two and then pretended her romance
with Somerton didn’t work out. She would send each of her
friends a sad little letter. But now . . . She shuddered at the
thought of them visiting and learning the truth. Bad enough that
she didn’t have a husband-to-be, but to have told them such
lies! If they discovered the truth they would never speak to her
again. Did this mean she really would have to persuade Somerton
to marry her?
She
pictured his handsome, aristocratic face, his black eyes resting
on her in amazed disgust. Marry you?
The young ladies were raising their champagne glasses and
she had no option but to raise her own and join in the toast.
“To
Eugenie!”
“To the Duchess of
Somerton!”
The champagne went down the
wrong way. Eugenie began to choke.
Again.