Constantine looked at him.
“I am deeply in your debt,” he said. “For everything.”
Elliott grinned.
“Do you imagine for one moment,” he said, “that I am going to let you forget it?”
Constantine chuckled.
“No,” he said. “I know you from of old.”
“Are you going to marry her?” Elliott asked.
And there it was. The idea his mind had been skirting about for days.
He wanted to marry. He wanted to have children. He wanted all those things he had avoided for years. He wanted to settle down.
But—with the Duchess of Dunbarton?
With Hannah?
It was like thinking of two different persons. But she was one and the same. She was both the duchess as he had always known her and Hannah as she had revealed herself since they became lovers. She could not be summed up in one word or one sentence. Even in one paragraph. Even in one book or one
“The idea had not crossed my mind,” he said.
“Liar!” Elliott was still grinning.
“What made you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that you wanted to marry Vanessa?” Constantine asked.
“I didn’t,” Elliott said. “She proposed to
“If you don’t want to tell me,” Constantine said, “you can just say so, you know.”
Elliott held up his right hand.
“Honest truth,” he said. “By the time I loved her more than life, I was already married to her and didn’t have to go through all the agony of deciding how and where and when and
“She might laugh at me,” Constantine said.
“It is a distinct possibility,” Elliott conceded after thinking about it for a moment. “She is a formidable lady, is she not? Not to mention
“The
“Why?” Elliott said. “You have much to offer, Con, and you are considerably more eligible today than you were a week ago.” He grinned again.
Constantine shrugged.
“Vanessa swears,” Elliott said, “that there is passion beneath all that sparkling white ice, Con, and that when the duchess finds an object upon which to focus it, she will be as constant as the north star. Vanessa tends to know these things. I would not dream of arguing with her upon such matters. I would turn out to be wrong, and she would gallantly refrain from saying
“Hmm,” Constantine said.
“For your edification,” Elliott added, “she says that you have become that object, Con. You had better come with me to Moreland House as soon as we get back to town, by the way, and make your peace with Vanessa before you go off to Dunbarton House.”
“Right,” Constantine said before setting his head back and pretending to sleep so that there would be no more such talk.
He dozed off while wondering if she would laugh or weep if he offered her marriage.
Or whether he would give her the opportunity to do either.
Chapter 21
HANNAH THOUGHT she must have been right to fear that Constantine would stay at Ainsley and so avoid the issue of their affair and the words she had so incautiously spoken to him when they were at Copeland. He did not return to London the day after the Earl of Merton or even the day after that.
But, she discovered after three days, neither did the Duke of Moreland. They were both still out of town. Hannah found that out when she met the duchess during the afternoon when they were both calling upon Katherine to see if she was still suffering morning sickness.
So perhaps he would return after all. The
In the meantime, it did not take Hannah long to discover that she had tired of her new favorite almost as quickly as everyone had predicted. She had cast him off without pity, and he had gone off into the country to lick his wounds. She was looking about her for a new lover, who would have his moment in the sun before being cast off in his turn. Everyone wondered who he would be. There was no lack of eager candidates.
This, at least, was the gossip that was doing the rounds of London clubs and drawing rooms. It would have been amusing had she not been so consumed with anxiety lest
There was nothing to be done, however, but to live up to expectations while she waited. She was certainly not going to stay at home like a recluse any longer. On one brilliantly sunny afternoon she donned her most dazzling white muslin dress and bonnet, added ostentatiously large diamonds to her earlobes and gloved fingers and one wrist, raised a white lacy parasol over her head, and sallied forth for a walk in Hyde Park at the fashionable hour.
Barbara and the Reverend Newcombe accompanied her. It was their last day in London. Tomorrow they would return to Markle, Babs in a carriage with her maid, the vicar on horseback beside it so that all the proprieties might be observed. Hannah had wanted them to spend their last afternoon in town alone somewhere together—she had suggested Richmond Park—but they had insisted upon remaining with her.
They were soon surrounded by people, most of them male, though not all. Margaret and Katherine were together in an open barouche and stopped to talk for a while. Katherine, upon learning that Barbara was to leave the next day, insisted that Hannah come to dine in the evening. And Margaret invited her to attend the opera with them the evening after.
“We have almost but not quite persuaded Duncan’s grandpapa to come with us,” she said. “If he knows
“Then tell him I have accepted
Barbara and the Reverend Newcombe were talking with Mr. and Mrs. Park and another couple.
The barouche drove on, and Hannah was swallowed up in a circle of her old male friends, some of whom were also would-be suitors, and a few new admirers. It felt very comfortable, she thought after a few minutes, to be back within the old armor, playing the part of the Duchess of Dunbarton while guarding the more fragile person of Hannah Reid safely within.
And yet it was a part that could not be played indefinitely. She had not realized that until now. She certainly had not realized it at the start of the Season. Playing the part had been easy and even enjoyable while the duke had lived. There had been his company, his companionship, and—yes—his
Would new friends and old be enough in the coming days and months—and years?