him. She didn’t care if he only mentioned what he’d eaten for breakfast . . . It would be breakfast in Italy and thus terribly exotic. What was he doing? Was he bored?
Could he speak Italian?
She stared at the two sheets of paper. Would it be so very terrible if she took a peek?
No. She couldn’t. It would be a gross breach of trust, a complete invasion of Marcus’s privacy. And of Daniel’s.
But then again, what could they possibly have to talk about that would not be of her concern?
She turned, glancing toward the door the maid had motioned to.
She couldn’t hear anything coming through it. If Marcus was finished with his bath, surely she’d hear him moving about. She looked back at the letter.
She was a very fast reader.
In the end, she didn’t really make a decision to read Daniel’s letter to Marcus. Rather, she didn’t allow herself to decide not to. It was a small distinction, but one that somehow allowed her to ignore her own moral code and do something that would have incensed her if it had been
She moved quickly, as if speed might make the sin smaller, and snatched up the two sheets of paper.
Smiling, Honoria turned to the second sheet of the letter. Daniel wrote the way he spoke, and she could practically hear his voice coming from the page.
In the next paragraph Daniel asked Marcus to inform his mother of his impending return, which made Honoria smile more broadly.
Daniel could never have imagined that they would be standing with Marcus when he read the missive.
And then, at the end, Honoria saw her own name.
She set the pages down, then rearranged them so that they would appear as they had been when she had picked them up.
Daniel had asked Marcus to watch over her? Why hadn’t Marcus said anything? And how stupid was she, really, that she had not figured it out? It made such perfect sense. All those parties when she’d caught Marcus glowering in her direction—he hadn’t been glowering at her because he disapproved of her behavior; he’d been in a bad mood because he was stuck in London until she received a good marriage proposal. No wonder he had seemed so miserable all the time.
And all those suitors who had mysteriously dropped her—he’d
She should be furious.
But she wasn’t. Not about that.
All she could think about was what he’d said the night before.
He’d been looking at her because she was an obligation.
And now she was in love with him.
A horrified spurt of laughter burst from her throat. She had to get out of his room. The only thing that could make her mortification more complete would be his catching her reading his correspondence.
But she couldn’t go without leaving a note. That would be completely out of character; he’d know for sure that something was amiss.
So she found paper, and she found a pen, and she scrawled a perfectly ordinary, perfectly boring farewell.
And then she left.
Chapter Seventeen
The following week
The recently aired-out music room
Winstead House, London
“Mozart this year!” Daisy Smythe-Smith announced. She held her new violin aloft with such vigor that her blond curls nearly bounced out of her coiffure. “Isn’t it gorgeous? It’s a Ruggieri. Father bought it for my sixteenth birthday.'
“It’s a beautiful instrument,” Honoria agreed, “but we did Mozart last year.'
“We do Mozart every year,” Sarah drawled from the piano.
“But I didn’t play last year,” Daisy said. She shot Sarah a peevish look. “And this is