wager.
And she wondered again, as she had a thousand or more times since that evening, why he had not completed what he had started and claimed whatever prize there was to claim. She had never wanted to believe- she still did not-that there might be some decency in him, that perhaps he was a man with some conscience. She preferred to believe the explanation he had given at the time-that she had been too easy a prey to be of any real interest to him. Would that have mattered, though, when there was a wager at stake?
“You still hate me,” he said softly.
His voice sounded abject-suspiciously so. There was also surely the suggestion of humor in it. She
“Are you surprised?” She raised her eyes to his again.
“Not at all,” he said. “You informed me on a certain infamous occasion that I had disappointed you. How can one
He was definitely laughing at her. But her effort to think of some suitably cutting retort was thwarted when he twirled her about one corner of the ballroom, using fancy footwork that somehow persuaded her own feet to match it. She laughed with delight before she remembered that she was not delighted at all.
“I could teach you
She raised her eyebrows.
“Would that not be doing you a favor?” he asked.
“On the assumption,” she said, “that if I did not hate you, I would be indifferent to you and would not glare at you every time we met? That would be convenient to
“
Her stomach was performing a somersault again. She could not seem to look away from those lazy eyes.
“I suppose not,” she said with a sigh. “Dislike is not indifference, is it?”
He smiled openly and chuckled aloud.
“I could teach you not to hate me
She was startled almost speechless.
“Ha!” was all she could manage to say. It was half exclamation, half question.
“Was that agreement?” The music had begun again, a somewhat faster tune this time. He twirled her several times before she could answer. “You admit, then, that I could do it?”
“Never in a million years,” she said when she could command her voice. It shook with indignation. “Never in a
“Would it take a billion and one, then?” he asked her. “How very tedious! And how very firm-minded of you. But I believe you underestimate me, Miss Huxtable.”
“And
He did not answer. Which was horrible, really, as her words seemed to hang between them and follow them about the dance floor as they waltzed in silence to an exhilarating rhythm, and the growing heat between them made her more and more aware of him physically and more and more uncomfortable.
She quite understood why the waltz was considered fast among a large segment of society.
Their hands, clasped together, had turned hot and damp.
The faster tune did not last long. Soon, almost without a pause, the orchestra began playing something far slower and more… romantic.
Still they danced without speaking-until eventually he broke the silence between them.
“It
“As it is for me,” she retorted hotly. “An utter, complete impossibility.”
“It is so mutually impossible, in fact,” he said, “that it sounds quite perfect for a wager, does it not?”
“A wager?” She looked at him with a frown.
“Oh, I know,” he said with an exaggerated sigh. “A refined lady does not lay bets. And anyone who wagers against me, male or female, inevitably regrets it anyway. I never lose, you see.”
“Except once,” she said tartly.
He raised his right eyebrow. It half disappeared beneath that errant lock of hair.
“Except once,” he agreed. “How obliging of you to remind me, Miss Huxtable. Though we both know, do we not, that I forfeited rather than lost that particular one.”
“What wager exactly are we talking about now?” she asked him after a short pause.
Was it her imagination, or were they dancing somewhat closer together than they had been a little while ago? She tried to edge backward, but his hand was as firm as a wall against her waist.
“A sort of double wager, I suppose it would have to be,” he said. “An interesting prospect. That I can make you fall in love with me for my part, that you can make me fall in love with you on yours.”
“Ha!” she said again. “There is
“And no way
“As I did not in Vauxhall?” she said, and could have bitten out her tongue.
His eyes grew very lazy indeed, though a smile lingered in them.
“I told a shocking fib on that occasion,” he said. “
“Oh?” she said. “What
“Perhaps,” he said, and his eyes mocked her again, “I was afraid I might fall in love with you.”
“Ha,” she said for the third time though it was a word-or a syllable-not normally in her vocabulary. Her stomach was into its tumbling act again.
“I could not take the risk, you see,” he said, and grinned again.
“What nonsense you speak,” she said crossly. “You just claimed never to have been in love and to be quite incapable of loving.”
“Perhaps,” he said, moving his head a little closer to hers as they turned about a corner of the room again and for a fleeting moment Katherine saw Margaret smiling up at the Marquess of Allingham, “I have been in danger
She stared at him.
“
“Nonsense!” she said again.
“You will not know,” he said, “unless you try.”
“But why would I want to?” she asked him. “What does it matter to me whether you have a heart or not? Or whether you are capable of love or not? Why would I wish to win such a ridiculous wager? Why would I want you in love with me?”
“Because,” he said, “by the time you admit that you