“It means that,” he said.
“That is a pity,” she said. “I had been beginning to think that I might, just
“I cannot
“I must be protected from life, then?” she said. “It cannot be done, Hugo.”
“I know nothing whatsoever about courtship,” he told her after a brief silence. “I have not read the manual.”
“You dance with the woman in question,” she said. “Or, if it is a waltz and you are afraid of tripping all over your feet or treading all over hers, then you stroll outdoors with her and listen to her pour out all her deepest, darkest secrets without either looking bored or passing judgment. And then you kiss her and make her feel somehow … forgiven. You call on her when she is feeling weary to the bone and take her walking. You make sure to lead her along a shady, deserted path so that you may kiss her.”
“A kiss each day?” he asked. “That is a requirement?”
“Whenever possible,” she said. “It takes ingenuity on some days.”
“I can be ingenious,” he said.
“I do not doubt it,” she told him.
They strolled slowly onward.
“Gwendoline,” he said, “I may seem like a big, tough fellow. I am not sure I am.”
“Oh,” she said softly, “I am quite sure you are not, Hugo. Not in all the ways that matter, anyway.”
At least she did not
She desperately needed to
“A kiss a day,” he said. “But not necessarily as a signal of courtship on either of our parts. A kiss merely because conditions are favorable and we wish to get physical.”
“It sounds like a good enough reason,” she said, laughing. “Kiss me, then, Hugo, and rescue today from seeming somehow … dismal.”
Tree branches laden with their spring coat of light green leaves waved above their heads. The air was fragrant with the smell of them. A chorus of invisible birds was busy with their mysterious, sweet-sounding communications. In the distance a dog barked and a child shrieked with laughter.
He turned her back to a tree trunk and leaned his body against hers. His fingers pushed past the sides of her bonnet into her hair while his palms cupped her cheeks. His eyes, gazing into her own in the shade of the trees, were very dark.
“Every day,” he said. “It is a heady thought.”
“Yes.” She smiled.
“Beddings every night,” he said. “Several times a night. And often during the day too. It would be the natural result of courtship.”
“Yes,” she said.
“
“Yes,” she said. “And
“Gwendoline,” he murmured.
“Hugo.”
And his lips touched hers, brushed them lightly, and drew back.
“The next time,” he said, “
“Yes,” she said. “
What
He kissed her again, wrapping both arms about her waist and drawing her away from the tree into his body, while her arms twined about his neck.
It was a hard, hot kiss, their open mouths pressed together, their tongues dueling, stroking, in her mouth, in his, back again. They breathed heavily against each other’s cheek. And ultimately they kissed softly and warmly and with lips only, murmuring unintelligible words.
“I think,” he said when he was finished, “I had better take you home.”
“I think so too,” she said. “And then you had better pull those invitations out of your pocket before it acquires a permanent bulge.”
“It would not do to be walking around looking like an imperfect gentleman,” he said.
“No, indeed.” She laughed and took his arm.
And she recklessly upgraded her chances of a future with him all the way from improbable to possible.
Though not yet to probable.
She was not
Chapter 18
Constance, it seemed to Hugo, was having the time of her life. She went shopping with Lady Muir and her cousin and sister-in-law one morning and ended up at a tea shop with an admirer and his mother. She went on a round of visits on another afternoon with the same three ladies and was escorted home by the son of the final household upon which they called, a maid trailing along behind at his grandmother’s insistence. She went driving in the park on two afternoons with different escorts. And each morning brought a steady stream of invitations, though so far she had attended only the one ball.
She was well launched upon society, it seemed, and she was happy. Not just for herself, though.
“
“About
“Well,” she said, “I suppose it is good for their prestige to be seen with the sister of the hero of Badajoz.”
Hugo was mortally tired of hearing that ridiculous phrase.
“But they are courting
“Oh, you must not worry, Hugo,” she said. “I am not going to
“You are not?” he asked, his brows drawing together.
“No, of course not,” she said. “They are all very sweet and very amusing and very … well, very silly. But no, that is cruel. I like them all, and they are very kind. And they are all terribly in awe of you. I doubt any would be able to get his courage up to ask you for my hand even if he wished to do so. You do frown quite ferociously, you know.”
Constance was perhaps more sensible than he had realized. She was not pinning her matrimonial hopes upon any of the gentlemen she had met thus far. It was hardly surprising, of course. Her first ball had been less than a week ago. Perhaps he had mistaken her motive in wanting to attend that ball. Perhaps it was not even important to her to move up the social scale by marrying up.
It was an idea that seemed to be corroborated by other things happening in her life.
She went to the grocery shop one afternoon with her grandmother and met her other relatives there. She instantly adored them all and was adored in return. After that first visit she made time every day to go over there to see them—those of them who were not at the house fussing over Fiona, that was. And she spoke of them and of the shop and the neighborhood with as much enthusiasm as she showed when describing her dealings with the
There was an ironmonger’s next to the grocery shop. The longtime owner had died recently, but his son had