a banquet table with any one or
As she told Claxton the night before, their estrangement wasn’t even about the women, but her doubt over his ability to
So perhaps childishly, as a reminder of his truer nature, she’d tucked the folded list inside her corset as a ward over her heart. If she did ultimately withdraw her demand for a separation, she would be wise to never forget that theirs must in the future be a marriage based on honesty and truths, not romance. Theirs, like so many other
Her only hope was that at some point in these unbroken, snowbound hours spent with Claxton, he would somehow lose his shine. At her own peril, she remained much too fascinated by the duke. Sophia prayed that at some moment he would sneeze untidily and wipe the resulting snotty mess on his sleeve. Or burst out with a sudden battery of flatulence. If he would only voice some heartless opinion about widows and orphans or confess to despising puppies, chicks, and kittens. Of course, he had never exhibited any of those oafish habits before, but now that her eyes were wide open and looking for flaws, she felt quite certain they would become apparent.
She would just be patient and give him time to reveal his true loathsome self. Only then, when she saw Claxton for who he was—just a man, like any other—could she chance proceeding to the next level of intimacy without endangering her heart.
On the threshold of the great room, she perceived two things in the dim morning light. Firstly, one of Claxton’s boots hung upside down from the center of the kissing bough. Secondly, the third Duke of Claxton’s portrait had gone missing from above the mantel. The portrait now occupied the corner, upside down and curiously misshapen. Sophia ventured inside for a closer inspection, which revealed a gash at the center of the elder’s painted face, the approximate size of Claxton’s foot. Now she realized what the crashing sound had been last night.
A rustle of movement sounded behind her. Turning, she found his Grace sprawled on the settee, clothed in his shirt and breeches, covered only by his coat. Curiously, his feet were raised to a slight level over his head, as one of the wooden legs of the settee had fallen out. He appeared terribly uncomfortable and just a little amusing because his stockinged feet jutted more than a foot over the end.
Now she felt truly guilty for having enjoyed the comfort of the ducal bedroom for the duration of their stay. Overwhelmed by the desire to just look at him, unguarded and unaware, she moved closer, quietly, so he would not awaken.
If providence could see to start her day on a good note, she would find him in an unforgivable, slovenly state. His face would be swollen and puffy with sleep, and there would be drool. Lots and lots of drool. The more excessive, the better. But curse her foul luck, there wasn’t a drop. He hadn’t been a drooler before either, but one could always hope.
Despite herself, she sighed. In repose, he appeared a younger, more boyish version of himself. Yet he’d not shaven in two days and the evidence of his maturity shadowed his jaw.
Fearing that any moment he would awaken and catch her admiring him, she quit him for the kitchen, where she warmed some of Mrs. Kettle’s rolls. After preparing a pot of tea, she made up a tray, the final touches being small dishes of the marmalade and honey she’d discovered in the pantry. Conveying all this to the great room, she set the tray on a table beside Claxton.
He exhaled and shifted, but did not open his eyes. No matter, he could sleep as long as he liked. She would return to her room with a cup of tea and read for the remainder of the morning once she removed the portrait, which seemed the conscientious thing to do as Claxton’s frustration with her had been to blame, at least in part, for its destruction.
She grasped its frame and lifted.
“Burn it.”
She turned and found him watching her, sleepy eyed and flushed. Inside she melted. How seductive he looked, with his hair tousled and his eyes heavy lidded. She blinked and glanced away, mentally shaking off her attraction.
“I was going to put it in the attic,” she said. “Perhaps the canvas can be repaired.”
“Repaired?” he muttered, righting himself on the cushions. He scowled. “Whatever for?”
“You’ll regret this one day, the destruction of your familial history. Have you any other portraits of him?”
“I do believe that was the last.” He smiled wickedly, an indication he may have disposed of prior paintings in the same manner.
“But, Claxton, whatever your feelings about your father, your mother clearly believed he deserved some measure of respect or else she would not have hung his portrait in her home.”
His eyebrows shot up. “You believe she hung that portrait? She didn’t. There’s a reason I didn’t know what he looked like until I was ten. Likely he hung it after her death, when he had the house shuttered. The bastard would have done that.” He spoke quietly, but bitterness roughened his voice. He rubbed his hands over his face. “I’m sure he came here after and cleaned out everything that had made Camellia House hers, like so much refuse, and hung a picture of his own damn self on her wall. Try to find her likeness anywhere, Sophia. You won’t find it. He had every portrait and miniature of her destroyed, and I’ve done everything I could to repay him in kind.” Sitting up, he reached for his Hessian. “He might as well have pissed on her grave.”
Sophia flushed at his crudity. “You seem as if you are only supposing what he did. Weren’t you present when all this occurred?”
He stood and with the assistance of the fireplace poker extricated the second boot from the bough. “No, I was gone by then.”
“What do you mean gone?”
“When I learned he’d dismissed the Kettles, I left.” He balanced on one long leg, tugging on the boot. “I enlisted in the army.”
“How old were you then?”
“Hmm? Oh, I was sixteen.”
She set the portrait down. “Claxton, when was the last time you spoke to your father before his death?”
“You mean directly? Not through representatives?”
“Yes, talked to him face-to-face.”
He circled the settee to stare out the window. “Sixteen.”
Sophia’s mouth fell open in shock. “I’d always assumed you entered the service in the same manner as other titled gentlemen, with a purchased commission. No one recognized your name?”
“Well, I lied about that, of course, and they shipped me straight off to India. It took the duke’s investigators three years to find me too. By then, my general had purchased my first commission for me, something he did from time to time based on merit. Merit, Sophia. Not that damn bastard’s name.” He laughed. “The duke was so furious when he found out he told them to leave me there.” He fell silent for a long moment. “He summoned Haden home from school then, just in case I ended up dead. I hated myself when I found out.”
Looking at Claxton now, turned from her, his stance was invincible and strong. Yet her imagination showed her another picture, that of a proud young boy. She wanted nothing more than to ease the pain that the man in the portrait brought him. Since she could not do so with an embrace or a kiss, she offered the only other reasonable response.
“Well, then, let us burn this awful thing.”
He continued to peer out the window, as if he refused to commit another word to the discussion of the