Her words stung, as much as if she had raked her nails across his face. And just as if she had struck him a physical blow, he felt almost overcome with anger, hearing her insult not only Julia but the nature of his feelings for her. This was going much too far. The woman might have given him life, but he wasn’t going to stand this, even from her.

James took a few breaths to keep himself from exploding at the viscountess, coiled up his rage into a small, icy ball, and let it burn his throat into hoarseness as he spoke.

“Get out of my bedchamber at once, or I’ll remove you by physical force, regardless of my state of undress,” he began in a quiet, dangerous voice.

“I will receive you properly, as a guest in my home, in the drawing room in fifteen minutes. At that time I will speak to you about Miss Herington, my future wife, in civil and logical terms. If you are at all insulting to me or to her, you will leave. And, I might add, you will also leave Matheson House, which I currently allow you to occupy as a courtesy, and you may draw on your jointure to find yourself other lodging. Is that absolutely clear?”

Truth be told, he hated the drafty, dark family town house, and he’d never live there himself. But he was certainly of a mood to boot his mother out of it if she abused Julia one more time. He seldom flexed the power that his title gave him, but he would do so now, and she knew it. Lady Matheson had been rooted to the Hanover Square house since the early days of her marriage, and as he stared at her white-angry face with his own hard eyes, he knew he’d struck home with his threat.

She narrowed her eyes at him until they were livid slits. Green gaze to green gaze, heated to icy, mother and son stared at each other for several long seconds. Then, without a word, Lady Matheson spun on her heel and marched out of his bedchamber and down the stairs.

James relaxed a bit as soon as his unwelcome visitor left the room, and he blew out a breath he hadn’t even noticed he was holding. Quickly, fired with the energy of righteous annoyance, he dressed, washed his face, and finger-combed his hair into a semblance of order. Without the help of his valet, however, he took a bit longer than he’d thought. Oh, well; it wouldn’t kill his mother to wait twenty minutes rather than fifteen. Especially because he wanted to take one more look at that newspaper her ladyship had left behind.

Yes, it was as bad as he’d thought. He shuddered. He supposed he couldn’t blame his mother for her anger; the shock she’d felt upon reading it must have been terrible. But that did not excuse her insults.

He made his way downstairs, drawing a breath to steel himself before entering the drawing room. The viscountess had probably gotten even angrier while she waited for him, and she was sure to have another tirade ready as soon as he appeared. He pushed the door open, prepared for another confrontation, and ready to make good on his every threat.

But to his surprise, his mother was sitting demurely on a sofa, her lady’s maid flipping through a bound volume as if preparing to read to her.

James was instantly suspicious. Why on earth would she be so calm all of a sudden?

Before he could even say a word, Lady Matheson noticed his arrival. “My dear boy,” she said, rising in greeting. “Do come join me.”

Her voice, if not precisely warm, was at least no less cool than her usual formal tones. She stepped forward to take hold of his hands and guide him to a seat next to her. As she clasped James’s hand, he felt that hers held a note, which she attempted to thrust aside. “Perhaps some coffee, if you haven’t had yours yet? It is rather early in the day, isn’t it? I am sure it will do you good.”

James ignored this overture. “What have you got in your hand?”

“This? Oh, it’s nothing,” she replied, a small smile playing over her face. “Just a little billet that arrived for you while you were upstairs.”

Wordlessly, James held out his hand for it, and the viscountess sighed and placed the letter into his grasp.

“The seal’s broken,” he said, again suspicious. He scanned his mother’s face as she blew out a dismissive breath and told him it had come that way. “It’s probably a mere nothing,” she said, her expression disinterested. “The messenger must have dropped it, that’s all.”

But it wasn’t a mere nothing. It bore Lady Irving’s seal; he could tell that even though the wax had been split, and the message the paper bore was short. Short, but momentous.


My Lord:

You have dishonored my nieces, and you have dishonored me. I assume you know to what I refer. We leave for the country at once. Please make no attempt to see, write, or speak to us.

Estella Irving


James felt as if he had been physically struck. As if a horse had kicked him in the head. As if his heart had been torn from his very body. What was this?

How could Lady Irving react in this way? Hadn’t Julia let her know that he had proposed marriage? Didn’t Lady Irving want him to marry Julia?

“Something amiss?” Lady Matheson asked in a syrupy voice, and the world righted itself in a moment as soon as she spoke. Of course her anger had vanished by the time he’d come into the room. Somehow, she’d written this note, and she was pleased with herself.

That had to be the answer. This couldn’t possibly be from the Grosvenor Square house. Lady Irving couldn’t think this; she couldn’t want him to stay away from Julia.

“This is a fraud,” he said flatly, thrusting the note back at his mother. “This isn’t from Lady Irving at all. You wrote this.”

“But, dear boy,” she replied with a shake of the head, glancing at the paper James had handed her, “that’s not my handwriting. Surely you know your own mother’s hand? And besides, where on earth would I have gotten that dear creature’s seal from?”

As she quickly read the contents of the brief letter, that small, tight smile quivered onto her face again. “Oh, dear. How very unfortunate.”

She crumpled the missive and dropped it on the floor. “Well, least said, soonest mended, wouldn’t you say? If you’ll take my counsel, you’ll simply let them leave, and that will be that. The whole affair will soon be nothing more than the mildest of unpleasant memories, to be forgotten entirely in the joy of a suitable match.”

“You’re mad,” James said. “I don’t care what the letter says. I’m not letting them leave without a word of explanation.”

He retrieved the note from the floor, smoothed the paper, and read it again. He still couldn’t believe it. Was this really from Lady Irving? Was she so insulted as to wish to cut ties completely?

No; it couldn’t be true. Something strange was going on here. “I’m going to marry Miss Herington,” he insisted.

“You can hardly do so if she is unwilling, which she apparently is,” his mother replied in a sugary, soothing voice, her eyes steely and exultant.

James had had about enough of this. He had no idea what was really going on, or who had written that letter, or what Julia really wanted — but he was desperate to find out.

Which meant that it was well past time for his mother to leave.

“Allow me to show you out,” he said, rising and attempting to pull his mother to her feet after him. “You can’t possibly wish to say anything more to insult me or my intended bride. I don’t believe you truly wish to hunt for rented lodgings, do you?”

As his mother stood unwillingly, he thought he saw a tiny shadow of. . was that fear in her eyes? He felt a flash of remorse; he really wasn’t cut out for this whole threatening-women-with-homelessness business. And after all, the woman was his mother, and it really wasn’t her handwriting. Maybe she had done nothing worse than unseal and read his mail.

Still, he was more than ready to leave, and he certainly wasn’t going to allow her to stay behind to wreak havoc in his house at her leisure. More gently this time, he tugged — well, call it guided—her arm toward the door.

Just then, Delaney entered with a tray of coffee. “Is her ladyship leaving?” he asked ingenuously.

“Yes,” James barked. “We’re both going out, almost at once.”

His mother looked surprised, though she quickly covered it, and then reseated herself as swiftly as he’d ever seen her move.

“No, indeed I am not, dear.” She turned wide, innocent eyes to him — an expression he thought sat ill on her shrewd face. “Surely you wouldn’t deny your own mother a cup of coffee? After coming all this way to see you, in chill weather?”

“I didn’t ask you to come,” he replied ungraciously, folding his arms.

Her wide-eyed expression vanished at once, replaced by a look of annoyance. “Very well, so it was an unsolicited visit. Is there any reason why I can’t visit my son?”

“Can’t. Shouldn’t. Haven’t. There are hundreds of reasons,” he answered, eyebrows lifted in a hurry-up expression.

“Well,” her ladyship said primly, serving herself some coffee, “be that as it may, I intend to fortify myself with a hot beverage before venturing back outside.”

James turned away from her. “Be my guest,” he said. “I’m leaving.” He didn’t want to wait any longer; he would just have to trust that Delaney could keep an eye on his mother during his absence.

“James,” the viscountess said, and this was a new voice. It was soft and beseeching; it held traces of the affection she must have once felt for him. It was a mother’s voice, not a noblewoman’s voice. He hadn’t heard that voice for a long time. “James, my dear boy. Please. . stay with me.”

He turned to face her, and her expression was pleading. “Just one cup. Drink one cup with me, and then I’ll go. And then you can do whatever you want, and marry whomever you wish, and I won’t say another word against it.”

This earnest mood was surprise enough, and James was struck by the novelty of it. She seemed sincere. Had he really hurt her feelings? If so, that would be the first time since his childhood that he’d managed to reach her heart in any way. He only felt sorry that it had to be for this reason, at this time of all times.

Hers was an offer worth considering. It would be well worth a few minutes of his time to win her promise to stop hassling him and hold her peace about his choice of a bride.

“Just one cup?” he said doubtfully.

“One will be plenty,” the viscountess replied with a small smile, giving her son’s hand a squeeze as he sat down across from her.

“Just one,” he agreed with a sigh, and poured out a cup of his own. One cup, and then he would go to Julia. Surely these very few minutes wouldn’t make a difference?

Chapter 31. In Which Proposals Are Rescinded


The inhabitants of the Grosvenor Square address passed an anxious hour waiting for James to reply to the pleading note Julia had sent. The minutes piled up with unbearable sloth, until Julia’s jittery pacing around the drawing room had driven both her and Louisa to the point of snapping at each other.

“Please be still,” Louisa begged her sister from an uncomfortable chair near the fire. Her own back was ramrod-straight and her face quiet and calm, but her hands twisted anxiously in her lap, belying her nervousness.

“I can’t,” Julia replied, sitting down and beginning to beat her heels against the legs of the chair. “I have to move. It keeps me from thinking. At least, as much as I would if I were sitting still.”

Kick, kick. Kick, kick. Louisa sighed heavily in annoyance, and Julia jumped up at once and began pacing again.

“Why doesn’t he write? Why doesn’t he come? What’s the matter?”

She stopped pacing, struck by an idea. “I should just go to him and speak to him in person.”

This elicited a strong reaction from Louisa. “No!” she cried, rising from her chair to stand between Julia and the door. “Absolutely not. You must see that that’s impossible.”

“Why?” Julia replied petulantly. “What on earth could it matter now? The worst is already done.”

Louisa rolled her eyes. “We are far from having had the worst happen. If you go to him now, your reputation as a loose woman will be confirmed in everyone’s minds. You may never recover, even if he does marry you. But if the next news related to you is marriage, people will soon forget. They may enjoy a good scandal, but everyone knows that things are usually not as bad as they sound. They’ll let it go.”