“Obviously.”

As she secured her hat with a hat pin, she shot him a sidelong glance. “What did I promise you again, in return for your escort? Whatever it is, it is worth more than your company.”

Rhys laughed, and Isabel silently acknowledged his appeal. There was something about men who could not be tamed. Thankfully she had grown out of the fascination for such hopeless sport long ago.

“You are introducing me to the lovely Lady Eddly.”

“Ah, yes. Under normal circumstances I wouldn’t agree to such a blatantly obvious pairing, but in this case I think you two are perfect for one another.”

“I definitely agree.”

“I am having a dinner party…eventually. You and Lady Eddly are both invited as of this moment.” Having Rhys there would help to calm her nerves. And she would need all the assistance in that regard as she could muster. The mere thought of surviving a dinner with Gray and a bevy of his former paramours made her stomach roil.

Sighing at her predicament, Isabel shook her head. “Horribly uncouth of you to use your sister in this manner.”

“Ha,” Rhys scoffed, collecting her pelisse from the returning maid and holding it out for her. “Dreadful of you to drag me along to a breakfast, and at the Marley residence no less. Lady Marley always smells of camphor.”

“It is not as if I wish to go either, so cease your whining.”

“You wound me, Bella. Men do not whine.” With his hand on her shoulder, he spun her to face him. “Why are we attending if you doubt your enjoyment of the event?”

“You know why.”

He snorted gently. “I wish you would disregard what others thought about you. I personally find you the least annoying woman I know. Straightforward, pleasant to look upon, and capable of witty discourse.”

“I suppose your opinion is the only one that matters.”

“Is it not?”

“I wish I could ignore the gossip,” she grumbled, “but the Dowager Lady Grayson feels the need to bring it to my attention as often as possible. Those horrid notes she sends infuriate me. I wish she would just spit her venom out, rather than attempt to hide it beneath a thin layer of civility.” Isabel stared into her brother’s resigned features. “I have no notion how Grayson grew up sane with that harridan as a mother.”

“You do realize that women who look as you do often have trouble with other females? Catty creatures that you are. You cannot bear it when one woman attracts excessive masculine attention. Not that you have ever experienced that particular kind of jealousy,” he finished dryly. “You are always the woman attracting the regard.”

She had experienced other kinds of jealousy though, such as the kind a wife experiences when the bed her husband ruts in is not her own.

“Which is why I associate with men more so than women, though that has its pitfalls, too.” Isabel was aware that other women found her appearance off-putting, but there was nothing she could do about that. “Let’s be off then.”

Both of Rhys’ brows rose into his hairline. “I must pay my respects to Grayson. I cannot simply abscond with his wife. The last time I did that, he gave me a brutal pummeling in the pugilist rings at Remington’s. The man is much younger than I, take pity on me.”

“Write him a note,” she said curtly, shivering at the image of her husband with his hair still damp. Just thinking of it reminded her of the night before and the way he had taken her.

“Don’t have feelings for Grayson, indeed.” Rhys’ hazel gaze was blatantly skeptical.

“Wait until you marry, Rhys. The need to escape occasionally will become all too clear.” With that in mind, she gestured impatiently toward the door.

“I’ve no doubt about that.” He offered his arm, and retrieved his hat from the waiting butler.

“You are not getting any younger, you know.”

“I am aware of my advancing years. Therefore, I have made a list of suitable spousal prospects.”

“Yes, Mother told me of your ‘list,’” she said dryly.

“A man must be sensible about choosing a bride.”

Isabel nodded with mock severity. “Of course, feelings should never be considered.”

“Did we not already agree to avoid a discussion of feelings?”

Smothering a laugh, she asked, “And who is at the top of your list, may I ask?”

“Lady Susannah Campion.”

“The Duke of Raleigh’s second daughter?” Isabel blinked.

Lady Susannah was indeed a sensible choice. Her breeding was exceptional, her deportment flawless, and her suitability for the rank of duchess could not be denied. But the delicate blonde girl had no fire, no passion. “She would bore you to tears.”

“Come now,” he demurred. “She cannot be as bad as that.”

Her eyes widened. “You have yet to meet the girl you are considering marrying?”

“I’ve seen her! I would not marry a chit sight unseen.” He cleared his throat. “I simply have not had the pleasure of speaking with her yet.”

Shaking her head, Isabel felt again like she did not quite fit in with her sensible family. Yes, falling out of love was a dreadful experience, but falling into it wasn’t so bad. She was certainly a far wiser and better-rounded individual than she had been before meeting Pelham. “Thank heaven you are coming with me today, for Lady Susannah will certainly be at the breakfast. Be certain you speak with her.”

“Of course.” As they left the house and approached his waiting phaeton, Rhys adjusted his long-legged stride to hers. “This might be just the thing to make dealing with an angry Grayson worthwhile.”

“He will not be angry.”

“Not with you perhaps.”

Her throat tightened. “Not with anyone.”

“The man has always been a trifle touchy where you are concerned,” Rhys drawled.

“He has not!”

“Has, too. And if he has truly decided to exert his husbandly rights, I pity the man who intrudes. Step lightly, Bella.”

Releasing a deep breath, Isabel kept her thoughts to herself, but the butterflies in her stomach took flight again.

Gerard gazed at his reflection, and heaved a frustrated breath. “When is the tailor scheduled to arrive?”

“Tomorrow, my lord,” Edward replied with obvious relief.

Turning to face his longtime valet, Gerard asked, “Are my garments truly that dreadful?”

The servant cleared his throat. “I did not say that, my lord. However, removing dirt clods and repairing torn knees are not exactly a full utilization of my many talents.”

“I know.” He sighed dramatically. “I did consider dismissing you on several occasions.”

“My lord!”

“But since tormenting you was often my only entertainment, I resisted the urge.”

The valet’s snort made Gerard laugh. Leaving the room, he mentally arranged his schedule for the day. His plans started with a discussion with Pel about redecorating his study and ended with her once again sharing his bed. He was content with that schedule until his foot met the marble floor of the foyer.

“My lord.”

He faced the bowing footman. “Yes?”

“The Dowager Marchioness has arrived.”

His hackles rose. He had managed a blessed four years without seeing her, but he would have gone a lifetime if that had been possible. “Where is she?”

“In the parlor, my lord.”

“And Lady Grayson?”

“Her Ladyship departed with Lord Trenton a half hour past.”

Normally, Gerard would take exception with Trenton, as he did with anyone who deprived him of his wife’s company without telling him first, but today he was relieved to spare Isabel his mother’s visit. There could be a hundred excuses for why his mother had come, but the truth was simply that she wished to berate him. She took such pleasure in it, and now she had four years’ worth of bile to vent. It would be unpleasant, no doubt, and he steeled himself inwardly for the trial ahead.

He also took a moment to acknowledge what he’d avoided seeing before, that he had always been slightly jealous of those who stole Pel’s attentions. The feeling of possessiveness was only exacerbated by his deepened interest in her.

But he did not have time to contemplate what that meant at the moment, so Gerard nodded to the servant, took a deep breath and headed in the direction of the parlor. He paused a moment in the open doorway, studying the silver strands that were now weaved liberally through the once dark tresses. Unlike Pel’s mother, whose love for living preserved her beauty well, the dowager marchioness simply looked tired and worn.

Sensing his presence, she turned to face him. Her pale blue gaze raked him from head to toe. Once, that look would have withered him. Now, he knew his own value. “Grayson,” she greeted, her voice tight and clipped.

He bowed, noting that she still wore widow’s weeds even after all these years.

“Your clothes are a disgrace.”

“It is lovely to see you, too, Mother.”

“Do not mock me.” She sighed loudly, and sank onto the sofa. “Why must you vex me so?”

“I vex you just by breathing, and I’m afraid I am not willing to go to the extent of stopping to please you. The best I can do is to give you a wide berth.”

“Sit, Grayson. It is rude of you to stand and force me to strain my neck looking up at you.”

Gerard sank into a nearby wooden-armed chair. Sitting directly across from her, he was able to study her in depth. Her back was ramrod straight, painfully so, her hands clenched in her lap until the knuckles were white. He knew he took after her in coloring-his father’s portrait was of a man with brown hair and eyes-but her bone-deep rigidness was far removed from his own ability to bend when necessary.

“What ails you?” he asked, only superficially concerned. Everything ailed his mother. She was simply a miserable woman.

Her chin lifted. “Your brother Spencer.”

That caught his attention. “Tell me.”

“Completely lacking in any sort of male authority, he has decided to adopt your way of living.” Her thin lips pursed tighter.

“In what way?”

“In every way-whoring, drinking to excess, complete irresponsibility. He sleeps all day and is out all night. He has made little effort to support himself since leaving school.”

Scrubbing his hand across his face, Gerard struggled to reconcile the image she presented with the fresh-faced brother he had known four years ago. It was his fault, he knew. Leaving any child in the care of their mother was bound to lead to a preoccupation with the pursuit of oblivion.

“You must speak with him, Grayson.”

“Talking will accomplish nothing. Send him to me.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Gather up his possessions, and send him to me. It will take some time to straighten him out.”

“I will not!” His mother’s spine stiffened further. How that was possible, he could not say, but it did. “I will not have Spencer under the same roof as that harlot you married.”

“Watch your tongue,” he warned with ominous softness, his fingers curling around the carved arms of his chair.

“You have made your point and embarrassed me utterly. End this farce now. Divorce that woman for adultery, and do your duty.”

That woman,” he bit out, “is the Marchioness of Grayson. And you know as well as I that a successful petition for divorce would include evidence of marital harmony prior to the adultery. It could also be said that my own inconstancy drove her to hers.”

His mother flinched. “To wed a mistress. For heaven’s sake, could you not have wounded me alone, and not the title as well? Your father would be so ashamed.”

Gerard hid the way that statement cut him with an impassive face. “Regardless of my reasons for choosing Lady Grayson, it is a choice I am quite content with. I hope you can learn to live with it, but I am not overly concerned if you do not.”

“She has never once honored her vows to you,” the dowager said bitterly. “You are a cuckold.”

His breath was harshly drawn, his pride stung. “Am I not culpable for that? I have not been a husband to her in anything but a fiduciary capacity.”

“Thank God for that. Can you imagine what kind of mother that woman would be?”

“No worse than you.”

“Touché.”

Her quiet pride made him feel guilty. “Come now, Mother.” He sighed. “We are so close to ending this lovely visit without bloodshed.”

But as always, she could not quit while they were ahead.

“Your father has been dead for decades, and yet I have been true to his memory.”

“Is that what he would have wanted?” he asked, genuinely curious.

“I am certain he would not have wanted the mother of his sons to fornicate indiscriminately.”

“No, but a genuine companion, a man who could offer the comforts women long for-”

“I knew what I promised when I said my vows-to do honor to his name and title, to give him and raise fine sons who would make him proud.”