He smiled ingenuously. “Always want to keep a female happy, you know.

“I say,” he continued, another thought seizing him, “have you met our host yet? I’d be dashed glad to introduce you, if you’d permit me the honor.”

He seemed to come back to an awareness of his surroundings then, and added, “Dash it, Matheson, would you mind if I took Miss Herington off your hands? I’d consider it quite an honor. Love to show her around and take her to Xavier and whatnot.”

Without daring to look at Julia for fear his face would crack into a laugh, James nodded and waved the pair away. “I leave her in your capable hands, Pellington. It’s very kind of you.”

Julia looked back at them once, desperately, as Freddie Pellington bore her off. James could overhear him saying, as they walked, “Went to school with Matheson, you know. Dashed good fellow. Bit of a stick, though. Didn’t even come in costume. So you really do like mine?”

That had worked better even than he had hoped; James reflected that he must have more of a talent for machinations than he’d known. There was absolutely no way Julia would be meeting any potential husbands tonight. He supposed the thought ought to make him ashamed, since it went against the express wishes of the two gently bred ladies who had asked for his help.

But it didn’t. He felt positively triumphant. And maybe a bit jealous, too; after all, Pellington still got to bear Julia away and keep her company for the evening.

James’s reverie was interrupted by another surprisingly hearty stomp on his foot by his fiancée.

Oh — his fiancée. He realized he’d been impolite to Louisa, more even than she knew, and his sense of satisfaction melted into chagrin.

“Really.” Louisa looked at him reproachfully as soon as she was sure Pellington and Julia were out of earshot. “That was unkind of you, James.”

“Unkind?” he repeated, unable to resist. “All right, maybe he’s not exactly the type of man she’s looking for. But he really is everything she asked for in a husband.”

Louisa continued to stare at him as if he were an idiot.

He folded his arms and looked back at his fiancée defensively. “He is. That’s what she gets for not specifying intelligence.” He knew it was a childish response, but he was feeling a bit childish right now.

Louisa rolled her eyes. “Fine. Please add ‘intelligence’ to the list of qualities Julia is looking for in a husband.”

James sighed. She had him cornered there. If Julia had ever managed to escape Pellington’s verbal cage, he’d had a string of vapid young time-wasters in mind to keep her occupied throughout the evening. Now he might have to think of someone she might actually like, or Louisa would see through him in a second.

In fact, she already seemed to be seeing through him with uncomfortable clarity. “What are you doing, James? You know perfectly well Pellington isn’t the sort of man who’d make her a good husband. Why even encourage her to spend any time with him, beyond a courteous introduction?”

“He’s not a bad fellow,” he replied, somewhat lamely. “And she seemed interested in him.”

“She was being polite,” Louisa replied, smiling sweetly for the sake of appearances in case anyone might be watching them, but with gritted teeth. “Which, by the way, is the only quality that is keeping me from kicking you behind the knee and making your legs buckle, right here in the drawing room of Xavier House.”

At James’s startled look, she explained logically, “Well, I can hardly kick you in the shin. My slippers are far too soft; I’d hurt my foot more than I’d hurt you.”

“Your point is taken,” James said calmly. “I promise to introduce her only to the finest men in England from this point forward.”

Inside, however, he was seething just a little. Why should Louisa assume that he’d be willing to go along with this harebrained scheme of theirs? Who ever heard of ordering a husband like a Christmas dinner, anyway? He felt like he was the poor goose in question, pursued, caught, and roasted. These women were using him.

To be fair, Julia was to be family, so he supposed they thought his close relationship to her would make him willing to help with any favor they deemed necessary. And it should; it really should.

Except this one was difficult for him. Unexpectedly difficult. He knew it shouldn’t be. After all, he wasn’t permitting himself to think of Julia in anything but the most friendly, casual way. Usually.

He decided to drop that line of thought and just try to enjoy the rest of the evening. He tossed the end of his cape over one arm — despite Pellington’s assertion, he had come in a costume, albeit a cursory one of a domino over his usual evening clothes — and offered Louisa his arm. He might be a goose, but he need not act like a pig as well.

“Come along, my dear. Let’s see who else is here.”



Louisa came with him willingly enough, and over the next few hours they spoke at least a little with nearly everyone at the gathering. Lord Xavier was the first person they sought out, of course, to pay their respects.

This young gentleman, dressed as a Georgian of their grandparents’ generation in powdered wig and knee breeches, with a black mask over his eyes, was regaling a group of bachelor friends with a decidedly improper story involving an opera dancer, a bottle of champagne, and a pineapple. James was interested in hearing the ending of it, but the young man stopped the tale as soon as he saw Louisa.

“Ah, you must be the Honorable Miss Oliver,” he transitioned smoothly, making his bow and kissing her hand. He lifted his mask to his forehead to remove any obstruction to his vision. “How enchanting to meet you at last. Or should I call you”—he cast his eyes up and down her form, taking in the details of her costume—“the goddess Diana, perhaps?”

“Lord Xavier.” She curtsied. “The honor is all on my side. And Helen of Troy was the intention, though I suppose that’s a bit presumptuous for any woman. Diana is equally flattering and will certainly do very well.”

She smiled knowingly, skeptical of his flattering tones, and James felt proud to be escorting her. She could hold her own socially, he knew it. See how the young men who had been speaking with Xavier were now looking at her? They gaped at her, dazzled by her Classical beauty, as if she truly were the goddess he had called her.

“Xavier,” James acknowledged his friend. “Thank you for the invitation tonight. Are you portraying our ailing, lamented king in his youth?”

“The Sun King, rather, I think,” Xavier drawled. “Our George never enjoyed wine, women, and song nearly so much as did Louis the Fourteenth. You could hardly expect me to portray a dull creature, now could you?”

He smiled, slow and dangerous and lewd, and Louisa drew in her breath sharply. Was she indignant? James, mindful of his duty to safeguard her from impropriety, nodded to his friend and thanked him again, drawing her away from the group of men.

“I don’t suppose he would do for Julia,” Louisa whispered in his ear, casting a dubious glance back over her shoulder as they walked away. “That look he gave me — I felt positively undressed. It was very uncomfortable.”

“No,” James said shortly. “He wouldn’t do.” Behind him, he heard the Sun King resume the tale about the pineapple. He looked back to see his old acquaintance’s eyes still on Louisa, thoughtful and dark, even as he held his friends spellbound with his bawdy story. “He definitely would not do at all.”

“He’s a friend of yours, though?” she asked doubtfully, a worried crease between her brows.

“Yes, he is,” James replied. “We grew up together, as Pellington and I did. I don’t know that I’ve got all that much in common with either of them anymore. Xavier’s a bit younger than I, and still very wild. He came into an enormous fortune at an early age and seems to be doing his best to run through it in any number of creative ways.”

“He’s quite handsome, though,” Louisa mused. “And obviously very intelligent.”

Handsome, James would grant, though it seemed odd to think that about another man. But he knew the lean, dark looks of Alexander Edgware, Lord Xavier, appealed to many women — as did his air of barely curbed wildness. And he was intelligent, too; he could read people with uncanny swiftness, he always rose the winner from a game of cards or chance, and he could be very quickwitted, even uncomfortably so.

However. .

“He’s not kind enough,” James informed her. “Not for Julia. Of the two, she’d be much better off with Pellington.”

Louisa shuddered. “Then we obviously need to find a third possibility for her.”

As it turned out, Julia found that third possibility herself. Pellington had steered her around the room and into a smaller side salon, introducing her in his fractured, enthusiastic style to several of his acquaintances. At the moment James and Louisa reencountered them, they were speaking in the smaller room with Sir Stephen Saville, a baronet in his mid thirties.

“Damnation,” James said when he saw them, ignoring Louisa’s gasp at his unguarded language.

Pellington was hovering around Julia and the baronet as they sat on a sofa, interjecting frequent comments that were mostly ignored by the other two. Sir Stephen, wearing a simple black domino with its accompanying mask flipped up atop his head rather than over his face, was staring spellbound at Julia, holding onto her every word as if it were a gem, plying her with questions whenever her conversation wound down. Julia, for her part, was chattering away merrily to the older gentleman, darting occasional replies to Pellington and frequently shoving her slipping turban back into place atop her now-untidy hair.