Chapter Three
For once, Clio was grateful for her sister’s choosy nature.
As Anna had predicted, Daphne and Teddy didn’t care for either the Blue Room or the larger chamber across the corridor. Instead, they preferred an apartment in the recently modernized West Tower.
Clio couldn’t understand how papered walls could ever trump ancient character and a superior view, but at least she had two available rooms for her unexpected guests.
She showed Mr. Montague into the north-facing room. “I hope you will be comfortable here.”
The man pulled a quizzing glass from his pocket, lifted it to his eye, and made a great show of surveying the space—from the tapestry wall hangings to the Louis XIV armchair rescued from a French château.
“It will suffice,” he said.
“Very good. If you need anything at all, you’ve only to ring for the maids.” Closing the door behind them, Clio directed Rafe across the corridor to the Blue Room. “I trust this will—”
“Wheeee!”
The faint cry came from behind the closed door of Mr. Montague’s room. It was promptly followed by a springy sort of thud. The kind of sound that one might expect to result when a man leapt into the air and dropped his weight onto a mattress.
Followed by more bouncy noises. And something that sounded like a chortle of glee.
Clio tilted her head and looked at Rafe. “Where did you say Mr. Montague hails from?”
“I didn’t.”
She paused, listening to new sounds. The sharp reports of cupboards opening and closing.
“Look at all this storage.” The muffled words were followed by an appreciative whistle. “Good Christ, there’s a bar.”
She raised her eyebrows at Rafe.
He gave a defensive shrug. “He’s one of Piers’s diplomatic associates. Probably last stationed in some remote, godforsaken outpost. You know how it is.”
Declining to question it further, she showed him into the bedchamber. “This is the Blue Room. I trust it will suit you and your dog.”
“I told you, he’s not my dog.”
The dog that wasn’t his tottered all of three feet forward before dropping flat to the carpet. A thick puddle of drool spread from his jowls.
Rafe was more thorough in his appraisal of the space. He prowled the chamber, pinging from one piece of furniture to the next. His gaze skipped over every surface, never lingering.
“There’s a lovely view of the gardens and countryside, if you’d care to have a . . .” Clio watched as he ducked and peered under a wardrobe. “My lord, is something wrong?”
“Yes.” He’d stopped beside the carved rosewood bed, frowning. “There are twenty pillows on this bed.”
“I don’t think there are twenty.”
“One.” He plucked a tasseled, roll-shaped cushion from the bed. Then he cast it aside. It bounced onto the floor and rolled to a stop just short of Ellingworth’s drool.
“Two.” He reached for another and flicked it aside. “Three.” Another. “Four.”
One by one, he tossed the pillows from the head of the bed toward the foot of the mattress, where they mounted in a haphazard heap.
“Fourteen . . . fifteen . . .” Finally, he held the last pillow in his hand and shook it at her. “Sixteen.”
“I told you there weren’t twenty.”
“Who the devil needs sixteen pillows? A man only has one head.”
“But he has two eyes.”
“Which are shut when he sleeps.”
Clio sighed. “Perhaps you’ve been residing in a storehouse, but I know you weren’t raised in a barn.”
Crossing to the opposite side of the bed, she began replacing the cushions in their proper order. “The pillows,” she said, “serve a decorative purpose. The symmetry is pleasing.”
“Right. Everyone knows that’s what a gentleman finds most pleasing in a bed. Symmetrical pillows.”
She felt her cheeks going from pink to scarlet. “Lord Rafe—”
“That’s another thing.” He’d moved on to the washstand now. No doubt to find fault with the basin, or question why there were two—heaven forfend, two!—cakes of soap. “I don’t answer to that title anymore. There will be no ‘my lord’-ing. Not from you, not from the servants.”
“Lord Rafe.” Her voice frayed at the edges as she reached for another cushion. “I am trying to be accommodating. But this is my home, not a Southwark warehouse. And I am—for the moment, anyhow—still engaged to Lord Granville. Unless you mean to dissolve the engagement by signing those papers tonight—”
“I don’t.”
“Then I suggest that for once, you comport yourself in a manner that honors the family name. The very name you are urging me to take.”
“That’s what I’m doing.” He turned his head, checking the closeness of his shave in the small mirror. “The best honor I can do the family name is to distance myself from it.”
Clio paused.
Surely he didn’t think that. Prizefighting might be illegal and scandalous, but it was a sport revered by every Englishman. He would no doubt cause an uproar at Almack’s, but any evening he wished, Rafe might stroll into London’s most exclusive gentlemen’s clubs and walk among the members as a demigod.
And yet . . .
There was a hard, jaded quality to his baritone.
“Don’t worry,” he said. “Once you’ve married my brother, I’ll keep my distance from you, too.”
“Lord Rafe . . .”
He snapped his fingers, drifting on to the closet. “Just Rafe. Or Brandon, if you prefer. Since I turned twenty-one, I only use the titles I’ve earned.”
The titles he’d earned?
Right now, in Clio’s estimation, he was earning the title Lord Pain-upon-Arse. Goodness, the man was exhausting.
“I suppose you mean the title of champion,” she said, feeling peevish as she resettled a pillow in its row. “But that’s Jack Dubose’s title now. Isn’t it?”
He turned to face her, and for the first time since he’d entered the castle, there were no restless motions. His gaze ceased wandering and focused, dark and intent, on her.
She squared her shoulders, refusing to look cowed.
Meanwhile, the back of her neck prickled like mad. And her heart skipped around her chest.
He spoke three simple, solemn words. “Not for long.”