âAre you well?â Tom stepped forward.
Miss Harrow wiped at her eyes and tried to laugh it off. âYes, quite.â
âYouâre cryingâ¦â
âHappy tears,â she replied with a weak smile. âThe duchess did me a good turn and I was overcome for a moment.â
He glanced around, taking in their isolation as they stood together in the middle of the forested path. âWere you seeking solitude? I can return the way I cameâ¦â
âI was, sir,â she admitted. âBut your intrusion is not unwelcome.â
He gave a curt nod. A dapple of sunlight filtered down through the trees, landing on her face and illuminating her soft featuresâdark eyes and porcelain skin. Damn, she was gorgeous. Why did it strike him like this every time? âShall we continue on this way together?â he offered.
She nodded, turning slightly to make space for him on the path at her side. For a moment they were quiet, Tom listening to the tranquil sounds of the forest.
âWhere is Mr. Burke this morning?â
âHe went with James into Finchley,â he replied. âAnd apparently thereâs to be music tonight so all the young ladies are determined to practiceâ¦I found I needed a moment of peace,â he added with a grin. âThe trees called to me, and I answered.â
She smiled. âAnd does the sea call to you as well? Do you miss your ship, sir?â
âAye, it can be a hard life to balance between ship and shore,â he replied. âThe rules are so different, the daily livingâ¦I find myself restless when Iâm in the country. To go from such a confined space to such a state of unconfinement isâ¦well, jarring.â
âIs that why you are so prone to walking? Because you feel you must navigate the space around you while you have space in which to move?â
He mused on that with a slow smile. âPerhaps there is something in that, Miss Harrowâ¦like a caged animal set to roam. I fear the day I come to prefer the cage.â
âSpeaking as a creature well familiar with life in a cage, I fully comprehend your feelings, sir.â
He paused. âYou see yourself as caged?â
She shrugged, letting her bonnet hide her face from him. Damn, he hated when women did that. Men had no such effective shield as part of their attire.
âAll women live their lives in a cage, sir. It is our blessing and our curse. A blessing when men fill the cage with comforts and sweets and place the cage with a goodly view of the outside worldâ¦a curse when we are left beating our wings against the bars, isolated and aloneâ¦with no way out.â
âChrist,â he murmured. âI never thought of it that way. You must despise me for comparing my life at sea to being in a cage.â
âOf course not,â she said with a laugh. âAs I said, the situations are indeed similar. I donât envy you your feelings. Rather, I appreciate that you can understand mine. It is a gift to be understood, is it not?â
âIndeed,â he replied.
They walked in silence for a few minutes, taking a turn in the path that allowed them to spot glimpses of the house and grounds through the trees.
âHow goes your wife search?â she said, the hint of a smile in her tone.
Christ, when she said it like that. âYou make it sound so despicable.â
She laughed. âThat was not my intent, sir. I understand the rules of our society. You are simply making your way in the world. As we all must. Playing the gameâ¦â
âIâve never been much of a game player,â he said, lost in renewed thoughts of Marianne. Could he really sit and wait for her to want him again? How pathetic did that make him on a scale from hopeless to downright pitiable?
âNor I. Which perhaps accounts for why we are both still unmarriedâ¦though your friends seem determined to help you change your status.â
âYes,â he said with a groan. âPerhaps determined.â He paused, meeting her gaze. âListen, Burke told me what he asked of you. Iâm sorry for it. He never should have done it.â
Heâd spent the night and half the morning pretending that it didnât matter that she had no interest in flirting with him outside her agreement with Burke. But he was just vain enough to admit that it bother him. Increasingly, he found he wanted to see her smile and know he was the cause. He glanced over at her. âMiss Harrow?â
She blushed and turned away. âWould it be terribly wrong of me to admit that I was enjoying it?â
âEnjoying what?â
There was a long silence, filled with the sound of leaves rustling on a wind.
âFlirting with you.â
It was the last possible thing he expected her to say. His body responded with a warm feeling that spread from his chest down to his fingertips. He gripped tighter to the top of his walking stick. âI enjoyed it too,â he admitted.
Her smile widened and she glanced his way. He took in the soft blue of her dress, the curve of her neck, half covered by a dark curl of hair come loose from under her bonnet. He wanted to tuck it behind her ear, wanted to run his fingers down the length of her neck, feel the tips brush over her collarbone as she took a gasping breath, his lips on hersâ¦
She was talking again.
.
âThere is something so freeing about flirting with someone and knowing it will come to nothing,â she said, clearly oblivious to the scenes now flashing through his mind. âHow comforting for both of us that we may flirt without fear of unwanted consequence.â
âMy thoughts exactly,â he replied.
That was a lie. Those were not his exact thoughts. In fact, his thoughts were the reverse. In this moment, all he seemed to want to do was press her against the nearest obliging tree and imprint her taste on his lips, drinking of her until he was drunk.
The others in this house party may ignore her and dismiss her as that little bird in a cage, but Tom Rosalie Harrow. He felt the fire burning inside her and wanted to dance with it. She wasnât a little starling on a branch. She was a phoenix. He wanted to feel her heartbeat and taste her fire, smell the sweet violets on her skin. Just thinking about holding her made his cock twitch.
âWell, who shall the lucky lady be?â she said brightly. âHave you decided?â
âI suppose I havenât made a decision,â he replied, still doing everything in his power to cool the fire sheâd so suddenly stoked in him. He led the way further down the forested path. âThere are many factors to considerâ¦â
.
She hummed a noncommittal response.
He glanced her way again, noting how a soft wind fluttered that loose curl on her shoulder. âWhich would you choose, Miss Harrow?â
She gave him a surprised, affronted look. âSir, I would never dream of commenting. It is not my place to have an opinion on such matters.â A tip of her lip told him there was some secret joke to her comment and he was desperate to be in her confidence.
He gave her a nudge with his shoulder. âAnd yet, why do I presume myself correct that you are never without a ready opinion?â
âIâm sure I donât know what you mean.â
He followed the arch of her neck with his eyes, settling on her lips, memorizing the way her upper lip bowed. He took a step closer until he could smell that intoxicating scent of sweet violets and rosemary. He let his breath fan across her neck, noting with pleasure the way she jolted. âI mean to say that the length and breadth of your ready opinions must surely rival the Old Testament.â
They both laughed. It felt strange to be so comfortable in a ladyâs presence. The other ladies bored him to death, but laughing with Rosalie felt right. Tom couldnât remember a time when he felt so at ease. He noticed her shoulders stiffen. âWhat is it, Miss Harrow? Donât go silent on me now.â
She glanced up at him through dark lashes. âSir, may Iâ¦may you permit me one of my ready opinions?â
âIn this moment, Miss Harrow, Iâd enjoy nothing better, and please stop calling me âsir.â I know Burke asked you to be more informal with him. I should appreciate the same.â
âI must admit that your purpose has not gone unnoticed,â she began.
âAnd?â
âWell, itâs only thatâ¦well I canât help but feel that your heart isnât really in it.â
He glanced her way, his brow raised slightly, waiting for her to keep going.
âTo be perfectly frank, youâve been flirting with the other ladies with the warmth of feeling of a cold ham.â
The analogy was so ridiculous, so accurate, Tom could do nothing but burst into laughter. Without meaning to, his free hand reached out and gripped her arm at the elbow, giving it a squeeze as he kept laughing. âPerhaps I seek to find that perfect maiden who will indulge my love of .â
God, he loved teasing this woman, seeing her cheeks blush as beautifully pink as the rose in her name. He could make a hobby of finding all the ways to bring that color to her cheeks.
But she didnât rise to his teasing. Instead, she came to a halt and turned to face him, not caring that his hand was still inexplicably wrapped around her elbow. âYou will not turn a ladyâs head unless she believes you it turned,â she said, her tone suddenly serious. âIf you want their heads turned, youâll need to put in more effort. But if there isâ¦some reason why you would want them turnedâ¦I think it would be best to admit that as well.â
He knew exactly what she was implying. She knew about Marianne. Perhaps not about her recent change in circumstance, but enough to know that Tom was still tied to her. Marianne was the albatross he couldnât escapeâ¦yet. But perhaps if he was forced to choose between a dead albatross and a caged phoenix yearning to be freeâ¦
, this woman did things to his mind he couldnât understand. He needed space, needed to breathe.
âThatâs all I had to say,â she murmured. âAnd now Iâve said it, and we shall drop the matter. Because, as I said, it is not for me to have an opinion.â
âI have heard your remarks and accept them gladly,â he replied, dropping his hold on her elbow. âI vow to you that I wonât court any woman here in bad faith. Tis true, there is a prior claim on my affections. I know you heard mention of Marianne. The lady was my first love and when sheââ He frowned, unsure whether he wanted to reveal the whole truth.
Now it was her turn to reach out and stroke his arm. âShe died?â
He blinked, too focused on the feel of her hand on him. âWhat? Noâ¦no sheâs alive.â
âAhhâ¦she jilted you. Which for a man, of course, is worse than if she died.â
He met her gaze. âWhat makes you say that?â
She lowered her hand away. âBecause if she died, youâd have a clean break. The heart can heal and move on. When one is jilted, it becomes a wound that festers. I see the sickness in you now,â she whispered, those dark eyes narrowed on him.
Her gaze made him uneasy. Where moments before he felt her lust, now he saw only pity, and he hated it.
âI didnât understand your melancholy before, but I see it now. Sheâs your sickness.â
It was as if he watched her seal away her emotions behind a mask. Christ, but that was a useful skill to have. The phoenix was carefully back in her cage.
âI will wish you well, sir.â She turned to walk back down the lane in the direction of the house, but paused, glancing over her shoulder. âAnd if you dare tell anyone Iâve been so forward with my opinions, I shall deny it to St. Peter himself. This never happened,â she added, gesturing between them with a pointed finger.
He smiled.
She admitted so much in such a little exchange. She admitted with words how she was watching him with the other ladies. She admitted in looks how she wanted him, how her fires burned. She admitted with those steps inching closer to him how easy it might be for him to lure her back out of her cage.
But she also admitted a truth that had him ready to punch the closest tree: she had no interest in continuing to flirt with a man who was lovesick for another woman. As long as Marianne Young was in his life, Rosalie wasnât going to give him another minute of her time.