Lunch wasnât due to be served for another thirty minutes, but Burke had no interest in spending any more time outside. He escaped to the dining room and propped his legs up on a chair, newspaper unfolded in his lapâ¦but he hadnât read a word. He was far too distracted.
Renley begged off early to go visit his brother, and Burke was annoyed to find that Rosalie skipped breakfast too. When he found out from a footman that sheâd slipped out with the sunrise to go riding with James, it was all he could do to keep calm and not demand another horse be saddled. There had to be a good reason why they were riding together, why neither made mention of their plans last nightâ
The dining room door slammed open and in swept George, followed closely by James.
âGeorge, you cannot be serious!â James barked.
George snatched up a glass, filling it with wine and draining it. âOf course, I am. Fate has spoken. I am but her humble servantââ
âYouâve never been humble a day in your goddamn life!â
Burke swung his leg off the chair. âWhatâs happening?â
âGeorge says heâs going to propose to Miss Harrow,â James snapped.
Some monstrous beast uncoiled deep in the pit of Burkeâs stomach as he suddenly fought the urge to leap across the table and strangle George. No one was going to touch Rosalie but him, especially not George fucking Corbin. âWhat?!â
âItâs not like I to marry her,â George groaned. âBut it was your idea for me to pick a name out of a hat.â He turned to Burke. âI did what he asked and now heâs mad!â
âWalk me through it,â Burke said, moving around the table to stand next to James.
âGeorge was being a petulant child again,â said James. âHe was packing to leave , and I told him the only way he was leaving was if he picked a bride first.â
âSo, James bid me put all the ladiesâ names into his hat,â George added. âAnd Iâm sorry if you donât like the result, but itâs out of my hands at this point. Fate has spoken.â
Burke glanced at his friend. âOh James, you didnâtâ¦â Why on Godâs green earth would James play into Georgeâs superstitions? It wasâ
âIt was a mistake,â James muttered to Burke. âAnd I never for one moment expected you to take this so seriously,â he threw at George. âMiss Harrowâs name wasnât supposed to be an option!â
The monster inside Burke purred with delight at this. James hadnât forgotten his ironclad principles after all. Burke turned to George, determined to help James put him back in his box. âSheâll never agree to marry you,â he said at George.
George just scoffed. âOf course, she will. Any of the ladies would fall over themselves to become duchess. Why do you think I detest this all so much? Why would any man want to go pheasant hunting if all the birds throw themselves at you and beg to climb in your sack? If my torture ends with her, so be it.â
âIâm telling you, sheâll not agree,â Burke repeated.
âWhy not?â George said with a scowl.
âBecause sheâs far too principled. Sheâs like James here,â he said, jabbing a thumb at his friend. Linking her in any way to James was a surefire way to make George retreat.
But his response wasnât quite what Burke expected. George narrowed his eyes between Burke and James, landing on his brother with a glower. âReally, James? Your own sex life is so boring you have to go and talk to Burke about mine?â
Burke blinked. âWhat?â
âIâm flesh and blood, James. I have needs! Iâll not be ashamed just because live like a monkââ
âI donât care if you fuck every maid in this house. I clearly canât stop you,â James countered. âBut thereâs a time and a place!â
âWhat happened?â Burke repeated, eyes darting between the brothers.
George raised a surprised brow. â
, so you didnât tell him. Thatâs interesting.â
Burke could feel himself getting angry again. âTell me what?â
James groaned, glancing at Burke. âMiss Harrow caught George in the stairwell this morningâ¦with a maid.â
He left the rest unsaid, but Burke could well imagine what Rosalie saw. What George probably said and did. Burke wanted to lunge forward and punch George in the face, but that was a line he couldnât cross. As much as Burke might want to on occasion, only James could get physical with George with impunity.
âAnd Burkeâs right,â James added. âNow that sheâs taken the measure of you, she wonât say yes.â
âWell, what do you expect me to do now?â George said, sinking into his chair. âPick a different name from the hat?â
â
.â Burke and James replied together.
âButâ¦that feels like cheating,â George said with a pout.
âGive me that fucking hat.â Burke snatched the hat from Jamesâ hand. He dug his hand inside and scooped out all the little papers, tossing them on the table and opening them as he read each. âGeorgeâ¦what is this?â
George didnât look up as he refilled his glass with wine. âWhat is what?â
Burke read the papers aloud. âMousey, Ice Queen, Red One, Red Twoâwhat the hell is this?â
George shrugged. âWhat? I canât be expected to learn all their names. Thereâs too manyââ
âJesus Christ, thereâs only five, George,â James groaned, rubbing his temple with a tired hand.
âSix if you count the lovely little Cabbage Rose.â
Burke clenched his jaw. âWhat?â
âHis name for Rosalie is Cabbage Rose,â James murmured, holding out the crumpled strip of paper in his hand.
Burke snatched it and read the moniker scrawled in slanted black ink.
âCome on,â George snickered. âItâs funny. Sheâs poor, so sheâs like a little cabbage rose. I mean, I know donât find it funny,â he shot at James. âBut you want to fuck her soââ
âGeorge, enough,â James barked.
The beast inside Burke was ready to breath fire. âWhat the hell is he talking about?â
âIgnore him.â James rounded on his brother. âYou canât pick your duchess by drawing a name from a hat. The woman you pick will stay in this house. Her portrait will go on the wall, her children will be born upstairs.â
âYesâ¦I suppose youâre right.â George let out a deeply agitated sigh. âFrankly, I think I dodged a bullet, because that Miss Harlow seems like a nightmare.â
âHarrow,â Burke corrected.
âWhatever.â
James chanced a hesitant step forward. âSoâ¦will you stay?â
George frowned, glancing from James to Burke. Suddenly, his eyes flashed with mischief. He leaned forward, elbows on the table. âIf you really want me to stayâ¦the two of you have to kiss. Right here, right now.â
Burke choked on a laugh as Jamesâ face went from pink to red with swallowed fury.
âGet fucked, George,â Burke replied for the both of them.
âOh, I plan to,â George replied. âPerhaps later again this afternoon. Meanwhile, the two of you will be stuck holding your own cocks as you cry into your pillows tonight about the Cabbage Rose and how sheâll never have any of us. Those principled types die old maids.â He stood, pushing his chair back from the table. âTell Reed Iâll take a tray for lunch in my room. James, you can handle the guests until dinner.â
As he turned to leave, a cacophony of shrieks and screams had all three men running to the window.
âWhat the hell?â
âI canât see anythingââ
More screams. Clattering. Smashing.
âGet it openââ
âBloodyâ
ââ
All three men fought with the latch of the window until it gave, and Burke shoved the glass panel open. It was the work of moments to swing one leg over and climb out. James was out just behind him and George last. Just as they were rounding the corner, George grabbed hold of Burke by the coat and jerked him backwards.
âLook out!â
âChristââ Burke gasped as a white horse went streaking past. âWhat theââ
George let go of Burkeâs coat. âHow did a horse get loose?â
âIt wasnât loose. It had a saddle,â Burke replied, eyes narrowed as he searched for the fallen rider. He charged around the corner to see that the ladies were in hysterics.
âOh, Mr. Burke, that animal was wild,â shrieked Elizabeth, her red hair fluttering around her face.
âIt came charging through our game like a hurricane,â her sister added.
Burkeâs eyes darted around the group looking for Rosalie.
âBurke!â James called.
âYour Grace, thank heavens,â another cried.
George stood dumfounded, surveying the tipped tables and ladies in various states of swoon.
âBurke!â James called again.
âWe were nearly trampled,â shrieked the marchioness, fanning her daughterâs face. âThat animal should be shot!â
Burke didnât care about any of this. Where the hell was Rosalie?
âChrist man, !â James was suddenly at his side, one hand snatching at his lapel and jerking him around.
âWhere is she?â Burke said. âWhereâs Rosalie?â
Jamesâ face was stricken. âThat was her horse.â
âWhat? I thought she rode in with youââ
James took off at a run towards the stables. âGeorge, come on,â he called to his brother.
Burke easily caught up. âJames, tell me what happened! You just left her out there?â
âSheâs got a good seat and she was just walking the park. Something mustâve happened.
.â
âWhatâs going on?â George called, running after them.
âSaddle horses!â James shouted as they neared the stables. It was already in pandemonium as the grooms did their best to catch poor little Magellan, who was trotting in circles in the courtyard.
âWe need horses,â James ordered. âJack, Wallace, take to foot. Find Miss Harrow. Last I knew she was heading towards Finchley Hill, but that was an hour ago.â
Rage flooded Burke. âAn ? She could be anywhere by nowââ
âYou donât think I know that?â James spun around. âLook, Iâll let you thrash me later. Right now, sheâs the only priority. Shut up, mount up, and help me find her.â
Burke fumed. If anything happened to her, heâd be taking James up on that offer. Heâd beat James bloody. But Rosalie was missing, possibly injured. She was his only concern. He snatched the reins of his horse and swung into the saddle. Wheeling it around, he took off towards Finchley Hill.