James left Burke at the stairs, his mind reeling as he went in search of his brother. This day was not going at all according to plan. Hell, this entire month had been a disaster. Rosalie Harrow crept in with the night and disrupted all their lives with the force of a hurricane.
Did his mother have any idea what she was doing when she invited the little vixen to stay? The Dowager Duchess of Norland was as clever as they came. James was sure she had a man investigate the girl. No doubt she already knew all the sordid details of Rosalieâs life.
If James were a lesser man, heâd march into his motherâs study and rattle all the drawers of her desk until he found the report. He wanted to read it for himself. He needed to know. Who was Rosalie Harrow? Why did his mother want her so badly? And how did James effectively go about disentangling her from their lives?
For that was the only solution, right? He couldnât possibly let her stay knowing she intended to ruin his friends, wrapping them around her jezebelâs finger with no intent to marry either of them. That kind of behavior might be acceptable for a common prostitute or an opera singer, but it wasnât going to be the fate of a ward of this house.
Christâs sake, Burke and Renley must have gone mad. James was going to have to put his foot down. He just needed to think of a way to do it without hurting Burkeâ¦or running him off.
But this was all going to be tomorrowâs problem, because tonight James had to survive the Michaelmas ballâ¦and to survive in one piece meant guaranteeing his brother did the expected thing for once in his worthless goddamn life and announced his engagement.
âSo, whoâs it going to be?â James said with a raised brow, leaning against the wall just inside Georgeâs room. âMother needs to know now so we have everything arranged for tonight.â
âLet me show you what I have planned,â George said, smiling. He went over to an armoire in the corner of the room that James knew held all manner of unspeakable items.
James raised a wary brow. âGeorge, if this is a sex thingââ
George tisked. âDo you think I would discuss that with you? I doubt you even know where to put itââ
âGeorge,â he warned.
âA joke,â George said, both hands raised in mock surrender.
âI just need a name. Mother wants no surprises.â
âYes, lookâ¦hereâs the thing,â George hedged. âIâve delayed in telling you my plans because theyâre a bit unconventional. But I donât want you to be all up in arms until youâve heard me outâ¦â
James instantly had to fight the urge to be up in arms. âIâm listeningâ¦â
âRight, wellâ¦â George took a deep breath. âIâve decided to marry Miss Nash.â
âThatâs wonderful. Which one?â
George gave a sheepish smile. âIâd actually rather determined that Iâd like to have the set.â
James blinked. âThe set?â
âMotherâs vision for my life has always been to run the estate, get married, and have children. Itâs a horribly oppressive way to live, feeling like you have no choice. You canât imagine because youâre a second son,â George said with a wave of his hand.
James could have punched him. He didnât understand the pressure of being a duke? He lived that pressure every day as his brother ambled about, content to do fuck-all with his life.
âI confess, Iâve been rather rebellious,â George admitted. âBut Iâve seen the light, James. The Nash sisters have been helping me to see the light, and I really feel like a changed man. My new vision for my future is .â
James blinked again. âAnd by twins you meanâ¦â
âI mean I shall live here at Alcott with the Nash sisters as my wives. Well, one wife, one mistress I supposeâthough Iâve never really liked the term mistress,â he added under his breath. âItâs brilliant, eh?â
James reeled. All the men around him were going mad. âGeorgeâ¦you be serious!â
âWhyever not? Do you really think Iâm the first peer to have a wife and a mistress?â
âMost mistresses are not the daughter of a lord.â James replied. âThey are not related to the duchess!â
George just scoffed again. âIâm sorry, but I believe the Boleyn sisters just popped out of the grave to say, âI beg your pardon?ââ
âStop trying to make jokes,â James snapped. âChrist, you must be sensible. You have to pick one.â
âIâll only one, obviously,â George replied, his nose in a drawer.
James crossed the room to his brotherâs side. âWhich one?â
âIt doesnât matter to me which one walks down the aisleâ
âhere it is. This is what I wanted to show you. I plan to give it toâ¦one of them.â He turned, opening the lid of a box to show James a beautifully cut emerald ring set with diamonds. It once belonged to their grandmother.
âWhich one will you give it to, George?â James repeated.
âI just said I donât care. Hmmâ¦perhaps I should have two rings. One for each? Fairness and all that,â he added. âI know I have something suitable in here.â He continued to dig in the top drawer.
âGeorge, you have to chooseââ
âNo. If I choose, it will seem like I have a favorite, and thatâs no way to start a marriage. Iâll let them choose. They can flip for it.â
âFlip for it?â
âSure,â George replied. âYou know, flip a coin. Heads a duchess, tails a mistress.â
This was how James would die, he was sure of it. He would handle this crisis, then tumble down the stairs to his death. âYou are mad,â he muttered, sinking onto the bed. âI really think youâve all gone mad.â
âIt does seem to be going around, doesnât it?â George replied. âHere, this ought to do nicely.â He turned with a new bauble held flat in his palm. It was a diamond brooch with a pearl drop the size of a quailâs egg. He opened his other palm to reveal the emerald ring. âWhat do you think?â
âI think you are perhaps my least favorite person to ever walk this earth,â James replied honestly.
George just laughed again. âFair enough. But I meant about the baubles.â
âI canât be part of this,â he muttered. âI canât watch you raise one up while you ruin the other. One gets to be your wife, and the other your mistress? One lauded the realm over as your duchess, the other your whore? Itâs too cruel for words. They donât deserve you.â
George groaned. âChrist, youâre such an insufferable prude. Even our dear father kept a mistress at Corbin House. For years, James. And sheâs a lovely dear, quite fun dinner company,â he added. âI had to move her out when he died, of course. Mama wouldnât have it any other way. But we still find time to dine together whenever Iâm in Town.â
James wasnât a fool. He knew all about his fatherâs French mistress. âYou still dine with our dead fatherâs mistress? Youâre seen together in public?â
âOf course not. Iâve rented her a nice little flat in Leicester Square.â
This had James seeing red. âYou still pay for her upkeep?â He took a shaky breath, bracing his clenched fists against his knees. âGeorgeâ¦I swear to the Almighty, if you are fucking our dead fatherâs mistressââ
âHow you,â George said with a glower. âShe is like a sister me. Weâre .â
James exhaled. This was some relief, at least.
âI couldnât very well put her out on the street. It wouldnât have been the Christian thing. After so many years of loyal service, I figured it was the least she was owed.â
James shot off the end of the bed and began pacing. âDoes mother know?â
George gave him an affronted look, one hand on his hip. âLittle brother, it pains me to say it, but sometimes I question how weâre even related.â
James seethed. âI wish to God every day we werenât related,â he snapped. âBurke has been more a brother to me than you have ever been!â
âAnd Helene is more a sister to me than have ever been,â George retorted.
âWho the is Helene?â
âHelene!â George cried, hands raised in exasperation. âFatherâs mistress. Helene! How can you be so unfeeling? You met her multiple times, James.â
âChrist, spare me from this madness,â James muttered. âSpare me. I canât handle this right now.â
âFor once, Iâm not asking you to do a thing,â George said. âIâll get down on one knee and everything. Mama will have absolutely nothing for which to reproach me, I promise.â
A bitter laugh escaped him. âExcept for the fact that youâre proposing to women.â
George just shrugged. âMama is a rationalist. If she expects me to marry, this is the bargain she must accept. The girls are up for it,â he added. âI donât know why it should be a spot of bother to anyone else.â
Now James quivered. When his voice came out, it was easily half an octave too low. âGeorgeâ¦tell me you did not already push this idea on the Nash twins. Tell me you have not so disgraced us as to actually pitch this ludicrous idea to them!â
âOf course, I did,â George replied. âAnd they were more than agreeable. They donât care about propriety either. English social mores are far too confining. They understand. All they want is financial security and the protection of my title to live how they see fit.â
For a horrifying moment, James felt his life flashing before his eyes. He imagined the Nash twins inserting themselves into every facet of his lifeâmeals together, redecorating rooms, arguing over dress money and imported glass for pineries, catching them in Georgeâs arms in all manner of odd places. James would have to move. Thereâd be nothing else to be done. Heâd have to resign the fate of the dukedom to George. Perhaps heâd move into Corbin House permanently, though he hated being in Town. He could go abroadâ¦Switzerland or Greece. Anywhere but Alcott Hall living every day in the shadow of George, his duchess, and his identical mistress.
âWhat do you expect me to tell our mother?â he asked with a raised brow.
âTell her whatever you think is best,â George said with a shrug. âThe twins have impeccable taste. Iâm sure theyâll put together a lovely wedding by Christmas. Iâm thinking Bath in the New Year and then on to Italy for the spring.â
âAnd youâllâ¦just bring them both, I suppose,â James said, his tone flat.
âOf course,â George replied.
âAnd the children?â
âWhat children?â
James scowled. âChildren, George. What if you get your mistress pregnant first? The only legitimate heirs will be those from your legal wife.â
âHmm, I hadnât thought of that,â George muttered.
James saw a fleeting ray of hope. Could he actually manage to make George abandon this scheme using a reasoned argument?
âIâll acknowledge them either way,â George said with a shrug. âI canât imagine the twins would care so long as all their needs are met, but Iâll ask. Thank you, James. Iâm glad to have you on board with this.â
James dragged a very tired hand through his hair. âI really think I hate you.â
George gave him a sad sort of smile. âI know. Life has treated us both unkindly. It raised me up, when I am the most unworthy of men, and it keeps you living in my shadow. We both sufferâme from hating my position, and you from hating me. If only the roles were reversed, eh? What an excellent second son I would have made.â
James couldnât help the weak smile that quirked his lips.
âWhat about you then? Mama will be on you to marry next. Any progress with Miss Harrow?â
James blinked. Why the hell was everyone on him about Miss bloody fucking Harrow? âMissâwhat? No, Iâm notâsheâsââ
Georgeâs smile spread as his eyes twinkled again. âVery articulate.â
James snapped his mouth shut. âItâs complicated.â
âItâs always complicated with you,â George replied. âDo you want my advice?â
âNo.â
âUncomplicate it,â George said anyway. âIf you let that one get away, youâll never find another like her.â
âLucky for you, that will not be your lot,â James retorted, moving for the door.
George barked a laugh. âAye, I suppose thatâs true. If I lose one, Iâll have a spare. Itâs brilliant, no?â
James sighed. âNo.â