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A Lady's
Guide To Improper Behavior
As Theresa Weller stepped down from the coach, Amelia gave her a
warm hug and a kiss on the cheek. “I need to speak with you,” her
cousin whispered, then released her to greet Tess’s brother Michael.
“That hadn’t occurred to me.” Laughing, Theresa sank into one of the
guest chairs in the small room. “She says it’s because she has all
the other colors, but you never know.”
“Well, keep an eye on things. She’s your responsibility now that I’m
married.” Amelia settled into the opposite chair. “I met Stephen’s
brother this morning.”
Finally Amelia smiled. “I know. And thank you. On our first meeting,
he seemed rather fierce.” Amelia stood, offering a hand to Theresa.
“Oh, and Stephen’s purchased me a horse,” she continued, returning
to the hallway. “Can you believe it? Me, with a horse.”
As they looked toward the foyer, Theresa’s voice trailed off. At
first glance she thought that Stephen had come looking for them, but
almost immediately she realized that the man standing there was
not Lord Gardner. For one thing he was taller by a good three or
four inches. And the viscount’s brown hair was short and orderly,
not the collar-brushing uneven mess of rich mahogany that belonged
to this man.
And then there were the eyes. Stephen’s were kind and brown,
crinkling at the edges with humor. Not whiskey-colored and gazing
straight through her as though she’d already been catalogued and
dismissed. She cleared her throat. “Hello.”
He didn’t move. A moment later Amelia stepped between them. “Oh,
good. You’ve come,” she said warmly, though she didn’t approach him.
“Tess, this is Colonel Bartholomew James. Tolly, my cousin, Theresa
Weller.”
“You look like your cousin,” he informed her in a low voice.
Theresa blinked. “Do you think so? Leelee’s hair is so much prettier
than mine.”
With a chuckle, Amelia gestured them both to the morning room.
“Don’t expect me to disagree with that. We’re all in h–“”I like your
hair,” the colonel interrupted. “It reminds me of sunshine.” He
glanced at Amelia, and then his gaze caught Theresa’s again. “Where
is dinner being served?” he asked.
“Oh, we decided to eat in the breakfast room, so you wouldn’t have
to climb the stairs.”
The gaze left Theresa again, and she blinked, feeling almost as
though she’d been dragged forward against her will. Or not against
her will, rather. His gaze, his bearing – they spoke of raw,
barely-contained power. Mesmerizing.
”I’ll wait there, then.” Not until he turned away did she realize
that he held a cane in one hand and that he had a terrible limp.
Moving further into the shadows, he disappeared through the
neighboring doorway.
Realizing she’d been holding her breath, Theresa exhaled sharply. “That
is your brother-in-law?” she whispered.
“Yes,” Amelia whispered back. “Much less like Stephen than I ever
expected.”
“He’s very...intense.” But it was more than that. In the moments
she’d gazed at him, it seemed as though everything not absolutely
necessary for him to be alive had been done away with. She nearly
felt that she’d seen straight through to his soul. It had been a
very dark place.
“Don’t be afraid of him, Tess. Come along,” her cousin said, taking
her arm. “I’ll tell Stephen that he’s arrived.”
She shook herself. “I’m not afraid of him. He merely wasn’t what
I expected, either.” Not at all.
His brother and sister were charming and chatty and amiable. Colonel
James, however, seemed their exact opposite in every way. She shook
herself. It wasn’t as though a wild beast had been let loose in
London. It was merely that he was...outside of her usual experience.
Far outside. Theresa glanced over her shoulder in the direction of
the breakfast room doorway. Outside was rather more exciting than
she’d expected.
“He’s here?” Lord Gardner said, standing as she and Amelia walked
back into the room.
“Yes. He went to sit in the breakfast room.”
The viscount gave a brief frown. “I suppose I should apologize in
advance for Tolly,” he said in a low voice. “He’s had a rough go of
it.”
Michael patted him on the shoulder. “No need for that, Stephen,” he
said warmly. “No one could expect your brother to dance a jig after
his unit was massacred.”
He couldn’t dance a jig, regardless, from the look of that cane.
Theresa kept silent, only nodding as they all decided to join the
colonel in the breakfast room. It seemed a shame about his leg and
his fearsome demeanor, because the more she considered it, he was
actually quite handsome in a dangerous sort of way. But he needn’t
worry about his welcome; he was a wounded hero, and there were oh,
so many rules about how one addressed a hero. Luckily, she knew them
all.
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