removed her hand from her face. Wiggling her nose, she said, “I think so.”
He couldn’t stop staring at her reddened nose and the alluring way she was moving it. Because her lips also moved, and now he was fixed on them as well.
Hell.
Carefully, he rose from the chair, lest they suffer some sort of additional mishap. “I’m terribly sorry about that.”
“It was an accident.” She laughed softly. “I’m rather good at those since coming to town. I promise my agility wasn’t this poor before.”
“It’s my influence. I’m making you clumsy.”
“How can it be your fault?” She shook her head briskly. “I haven’t noticed that you are clumsy at all.”
“Given what just happened, I don’t think you can rule it out. Perhaps you should rethink your plans to delay finding a husband so you may get away from me as soon as possible.” He’d meant it as a joke, but the moment he saw the discomfort flit through her gaze, he regretted it. “That was a jest. All of this was a jest. Of course I haven’t affected your agility.”
“Of course,” she murmured.
“I must meet with my secretary now. Keep hammering away on the pianoforte, if you like.” He smiled at her on his way out.
As he made his way to his study, he wondered why, in addition to his still smarting nose, his lips were also tingling.
Chapter 10
“How do I look?” Cassandra sat straight in the hack as it rattled its way along Bond Street toward Piccadilly. She smoothed her hand over the front of her dark green apron and adjusted the white cap covering her dark curls.
“Like a Society miss dressed up as a maid.” Fiona giggled.
Grinning, Cassandra flopped back against the seat. “Hopefully no one will look too closely.”
Fiona settled her own cap over her hair, which she’d personally dressed into a tight, simple style. “I, on the other hand, probably appear quite normal.”
“I’ve no idea what that’s supposed to mean, but you also look like a Society miss in costume.”
Did she? Fiona wasn’t sure she believed that. She was barely a Society miss. And she didn’t feel like one this week since she wasn’t going to any events. Not that she could complain. Yesterday’s shopping excursion to Cheapside with Cassandra’s aunt had more than made up for anything Fiona was missing. Cheapside was a teeming, vibrant area with so many sights and sounds. She’d even tried caviar from a cart.
Cassandra’s aunt had brought along a friend, and they’d all but ignored Fiona and Cassandra, so purchasing their costumes had been unremarked upon. They’d encountered some difficulty finding gray dresses that fit them properly. As a result, their garments were both a tad too large.
The hack turned onto Piccadilly, where they planned to disembark at Duke Street and walk to the club. Fiona’s insides churned with excitement and anxiety.
After proclaiming themselves ill and stating their plans to remain abed all day, they’d both slipped from their houses and met where Brook Street met Grosvenor Square. Keeping their heads down, they’d hurried to Bond Street and caught a hack, which had been an exciting endeavor on its own. No one could say Fiona wasn’t having an adventure.
The hack came to a stop at the designated location and disembarked. Cassandra paid the driver, then linked arms with Fiona as they started down Duke Street.
“I wish you were coming to the ball on Saturday,” Cassandra said. “What will I do without you there?”
“Dance, make conversation, and generally shine like a diamond?”
Cassandra snorted. “The diamond part is highly debatable. My father is annoyed that no one has paid me a call yet.”
“Why do you suppose that is?” Fiona hadn’t received any either, but she wasn’t surprised.
“The Season is in its infancy. If it were a person, it would still be drooling.”
Fiona laughed. “Is your father annoyed just to be annoying?”
“Precisely.” Cassandra looked at her askance. “I thought Lord Gregory might have called on you by now.”
“Really, why?”
“It seemed you shared a connection. And that you liked him well enough.”
“I did. I do.” Fiona thought back to their promenade and dance. “What constitutes a connection?”
“Sharing things in common, finding things to laugh about, but most importantly a physical…magnetism where you’re drawn together.”
Fiona suddenly thought of the other day when she and Overton had crashed noses. Just before that had happened there’d been something…odd. What Cassandra described was somewhat how Fiona had felt, as if she were being pulled toward him. Additionally, they did laugh together. She found him rather engaging. It was hard