My Heart's True Delight (True Gentlemen #10) - Grace Burrowes Page 0,111

you feeling cautious or lucky?” Chastain had an eight showing, and—because the deck was fresh—nothing up his sleeve.

“Hit,” Chastain said, tapping the table impatiently with his fingers. “Be bold, eh, Dorning?’

Be stupid was probably closer to Chastain’s situation. Ash dealt him another eight.

Chastain glanced at the card, then sent Ash a puzzled look, then glanced at the card again. “Rubbishing cards.” He flipped over his facedown card, showing a total of twenty-six points. With eighteen in his original hand, taking another card had been a classic beginner’s mistake, and with no effort at all, he’d been goaded into making it.

Ash’s hand totaled eighteen points as well. “I will be bold too,” he said, turning over the queen of hearts, “and I will also apparently suffer for my lack of caution. I’m out.”

“Nineteen,” Mrs. Tremont said, grinning like a cat before a horse trough full of cream.

“Twenty-one,” Lady Tavistock added, to a soft patter of applause. “But fear not, gentlemen. We ladies intend to be generous in victory. We’ll give you both a fortnight to pay up.”

Chastain sat back. “A fortnight? A mere fourteen days? But that’s… that’s…”

“Very generous,” Ash said, collecting the cards while joy and relief course through him. “I can write out bank drafts to each of you ladies tonight for the full amount owed, and it will be my pleasure to do so. Chastain, if that suits, shall we drink a toast to the victors?”

A dozen conversations started up among the spectators, while footmen came around with flutes of champagne. Chastain helped himself to three glasses, drinking one and putting it back on the tray, then taking two more. Lord Wentwhistle passed him paper and pen, and between glasses, Chastain made out his markers.

Ash had brought the proper documents with him to the library and needed only a moment to execute bank drafts for both ladies, sums sufficient to pay both Ash’s losses and Chastain’s. The ladies were only too happy to pass him Chastain’s markers.

Chastain was too busy swilling champagne and trying to look cheerfully indifferent to attend these exchanges, as Ash had expected he would be. The other guests shuffled toward the door, declaring the evening and the house party quite successful and the mezzanine emptied out as well.

Della slipped her hand around Ash’s arm. “Well played, husband.”

“Will you stay while I settle up with Chastain?” Ash asked.

Della looked him up and down. “Of course. You are well?”

“Well, but tired, and I don’t want to lose my temper.” He actually did want to lose his temper and leave Chastain with the bruises to show for it.

Della leaned near, which pressed her breast gently against Ash’s arm. “Lose your temper just a bit. Clarice said to thank you. She lacks a means of removing William from the temptations that call to his worst qualities. Now she’ll have a few years to bring him around.”

Ash bent near, needing to dose himself with the soothing scents of honeysuckle and Della. “I would not lay money that Chastain will put those years to good use. I would, however, accept a bet that drink, a jealous husband, or a Captain Sharp will lay him low before those years are up.”

“Somehow, I think Clarice would bear up well enough under the loss, leaning on Mr. Portly’s sturdy arm all the while.”

Della sounded relaxed and happy, and she was regarding Chastain with an attitude of pity tinged with disgust. Truly, the coin she’d spent at the table had been worth the reward.

“Portly,” Ash said, “would you mind giving us a moment? I’m sure Mr. Golding can escort Mrs. Chastain to her room.”

Sycamore came down the steps from the mezzanine and bowed over the marchioness’s hand. Ash caught his eye, and Sycamore, to his credit, wished her ladyship good night.

The library emptied out, leaving only Ash, Della, Chastain, Portly, and Sycamore.

“Chastain,” Ash said gently, “my wife now holds your markers. All of them, from every round of cards you’ve lost for the past two weeks. You owe her ladyship a fortune, and if you fail to pay her timely—because debts of honor are always to be settled quickly—she will ruin you. What say you?”

Chastain looked from Ash to Della, then to Portly and Sycamore. He reached blindly behind him and half fell, half sat in the nearest wing chair.

“Lady Della holds my vowels?”

Della brandished a bouquet of IOUs. “All of them, every single one, including the two you just made out to Mrs. Tremont and Lady Tavistock, whom you will not so much

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