My Heart's True Delight (True Gentlemen #10) - Grace Burrowes Page 0,70

slumber left Della more tired than if she hadn’t tried to nap at all.

Rather than doze off while waiting for Ash to return, Della wrapped herself in her mother’s shawl and took out her needlepoint. A wife’s privileges included providing her husband with monogrammed handkerchiefs, and stitchery was a more productive pastime than speculating about why Trask had inquired specifically after William Chastain.

Chapter Twelve

Ash could have walked for another three hours, but he was mindful that Della awaited him in their rooms.

How long was a midafternoon nap?

Should he have joined her for her respite?

Was a nap a means of inviting a husband to enjoy marital pleasures in the middle of the day? Ash thought not, because Della wouldn’t be that coy.

Or would she?

Perhaps a nap was an invitation merely to cuddle and exchange those sweet nothings Sycamore seemed to think no woman should be without, though what did Sycamore know about anything?

Ash was lost in his mental peregrinations as he passed William Chastain at the foot of the terrace steps. Chastain’s cravat was slightly askew, and his hair looked windblown on a day without much breeze. His afternoon activities had included either overimbibing or swiving—or both—and Ash doubted the elegant Mrs. Chastain would have let her husband rise from a frolic in such an untidy state.

Ash nodded at Chastain and kept walking rather than indulge in verbal fisticuffs in his present mood. He slowed his steps as he approached the entrance to the house.

An older woman sat alone at a wrought-iron table. She looked slightly familiar and more than slightly upset. Her eyes were sheened with tears, and she clutched a handkerchief in one pale hand.

“Lady Fairchild?”

She looked up, her gaze more worried than friendly. “Sir?”

“Ash Dorning, at your service. May I join you?” He did not want to join her, but she was clearly in distress. They had doubtless been introduced at some point, though he knew he hadn’t met her at the Coventry.

“You have the Dorning eyes,” she said, gesturing to the only other chair at the table. “You are here with your new bride?”

“I have that honor. Would you like to take a turn in the garden?”

“No, thank you.” She sent Chastain a withering glance, then seemed to collect herself. “I was well acquainted with your father, Mr. Dorning. I’ve been introduced to Lady Jacaranda, and I’m sure I’ve crossed paths with your oldest brother—he’s Casriel now. So strange to think your papa has gone to his reward.”

“My youngest brother, Sycamore, is among the guests too.”

Lady Fairchild folded her handkerchief and tucked it into a pocket. “Mr. Sycamore Dorning is a scamp by reputation. I don’t move much in Society, but I’ve heard about his club. Does he have the same gorgeous eyes as the rest of you?”

“We don’t dare put it like that lest his head swell beyond the proportions necessary to fit through the average parlor door.”

She studied Ash, and he realized she was a very attractive woman.

“Your father had that same humor, an ability to poke gentle fun. It’s a lovely quality in a man. Were you walking off the dismals?”

If she’d burst into a Monteverdi aria, Ash could not have been more surprised. “I beg your pardon?”

“Your dear papa used to walk off the dismals. He’d roam endlessly over hill and dale and take extended walking tours in every little corner of the realm. I wandered many an hour in his company, and he used to say the fresh air was a tonic. He was between wives when I knew him best, and he grieved for his first countess sorely.”

“I was under the impression Papa’s walking tours were in the interest of collecting botanical specimens.”

“He always had a specimen bag over his shoulder, and I do believe he was interested in botany, but when I knew him—this would have been quite a long time ago—he was somewhat at loose ends. Lord Fairchild was in Vienna at a diplomatic posting, and I appreciated your father’s companionship so very much.”

So Sycamore came by his scapegrace flirtatiousness honestly? Ash had never considered that theory. “What else do you recall about my father?”

She smiled at her hands. “He was a terrible flirt. Men newly grieving can be that way, as can women, I’m told. He was a good listener, he didn’t need to be the center of attention, and he loved his children to distraction.”

That comported with what Ash recalled of his father. Papa had been quiet, studious even, and yet he’d been able to charm Mama

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