Heiress in Red Silk (Duke's Heiress #2) - Madeline Hunter
Chapter One
Eccentricity ran through the Radnor family much like an orange thread weaving in and out of a tapestry. Some members showed none of the color, while others were ablaze with it. Kevin Radnor was still a young man, so it remained to be seen how much the orange would dominate his section of the tapestry.
He already displayed some evidence of the trait that so marked his father and his uncle. When a subject captured his attention, he investigated it thoroughly with a notable singlemindedness. Thus, at not yet thirty years of age, he had acquired an extraordinary expertise in fencing, mechanics, engineering, moths, ancient Greek, chemistry, and carnal sensuality.
It was the last of those investigations that brought him in late March to a brothel in the neighborhood of Portman Square. His attention had been distracted of late by a business problem he faced, and only pleasure might relieve his brooding. The house he visited was known for women who had joined their profession out of enthusiasm, not desperation. That absolved his conscience of furthering the ruin of some poor female, and also appealed to him because with enthusiasm came both invention and joy.
He sat stripped to the waist in the chamber of a prostitute who used the name Beatrice while the pretty, red-haired woman slowly removed her own garments. Already his concerns had receded, especially because Beatrice turned disrobing into an art. At the moment, down to her chemise and hose, she was bending over to roll down one stocking. Her pose revealed her round, plump bottom which, Kevin noticed, had been rouged along the cleft.
A scratch at the door caught Beatrice just after she pulled off the stocking.
“I’ve a gentleman here,” Beatrice called out.
“I only wanted you to know that it has come. The new bonnet,” a muffled woman’s voice said. “It is so lovely.”
Beatrice began on the other stocking, but Kevin could see that the news of the bonnet had most of her attention now.
“Go and see it,” he said. “I don’t mind.”
She skipped over to him and gave him a kiss. Then she hurried to the door and opened it halfway.
“See?” the other woman said.
“Oh my, she outdid herself this time,” Beatrice said. “Look at that ribbon and how intricate she wove it.”
“Rosamund is the best,” her friend said.
Rosamund. The name might have been shouted, it garnered Kevin’s attention so thoroughly. He stood and joined the women at the door. “I have a fancy for pretty bonnets,” he said. “Let me see it.”
The bonnet was indeed handsome, with blues and pinks appropriate for the coming spring. Some cream cloth had been neatly sewn to cover the high crown, and the ribbons around its base showed painstaking effort to create little rosettes.
He admired the bonnet, but it was the hat box on the floor of the corridor that interested him much more. He lifted it, so the bonnet might return to its home. A label pasted to its side carried the words Jameson’s Millinery, Richmond.
He kept his expression impassive, but as soon as the door closed, he strode to the chair and picked up his shirt.
“What?” Beatrice exclaimed. “I thought—”
“I suddenly remember I must attend to something this evening. Do not worry, I will pay Mrs. Darling all the same.”
Beatrice pouted. “I was expecting some fun. You are one of my favorites.”
“As you are one of mine. Another night, however.”
Fifteen minutes later, Kevin pulled up his cantering horse in front of a house on Brook Street in Mayfair. He tied his mount to a post, then bounded to the door. When it opened, he pushed past the servant and ran up the stairs, ignoring the bleating objections sounding behind him.
He barged through an apartment, throwing open doors until he entered the dimly lit bedchamber.
A woman cried out in shock.
“Hell, Kevin,” a man yelled.
That brought him up short. Two pairs of eyes glared at him from the bed. The woman’s peered over the edge of a sheet pulled up to her nose. “Honestly, Chase, sometimes your family is not to be borne,” she said furiously.
“My sincere apologies, Minerva. Chase. Truly. Only I have found her. I have finally found Rosamund Jameson.”
* * *
Rosamund hoped the lady hovering outside the window of her shop would enter. She looked to be of quality, judging by the blue, woolen pelisse that fit her as only the best-made clothes did. Her bonnet had cost a good penny too, although Rosamund could not help reworking it in her mind. She would have found a