The Last True Gentleman (True Gentlemen #12) - Grace Burrowes Page 0,77
himself from the embrace of rural Hampshire—and the embrace of marital bliss—and come to London to do some lecturing at the Royal Academy.
Of course, a romp or twenty with the marchioness would have been lovely too, but romping undertaken in return for services rendered wasn’t romping.
“Can you buy out Jonathan Tresham’s interest in the Coventry?” Sycamore asked.
“One wondered what the arrangement was. Yes, I can, but no, I will not. I am a quick study, Mr. Dorning, and determined to master the skill.”
And she was very good at keeping her emotions to herself, as any successful gambler must be.
Sycamore crossed an ankle over a knee. “You are doubtless a paragon in many regards, my lady. I am not a paragon, though I am a gentleman. I will show you the rudiments of the art as a favor between friends.”
She wrinkled her nose, probably because Sycamore had referred to himself as her friend. “How good are you?”
Sycamore smiled and sat forward as if to impart a confidence. In the next instant, the blade he carried in his left boot was silently quivering in the middle of the cork target across the room.
“I am that good.”
Her ladyship studied the blade until it was still. “You didn’t even look.” The marchioness, however, swiveled her gaze to Sycamore. She studied him, no longer visually dismissing him, evading his eyes, or turning a wary regard on him.
“My dear marchioness, looking rather destroys the element of surprise, which is half the beauty of a well thrown knife.”
She crossed the room and withdrew the blade. “Teach me to do this, and you can demand almost anything of me in return.”
Almost. A prudent woman. “You hate to be in anybody’s debt, don’t you?” Sycamore had made her a loan once before, at a rural house party, and she had paid it back to the penny within days of the house party’s conclusion. The sum had gone to paying off her step-son’s gambling debts, and what consideration she had extracted from the hapless lad was a secret between her and his young lordship.
She passed Sycamore his knife and watched as he returned it to the sheath in his boot. “I loathe being in debt to anybody, particularly a man. Women have little enough power, and a woman in debt is a woman all but asking to be exploited.”
Sycamore understood an independent nature, but not the bitterness behind her ladyship’s words. He also understood pride, however, and to become her ladyship’s instructor, he would have to surrender some scintilla of his own pride.
He had a bit to spare, after all. “Here is the favor I will accept in return for teaching you what you seek to know: Once a week, we will meet at the Coventry to practice throwing, and then you will dine with me on the premises.”
“Supper?” With a single word, she conjured a reference to all manner of hedonistic excesses.
“Food, wine, conversation. I can inflict some of my laughable French on you, you can tell me who is walking out with whom.”
The wariness had returned to her gaze, muted by curiosity. “You are serious?”
“I do not dissemble, even when my family dearly wishes I would.” Her ladyship still looked doubtful, so Sycamore resigned himself to explaining his situation to her.
“My brother Ash is my business partner, or he used to be. Now he’s too besotted with the wedded state to do more than keep an impatient eye on me at the club, not an eye on the club, mind you, an eye on me. When we talk it’s Della says, Della hopes, and my dear Della tells me. I love my sister by marriage—I love the entire herd of them—but Lady Della has entirely made off with my dearest brother.”
Sycamore rose to pace rather than sit passively before her ladyship’s scrutiny. “I cannot gossip with anybody about club business, or with nobody but Tresham, and with him it’s Theodosia believes, my darling Theo would say, and more of same. Casriel is the worst of the lot. He’s awash in daughters, which adds entire rhapsodic chapters to his litany.”
Sycamore paused before the corkboard, which would soon have to be replaced, because the center was too pitted from multiple throws hitting the same mark.
“I spend almost every night,” he said, “amid the witty and wealthy, and while I can flirt, make small talk, and flatter until my eyelashes fall off, that’s not the same as a good meal with a pleasant companion.”