What Happens in London

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Authors: Julia Quinn
Smythe-Smith glanced at him with some impatience. “Marianne.” Then back to Sebastian: “Viola was the soloist.”
    “Ah,” Sebastian replied. “It was a rare treat.”
    “Indeed. We are so very proud of her. We shall have to plan for solos for next year.”
    Harry began to plan for his trip to the Arctic, to correspond.
    “I am so glad you were able to attend, Mr. Grey,” Mrs. Smythe-Smith continued, apparently unaware that she’d said this already. “We have another surprise for the evening.”
    “Did I mention my cousin is a baronet?” Sebastian put in. “Lovely estate back in Hampshire. The hunting is divine.”
    “Really?” Mrs. Smythe-Smith turned to Harry with new interest and a broad smile. “I am so grateful for your attendance, Sir Harry.”
    Sir Harry would have responded with more than a nod except that he was plotting the imminent demise of Mr. Grey.
    “I must tell you both about our surprise,” Mrs. Smythe-Smith said excitedly. “I want you to be the first to know. We shall have dancing! This evening!”
    “Dancing?” Harry echoed, struck nearly into incoherence. “Er, will Viola be playing?”
    “Of course not. I shouldn’t want her to miss out. But it just so happens that we have a number of other amateur musicians in the audience, and it is such great fun to be spontaneous, don’t you think?”
    Harry rated spontaneity up with trips to the dentist. What he did rate highly, however, was petty revenge. “My cousin,” he said with great feeling, “adores dancing.”
    “He does?” Mrs. Smythe-Smith turned back to Sebastian with delight. “You do?”
    “I do,” Sebastian said, perhaps a bit more tightly than was necessary, given that it was not a lie; he did like to dance, far more than Harry ever had.
    Mrs. Smythe-Smith looked at Sebastian with beatific expectancy. Harry looked at them both withself-satisfied expectancy; he did love when everything wrapped up neatly. In his favor, specifically.
    Sebastian, aware that he’d been outmaneuvered, said to Mrs. Smythe-Smith, “I hope your daughter will save the first dance for me.”
    “It would be her honor to do so,” Mrs. Smythe-Smith said, clasping her hands together with joy. “If you will excuse me, I must make arrangements to begin the music.”
    Sebastian waited until she’d wended through the crowd, then said, “You will pay for this.”
    “Oh, I think we’re even now.”
    “Well, you’re stuck here, too, at any rate,” Sebastian replied. “Unless you wish to walk home.”
    Harry would have considered it, were it not pouring rain. “I’m happy to wait for you,” he said, with all the good cheer in the world.
    “Oh, look!” Sebastian said, with patently false surprise. “Lady Olivia. Right there. I’d wager she likes to dance.”
    Harry considered saying, You wouldn’t , but really, what was the point? He knew Sebastian would.
    “Lady Olivia!” Sebastian called out.
    The lady in question turned, and there was no way she could avoid them, what with Sebastian plowing through the crowd to her side. Harry, too, could find no way to avoid the encounter; not that he would give her the satisfaction of doing so.
    “Lady Olivia,” Sebastian said again, once they were at speaking range. “How lovely to see you.”
    She gave a faint impression of a nod. “Mr. Grey.”
    “Taciturn this evening, are we, Olivia?” Sebastian murmured, but before Harry could wonder at thefamiliarity of such a statement, he continued with: “Have you met my cousin, Sir Harry Valentine?”
    “Er…yes,” she stammered.
    “I made Lady Olivia’s acquaintance this very evening,” Harry cut in, wondering what Seb was up to. He knew very well that the two of them had already spoken.
    “Yes,” Lady Olivia said.
    “Ah, poor me,” Sebastian said, changing the subject with startling speed. “I see Mrs. Smythe-Smith signaling to me. I must find her Viola.”
    “Does she play as well?” Lady Olivia asked, her eyes clouding with

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