screeching halt. Gravel was sent flying. In seconds, women ran inside, wearing clothes that ranged from dirty jeans to an evening gown with the price tag hanging off the low-cut bodice.
Minutes later, Jack had disappeared with Gizzy, but Tate was near the far wall with Kit. Around them were several women holding out scripts for Tate to autograph and staring up at him in adoration.
Kit looked across their heads to Casey with an expression that pointed out that some women did indeed
like
Tate.
Casey gave an exaggerated shrug. “Who can explain taste?” she seemed to reply.
“We’re closing the food service down.” Casey was standing by the tables. “Let people help themselves.”
“Are you leaving?” Olivia asked.
“No. You and I are going to see the show.” Casey rummaged inside a grocery bag under the table. “I sent Josh out for these.” She pulled out two big bags of popcorn. “I thought that maybe there’d be fireworks when Kit announced who would help with the auditions, but this beats all my expectations. You and I are going to watch this fiasco in comfort.”
“Surely with an actor like Tate Landers, things will run smoothly.”
“Ha!” Casey said. “As far as I can piece together, Kit has used charity to shame the guy into performing. But Landers has made it clear that he doesn’t want to do it. If these Elizabeths are half as bad as the Lydias this morning, I want to see his distaste and arrogance.”
Olivia was looking at her in shock. “What in the world did that young man do to make you dislike him so much?”
“Let’s see. Where do I begin? Bawled me out for sitting in my own house. Told Jack he thought I wasn’t pretty enough for
him
. Broke into my house and ate one of the pies I made for my friends. And if all that weren’t enough, I think he did something in my bedroom that made him take his shirt off and throw it onto my roof. Is that enough reason to dislike him?”
“I should say so!” Olivia said. “Come on, let’s go and watch, and if he does a bad job we’ll throw popcorn at him.”
“Just so it isn’t a pie. He’d like that too much.”
Laughing, they went down the aisle to take seats by Kit at his desk.
The walls were lined with women who wanted to try out for Elizabeth, each one wearing varying degrees of fear and hope on her face. There was a two-page printout of the scene they were to use for the auditions, where Darcy says he wants to marry Elizabeth in spite of the fact that she is totally unsuitable to be his wife.
“None of them looks like she’d say no to him,” Casey said. “From the way they keep glancing at the curtain, I think they’re all hoping he asks them for real.”
“I have to say that, even at my age, I was ready to run away with Mr. Landers when he played Heathcliff.”
“You’ve seen his movies?” Casey asked.
“Of course. You haven’t?”
“No,” Casey said. “I’ve only seen
him,
and that was more than enough.”
“But shirtless, he is—”
Casey snorted. “I’ve seen him with clothes and without them, and it’s still no.”
“How in the world—?”
“Quiet on the set,” the stage manager shouted, and the curtain went up.
A young woman Casey had seen around town but didn’t know was sitting at a desk and writing with a quill pen. She had on one of the prop dresses that had been used for the Lydia auditions, and she looked good.
From the right, Tate walked onto the set—and a collective sigh went through the auditorium. He wore a Regency suit, and from the way it fit it seemed to have been custom made for him. His tight trousers smoothed down over his heavy thighs and into tall boots. A vest clung to his flat stomach, and a black jacket showed off his broad shoulders.
Every eye was on the two people onstage.
When Tate spoke, his voice halted all motion. “ ‘In vain I have struggled, but my feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love