cousins of a family that embraced more members than just his blood relatives. Certainly he felt that he ought to attend any entertainment to which they had been obliging enough to invite him. He wanted to attend also because he had heard good things about the singing voice of the Countess of Edgecombe and welcomed the opportunity to hear it for himself. He wanted to attend because LaurenâViscountess Ravensberg, his cousin of sortsâupon whom he had called after leaving Whiteâs, had told him that she and Kit would be there as well as the Duke and Duchess of Portfrey. Elizabeth, the duchess, was another almost-relative of his. He had always thought of her as an aunt though she was in fact the sister of his uncle by marriage. He wanted to attend because Nevilleâs wife, Lily, who had also been visiting Lauren, had invited him to dinner before the concert.
And he was to attend, he discovered during the course of the evening, despite the fact that Portia Hunt was
not
. It was regrettable, he supposed, but unavoidable under the circumstances.
During one of the intervals between acts of the play, Miss Hunt asked him if he was going to Lady Flemingâs soiree a few evenings hence. There was something quite new in her manner toward him, he had realized all eveningâsomething rather proprietary. Clearly her father had spoken with her. He was about to reply in the affirmative when Laurence Brody interjected with a question of his own.
âYou are not going to the Whitleaf concert on that evening, then, Miss Hunt?â he asked. âI have heard that everyone is going there. Lady Edgecombe is to sing and the whole world is eager to hear her.â
âNot the
whole
world, Mr. Brody,â Portia said with controlled dignity. â
I
am not eager to go, and neither is my mother or any number of other people of good taste whom I could name. We have already accepted Lady Flemingâs invitation. I expect to find superior company and conversation at her soiree.â She smiled at Joseph.
He could have kicked himself then.
Of course
she would not be going to the concert. The Countess of Edgecombe was married to the man Portia had firmly believed for most of her life
she
was going to marry. It was during the days and weeks following the ending of that relationship that he, Joseph, had first befriended her.
âI regret that I must miss the soiree, Miss Hunt,â he said. âI have already accepted my invitation to Lady Whitleafâs concert.â
He would have refused his invitation if he had rememberedâas he ought to have doneâthat connection between the Edgecombes and Miss Hunt. And she was clearly not pleased with him. She was very quiet for the rest of the evening, and when she
did
speak, it was almost exclusively to other members of the party.
He arrived on the appointed evening with Lily and Neville and paid his respects to Whitleaf and Susanna. The ballroom, he could see, was already filling nicely. The first person he saw when they stepped inside was Lauren, who had a smile on her face and an arm raised to attract their attention from the other side of the room. Kit was with her as were Elizabeth and Portfrey.
And Miss Martin.
He had thought of the schoolteacher a number of times since his return to town. He had liked her more than he had expected to during the journey to London. She was prim and straightlaced and severe, it was true, and independent to a fault. But she was also intelligent and capable of dry humor.
But he had thought of her mainly for other reasons. He intended to have another talk with her before she returned to Bath, though tonight was probably not the right time for that. She was smartly dressed in green muslin, he noticed. Her hair was styled a little more becomingly than it had been at the school or on the journey to London. Even so, anyone looking at her this evening could surely not mistake her for anything other than what she wasâa
Dayton Ward, Kevin Dilmore