viscountess wearing it, and not Evangeline.
He wanted to ask her why, but that wouldnât fit with his plan for the evening. And so he bit his tongue and smiled as he helped both ladies into his coach and then followed Lord Munroe inside. Wearing what he was to a very popular soiree was probably going to be the stupidest thing heâd ever doneâexcept for getting drunk and falling on Gillyâbut if his assessment was correct, giving her precisely what she claimed to want could be the very best way to prove that she was in error.
She was gazing at him again, her expression still wary and suspicious. If she thought he meant to try something tonight, she was too late. They were already well into the game.
âWhat were you reading that so engrossed you, Papa?â she asked after several moments of silence.
The viscount stirred, sending a swift glance in his wifeâs direction. âAh, just the newspaper. A fascinating article on the reinstatement of the French monarchy once weâve dealt with Bonaparte again.â
Connoll lowered his brow, wishing everyone would stop talking about France, then smoothed the expression as the viscountess looked up at him and smiled. âThat was kind of you to dress in coordination with Evangeline,â she said.
âOh, I worship your daughter,â he said, repeatingwhat heâd heard Dapney say the other night. âI would do anything for her.â
âWould you, now?â
âAnything. Ask it of me.â
âIâm sure thatâs not necessary,â Gilly broke in to the conversation.
âWe might at least know what Lord Rawleyâs intentions are toward you,â her mother countered.
âSurely Iâm not Miss Munroeâs only suitor. Though I am the most sincere, I assure you.â He clenched his jaw at the silliness spilling from his own lips. Whatever he was getting into, however, heâd already vowed to see it through. âMy annual income is in the vicinity of twenty-five thousand pounds,â he said with every ounce of unctuousness he possessedâa means to an end. âI could provide her with anything she wanted. I would be happy to do so.â
âTwenty-five thousand,â the viscountess repeated, her eyes growing larger. âAnd a marquis.â
âMy main estate in Devonshire is rumored to be the finest in three counties,â he continued. âMy great-great-great-grandfather had it built in 1612.â
âYour main estate? How many do you own?â
âWell, four in Scotland,â he returned, ticking them off on his fingers, âone in Devonshire, one in York, and a seventh in Cornwall. And the two houses here in London, though Iâve given one over to my cousin and his family. They also have use of the estate in Cornwall. One can only live in so many places.â
âIndeed.â
Evangeline gazed at him, her lips pursed. âThere are some rumors,â she said slowly, flicking her skirt, âthat you recently spent some time in France, and that you have sympathies with Bonaparte and the French.â
The little minx . âI have sympathy for the French,â he answered, keeping his tone easy. âThey will have a great deal of work ahead of them once Bonaparteâs been stopped.â
From the flash of her hazel eyes, Gilly realized that he hadnât answered the question of whether heâd been in France or not. To her credit, though, she didnât pursue it further. Heâd already told her that he would explain his whereabouts during their waltz tonightâand not a bloody second before that.
âI donât envy Wellington that task,â the viscount put in. âBonaparteâs a popular fellow.â
âThere is nothing more tedious than politics,â Lady Munroe said airily. âIâve heard that Lady Howlett actually has a tent erected in the stable yard to accommodate all of the additional servants and
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