jigging and contented themselves with beaming; only then, with his eyes adjusting and with their dancing parasols no longer distracting him, did he see the lady standing behind them.
Alathea.
His stride almost faltered.
She stood straight and tall, silently contained, her parasol held at precisely the correct angle to protect her fine skin from the sun. Not, of course, waving at him.
Masking his reactionâthe powerful jolt that shook him whenever he saw her unexpectedly and the prickling sensation that followedâhe continued his advance. She watched him with her usual cool regard, her customary challengeâa haughty watchfulness that never failed to get his goat.
Forcing his gaze from her, he smiled and greeted Mary and Alice, veritable pictures in mull muslin. He made them laugh by bowing extravagantly over their hands.
âWe were utterly amazed to see you!â Mary said.
âWeâve been to the park twice,â Alice confided, âbut that was earlier than this. You probably werenât about.â
Refraining from replying that he rarely inhabited the park, at least not during the fashionable hours, he fought to keep his gaze on them. âI knew you were coming to town, but I hadnât realized you were here.â Heâd last met them in January, at a party given by his mother at his family home, Quiverstone Manor in Somerset. Morwellan Park and the Manor shared a long boundary; the combined lands and the nearby Quantock Hills had been his childhood stamping groundâhis, his brother Luciferâs, and Alatheaâs.
With easy familiarity, he complimented both girls, fielding their questions, displaying his suave London persona to their evident delight. Yet while he distracted them with trivialities, his attention remained riveted on the cool presence a few feet away. Why that should be so was an abiding mysteryâMary and Alice were effervescent delights. Alathea in contrast was cool, composed, stillâin some peculiar way, a lodestone for his senses. The girls were as bubbling, tumbling streams, while Alathea was a deep pool of peace, calm, and something else heâd never succeeded in defining. He was intensely aware of her, as she was of him; he was acutely conscious they had not exchanged greetings.
They never did. Not really.
Steeling himself, he lifted his gaze from Maryâs and Aliceâs faces and looked at Alathea. At her hair. But she was wearing a bonnetâhe couldnât tell whether she was also wearing one of her ridiculous caps, or one of those foolish scraps of lace sheâd started placing about her top knot. She probably was concealing some such frippery nonsense, but he couldnât comment unless he saw it. Lips thinning, he lowered his gaze until his eyes met hers. âI hadnât realized you were in London.â
He was speaking directly to her, specifically of her, his tone quite different from when heâd spoken to the girls.
Her lashes flickered; her grip on her parasol tightened. âGood afternoon, Rupert. It is a lovely day. We came up to town a week ago.â
He stiffened.
Alathea sensed it. Her stomach knotted with panic, she looked at Mary and Alice and forced herself to smile serenely. âThe girls will be making their come-outs shortly.â
After a fractional hesitation, he followed her lead. âIndeed?â Turning back to Mary and Alice, he quizzed them on their plans.
Alathea tried to breathe evenly, tried to hold her sudden lightheadedness at bay. She refused to let her gaze slide his way. She knew his face as well as her ownâthe large, heavily hooded eyes, the mobile lips given to wry quirks, the classic planes of nose and forehead, the uncompromisingly square chin. He was tall enough to see over her headâone of the few who could do so. He was strong enough to subdue her if he wished, and ruthless enough to do it. There was nothing about him physically that she didnât already