retire to her room to pen the invitation.
Which meant that no one besides Honoriaâand Marcus, of courseâknew that what it actually said was:
Marcusâ
Mrs. Royle has asked me to extend an invitation to Bricstan this weekend. She plans a small house party, with the four ladies I mentioned, along with four young gentlemen from the university. I beg of you, do not accept . You shall be miserable, and then I shall be miserable, fretting over your misery.
With affection, et cetera & et cetera,
Honoria
A different sort of gentleman would take such an âinvitationâ as a dare and accept immediately. But not Marcus. Honoria was certain of that. He might be supercilious, he might be disapproving, but one thing he was not was spiteful. And he wasnât going to make himself miserable just to make her miserable.
He was occasionally the bane of her existence, but he was, at heart, a good person. Reasonable, too. He would realize that Mrs. Royleâs gathering was exactly the sort of event that made him want to gouge his eyes out. Sheâd long wondered why he ever went to London for the season; he always looked so bored.
Honoria sealed the letter herself and brought it downstairs, handing it to a footman to deliver to Marcus. When Marcusâs reply arrived several hours later, it was addressed to Mrs. Royle.
âWhat does it say?â Cecily asked breathlessly, rushing to her motherâs side as she opened it. Iris, too, crowded in, trying to peer over Cecilyâs shoulder.
Honoria hung back and waited. She knew what it would say.
Mrs. Royle broke the seal and unfolded the missive, her eyes moving quickly across the writing as she read. âHe sends his regrets,â she said flatly.
Cecily and Sarah let out wails of despair. Mrs. Royle looked over at Honoria, who hoped she was doing a good job at looking shocked as she said, âI did ask. Itâs just not his sort of entertainment, I think. Heâs really not terribly sociable.â
âWell, that much is true,â Mrs. Royle grumbled. âI canât remember more than three balls last season at which I saw him dancing. And with so many young ladies without partners. It was downright rude.â
âHeâs a good dancer, though,â Cecily said.
All eyes turned to her.
âHe is,â she insisted, looking a bit surprised that her statement had garnered so much attention. âHe danced with me at the Mottram Ball.â She turned to the other girls, as if to offer an explanation. âWe are neighbors, after all. It was only polite.â
Honoria nodded. Marcus was a good dancer. Better than she was, that was for certain. She never could understand the intricacies of rhythm. Sarah had tried endlessly to explain the difference between a waltz and common time, but Honoria had never been able to grasp it.
âWe shall persevere,â Mrs. Royle said loudly, placing a hand over her heart. âTwo of the other four gentlemen have already accepted, and I am certain that we will hear from the others in the morning.â
But later that night, as Honoria was heading upstairs to bed, Mrs. Royle took her aside and quietly asked, âDo you think there is any chance Lord Chatteris will change his mind?â
Honoria swallowed uncomfortably. âIâm afraid not, maâam.â
Mrs. Royle shook her head and made a little clucking sound. âSuch a pity. He really would have been the feather in my cap. Well, good night, dear. Pleasant dreams.â
T wenty miles away, Marcus was sitting alone in his study with a hot cup of cider, mulling over his recent missive from Honoria. He had burst out laughing upon reading it, which he imagined had been her intention. Perhaps not her primary intentionâthat had certainly been to stop him from attending Mrs. Royleâs partyâbut she would have known that her words would amuse him to no end.
He looked down at the paper again, smiling as he