sisterâs distress?
She frowned as she noticed his full lips were curved in a smile; a smile that seemed only for her; and her heart did a skittering dance at the clear interest of this inimitable Viscount Peregrine as he rounded the rose bushes and finally came to stand in full view before them.
Dear Lord. Cognisance was like a stone dropping to the pit of her stomach. Those lips had covered hers not two nights before in a secluded arbour at Vauxhall Gardens. Those arms had held her against him in a lust-filled moment of abandonment. Sweet mercy, but Perryâwhoever he really was to Lady Cowdrilâwas Celesteâs handsome stranger.
She stood aside in rigid panic as the formalities were conducted. It only grew worse. This was Viscount Peregrine? Her heart rate ratcheted up several more notches. What would he say? How would he respond? Would he reveal her for the bold strumpet he no doubt thought her? Would she still be able to hold her head high by the end of the house party?
When, by some strange rearrangement of pairings, she found herself walking by his side, having no choice but to rest her hand on the forearm he offered her, she had completely lost the power of speech.
Lady Cowdril had managed one more turn around the rose bushes before seating herself with Celesteâs Aunt Branwell. However the viscount, or Perry as everyone called him, had evinced a strong desire to admire the roses, calling upon Celesteâs recently lauded expertise.
The kindling look he sent her as they paused by the blooming bushes brought a surely far more vibrant bloom to her cheeks.
Lowering his head, as if to elicit some opinion on a deep red, velvet rose, he murmured, âAh, the Apothecaryâs Rose.â He raised an eyebrow. âNow I have you all to myself.â
She wasnât sure what to make of his words. Should she start with an abject apology for her behaviour? A declaration she was not in the habit of consorting with strange men? Neither seemed appropriate when his eyes were twinkling with suppressed humour. Bending to smell the rose, she managed, âI prefer to call it by its less pedestrian name, the Red Rose of Lancaster.â Self-consciously, she brushed an escaped strand of hair from her cheek. Then, summoning up all her courage, she whispered as she cast him an appealing look, âShould I be afraid?â
The look he levelled upon her was one of singular calculation. He chuckled. âWoe betide The House of Lancaster, for they did not prevail, did they? Hmm, Miss Rosington, your question depends on your assessment of our unexpected little encounter the other night. Was it pleasing, or were you never more relieved than when I melted into the dark? I must say, it really is the most extraordinary coincidence to find you here, when Iâd thought never to lay eyes on you again.â Plucking the rose, he handed it to her with a bow. âPerhaps the Rose of Lancaster will one day be an emblem of victory, but for my purposes right now, please accept it as a token of peace.â He straightened, that wicked, difficult-to-interpret smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. âNevertheless, to return to the subject of our little encounter ⦠As Iâd planned to rectify that little matter and ensure I was in a position to lay more than my eyes upon you again, Miss Rosington, perhaps you could say that fate has played into my hands most unexpectedly. You are even more ravishing in the harsh light of day than you were when last we met.â
Celeste shot him a startled look, mixed emotions roiling within her as she found him smiling down at her with both amusement and calculation.
âYou are too kind, my lord,â she murmured, dropping her eyes as she took the rose, stepping forward to resume their walk. His words were both shocking but curiously exciting. She glanced at the ladies to ensure she was not likely to become the latest subject of their gossip, but they were