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The Calhoun Chronicles Bundle: The Charm School

Год написания книги
2019
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“There’s so much to see,” Lily declared. “And in such a short time.”

“It doesn’t have to be short,” Rose said. “You could stay with me.”

“Here?”

“Of course. What is there at Albion for you?”

Lily took a sip of her wine. “Albion is my home. It’s where I raised my son and buried my husband. My stepson has two children I barely know. I spent too long on the Continent. I can’t stay away forever.”

Ryan eyed her keenly. “Father’s dead and I’ll never live at Albion again, Mama. I think Aunt Rose has a fine idea. Let Hunter have Albion. He never needed us anyway.”

Hunter. Isadora tried to picture the stepbrother—older, of course. Dissolute, with a big red nose from drinking all those mint juleps on the porch while his slaves worked themselves to death in the fields.

“What are his children like?” Rose asked.

“I hardly know—they were both in leading strings when I left. The boy’s name is Theodore and his sister is Belinda. Hunter’s wife—her name is Lacey—didn’t welcome my attention.” A wistful expression softened Lily’s face. “I would have liked to be a grandmama.” The expression vanished as she drilled Ryan with a stare. “Perhaps one day someone of my own flesh and blood will oblige me.”

Ryan laughed. “I know I performed a small miracle in getting us here so fast, but even I would have trouble having a baby.”

Rose burst out laughing. Her sister merely shook her head. “Whatever shall I do with the boy?”

Isadora took a very small bite of melon, chewed it carefully and swallowed. She prayed they would not see the hot blush that stained her cheeks.

“We’ve embarrassed our guest with all this bawdy talk,” Rose said. “Shame on us.”

“No, really—”

“Nonsense, my dear. Let us move on to politer topics.” She folded her unfashionably sunbrowned arms on the table. “You are a most intelligent young lady. Lily was telling me you’ve a gift for languages.”

Isadora shook her head. “If the conversation I heard at the wharves today was any indication, I am no expert.”

“She’s being modest,” Ryan said. “She’s the best interpreter I’ve ever heard.”

She blinked. After her performance with the harbor pilot, she hadn’t expected praise.

“Is that so?” Rose asked, lifting a dark eyebrow.

“It is,” he said, upending his wine goblet.

Isadora felt a soft shock of pleasure. Praise from Ryan Calhoun should not feel so good, but Lord help her, it did. She knew pride was a vanity, yet his compliment warmed her like the wine she was drinking.

“You have,” Rose observed, “a most remarkable smile.”

Isadora immediately pressed her mouth into a flat line. Ryan had probably given her a compliment because he felt guilty about his behavior.

“I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have said anything,” Rose commented. “But that smile—it quite transforms you. And the cut of your hair is quite…revolutionary. I simply adore it. Perhaps I shall get mine cut short, too.”

Isadora had no idea what to say. Lily rescued her by turning the subject back to Albion and people they knew years before. Isadora sampled her lemon ice and listened, enjoying the stories of these lovely strangers while barefooted servants waited on them.

A low churring sound came through the arched windows, startling her. Noting her widened eyes, Rose said, “That noise you’re hearing is a taramin—a nocturnal monkey. He’s a pet of sorts. Shy, but he’ll come around for a taste of fruit or honey from the kitchen.”

“I’d love to see him.”

“Ryan, show Isadora out to the patio,” Rose said.

“No, really,” Isadora began, quickly changing her mind. Rose’s suggestion bore a nightmarish resemblance to the well-meaning matchmakers of Boston, forever trying to pair her up with mortified young men. “It’s not nec—”

“I don’t mind.” Ryan pushed his chair from the table. She searched his face to see if he wore the look of those doomed suitors.

“You can stop in the kitchen for a pail of food,” Rose suggested. “The monkey is sure to be prowling about the garden.”

Torches illuminated the stone-paved area which formed the heart of the villa. Low arches flanked the patio, and one side had no wall but a wrought iron fence and a huge, unusual tree with a twisted trunk that resembled straining sinew and branches that grew almost horizontally out from it.

The scent of flowers weighted the night air, the odor so thick and exotic that Isadora felt woozy simply breathing it. She stopped in front of the burbling fountain in the center of the patio and stood very still, inhaling deeply, feeling the essence of the night pour through her, bringing parts of her to life that had been sleeping since before she could remember, sleeping so soundly that until this moment she didn’t know they existed.

“Are you ill?” Ryan asked, breaking in on her ecstatic reveries.

She opened her eyes. “No. Why do you ask?”

“You looked a little…peaked,” he said. “A little dizzy.”

“If I’m dizzy it’s not due to illness,” she said, flushing. “It’s because this place is so wonderful—the smells and sounds and the very feel of the air—it makes me…tingle,” she explained, then flushed again. “For want of a better word.”

“Tingle,” he repeated, an amused quirk lifting the side of his mouth.

“What I mean is that this environment gives me a sense of vitality I’ve not felt before. Does it have that effect on you, Captain Calhoun?”

He studied her with a frank and probing scrutiny that made her uncomfortable. And without moving his gaze from her, he said, “I do believe I feel that tingling effect, Isadora.”

“Now you’re teasing me,” she said, but the night was too perfect to feel angry about it.

He held out his hand to her. “Oddly, I’m not. Shall we go in search of this elusive creature?”

When she touched his hand, the tingling sensation heightened. She hadn’t expected that. Perhaps it was something she’d eaten—all the fruit had tasted so exotic. She felt light on her feet and graceful, probably a trick of equilibrium, since she had been so long at sea.

They walked to the end of the path, finding a sundial sitting in the gloom.

“How do you call a monkey?” Ryan asked.

“I have no idea. I’ve never even seen a monkey.”

He rattled the pail of fruit and made a smooching sound with his mouth. Isadora laughed. “That’s your monkey call?”

He winked at her. “Can you do any better?”

She pursed her lips and tried to emulate the churring sound they’d heard in the dining room.

“I don’t know how the monkey feels,” Ryan said with a chuckle, “but you’ve certainly got my attention.”
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