To Wed The Widow

The room erupted into hushed whispers and excited laughter and the very Honorable George Sinclair breathed it in deeply and thought to himself, for the first time, that it was good to be home.

He hadn’t missed England. India had sunk into his bones; the heat, the food, the never-ending roar of life. He hadn’t wanted to leave; he mourned the fact that he’d never be able to return.

India had sent him home a changed man. He’d never be warm again; his greatcoat was now a permanent part of his wardrobe no matter how brightly the weak English sun tried to shine. Food would never taste again; flavorless, spiceless, and missing that now familiar bite. And he stayed as far from the country as he could because the silence was too much to take.

That, and his brother the earl.

He was too much to take as well.

But here, in town, with the excitement of balls and the roar of life and the rules, here George Sinclair found what he hadn’t realized he’d been missing.

Scandal.

The noise level somehow both increased and decreased at the same time as she entered and he turned to look at just who could cause such a commotion.

Her golden hair piled high atop her head, her plunging neckline peaking coyly from beneath row upon row of jeweled necklaces.

She paused, looking down on her subjects and they looked back, twittering and fluttering, and Sinclair thought that it was not enough. There should have been trumpets fanfaring and fireworks exploding because a regal queen had deigned to grace them with her presence.

Sinclair poked his friend in the side. “Just who, pray tell, is that?”

George St. Clair looked to where his friend pointed and fingered his cravat. “Mmm. The widow.”

Sinclair trembled with delight. “She has an epithet? The widow? How very intriguing.”

“A richly deserved one. She has had five husbands, all dead within one year of the wedding. The last, rumor has it, died whilst in bed and under her. Two weeks ago.”

Sinclair jolted when he realized her dress was black. That she was in mourning. Her dress skimmed here and flared there, and despite the color said nothing about mourning.

Sinclair’s eyes followed the curves and flares and he said, “Lucky scoundrel.”

St. Clair snorted and Sinclair looked at him with an eyebrow raised. “Is that not the most fervent wish of every man? To die naked, in bed, and beneath a beautiful woman riding him into everlasting oblivion?”

“It is apparently many a man’s wish because she has no lack of suitors.”

“But not you?”

“I require a man be cold in his grave before I start in on his widow.”

Sinclair looked again at the woman, at the long limbs and golden hair that gave proof that some Viking had pilfered and pillaged somewhere in her blood line.

Her black dress not stark but richly adorned, making her pale skin even paler, her golden hair even more golden.

Sinclair sighed. “Mourning suits her.”

“It does.”

Sinclair looked at his friend, noting the lines on his face and the tired look in his eyes that eight years had wrought.

“It’s suited her well for nearly a decade and with a handful of husbands. Remember that, Sin, before you become too enamored.”

“You don’t like her?”

St. Clair looked back at the woman, studying her, and when their eyes caught across the room, she smiled and made her way toward them.

“I know you will like her. And I have no wish to stand over your grave, my friend.”

Sinclair laughed. “I may like her, I may acquaint myself with all England has to offer now that I must, but marriage? Should I lose my mind, the earl will surely take it upon himself to find it for me.”

St. Clair clapped his friend on the back, smiling despite himself. “It’s good to have you home, Sin. And you can count on me, as well, to take up that task if it becomes necessary.”

“See? It is good to be home. I can play with whatever delectable scandal that crosses my path as long as you two are watching over me like clucking hens.”

“We wouldn’t need to if you didn’t look at scandal like a boy getting his first glimpse up the milkmaid’s frock.”

The widow snaked through the crowd, close enough now that she might be able to hear their conversation, and Sinclair said, “I have matured, my friend, since then. And I assure you that I can keep my wits about me in the presence of such beauty. Long golden locks and, oh my, crystal blue eyes.”

St. Clair shook his head. “All the better to snare her prey.”

The widow stopped in front of them, flicking open her fan to wave it idly. “Talking of me, Mr. St. Clair? You are always so flattering.”

He bowed, stiff and just this side of disapproving. “May I introduce Mr. George Sinclair. And this is Elinor Rusbridge Lemmon Gilberti Wooten Headley, Lady Haywood. Did I leave any out, my lady?”

She laughed, a low amused sound that would make any red-blooded man think of silk sheets and naked limbs.

Sinclair bowed theatrically enough to make up for his friend’s lack of manners. Flamboyantly enough to snag her attention to him.

The widow said, “George Sinclair and George St. Clair? However will I tell you apart?”

Sinclair leaned toward her. “Just remember, my lady, the sinner and the saint. And then forget the saint.”

Her smile peeked out from behind her fan and she whispered conspiratorially, “Forgotten.”

Sinclair leaned in even closer and didn’t whisper. “Good.”

They laughed, sharing in their little joke, and St. Clair bowed, leaving his friend to fend for himself. Sinclair was reminded of just what a good friend the man was.

The widow watched St. Clair’s back as he walked away from them, her fan still waving slowly.

She said, “I’m surprised he left you here, with me. I thought I heard you were good friends, back in the day.”

“Good friends, we are. The only friend I willingly put pen to paper during my long years in India.”

“The friendship must be more one-sided than you realize.” And in her words was the truth that it was her St. Clair didn’t like.

Sinclair shook his head. “My friend. Who knows me better than myself. Who knows it is very hard to distract me once I’ve seen something I like.”

She turned her eyes to him, dismissing St. Clair.

She waved her fan, still smiling, and studied his coiffed brown hair. His cravat. His waistcoat.

He waited for her to say she liked what she saw as well but out came, “And how is India? As uncivilized as one hears?”

Sinclair jolted at uncivilized. He’d been gone a long time, perhaps he was out of practice at this particular game.

“It is wonderful, and until but a moment ago, I was devising numerous schemes to get back there. Now, though, I find England and her wares intoxicating.”

“Flattery will get you everywhere, Mr. Sinclair.”

He murmured, “Excellent.”

Her fan sped up, their eyes caught. The crowd pushed her closer and she said softly, “Do you know why your friend Mr. St. Clair doesn’t like me?”

“I assumed it was a personal failing.”

She laughed, her hair moving precariously atop her head and he noticed there was gold tinsel woven through it.

“It is. My personal failing.”

He sniffed and her dark musky scent surrounded him.

He said, “I have known George St. Clair since our school days and you for but one minute, and I can assure you, it is not your personal failing.”

She was still laughing when she shrugged one shoulder, a surprisingly Gallic gesture for so Nordic a complexion.

“I like torturing him. I can’t help it. And I wonder if I can wind Mr. St. Clair so tight that he will shatter.”

“It can’t be done. Trust me.”

“So you think I should give it up? Admit defeat?”

Sinclair nodded. “I think you should expend your energies on a more worthwhile cause.”

Their eyes were nearly even, she was such a tall woman, and her hair towered over him. She only had to lean in to whisper in his ear, “I don’t give up. I don’t admit defeat.”

She pulled back, rapping his forearm with her fan hard enough to sting, and turned away from him.

She said over her shoulder as she walked away, “But you should perhaps listen to your friend, Mr. Sinclair. I like to play with my prey.”