JQuinn - The Secret Diaries of Miss Miranda Cheever
Precisely.
“Miranda! Miranda! Oh, Turner. Good day.”
“Olivia,” he said politely, giving her a tiny nod.
“Miranda says she is mourning Leticia. Is that not insupportable?”
“Olivia!” Miranda gasped. Turner might have detested his dead wife—enough to say so at her funeral, even—but there were certain things that were quite beyond the bounds of decency.
Turner just looked at Miranda, one of his brows rising into a mockingly quizzical expression.
“Oh, stuff. He hated her, and we all knew it.”
“Candid as always, dear sister,” Turner murmured.
“You’ve always said you don’t enjoy hypocrisy,” she returned.
“True enough.” He looked to Miranda. “Shall we?”
“You’re taking her home?” Olivia asked, even though Miranda had just told her that he was.
“I need to speak with her father.”
“Can’t Winston take her?”
“Olivia!” Miranda wasn’t sure what embarrassed her more—that Olivia was matchmaking or that she was doing it in front of Turner.
“Winston doesn’t need to speak with her father,” Turner said smoothly.
“Well, can’t he come along?”
“Not in my curricle.”
Olivia’s eyes grew round with longing. “You’re taking your curricle?” It was newly built, high, fast, and sleek, and Olivia had been dying to take the reins.
Turner grinned, and for a moment he almost looked like himself again—the man Miranda had known and loved, all those years ago. “Maybe I’ll even let her drive,” he said, clearly for no other reason than to torture his sister.
It worked, too. Olivia made a strange, gurgling sound, as if she were choking on her own envy.
“Ta, dear sis!” Turner said with a smirk. He slipped his arm through Miranda’s and drew her toward the door. “I shall see you later…or perhaps you’ll see me. As I drive by.”
Miranda bit back a laugh as they headed down the steps to the drive. “You’re terrible,” she said.
He shrugged. “She deserves it.”
“No,” Miranda said, feeling that she ought to stand up for her dearest friend, even if she had enjoyed the scene to an unseemly degree.
“No?”
“Very well, yes, but you’re still terrible.”
“Oh, absolutely,” he agreed, and as Miranda let him help her up into the curricle, she wondered how this had all come about, that she was sitting beside him and she was actually smiling and thinking that maybe she didn’t hate him, and maybe he could be redeemed.
They drove in silence for the first few minutes. The curricle was very smart, and Miranda could not help but feel terribly stylish as they sped along, high above the road.
“You made quite a conquest this afternoon,” Turner finally said.
Miranda stiffened.
“Winston seems quite taken with you.”
Still, she said nothing. There was nothing she could say, nothing that would leave her with dignity intact. She could deny it, and sound like a coquette, or she could agree and sound boastful. Or taunting. Or, God forbid, as if she wished to make him jealous.
“I suppose I ought to give you my blessing.”
Miranda turned to face him in shock, but Turner kept his eyes on the road as he added, “It would certainly be an advantageous match for you, and he could undoubtedly do no better. You may be lacking in the funds a younger son so earnestly needs, but you make up for it in sense. And sensibility, for that matter.”
“Oh. I—I—” Miranda blinked. She hadn’t the faintest idea what to say. It was a compliment, and not even a backhanded one at that, but still, it fell a bit flat. She didn’t want him to rave about all her stellar qualities if the only reason was to pair her with his brother.
And she didn’t want to besensible . For once she wanted to be beautiful, or exotic, or captivating.
Good heavens.Sensible . It was a miserable designation.
Miranda realized he was waiting for her to finish her halting reply, so she muttered, “Thank you.”
“I do not wish for my brother to make the same mistakes that I did.”
She looked to him at that. His face was pinched, his eyes pointed determinedly at the road, as if a single glance in her direction might send the world crashing down around them. “Mistakes?” she echoed softly.
“Mistake,” he said, his voice clipped. “Singular.”
“Leticia.” There. She’d said it.
The curricle slowed, then stopped. And finally, he looked at her. “Indeed.”
“What did she do to you?” she asked softly. It was too personal, and highly inappropriate, but she could not stop herself, not when his eyes were focused so intently on hers.
But it was the wrong thing to say. Clearly, because his jaw tensed, and he turned away as he said, “Nothing that is fit for a lady’s ears.”
“Turner—”
He whirled back to face her, his eyes flaring. “Do you know how she died?”
Miranda was shaking her head even as she said, “Her neck. She fell.”
“From a horse,” he bit off. “She was thrown from a horse—”
“I know.”
“—riding to meet her lover.”
That, she hadn’t known.
“She was also with child.”
Good God. “Oh, Turner, I’m so s—”
He cut her off. “Don’tsay it. I’m not.”
Her hand covered her open mouth.
“It wasn’t mine.”
She swallowed. What could she say? There was nothing to say.
“The first wasn’t mine, either,” he added. His nostrils flared, and his eyes narrowed, and there was a twist to his lips—almost as if he were daring her. Silently daring her to ask.
“T—” She tried to say his name, because she thought she ought to speak, but the truth was, she was blessedly thankful when he cut her off.
“She was carrying when we married. It’s why we married, if you must know.” He laughed caustically at that. “If you must know,” he said again. “That’s rich, consideringI didn’t know.”
The pain in his voice cut through her, but not nearly as much as the self-loathing. She had wondered how he had come to this, and now she knew…and she knew she could never hate him.
“I’m sorry,” she said, because she was, and because anything more would have been too much.
“It wasn’t your—” He cut himself off, cleared his throat. And then, after several seconds, he said, “Thank you.”
He picked up the reins again, but before he could set them in motion, she asked, “What will you do now?”
He smiled at that. Well, not really, but the corner of his mouth moved a little. “What will I do?” he echoed.
“Will you go to Northumberland? To London?”Will you remarry?
“What will I do,” he mused. “Whatever I please, I imagine.”
Miranda cleared her throat. “I know that your mother was hoping that you would make yourself present in London during Olivia’s season.”
“Olivia doesn’t need my help.”
“No.” She swallowed. Painfully. That was her pride sliding down her throat. “But I do.”
He turned and assessed her with raised brows. “You? I thought you had my little brother wrapped up neatly with a bow.”
“No,” she said quickly. “I mean, I don’t know. He’s rather young, don’t you think?”
“Older than you.”
“By three months,” she shot back. “He’s still at university. He’s not going to wish to marry soon.”
His head tilted, and his gaze grew penetrating. “And you do?” he murmured.
Miranda fought the urge to leap over the side of the curricle. Surely there were some conversations a lady shouldn’t have to endure.
Surely this had to be one of them.
“I would like to marry someday, yes,” she said haltingly, hating t
hat her cheeks were growing warm.
He stared at her. And he stared at her. And then he stared at her some more.
Or maybe it was barely a glance. She really couldn’t tell any longer, but she was beyond relieved when he finally broke the silence—however long it had lasted—and said, “Very well. I shall consider it. I owe you that, at least.”
Good Lord, her head was spinning. “Owe me what?”
“An apology, to begin with. What happened last night…It was unforgivable. It’s why I insisted upon escorting you home.” He cleared his throat, and for the barest of moments looked away. “I owe you an apology, and I thought you’d rather I did it in private.”
She stared straight ahead.
“A public apology would require that we tell my family just what exactly I was apologizing for,” he continued. “I didn’t think you’d want them to know.”
“You meanyou don’t want them to know.”
He sighed and raked his hand through his hair. “No, I don’t. I can’t say I’m proud of my behavior, and I would rather my family didn’t know. But I was also thinking of you.”
“Apology accepted,” she said softly.
Turner let out a long, weary sigh. “I don’t know why I did it,” he continued. “It wasn’t even desire. I don’t know what it was. But it wasn’t your fault.”
She gave him a look. It wasn’t difficult to decipher.
“Ah, bloody—” He let out an irritated breath and looked away.Brilliant job ,Turner. Kiss a girl and then tell her you didn’t do it out of desire . “I’m sorry, Miranda. That came out the wrong way. I’m being an ass. I can’t seem to help myself these days.”
“Perhaps you ought to write a book,” she said bitterly. “One hundred and one ways to insult a young lady. I daresay you’re up to at least fifty by now.”
He took a deep breath. He wasn’t used to apologizing. “It’s not that you aren’t attractive.”
Miranda’s expression turned to disbelief. Not at his words, he realized—at the mere fact that he was saying them, that she was being forced to sit there and listen as he embarrassed them both. He should stop, he knew, but the hurt in her eyes had awakened a painful little corner of his heart that he’d kept shuttered for years, and he had this strange compulsion to make things right.
Miranda was nineteen. Her experience with men consisted of Winston and himself. Both of whom had heretofore been brotherly figures. The poor girl must be confused as hell. Winston had suddenly decided that she was Venus, Queen Elizabeth, and the Virgin Mary all rolled into one, and Turner had all but forced himself on her. Not exactly an average day in the life of a young country miss.
And yet here she was. Her back straight. Her chin high. And she didn’t hate him. She should, but she didn’t.
“No,” he said, actually taking her hand in his. “You must listen to me. Youare attractive. Quite.” He let his eyes settle on her face and took his first really good look at her in years. She wasn’t classically pretty, but there was something about those big brown eyes that was rather engaging. Her skin was flawless and quite elegantly pale, providing a luminescent contrast to her dark hair, which was, Turner suddenly noticed, rather thick, with just the slightest tendency to curl. It looked soft, too. He had touched it the night before. Why didn’t he remember what it felt like? Surely he would have noticed its texture.
“Turner,” Miranda said.
He was staring at her. Why was he staring at her?
His gaze moved down to her lips as she said his name. A sensual little mouth, she had. Full lips, very kissable.
“Turner?”
“Quite,” he said softly, as if just coming to an unbelievable realization.
“Quite what?”
“Quite attractive.” He shook his head slightly, pulling himself out of the spell she had somehow cast over him. “You’re quite attractive.”
She let out a sigh. “Turner, please don’t lie to spare my feelings. It shows a lack of respect for my intellect, and that is more insulting than anything you can say about my appearance.”
He drew back and quirked a smile. “I’m not lying.” He sounded surprised.
Miranda caught her lower lip nervously between her teeth. “Oh.” She sounded just as surprised as he had. “Well, thank you, then. I think.”
“I’m not usually so clumsy with compliments that they cannot be identified.”
“I am sure you are not,” she said tartly.
“Now why do I suddenly feel like you’re accusing me of something?”
Her eyes widened. Had her tone been that cold? “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she said quickly.
For a moment it looked as if he might question her further, but then he must have decided against it, because he picked up the reins and offered her a bland smile as he said, “Shall we?”
They rode on for several minutes, Miranda stealing glances at Turner when she could. His expression was un-readable, placid even, and it was more than a bit irritating, when her own thoughts were in such a turmoil. He’d said he hadn’t desired her, but then why had he kissed her? What had been the point? And then it just slipped out—“Whydid you kiss me?”
For a moment it looked as if Turner were choking, although on what, Miranda could not imagine. The horses slowed a bit, sensing a lack of attention from their driver, and Turner looked at her with obvious shock.
Miranda saw his distress and decided that he couldn’t find any kind way to answer her question. “Forget that I asked,” she said quickly. “It doesn’t matter.”
But she didn’t regret having asked. What had she to lose? He wasn’t going to mock her and he wasn’t going to spread tales. She had only the embarrassment of this one moment, and that could never compare with the embarrassment of the night before, so—
“It was me,” he said quite suddenly. “Just me. And you were unfortunate enough to be standing next to me.”
Miranda saw the bleakness in his blue eyes and placed her hand on his sleeve. “It’s all right to be angry with her.”
He did not pretend not to know what she was talking about. “She’s dead, Miranda.”
“That doesn’t mean she wasn’t an exceptionally awful person when she was alive.”
He looked at her strangely and then burst out laughing. “Oh, Miranda, sometimes you say the damnedest things.”
She smiled. “Nowthat I will definitely take as a compliment.”
“Remind me never to put you up for the position of Sunday school teacher.”
“I have never quite mastered Christian virtue, I’m afraid.”
“Oh, really?” He looked amused.
“I still hold a grudge against poor little Fiona Bennet.”
“And she is…?”
“That dreadful girl who called me ugly at Olivia and Winston’s eleventh birthday party.”
“Dear God, how many years ago was that? Remind me not to cross you.”
She quirked a brow. “See that you don’t.”
“You, my dear girl, are decidedly lacking as pertains to charitable nature.”
She shrugged, marveling at how he’d managed to make her feel so carefree and happy in such a short time. “Don’t tell your mother. She thinks me a saint.”
“Compared to Olivia, I’m sure you are.”
Miranda wagged her finger at him. “Nothing bad about Olivia, if you please. I’m quite devoted to her.”
“Faithful as a hound you are, if you’ll excuse my less than attractive simile.”
“I adore hounds.”
And it was then that they arrived at Miranda’s home.
I adore hounds. That would be her final comment. Wonderful. For the rest of his life, he would associate her with dogs.
Turner helped her down and then glanced up at the sky, which had begun to darken. “I hope you don’t mind if I do not walk you in,” he murmured.
“Of course not,” Miranda said. She was a practical girl. It was silly for him to get wet when she was per
fectly able to let herself into her own home.
“Good luck,” he said, hopping back up into his curricle.
“With what?”
“London, life.” He shrugged. “Whatever you wish.”