It probably had been.
At least she’d hit the notes.
Cicely Peck was not to be outdone. After Miss Mountbatten’s apparent triumph—hitting all the notes and all—she sprang to her feet and pushed her way to the piano, where Susana was preparing to play. There was a hushed discussion between them—Jonathan only caught a few words—but the jist of it was Cicely wasn’t on the program, but she insisted on performing anyway. Naturally, Susana being the gentlewoman that she was, only snarled a little bit before giving over.
After which, Miss Peck played the piano and sang a song about the joys of motherhood that Jonathan suspected she’d written herself.
It was a relief when Susana took over when Miss Peck finished, playing a Beethoven sonata—and playing it flawlessly. Though everyone had clapped for everyone, the applause for his sister was infinitely more sincere.
Thank God, it said. Someone who can actually play.
The next act was also the finale. Or, as it was called in the halls of Whites, the Finally.
Jonathan was surprised to see his daughters appear, in lovely dresses—and tiaras. He didn’t know why he was surprised. He’d asked for them to perform. But that had been hours ago. Weeks, if one accounted for the torment of the last few sets.
The crowd oohed and awed and clapped as they took their places, and then Susana began to play. Ah. A Christmas song. How lovely. His girls sang the first verse of “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” in a charming soprano, which was delightful.
Granted, they were his daughters. He was supposed to find them delightful, but the audience seemed to agree.
What they didn’t expect—what no one expected—what that they would be joined for the second verse by Meg.
Jonathan had heard Meg sing before. She had a beautiful voice that was rich and full. She sang the second verse by herself and then, the three joined their voices for a three-part harmony that gave him chills.
When the last note faded away, he leaped to his feet and applauded madly, barely aware that everyone else did the same—of course, Cicely Peck waited to see what everyone was doing before she joined in.
“Encore! Encore” Someone shouted. Jonathan suspected it was Hisdick.
Vicca grinned as she and Lizzie bowed. “That’s the only song we practiced,” she said with a cheeky smile.
“But Meg knows more. Sing the Italian one, Meg,” she urged.
Naturally, Meg flushed and shook her head, but the crowd would not let her off the hook.
Silence settled in the crowd, save Cicely’s snort, as Meg prepared.
When she opened her mouth and began to sing—his favorite aria as it happened, “Voi che sapete” from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro, each perfect note wafted through the room like a heavenly air. He sat, spellbound, with the others, as she created magic with her voice in a stunning soprano. As she finished, the room was hushed, then rocked with hurrahs and bravissimos. Everyone rushed her to congratulate her, which was annoying, because he couldn’t reach her.
But his daughters, worming their way through the crowd, found him and hopped on his lap. Together. “Did you like our song, Papa?” Vicca asked.
“It was exquisite,” he said, kissing them both on the forehead. They beamed and his heart warmed.
“Oh,” Cicely said in a syrupy voice at his side. “Are these your daughters?”
“Yes. This is Victoria, and this little darling is Elizabeth.”
“We’re named for queens,” they informed her.
“Isn’t that sweet. How long did you have to practice?”
Lizzie made a face. “All morning.”
Ah. That must be where Meg had been. He should have known.
“Well, your song was lovely,” Louisa put in. “How old are you?”
The girls held up five fingers each.
“That was quite impressive for five.” She was something of a chatterbox, but Jonathan had to admit, Louisa had a more natural way about her with the girls than Cicely, whose demeanor made him wonder if his daughters were sticky. “Shall we go celebrate with lemonade and cakes?” she asked.
The girls looked to him and when he nodded, shouted hurrah!
“Aren’t they darling?” Cicely asked as Louisa led the way to the refreshment table in the corner.
He shrugged, keeping his eye on the trio. “I’m partial. But isn’t Louisa wonderful with them?” He wasn’t sure why he said this, but was glad he had when Cicely gasped, leapt to her feet, and practically ran to catch up.
Excellent.
Time to escape.
He could talk to Meg later, when she wasn’t surrounded by slavering dogs.
Before anyone could intercept him, he slipped out of the salon and made his way to the library, and the waiting decanter of whisky.
He’d definitely earned a drink.
THE LAST THING MEG EXPECTED, after her performance, was to be surrounded by all the guests and be gushed over as she was. It took quite some time to thank them all. Long enough for her to recover from her embarrassment at the fuss they made. When it was over, she was exceedingly warm, thirsty, and tired. Certainly ready to escape, although Hisdick, Mattingly, and St. Clare seemed inclined to follow her wherever she went.
Fortunately, there was one place they could not follow, so she headed to the water closet. She stayed there for a long time, until she was certain they were gone.
When she peeped out to find herself alone, she breathed a sigh of relief and vowed never to sing before a crowd again.
She knew that after the musicale, a tour of the conservatory was planned, so she didn’t head there. Rather she sneaked off to her favorite room in the house, the library.
It was quiet and dark and cool. Exactly what she needed.
Despite the business of the morning and the melee of the musicale, she’d been beset with one single thought.
That kiss from Jonathan.
It had dominated her mind since last night, but she wasn’t sure what to make of it.
Jonathan wasn’t the kind of man to run around kissing girls all higgledy-piggledy. In fact, since Tessa, she doubted he’d even looked at another woman. Who would? Tessa had been a diamond of the first water.
But he had kissed her.
It had been the single most thrilling moment of her life.
And the most confusing.
She made her way through the darkened room to the window seat, where she loved to sit and read and, occasionally, look out at the drifts of snow covering the garden. She wondered what the garden might look like in spring, but she knew she would probably never find out. She certainly would never come to Sutton House again. At least, not after Jonathan married.
The thought depressed her.
“That is a fierce frown.”
His voice, in a dark rumble from the king’s chair by the fire, surprised her.
“Jonathan!” She huffed a laugh. “I was just thinking of you.”
Oh dear. Thank heavens he couldn’t see her flush in the shadows.
“Were you?” He stood and made his way over, then sat beside her, which was hardly wise. The window seat was not all that generous. As it was, his thigh touched hers; the propinquity scorched her and she edged away, but he, oblivious followed. “I was just thinking of you.”
His voice was playful and she wasn’t sure what to make of it.
“What were you thinking about?” Her performance, probably. “Did you like the aria?”
“I loved the aria. It’s my favorite, you know.”
“I didn’t know.” How could she? They’d never discussed the opera.
“Well, it is. And I adored the song you and the girls sang.”
“They are very talented.”
“Like their father, no doubt.” His smile was crooked.
“They sang it for Tessa.”
When she spoke her friend’s name, the mood shifted. It went from playful to sober. “I’m sure she appreciated it. But no. Those were not the things I was thinking of.”
He took her hand. His was warm. His gaze made her tremble.
“What-what were you thinking about?”
“How lovely you are.”
Her breath caught. She brushed back her hair. Swallowed. “I… Thank you.”
“All my friends are besotted, you know.”
“Are they?” She had to smile at that. “They’ve been following me like hungry pups.”
“I imagine they have been. You’ve…really won them over. No doubt a proposal is yours, if you so wish it.”
She quirked her head. “From which one?” Not that it mattered. None of them made her heart patter in the slightest.
He laughed. “All of them, I imagine.”
“Oh. Lovely.”
He leaned closer. Her pulse kicked up. “You don’t sound pleased.”
“Is it so wrong that I don’t want to marry any of them?” she asked.
“I shouldn’t think so,” he shrugged. “You will always have a home here, if you wish.”
Ah. “How kind.”
“Not in the least.” He moved closer. “Do you want to know what else I was thinking of?”
She met his gaze, held it. She thought she knew what he was going to say, and it made her breathless. “Yes.” A peep.
“I was thinking about that kiss last night. Do you remember it?”
She couldn’t hold back a laugh. Did she remember it? “Honestly, Jonathan. How terrible do you think my memory is?”
“So you do remember?”
“Of course I do. It was…”
“What?” He came closer still. His breath caressed her cheek.
“It was wonderful,” she whispered. It was all she could manage.
“I thought it was wonderful too. I’d like to do it again.” Somewhere, in his words, was an inherent question, which was ridiculous. In response, she put her hand to his cheek. His day beard scratched her palm and she loved it. So she stroked.
“Ah,” he said, closing his eyes and leaning in to her touch. “Meg. My Meg.”
The words stunned her—my Meg—but she had no time to react, because he touched his lips to hers, ever so tenderly. She allowed him to kiss her like that for a long time, but when he deepened the kiss, her conscience smote her, and not for the first time.
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