“Yes, Dev. Hands off, and this is not a request.”
“Getting into the ducal spirit, are you?” Dev closed his eyes again and folded his hands on his chest. “Well, no need to issue a decree. I’ll behave, as she is a female employed by a Windham household.”
“Devlin St. Just.” Westhaven’s boots hit the floor with a thump. “Weren’t you swiving your housekeeper while she was engaged to some clueless simian in Windsor?”
“Very likely.” Dev nodded peacefully, eyes closed. “And I put away that toy when honor required it.”
“What sort of honor is this? I comprehend what is expected of a gentleman, generally, but must have missed the part about how we go on when swiving housekeepers.”
“You were going on quite enthusiastically,” Dev said, opening one eye, “when I came down here last night to find a book.”
“I see.”
“On the sofa,” Dev added, “if that pinpoints my interruption of your orgy.”
“It wasn’t an orgy.”
“You were what?” Dev frowned. “Trying to keep her warm? Counting her teeth with your tongue? Teaching her how to sit the trot riding astride? Looked to me for all the world like you were rogering the daylights out of dear Mrs. Seaton.”
“I wasn’t,” Westhaven spat, getting up and pacing to the hearth. “The next thing to it, but not quite the act itself.”
“I believe you,” Dev said, “and that makes it all better. Even though it looked like rogering and sounded like rogering and probably tasted like it, too.”
“Dev…”
“Gayle…” Dev got up and put a hand on his brother’s shoulder. “I am the last person to begrudge you your pleasures, but if I can walk in on you, and I’ve only been underfoot a day, then anybody else can, too.”
Westhaven nodded, conceding the point.
“I don’t care that you and Mrs. Seaton are providing each other some slap-and-tickle, but if you’re so far gone you forget to lock the door, then I am concerned.”
“I didn’t…” Westhaven scrubbed a hand over his face. “I did forget to lock the door, and we haven’t made a habit out of what you saw. I don’t intend to make a habit of it, but if I do, I will lock the door.”
“Good plan.” Dev nodded, grinning. “I have to approve of the woman on general principles, you know, if she has you spouting such inanities and dropping your pants for all the world to see.”
“I thought in my own library at nigh midnight I could have privacy,” Westhaven groused.
Dev’s expression became serious. “You cannot assume you have privacy anywhere. The duke owns half your staff and can buy the other half, for one thing. For another, you are considered a most eligible bachelor. If I were you, I would assume I had no privacy whatsoever, not even in your own home.”
“You’re right.” Westhaven blew out a breath. “I know you’re right, but I don’t like it. We will be careful.”
“You be careful,” Dev admonished. “Earlier today, I was minding my own business up on the balcony that opens off my bedroom, and I saw your housekeeper in earnest discussion with the deaf maid. Mrs. Seaton was warning the maid you and Val are men who can’t be trusted nor asked to break the law. I thought you should know.”
“I appreciate your telling me, but I am loathe to react out of hand to words taken out of context. In some villages, there are laws against waving one’s cane in public, and laws against drinking spirits on the Sabbath.”
“Are you sure the maid can’t speak?” Dev pressed. “Do you really know what became of Mr. Seaton and where the banns were cried? Just who were Mrs. Seaton’s references?”
“You raise valid questions, but you cannot question that Mrs. Seaton does a splendid job of keeping this house.”
“Absolutely splendid,” Dev agreed, “and she trysts with you in the library.”
“Are you telling me I shouldn’t marry her now?” Westhaven tried for humor but found the question was partly serious.
“You might well end up having to marry her, if last night is any indication,” Dev shot back. “Just make damned sure you know exactly who it is you’re trysting with before the duke gets wind of same.”
Knowing he wouldn’t get any more work done after that discussion, Westhaven left the library in search of his housekeeper. He couldn’t be precisely sure she was avoiding him—again—but he’d yet to see her that day. He found her in her private sitting room and closed the door behind him before she even rose to offer him a curtsy.
“I wish you wouldn’t do that,” he said, wrapping his arms around her. She stiffened immediately.
“I wish you wouldn’t do that,” she retorted, turning away her face when he tried to kiss her.
“You don’t want me holding you?” he asked, kissing her cheek anyway.
“I don’t want you closing the door, taking liberties, and bothering me,” she said through clenched teeth. He dropped his arms and eyed her curiously.
“What is it?”
“What is what?” She crossed her arms over her chest.
“You were willing enough to be bothered last night, Anna Seaton, and it is perfectly acceptable that your employer might want to have a word or two with you privately. Dev said he saw you and Morgan in heated discussion after lunch. Is something troubling you? Those confidences you referred to last night, perhaps?”
“I should not have trusted you with even that much of a disclosure,” Anna said, uncrossing her arms. “You know I intend to seek another position, my lord. I wonder if you’ve written out that character you promised me?”
“I have. Because Val has yet to return, it remains in my desk. You gave me your word we would have the rest of the summer, Anna. Are you dishonoring that promise so soon?”
She turned away from him, which was answer enough for Westhaven.
“I am still here.”
“Anna…” He stole up behind her and wrapped his arms around her waist. “I am not your enemy.”
She nodded once, then turned in his arms and buried her face against his throat.
“I’m just… upset.”
“A lady’s prerogative,” he murmured, stroking her back. “The heat has everyone out of sorts, and while I was allowed to sit on my lordly backside for a week, claiming illness, you were expected to be up at all hours.”
She didn’t contradict him, but she did take a deep breath and step back.
“I did not intend to upset you.” The earl offered her a smile, and she returned it just as the door swung open.
“I beg your pardon, my lord.” Stenson drew himself up to his unimpressive height, shot a disdainful glance at Anna, and pulled the door shut again.
“Oh, God.” Anna dropped down onto her sofa. “It needed only that.”
The earl frowned at her in puzzlement. “I wasn’t even touching you. There was a good two feet between us, and Stenson was the one in the wrong. He should have knocked.”
“He never does,” Anna sighed, “and we were not touching, but we looked at one another as something other than housekeeper and employer.”
“Because I smiled at you?”
“And I smiled back. It was not a housekeeper’s smile for her employer.”
“Don’t suppose it was, but it was still just a smile.”
“You need a butler, Westhaven.” Anna rose and advanced on him.
“Any footman can answer the damned door. Why do I need another mouth to feed?”
“Because, a butler will outrank that toadying little buffoon, will be loyal to you rather than the duke’s coin, and will keep the rest of the male servants toeing the line, as well.”
“You have a point.”
“Or you could just get rid of Stenson,” she went on, “or have your brother perpetually travel around the countryside with Stenson in tow.”
“I suppose if Stenson is back, then Val can’t be far behind,” Westhaven observed.
“I have missed him,” Anna said. She looked a trifle disconcerted to have made the admission but let it stand.
“I have, too.” Westhaven nodded. “I miss his music, his irreverence, his humor… How is Dev settling in?”
Anna crossed the room and opened the door before answering his question.
“Well enough, I suppose,” she replied, busying her hands with an arrangement of daylilies. “He doesn’t sleep much, though, and doesn’t seem to have much of a routine.”
“He’ll settle in,” the earl said. “You will let me know when Lord Valentine returns?”
“No need for that.” Val stepped into the room. “I am back and glad to be back. It is too damned hot to travel, and Stenson was unwilling to travel at night. Not a very servile servant, if you ask me, though he does a wicked job with a muddy boot.”
“You.” Westhaven pulled his brother into a hug. “No more haring off for you, sir. Nobody knows how to go on without your music in the house or your deviltry to keep up morale.”
“I will wander no more,” Val said, stepping back, “at least until the heat breaks. I came, though, in search of Miss Morgan.”
“She might be in the kitchen,” Anna said. “More likely she’s reading in the barn. With dinner pushed back these days, she has some free time early in the evening.”
“Val?” The earl stayed his brother’s departure with a hand on his arm. “You should know, in your absence, I’ve asked Dev to bunk in with us. He was without his domestic help, and we have the room.”
“Devlin, here?” Val’s grin was spontaneous. “Oh ye gods and little fishes, that was a splendid idea, Westhaven. If we’re to be stuck in Town with this heat, at least let us have good company and Mrs. Seaton’s conscientious care while we’re here.”
He sailed out of the room, leaving Anna and the earl smiling in his wake.
“Good to have him back safe and sound,” Westhaven said.
“Three for dinner on the terrace, then?” she asked, every inch a housekeeper.
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