Page 2 of The Society Catch

Page List

Font Size:

Mother and daughter finally reached the top of the stairs and Joanna sought diligently for something appropriate to say to theduchess. It would be important as the wife of a senior officer to say the right things to all manner of people. The Duchess of Bridlington, Joanna recalled, liked to be in the forefront of fashion, setting it, not following. She eyed the unusual floral decorations thoughtfully.

‘Mrs Fulgrave, Miss Fulgrave.’ Her Grace was gracious. ‘A dreadful squeeze it is not?’ She smiled at Joanna.

‘Not at all, Your Grace,’ Joanna smiled back, dropping a perfectly-judged curtsey. ‘It was delightful to have the opportunity to admire the floral decorations as we came up the stairs. How wonderful those palms and pineapples look, and how original. I have never seen anything like it.’

‘Dear child,’ the duchess responded, patting her cheek, clearly pleased at the compliment.

Joanna and her mother passed on into the ballroom, its pillared, mirrored walls already reverberating with the hum of conversation, the laughter of nervous debutantes and the faint sounds of the orchestra playing light airs before the dancing began.

As she always did, Joanna began to scan the room, her breath catching at the sight of each red coat before passing on. She must not let her anxiety show, she knew. An officer’s wife must be calm and hide her feelings whatever the circumstances. A small knot of military men was surveyed and dismissed and then, suddenly, half a head above those surrounding him, was a man with hair the colour of dark honey. A man whose scarlet coat sat across broad shoulders strapped with muscle and whose crimson sash crossed a chest decorated with medal ribbons on the left breast.

‘Giles.’He was here and three years of waiting, of loving, of hard work and passionate belief were at an end.

He was making his way slowly up the opposite side of the dance floor, stopping to talk to friends, bowing to young ladiesand, now and again, she could see, asking for a dance. Joanna’s hand closed hard over the unfilled dance card dangling from her wrist on its satin ribbon. As it did so a voice beside her said, ‘Miss Fulgrave, may I beg the honour of the first waltz?’

It was a round-faced young man with red hair. Joanna smiled but shook her head. ‘I am so sorry, Lord Sutton, I will not be waltzing this evening. Would you excuse me? I have to speak to someone at the other end of the room.’

She began to move through the crowd, her eyes on Giles’s head, trying to catch a glimpse of his face. Why was he in London? She had seen no mention of it in theGazette.She felt no doubts because this was her destiny. This was Giles’s destiny.

He had almost reached the head of the room now. Joanna fended off three more young men before they could ask for dances. Her entire card had to be free for Giles. Or would they just sit and talk? Would he recognise her immediately or would she have to contrive an introduction?

She was almost there. She calmed her breathing. It was essential that his first impression was entirely favourable. She could see his face clearly now. He was very tanned, white lines showing round his eyes where laughter had creased the skin. He looked harder, fitter, even more exciting than she remembered him. Ten more steps.

Giles Gregory turned his head as though someone had spoken to him, hesitated and stepped back. Joanna saw him push aside the curtain which was partly draped over an archway and go inside.

The crowd was thick at that end of the room where circulating guests from both directions met and spoke before moving on their way. Held up by the crush it took her perhaps three minutes to reach the same archway.

When she finally lifted the curtain she found herself alone in a little lobby and looked around, confused for a moment. Then sheheard his unmistakeable voice. Deep, lazily amused, caressing her senses like warm honey over a spoon. She stepped forward and saw into the next room where Giles was standing…

…Where Giles was standing smiling down into the upturned face of the lovely young lady clasped in his arms. ‘So you will talk to Papa, Giles darling? Promise?’ she was saying, her blue eyes wide on his face.

‘Yes, Suzy my angel, I promise I will talk to him tomorrow.’ Giles’s voice was indulgent, warm, loving. Joanna’s hand grasped the curtain, her eyes, her every sense, fixed on the couple in the candlelit chamber.

‘Oh, Giles, Idolove you.’ The young lady suddenly laughed up at him and Joanna’s numbed mind realised who she was. Lady Suzanne Hall was the loveliest, the most eligible, the wealthiest, debutante of that Season. Niece of Her Grace the Duchess of Bridlington, eldest and most indulged daughter of the Marquis of Olney, blonde, petite, spirited and the most outrageous flirt, she had a fortune which turned heads. But even penniless, Suzanne would have drawn men after her like iron filings to a magnet.

Why does she want Giles? Joanna screamed inwardly.He is mine.

‘It is such an age since I have seen you. Do you truly love me, Giles my darling?’ Suzanne said, her arms entwined round his neck, his hands linked behind her tiny waist.

‘You know I do, Suzy,’ he replied, smiling down at her. ‘You are my first, my only, my special love.’ And then he bent his head and kissed her.

Chapter Two

The world went black and Joanna clutched the curtain. Vision closed in until all she could see was a tiny image of the entwined lovers as though spied down the wrong end of a telescope. Blindly she turned and walked out. By some miracle she was still on her feet, although she could see nothing now. It was as though she had fainted, yet retained every sense but sight.

Outside the archway there had been chairs, fragile affairs of gilt wood. She put out a hand and found one, thankfully unoccupied. She sat, clasped her hands in her lap and managed to smile brightly. Would anyone notice?

Gradually sight returned, although her head spun. No-one was sitting next to her, no-one had noticed. She tried to make sense of what had happened. Giles was here, and Giles was in love with Lady Suzanne.

She studied everything that she could find on military matters and had read that it was possible to receive a mortal wound and yet feel no pain, to continue for some time until suddenly one dropped dead of it. Shock, the doctors called it, a far more serious and deadly thing than the everyday shocks of ordinary life. Perhaps that was what she was feeling. Shock.

Joanna was conscious of a swirl of bluebell skirts by her shoulder and Lady Suzanne appeared then plunged into the crowd. Her voice came back clearly. ‘Freddie, I would love to waltz with you, but I have not got a single dance on my card left. No, I am not teasing you, look.’

Joanna found she could not manage to keep the smile on her lips. Her hands began to tremble and she clasped them together in her lap. Any minute now someone was going to notice her and start to fuss. Shehadto get herself under control.

‘Madam, are you unwell?’ The deep voice came from closebeside her. Joanna started violently, dropping her fan, and instantly Giles was on one knee before her. ‘Here, I do not think it is damaged.’

She began to stammer a word of thanks, then their eyes met and he said, ‘But you are Joanna Fulgrave.’ Joanna nodded mutely, taking the fan from his outstretched fingers, using exaggerated care not to touch him. ‘May I sit down, Miss Fulgrave?’ He took the chair next to her, his big frame absurdly out of place on the spindly object.