Desperate for a few moments of solitude, Alexa glanced
around, then hurried past the withdrawing room for ladies
and turned down a darkened side corridor. With its heady
swirl of silks and scents, of lights and laughter, the
ballroom had suddenly become too oppressive to bear. Every
glittering, gleaming detail seemed a mocking reminder of
how dull she was.
How different she was.
Alexa pressed her palms to her cheeks, feeling the hot
humiliation burn through her thin kidskin gloves. Spotting
a set of arched French doors up ahead, she quickened her
steps and slipped out to the gardens. The small terrace was
deserted, its decorative urns and slate tiles shrouded in
shadows cast by the torchieres on the balcony and the full
moon overhead.
Drawing in a great gulp of the cool night air, she
choked back a sob. Oh, stop indulging in self-pity, she
scolded herself. What had she expected? To dazzle the
gentlemen of London with her beauty and brilliant intellect?
Hah. With a wry grimace, she blinked the beads of
moisture from her lashes. She was a rough-cut bit of
country quartz compared to the perfectly polished jewels of
the ton. To imagine that—
The click of the door latch was followed by a grunt of
surprise.
Alexa whirled around. "I'm sorry. I know I shouldn't be
out here alone—" she began, and then stopped short on
seeing who it was.
"You," growled the Irish Wolfhound. "You seem to have a
habit of straying to places where you shouldn't go." A
breeze ruffled his hair, and the swaying twists of ivy cast
a pattern of light and dark across his chiseled face. He
looked fierce. Forbidding.
Alexa lifted her chin, refusing to be intimidated. "I
needed a breath of fresh air, and a garden terrace is a
perfectly respectable place for me to be." She exaggerated
taking a look around. "Or were you hoping to sneak a quick
tup with one of your lightskirts?"
His lips thinned. "You have a saucy mouth, Lady Alexa
Hendrie. Take care that it does not get you into trouble."