. . . should not have let him kiss you. Who knows what liberties he will attempt to take the next time you meet? But whatโs done is done, I suppose, so all there is left is to ask: Was it lovely?
โfrom Eloise Bridgerton to her sister Francesca, slid under the door of her bedroom
the night Francesca met the Earl of Kilmartin, whom she would marry two months later
When the children entered the room, half dragged and half pushed by their nursemaid, Phillip forced himself to remain rigidly in his position against the wall, afraid that if he went to them heโd beat them both within an inch of their lives.
And even more afraid that when he was through, he wouldnโt regret his actions.
So instead he just crossed his arms and stared, letting them squirm under the heat of his fury, while he tried to figure out what the hell he meant to say.
Finally, Oliver spoke up, his voice trembling as he said, โFather?โ
Phillip said the only thing that came to mind, the only thing that seemed to matter. โDo you see Miss Bridgerton?โ
The twins nodded, but they didnโt quite look at her. At least not at her face, which was beginning to purple around the eye.
โDo you notice anything amiss about her?โ
They said nothing, forcing a silence until a maid appeared in the doorway with a โSir?โ
Phillip acknowledged her arrival with a nod, then strode to take hold of the piece of meat sheโd brought for Eloiseโs eye.
โHungry?โ he snapped at his children. When they didnโt reply, he said, โGood. Because sadly, none of us will be eating this, will we?โ
He crossed the room to the bed, then sat down gently at Eloiseโs side. โHere,โ he said, still too angry for his voice to be anything but gruff. Brushing aside her efforts to help, he set the meat against her eye, then arranged a piece of cloth over it so that she would not have to dirty her fingers while keeping it in place.
Then, when he was done, he walked over to where the twins were cowering, and stood in front of them, arms crossed. And waited.
โLook at me,โ he ordered, when neither removed their gaze from the floor.
When they did, he saw terror in their eyes, and it sickened him, but he didnโt know how else he was supposed to act.
โWe didnโt mean to hurt her,โ Amanda whispered.
โOh, you didnโt?โ he bit off, turning on them both with palpable fury. His voice was icy, but his face clearly showed his anger, and even Eloise shrank back in her bed.
โYou didnโt think she might possibly be hurt when she tripped over the string?โ Phillip continued, his sarcasm lending him a controlled air that was even more frightening. โOr perhaps you realized correctly that the string itself wasnโt likely to cause injury, but it didnโt occur to you that she might be hurt when she actually fell.โ
They said nothing.
He looked at Eloise, who had lifted the meat from her face and was gingerly touching her cheekbone. The bruise under her eye seemed to be worsening by the minute.
The twins had to learn that they couldnโt continue like this. They needed to learn that they had to treat people with more respect. They needed to learn . . .
Phillip swore under his breath. They needed to learnย something.
He jerked his head toward the door. โYou will come with me.โ He walked into the hall, turned back at them, and snapped, โNow.โ
And as he led them from the room, he prayed that he could control himself.
Eloise tried not to listen, but she couldnโt seem to stop herself from straining her ears. She didnโt know where Phillip was taking the childrenโ it could be the next room, it could be the nursery, it could be outside. But one thing was certain. They were going to be punished.
And while she thought theyย shouldย be punishedโwhat they had done was inexcusable and they were certainly old enough to have realized thatโ she still found herself oddly worried for them. They had looked terrified when Phillip had led them away, and there was that niggling memory from the day before, when Oliver had blurted out the question, โAre you going to hit us?โ
He had recoiled when heโd said it, as if he were expecting to be hit.
Surely Sir Phillip didnโt . . . No, that was impossible, Eloise thought. It was one thing to give children a spanking at a time like this, but surely he didnโt strike his children habitually.
She couldnโt have made such a misjudgment about a person. She had let the man kiss her the night before, kissed him in return, even. Surely she would have felt that something was wrong, sensed an inner cruelty if Phillip were the sort who beat his children.
Finally, after what seemed like an eternity, Oliver and Amanda filed in, looking somber and red-eyed, followed by a grim-faced Sir Phillip, whose job at the rear was clearly to keep the children walking at a pace that exceeded that of a snail.
The children shuffled over to her bedside, and Eloise turned her head so that she could see them. She couldnโt see out of her left eye with the meat covering it, and of course that was the side the children had chosen.
โWeโre sorry, Miss Bridgerton,โ they mumbled. โLouder,โ came their fatherโs sharply worded directive. โWeโre sorry.โ
Eloise gave them a nod.
โIt wonโt happen again,โ Amanda added. โThatโs certainly a relief to hear,โ Eloise said. Phillip cleared his throat.
โFather says we must make it up to you,โ Oliver said.
โEr . . .โ Eloise wasnโt exactly certain how they meant to do that. โDo you like sweets?โ Amanda blurted out.
Eloise looked at her, blinking her good eye in confusion. โSweets?โ Amandaโs chin shook up and down.
โWell, yes, I suppose I do. Doesnโt everyone?โ
โI have a box of lemon drops. Iโve saved them for months. You can have them.โ
Eloise swallowed against the lump in her throat as she watched Amandaโs tortured expression. There was something wrong with these children. Or if not with them, then for them. Something wasnโt right in their lives. With all of her nieces and nephews, Eloise had seen enough happy children to know this. โThat will be all right, Amanda,โ she said, her heart wrenching. โYou may keep your lemon drops.โ
โBut we have to give you something,โ Amanda said, casting a fearful glance at her father.
Eloise was about to tell her that that wasnโt necessary, but then, as she watched Amandaโs face, she realized that it was. In part, of course, because Sir Phillip had obviously insisted upon it, and Eloise wasnโt about to undermine his authority by saying otherwise. But also because the twins needed to understand the concept of making amends. โVery well,โ Eloise said. โYou may give me an afternoon.โ
โAn afternoon?โ
โYes. Once Iโm feeling better, you and your brother may give me an afternoon. There is much here at Romney Hall with which Iโm unfamiliar, and I imagine you two know every last corner of the house and grounds. You may take me on a tour. Provided, of course,โ she added, because she did value her health and well-being, โthat you promise there will be no pranks.โ
โNone,โ Amanda said quickly, her chin bobbing in an earnest nod. โI promise.โ
โOliver,โ Phillip growled, when his son did not speak quickly enough. โThere will be no pranks that afternoon,โ Oliver muttered.
Phillip strode across the room and grabbed his son by the collar.
โEver!โ Oliver said in a strangled voice. โI promise! We shall leave Miss Bridgerton completely alone.โ
โNot completely, I hope,โ Eloise said, glancing up at Phillip and hoping he correctly interpreted that to mean,ย You may now put down the child.ย โAfter all, you do owe me an afternoon.โ
Amanda offered her a tentative smile, but Oliverโs scowl remained firmly in place.
โYou may leave now,โ Phillip said, and the children fled through the open doorway.
The two adults remained in silence for a full minute after they left, both staring at the door with hollow, weary expressions. Eloise felt drained, and wary, almost as if sheโd been dropped into a situation she didnโt quite understand.
A burst of nervous laughter almost escaped her lips. What was she thinking? Ofย courseย she had been dropped into a situation she didnโt understand, and she was lying to herself if she thought she knew what to do.
Phillip walked over to the bed, but when he got there, he stood rather stiffly. โHow are you?โ he asked Eloise.
โIf I donโt remove this meat soon,โ she said quite frankly, โI think I might be sick.โ
He picked up the platter the meat had arrived upon and held it out. Eloise put the steak down, grimacing at the wet, slopping sound it made. โI believe I would like to wash my face,โ she said. โThe smell is rather overwhelming.โ
He nodded. โFirst let me look at your eye.โ
โDo you have very much experience with this sort of thing?โ she asked, glancing at the ceiling when he asked her to look up.
โA bit.โ He pressed gently against the ridge of her cheekbone with his thumb. โLook right.โ
She did. โA bit?โ
โI boxed at university.โ โWere you good?โ
He turned her head to the side. โLook left. Good enough.โ โWhat doesย thatย mean?โ
โClose your eye.โ
โWhat does thatย mean?โ she persisted. โYouโre not closing your eye.โ
She did, shutting them both, because whenever she winked only one eye she ended up squeezing it far too tightly. โWhat does it mean?โ
She couldnโt see him, but she could feel him pause. โHas anyone ever told you you can be a bit stubborn?โ
โAll the time. Itโs my only flaw.โ
She heard his smile in the tenor of his breath. โThe only one, eh?โ โThe only one worth commenting upon.โ
She opened her eyes. โYou didnโt answer my question.โ โIโve quite forgotten what it was.โ
She opened her mouth to repeat it, then realized he was teasing her, so she scowled instead.
โClose your eye again,โ he said. โIโm not yet finished.โ When she obeyed his command, he added, โGood enoughย meant I never had to fight if I didnโt want to.โ
โBut you werenโt the champion,โ she surmised. โYou can open your eye now.โ
She did, then blinked when she realized how close he still was. He stepped back. โI wasnโt the champion.โ
โWhy not?โ
He shrugged. โI didnโt care about it enough.โ โHow does it look?โ she asked.
โYour eye?โ She nodded.
โI donโt think there is anything to be done to stop the bruising.โ
โI didnโt think I hit my eye,โ she said, letting out a frustrated sigh. โWhen I fell. I thought I hit my cheek.โ
โYou donโt have to hit your eye to bruise there. I can see from your face that you landed right hereโโhe touched her cheekbone, right where sheโd hit, but he was so gentle that she felt no painโโand thatโs close enough for the bleeding to spread to the eye area.โ
She groaned. โIโm going to look a fright for weeks.โ โIt might not take weeks.โ
โI have brothers,โ she said, giving him a look that said she knew what she was talking about. โIโve seen blackened eyes. Benedict had one that didnโt completely fade away for two months.โ
โWhat happened to him?โ Phillip asked. โMy other brother,โ she said wryly.
โSay no more,โ he said. โI had a brother of my own.โ
โBeastly creatures,โ she muttered, โthe lot of them.โ But there was love in her voice as she said it.
โYours probably wonโt take that long,โ he said, helping her to stand so that she could make her way to the washbasin.
โBut it might.โ
Phillip nodded, then, once she was splashing the smell of the meat off her skin, said, โWe need to get you a chaperone.โ
She froze. โIโd quite forgotten.โ
He let several seconds go by before replying, โI hadnโt.โ
She picked up a towel and patted herself dry. โIโm sorry. Itโs my fault, of course. You had written that you would arrange for a chaperone. In my haste to leave London, I quite forgot that you would need time to make the arrangements.โ
Phillip watched her closely, wondering if she realized that she had slipped and said more than sheโd probably meant to. It was difficult to imagine a woman such as Eloiseโopen, bright, and extremely talkativeโ as having secrets, but she had been quite close-lipped about her reasons for coming to Gloucestershire.
Sheโd said that she was looking for a husband, but he suspected that her reasons had as much to do with what sheโd left behind in London as they did with what she hoped to find here in the country.
And then sheโd saidโin my haste.
Why had she left in a hurry? What had happened there?
โI have already contacted my great-aunt,โ he said, helping her back into her bed even though she quite clearly wanted to do it herself. โI sent her a letter the morning you arrived. But I doubt she could be here any earlier than Thursday. She only lives in Dorset, but sheโs not the sort to leave her home at the drop of a hat. She will want time to pack, Iโm sure, and do all those thingsโโhe waved his hand about in a slightly dismissive manner
โโthat women need to do.โ
Eloise nodded, her expression serious. โItโs only four days. And youโve a great many servants. Itโs not as if weโre alone together at some remote hunting box.โ
โNonetheless, your reputation could be seriously compromised should people learn of your visit.โ
She let out a long exhale, then lifted her shoulders in a fatalistic gesture. โWell, there isnโt much I can do about it now.โ She motioned to her eye. โIf
I returned, my current appearance would cause more comment than the fact that I left in the first place.โ
He nodded slowly, signaling his agreement even as his mind flew off in other directions. Was there a reason she was so unconcerned for her reputation? Heโd not spent much time in society, but it was his experience that unmarried ladies, regardless of their age, were always concerned for their reputations.
Was it possible that Eloiseโs reputation had been ruined before sheโd arrived on his doorstep?
And more to the point, did he care?
He frowned, unable to answer the latter question just yet. He knew what he wantedโno, make that what heย neededโin a wife, and it had little to do with purity and chastity and all those other ideals that proper young ladies were meant to embody.
He needed someone who could step in and make his life easy and uncomplicated. Someone who would run his house and mother his children. He was quite frankly pleased to have found in Eloise a woman for whom he felt a great deal of desire as well, but even if sheโd been ugly as a croneโ well, heโd have been happy to marry a crone as long as she was practical, efficient, and good with his children.
But if all that were true, why did he feel rather annoyed by the possibility that Eloise had had a lover?
No, not annoyed, precisely. He couldnโt quite put his finger on the correct word for his feelings. Irritated, he supposed, the way one was irritated by a pebble in oneโs shoe or a mild sunburn.
It was that feeling that something wasnโt quite right. Not dreadfully, catastrophically wrong, but just not . . .ย right.
He watched her settle herself against the pillows. โDo you want me to leave you to your rest?โ he asked.
She sighed. โI suppose, although Iโm not tired. Bruised, perhaps, but not tired. Itโs barely eight in the morning.โ
He glanced at a clock on a shelf. โNine.โ
โEight, nine,โ she said, shrugging off the difference. โWhichever, itโs still morning.โ She looked longingly out the window. โAnd itโs finally not raining.โ
โWould you prefer to sit in the garden?โ he inquired.
โIโd prefer toย walkย in the garden,โ she replied pertly, โbut my hip does ache a bit. I suppose I should try to rest for a day.โ
โMore than a day,โ he said gruffly.
โYouโre most probably right, but I can assure you I wonโt be able to manage it.โ
He smiled. She wasnโt the sort of woman who would ever choose to spend her days sitting quietly in a drawing room, working on her embroidery or sewing, or whatever it was women were supposed to do with needles and thread.
He looked over at her as she fidgeted. She wasnโt the sort of woman who would ever choose to sit still, period.
โWould you like to take a book with you?โ he asked.
Her eyes clouded with disappointment. He knew that sheโd expected him to accompany her to the garden, and heaven knew, part of him wanted to, but somehow he felt he had to get away, almost as a measure of self- preservation. He still felt off balance, desperately ill-at-ease from having had to spank the children.
It seemed that every fortnight they did something that required punishment, and he didnโt know what else to do. But he drew no pleasure from the act. He hated it, absolutely hated it, felt almost as if he might retch every time, and yet what was he supposed to do when they misbehaved that badly? The little things he tried to brush aside, but when they glued their governessโs hair to her bedsheets while she slept, how was he supposed to brush asideย that? Or what about the time they had broken an entire shelf of terra-cotta pots in his greenhouse? They had claimed it was an accident, but Phillip knew better. And the look in their eyes as they protested their innocence told him that even they hadnโt thought heโd actually believe them.
And so he disciplined them in the only way he knew how, although thus far heโd been able to avoid using anything other than his hand. When, that is, he did anything at all. Half the timeโmore than half, reallyโhe was so overcome by memories of his own fatherโs brand of discipline that he just stumbled away, shaking and sweating, horrified by the way his hand itched to swat them on their behinds.
He worried that he was too lenient. He probably was, since the children didnโt seem to be getting any better. He told himself he needed to be more
stern, and once heโd even strode out to the stables and grabbed the whip . . . He shuddered at the memory. It was after the glue incident, and theyโd had to cut away Miss Lockhartโs hair just to free her, and heโd been so angryโso unbelievably, overpoweringly angry. His vision had gone red, and all heโd wanted to do was punish them, and make them behave, and
teach them how to be good people, and heโd snatched the whip . . .
But it had burned in his hands, and heโd dropped it in horror, afraid of what he would become if he actually used it.
The children had gone unpunished for an entire day. Phillip had fled to his greenhouse, shaking with disgust, hating himself for what heโd almost done.
And for what he was unable to do. Make his children better people.
He didnโt know how to be a father to them. That much was clear. He didnโt know how, and maybe he simply wasnโt suited to the task. Maybe some men were born knowing what to say and how to act, and some of them simply couldnโt do a good job of it no matter how hard they tried.
Maybe one needed a good father oneself to know how to be the same. Which had left him doomed from birth.
And now here he was, trying to make up for his deficiencies with Eloise Bridgerton. Perhaps he could finally stop feeling so guilty about being such a bad father if he could only provide them with a good mother.
But nothing was ever as simple as one wanted it to be, and Eloise, in the single day sheโd been in residence, had managed to turn his life upside down. Heโd never expected to want her, at least not with the intensity he felt every time he stole a glance at her. And when heโd seen her on the floorโ why was it that his first thought had been terror?
Terror for her well-being, and, if he was honest, terror that the twins might have convinced her to leave.
When poor Miss Lockhart had been glued to the bed, Phillipโs first emotion had been rage at his children. With Eloise, heโd spared only the merest of thoughts for them until heโd assured himself that she was not seriously injured.
He hadnโt wanted to care about her, hadnโt wanted anything other than a good mother for his children. And now he didnโt know what to do about it.
And so even though a morning in the garden with Miss Bridgerton sounded like heaven, somehow he couldnโt quite allow himself the pleasure. He needed some time alone. He needed to think. Or rather, toย notย think,
since the thinking just left him angry and confused. He needed to bury his hands in some dirt and prune some plants, and shut himself away until his mind was no longer screaming with all of his problems.
He needed to escape.
And if he was a coward, so be it.