"Lizzie," said the blue domino in perfectly recognizable accents, "what were you doing talking to Keighly?"
"Martin! What a start you gave me. My mask nearly fell. Wh…what do you mean?"
"I mean, Miss Innocence," said Martin sternly, taking her arm and compelling her to walk beside him
on to the terrace, "that I saw you come into the ballroom and then, as soon as you were out of Max's sight, make a beeline for Keighly. Now, out with it! What's going on?"
Lizzie was in shock. What was she to do? Not for a moment did she imagine that Martin would agree
to turn a blind eye to their scheme. But she was not a very good liar. Still, she would have to try.
Luckily, the mask hid most of her face and her shock had kept her immobile, gazing silently up at him
in what could be taken for her usual innocent manner. "But I don't know what you mean, Martin. I
know I talked to Sir Ralph, but that was because he was the only one I recognized."
The explanation was so reasonable that Martin felt his sudden suspicion was as ridiculous as it had seemed. He felt decidedly foolish. "Oh."
"But now you're here," said Lizzie, putting her hand on his arm. "So I can talk to you."
Martin's usual grin returned. "So you can." He raised his eyes to the secluded walks, still empty as the dancing had only just begun. "Why don't we explore while we chat?"
Lately, Lizzie had been in the habit of refusing such invitations but tonight she was thankful for any suggestion that would distract Martin from their enterprise. So she nodded and they stepped off the terrace on to the gravel. They followed a path into the shrubbery. It wended this way and that until
the house was a glimmer of light and noise beyond the screening bushes. They found an ornamental stream and followed it to a lake. There was a small island in the middle with a tiny summer-house, reached by a rustic bridge. They crossed over and found the door of the summer-house open.
"Isn't this lovely?" said Lizzie, quite enchanted by the scene. Moonbeams danced in a tracery of light created by the carved wooden shutters. The soft swish of the water running past the reed-covered
banks was the only sound to reach their ears.
"Mmm, yes, quite lovely," murmured Martin, enchanted by something quite different. Even Lizzie in
her innocence heard the warning in his tone but she turned only in time to find herself in his arms.
Martin tilted.her face up and smiled gently down at her. "Lizzie, sweet Lizzie. Do you have any idea
how beautiful you are?"
Lizzie's eyes grew round. Martin's arms closed around her, gentle yet quite firm. It seemed unbelievable that their tightness could be restricting her breathing, yet she found herself quite unable to draw breath. And the strange light in Martin's eyes was making her dizzy. She had meant to ask her sisters for
guidance on how best to handle such situations but, due to her absorption with their schemes, it had slipped her mind. She suspected this was one of those points where using one's wits came into it. But,
as her tongue seemed incapable of forming any words, she could only shake her head and hope that
was acceptable.
"Ah," said Martin, his grin broadening. "Well, you're so very beautiful, sweetheart, that I'm afraid I
can't resist. I'm going to kiss you again, Lizzie. And it's going to be thoroughly enjoyable for both
of us." Without further words, he dipped his head and, very gently, kissed her. When she did not
draw back, he continued the caress, prolonging the sensation until he felt her response. Gradually,
with the moonlight washing over them, he deepened the kiss, then, as she continued to respond
easily, gently drew her further into his arms. She came willingly and Martin was suddenly unsure
of the ground rules. He had no wish to frighten her, innocent as she was, yet he longed to take their dalliance further, much further. He gently increased the pressure of his lips on hers until they parted
for him. Slowly, continually reminding himself of her youth, he taught her how pleasurable a kiss
could be. Her responses drove him to seek more.
Kisses were something Lizzie felt she could handle. Being held securely in Martin's arms was a delight. But when his hand closed gently over her breast she gasped and pulled away. The reality of her feelings hit her. She burst into tears.
"Lizzie?" Martin, cursing himself for a fool, for pushing her too hard, gathered her into his arms,
ignoring her half-hearted resistance. "I'm sorry, Lizzie. It was too soon, I know. Lizzie? Sweetheart?"
Lizzie gulped and stifled her sobs. "It's true!" she said, her voice a tear-choked whisper. "They said
you were a rake and you'd want to take me to bed and I didn't believe them but it's true." She ended
this astonishing speech on a hiccup.
Martin, finding much of her accusation difficult to deny, fastened on the one aspect that was not clear. "They-who?"
"Sarah and Bella and Caro. They said you're all rakes. You and Max and Lord Darcy and Lord
Denbigh. They said there's something about us that means we attract rakes."
Finding nothing in all this that he wished to dispute, Martin kept silent. He continued to hold Lizzie,
his face half buried in her hair. "What did they suggest you should do about it?" he eventually asked, unsure if he would get an answer.
The answer he got was unsettling. "Wait."
Wait. Martin did not need to ask what for. He knew.
Very much later in the evening, when Martin had escorted Lizzie back to the ballroom, Max caught
sight of them from the other side of the room. He had been forced to reassess his original opinion of the youngest Twinning's sobriety. Quite how such a youthful innocent had managed to get Martin into her toils he could not comprehend, but one look at his brother's face, even with his mask in place, was enough to tell him she had succeeded to admiration. Well, he had warned him.
Arabella's role in the great plan was to flirt so outrageously that everyone in the entire room would be certain that it was indeed the vivacious Miss Twinning under the rose-pink domino. None of the conspirators had imagined this would prove at all difficult and, true to form, within half an hour
Arabella had convinced the better part of the company of her identity. She left one group of revellers, laughing gaily, and was moving around the room, when she found she had walked into the arms of a large, black-domino-clad figure. The shock she received from the contact immediately informed her
of the identity of the gentleman.
"Oh, sir! You quite overwhelm me!"
"In such a crowd as this, my dear? Surely you jest?"
"Would you contradict a lady, sir? Then you're no gentlemen, in truth."
"In truth, you're quite right, sweet lady. Gentlemen lead such boring lives."
The distinctly seductive tone brought Arabella up short. He could not know who she was, could he?
As if in answer to her unspoken question, he asked, "And who might you be, my lovely?"
Arabella's chin went up and she playfully retorted, "Why, that's not for you to know, sir. My reputation might be at stake, simply for talking to so unconventional a gentleman as you."
To her unease, Hugo responded with a deep and attractive chuckle. Their light banter continued,
Arabella making all the customary responses, her quick ear for repartee saving her from floundering
when his returns made her cheeks burn. She flirted with Hugo to the top of her bent. And hated every minute of it. He did not know who she was, yet was prepared to push an unknown lady to make an assignation with him for later in the evening. She was tempted to do so and then confront him with her identity. But her heart failed her. Instead, when she could bear it no longer, she made a weak excuse
and escaped.