for that one fact."
Caroline looked hopeful, but he did not elaborate.
Max stood and the others followed suit. Hugo, still shaking his head in disbelief, took himself off, and Darcy left immediately after. Martin retired for a much needed rest and Caroline found herself alone
with her guardian.
Max crossed to where she sat and drew her to her feet and into his arms. His lips found hers in a reassuring kiss. Then, he held her, her head on his shoulder, and laughed wearily. "Sweetheart, if I thought your sisters would be on my hands for much longer, I'd have Whitney around here this
morning to instruct him to break that guardianship clause."
"I'm sorry," mumbled Caroline, her hands engrossed in smoothing the folds of his cravat. "I did come
as soon as I found out."
"I know you did," acknowledged Max. "And I'm very thankful you did, what's more! Can you imagine how Hugo and I would have looked if we had succeeded in overtaking Keighly's carriage and demanded he return the lady to us? God!" He shuddered. "It doesn't bear thinking about." He hugged her, then released her. "Now you should go home and rest. And I'm going to get some sleep."
"One moment," she said, staying within his slackened hold, her eyes still on his cravat. "Remember
I said I'd tell you whether there were any gentlemen who we'd like to consider seriously, should they apply to you for permission to address us?"
Max nodded. "Yes. I remember." Surely she was not going to mention Willoughby? What had gone
on last night, after he had left? He suddenly felt cold.
But she was speaking again. "Well, if Lord Darcy should happen to ask, then you know about that,
don't you?"
Max nodded. "Yes. Darcy would make Sarah a fine husband. One who would keep her sufficiently occupied so she wouldn't have time for scheming." He grinned at Caroline's blush. "And you're right.
I'm expecting him to ask at any time. So that's Sarah dealt with."
''And I'd rather thought Lord Denbigh for Arabella, though I didn't know then about Maria Pavlovska."
"Oh, I wouldn't deal Hugo short. Maria Pavlovska might be a bit hard to bear but I'm sure he'll come about. And, as I'm sure Aunt Augusta has told you, he's perfectly acceptable as long as he can be
brought to pop the question."
"And," said Caroline, keeping her eyes down, "I'm not perfectly sure, but…"
"You think Martin might ask for Lizzie," supplied Max, conscious of his own tiredness. It was sapping
his will. All sorts of fantasies were surfacing in his brain and the devil of it was they were all perfectly achievable. But he had already made other plans, better plans. "I foresee no problems there. Martin's
got more money than is good for him. I'm sure Lizzie will keep him on his toes, hauling her out of the scrapes her innocence will doubtless land her in. And I'd much rather it was him than me." He tried to look into Caroline's face but she kept her eyes-were they greyish-green or greenish-grey? He had
never decided-firmly fixed on his cravat.
"I'm thrilled that you approve of my cravat, sweetheart, but is there anything more? I'm dead on my
feet," he acknowledged with a rueful grin, praying that she did not have anything more to tell him.
Caroline's eyes flew to his, an expression he could not read in their depths. "Oh, of course you are!
No. There's nothing more."
Max caught the odd wistfulness in her tone and correctly divined its cause. His grin widened. As he walked her to the door, he said, "Once I'm myself again, and have recovered from your sisters'
exploits, I'll call on you-say at three this afternoon? I'll take you for a drive. There are some matters
I wish to discuss with you." He guided her through the library door and into the hall. In answer to her questioning look, he added. "About your ball."
"Oh. I'd virtually forgotten about it," Caroline said as Max took her cloak from Hillshaw and placed it about her shoulders. They had organized to hold a ball in the Twinnings' honour at Twyford House
the following week.
"We'll discuss it at three this afternoon," said Max as he kissed her hand and led her down the steps to
her carriage.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Sarah wrinkled her nose at the piece of cold toast lying on her plate. Pushing it away, she leaned back
in her chair and surveyed her elder sister. With her copper curls framing her expressive face, Caroline
sat at the other end of the small table in the breakfast-room, a vision of palest cerulean blue. A clearly distracted vision. A slight frown had settled in the greeny eyes, banishing the lively twinkle normally lurking there. She sighed, apparently unconsciously, as she stared at her piece of toast, as cold and untouched as Sarah's, as if concealed in its surface were the answers to all unfathomable questions.
Sarah was aware of a guilty twinge. Had Max cut up stiff and Caroline not told them?
They had all risen early, being robust creatures and never having got into the habit of lying abed, and
had gathered in the breakfast parlour to examine their success of the night before. That it had been a complete and unqualified success could not have been divined from their faces; all of them had looked drawn and peaked. While Sarah knew the cause of her own unhappiness, and had subsequently learned of her younger sisters' reasons for despondency, she had been and still was at a loss to explain Caroline's similar mood. She had been in high feather at the ball.
Then Max had left early, an unusual occurrence which had made Sarah wonder if they had had a falling-out. But her last sight of them together, when he had taken leave of Caroline in the ballroom,
had not supported such a fancy. They had looked…well, intimate. Happily so. Thoroughly immersed in each other. Which, thought the knowledgeable Sarah, was not especially like either of them. She sent a sharp glance to the other end of the table.
Caroline's bloom had gradually faded and she had been as silent as the rest of them during the drive home. This morning, on the stairs, she had shared their quiet mood. And then, unfortunately, they
had had to make things much worse. They had always agreed that Caroline would have to be told immediately after the event. That had always been their way, ever since they were small children. No matter the outcome, Caroline could be relied on to predict unerringly the potential ramifications and to protect her sisters from any unexpected repercussions. This morning, as they had recounted to her their plan and its execution, she had paled. When they had come to a faltering halt, she had, uncharacteristically, told them in a quiet voice to wait as they were while she communicated their deeds
to their guardian forthwith. She had explained nothing. Rising from the table without so much as a sip
of her coffee, she had immediately called for the carriage and departed for Delmere House.
She had returned an hour and a half later. They had not left the room; Caroline's orders, spoken in
that particular tone, were not to be dismissed lightly. In truth, each sunk in gloomy contemplation of
her state, they had not noticed the passage of time. Caroline had re-entered the room, calmly resumed
her seat and accepted the cup of coffee Arabella had hastily poured for her. She had fortified herself
from this before explaining to them, in quite unequivocal terms, just how close they had come to
creating a hellish tangle. It had never occurred to them that someone might see Harriet departing and, drawing the obvious conclusion, inform Max of the fact, especially in such a public manner. They had been aghast at the realization of how close to the edge of scandal they had come and were only too
ready to behave as contritely as Caroline wished. However, all she had said was, "I don't really think there's much we should do. Thankfully, Arabella, your gadding about as Maria Pavlovska ensured that everyone knows you did not elope from the ball. I suppose we could go riding." She had paused, then added, "But I really don't feel like it this morning."