“Did you seduce her?” his father laughingly asked. “Make sure she couldn’t say no, even if—”
Gareth hadn’t meant to do it. He’d meant to maintain his calm, and he would have managed it if the baron had kept his insults to him. But when he mentioned Hyacinth…
His fury took over, and the next thing he knew, he had his father pinned against the wall. “Do not,” he warned, barely recognizing his own voice, “speak to me of her again.”
“You would make the mistake of attempting to kill me here, on a public street?” The baron was gasping, but even so, his voice maintained an impressive degree of hatred.
“It’s tempting.”
“Ah, but you’d lose the title. And then where would you be? Oh yes,” he said, practically choking on his words now, “at the end of a hangman’s rope.”
Gareth loosened his grip. Not because of his father’s words, but because he was finally regaining his hold on his emotions. Hyacinth was listening, he reminded himself. She was right around the corner. He could not do something he might later regret.
“I knew you’d do it,” his father said, just when Gareth had let go and turned to leave.
Damn. He always knew what to say, exactly which button to push to keep Gareth from doing the right thing.
“Do what?” Gareth asked, frozen in his tracks.
“Ask her to marry you.”
Gareth turned slowly around. His father was grinning, supremely pleased with himself. It was a sight that made Gareth’s blood run cold.
“You’re so predictable,” the baron said, cocking his head just an inch or so to the side. It was a gesture Gareth had seen a hundred times before, maybe a thousand. It was patronizing and it was contemptuous, and it always managed to make Gareth feel like he was a boy again, working so hard for his father’s approval.
And failing every time.
“One word from me,” the baron said, chuckling to himself. “Just one word from me.”
Gareth chose his words very carefully. He had an audience. He had to remember that. And so, when he spoke, all he said was, “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
And his father erupted with laughter. He threw back his head and roared, showing a degree of mirth that shocked Gareth into silence.
“Oh, come now,” he said, wiping his eyes. “I told you you couldn’t win her, and look what you did.”
Gareth’s chest began to feel very, very tight. What was his father saying? That he’d wanted him to marry Hyacinth?
“You went right out and asked her to marry you,” the baron continued. “How long did that take? A day? Two? No more than a week, I’m sure.”
“My proposal to Miss Bridgerton had nothing to do with you,” Gareth said icily.
“Oh, please,” the baron said, with utter disdain. “Everything you do is because of me. Haven’t you figured that out by now?”
Gareth stared at him in horror. Was it true? Was it even a little bit true?
“Well, I do believe I shall take myself off to bed,” the baron said, with an affected sigh. “It’s been…entertaining, don’t you think?”
Gareth didn’t know what to think.
“Oh, and before you marry Miss Bridgerton,” the baron said, tossing the remark over his shoulder as he placed his foot on the first step up to Clair House’s front door, “you might want to see about clearing up your other betrothal.”
“What?”
The baron smiled silkily. “Didn’t you know? You’re still betrothed to poor little Mary Winthrop. She never did marry anyone else.”
“That can’t be legal.”
“Oh, I assure you it is.” The baron leaned slightly forward. “I made sure of it.”