His arms pumped madly through the air, his fingers curling into furious claws. He clamped his teeth together to keep from screaming, but sounds emerged all the same, low and guttural.
Wounded.
He hated this. Dear God, why?
Why why why?
Why did the baron still have this sort of power over him? He wasn’t his father. He’d never been his father, and damn it all, Gareth should have been glad for that.
And he was. When he was in his right mind, when he could think clearly, he was.
But when they were face-to-face, and the baron was whispering all of Gareth’s secret fears, it didn’t matter.
There was nothing but pain. Nothing but the little boy inside, trying and trying and trying, always wondering why he was never quite good enough.
“I need to leave,” Gareth muttered, crashing through the door into the hall. He needed to leave, to get away, to not be with people.
He wasn’t fit company. Not for any of the reasons his father said, but still, he was likely to—
“Mr. St. Clair!”
He looked up.
Hyacinth.
She was standing in the hall, alone. The light from the candles seemed to leap against her hair, bringing out rich red undertones. She looked lovely, and she somehow looked…complete.
Her life was full, he realized. She might not have been married, but she had her family.
She knew who she was. She knew where she belonged.
And he had never felt more jealous of another human being than he did in that moment.
“Are you all right?” she asked.
He didn’t say anything, but that never stopped Hyacinth. “I saw your father,” she said softly. “Down the hall. He looked angry, and then he saw me, and he laughed.”
Gareth’s fingernails bit into his palms.
“Why would he laugh?” Hyacinth asked. “I hardly know the man, and—”
He had been staring at a spot past her shoulder, but her silence made his eyes snap back to her face.
“Mr. St. Clair?” she asked softly. “Are you sure there is nothing wrong?” Her brow was crinkled with concern, the kind one couldn’t fake, then she added, more softly, “Did he say something to upset you?”
His father was right about one thing. Hyacinth Bridgerton was good. She may have been vexing, managing, and often annoying as hell, but inside, where it counted, she was good.
And he heard his father’s voice.
You’ll never have her.
You’re not good enough for her.
You’ll never—
Mongrel. Mongrel. Mongrel.
He looked at her, really looked at her, his eyes sweeping from her face to her shoulders, laid bare by the seductive décolletage of her dress. Her breasts weren’t large, but they’d been pushed up, surely by some contraption meant to tease and entice, and he could see the barest hint of her cleavage, peeking out at the edge of the midnight blue silk.