Page 15 of My January Duke


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He sent her a pleased glance. “There you go, I told you making jokes about your father was easy. Brava!”

She bit her lip to hide her smile, determined not to encourage his flippancy, but charmed, all the same.

Chapter Eight

The weather station turned out to be a small greenhouse, converted into an odd kind of laboratory, with tables set inside around the edges to form a U shape. A weathervane with a running fox on the top had been positioned on the roof, and Dev glanced up at it before they stepped through the small doorway.

“Easterly wind today,” he noted.

“Is that good or bad?”

“It means we’re in for more cold weather. Ice, maybe even some snow.”

“Oh, lovely,” Livvy muttered sarcastically, stomping her booted feet to keep the blood flowing to her toes. She hated being cold. A brisk walk in the frosty air was all very well, but she much preferred being inside, curled up in a chair by the fire with a good book.

Inside the greenhouse was barely warmer than the outside, except they were shielded from the wind. The path between the tables was only one flagstone wide.

“Why try to predict the weather?” she asked. “Is it for your fields? Surely planting is a springtime thing?”

“It is,” he agreed. “But this isn’t for crops. I like to know when to expect bad weather. Traveling during a storm is stupid. The roads get horrible, and it’s not good for the horses.”

Livvy nodded, pleased that he considered the comfort and safety of his livestock. He wasn’t a complete scoundrel. “The only thing I know about weather is the old saying, “red sky in the morning, shepherd’s warning.”

“And red sky at night, shepherd’s delight,” he finished with a grin. “Although it could also mean the shepherd’s house is on fire, but nobody seems to have considered that possibility.”

She rolled her eyes at his contrariness. “Is there any truth to it?”

“There is, actually. A red sunrise usually means bad weather on the way. That’s also true if there’s a halo around the moon.”

He leaned over and used his knuckle to tap the glass of a clock-like instrument in a wooden case. The single hand shivered, then jumped to settle between two markers on the round dial. He leaned over to get a better look, and she tried not to notice the way his breeches tightened over his muscled thighs and backside.

“This is a wheel barometer. There’s a tube filled with mercury inside, which measures the pressure of the atmosphere. Lower pressure means a higher chance of clouds and rain.”

He pulled off his gloves, picked up a pencil from the bench, and noted the reading down in a small notebook. Livvy peered over his shoulder, intrigued by the neat rows of figures he’d recorded, and the way his strong fingers held the pencil. What would it feel like to have them stroking her skin?

She forced her eyes away. “I know this one. A thermometer.” She bent to peer at the long case propped on the opposite bench. “For air temperature. We have one in the office at King and Co. What’s this?”

He straightened and turned. His shoulder brushed hers in the enclosed space. “A hygrometer. It measures the humidity or moisture content of the air.”

Livvy snorted. “Who needs one of those? My hair tells me what the humidity’s like. It gets all frizzy if it’s hot and damp.”

His amused gaze slid to her hair, and she felt her cheeks warm. “I hardly think the gentlemen at the Royal Society would consider your hair an accurate scientific indicator. However pretty it may be.”

He gave a cough, as if to clear his throat, and tilted his head back to look at the sky above them through the glass. “Now we just have to record what sort of clouds there are.”

Livvy lifted her head and frowned upward. “Aren’t they all the same? White and puffy, like meringues?”

“Not according to a chap named Luke Howard. He wrote a scientific paper classifying them into different types.” He pointed upward, his hand almost touching the panes. “There are four main kinds. Cumulus, from the Latin meaning heap; they’re the piled-up puffy clouds you’re thinking of, with a flat bottom, and a top that looks like a cauliflower. They don’t usually produce any rain. Next, there’s stratus clouds?—”

“From the Latin meaning layer?” she hazarded.

He sent her a pleased look. “Someone knows their Latin.”

She shrugged. “Geology, actually. It’s the same word fossil hunters use to describe layers of rock.”

“Exactly. Well, like their name, those clouds look like horizontal layers, gray or white, like fog, only higher off the ground. They sometime bring a small amount of drizzle, or light snow.”

“And the third type?”