Page 11 of His Lessons on Love


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Dora was safe. She was here withwomen.Theywould know what to do. He could relax.

Of course, he would rather Miss Taylor not be here. He didn’t have the patience, especially right now, for her self-righteous huffing and puffing. Oh, she was easy on the eyes with her golden hair and well-endowed figure, even in such a dowdy dress. In fact, in spite of her being no taller than a sprite, Mars thought her possibly one of the loveliest women in several parishes around—but then she would open her mouth and it was always to criticize him.

Wasn’t she supposed to be off being a companion to some old, rich hen in London? Isn’t that what he’d heard?

Well, apparently she had returned and was sipping tea at Mrs. Warbler’s table along with Reverend Summerall’s wife. Damn his luck.

The worst insult was that Dora immediately stopped her soul-rattling cries. Instead, she looked at Miss Taylor as if the spinster was her hero.

Mars consoled himself, and his still pounding head, by reaching for the only bottle on a table covered with teacups. He had missed his strong tea and Port this morning and he still dearly needed it. “Please tell me this is Port?”

“Sherry,” Mrs. Warbler answered.

“She is soaking wet,” Miss Taylor declared as if this was news to Mars.

“Yes,” he agreed, hefting the sherry. “She is. She needs a dry whatever she has to have.”

“A clout,” Mrs. Summerall said as if trying to be helpful. “A rag will do of course but a clout is designed for a baby’s bottom and has ties to hold it in place.”

“Oh,” Mars responded, wondering why anyone would think he knew about such a thing. He really didn’t even want to know now.

“Do youhavea dry clout?” Miss Taylor asked in that arched voice of hers.

“If I did, she wouldn’t be wet.” He sniffed the top of the bottle and shuddered. Sherry was such a vile drink.

“With all due respect, my lord,” Mrs. Warbler said, “is this a social call?” He understood her suspicion. There wasn’t a soul in the villagewho didn’t know that he avoided the Matrons of Maidenshop. They were barely on cordial terms. He’d not minced words when denouncing their power and manipulations, and yet here he was.

“Sherry will have to do,” he muttered to himself just as Dora restored his faith in her and broke down into tears—again. He turned to the maid, “I need a cup ofverystrong and hot tea.”

The maid glanced at Mrs. Warbler who, thankfully, nodded her assent. Mars didn’t know what he would have done if his request had been denied. Probably tipped the bottle right in front of them, and that would have outraged their feminine sensibilities.

Then he remembered he owed his hostess an answer. “This isn’t a social call but a desperate plea for help.” Yes, he could be that honest. To Miss Taylor he said, “Is that enough explanation for you?”

She shot him a look that said clearly,What is wrong with you?followed by a glance in the direction of the other women as if to say,Isn’t he a disappointment?

He was.

Although, to find the answers, he’d braved putting himself into the center of their little coven. That must count for something. It also made his daughter’s crying easier to take now that he wasn’t the sole one in control. He hated feeling inept.

“Did you even bring a sucking bottle?” Miss Taylor wondered.

“A sucking bottle?” he repeated blankly. “Yes, that is what she needs. She’s hungry. She must be. But what to feed her?”

“Where is her mother?” Mrs. Summerall asked.

“Gone.” He wasn’t going to tell them that Deb had foisted the baby on him before she went off to accept another man’s protection. Or even make the excuse that he truly was a responsible lover who always took precautions with his partners because obviously, he had not been completely successful.

No, he’d keep all of that to himself. Poor Dora didn’t need any more counts against her than being abandoned. He’d seen what Miss Taylor had endured over the years.Hisdaughter would be treated better.

With a beleaguered sound, Miss Taylor shifted the baby into the crook of her arm as if she’d practiced the move. Then she did something he would never have thought of doing—she bent one knuckle and offered it to Dora. His child latched on to it as if desperate and began sucking. “When did she last eat?”

Mars didn’t understand why Miss Taylor thought he’d have a clue about Dora’s eating schedule. Although something tickled the back of his still drink-hazy brain that he should know. However, before he could frame an answer, the maid returned to the room holding a cup and saucer and a fresh pot of tea. He could have cried at the sight. She placed the dishes on the table in front of him and poured the steaming brew into a cup. He uncorked thesherry and topped the cup off. “Bless you,” he whispered to the maid and the world. “Bless you, bless you.” He sat in the nearest chair, ready to take a sip.

“Well, I’m so pleased that we have metyourneeds, my lord,” Miss Taylor snapped.

“You don’t sound pleased.” He took a swallow of tea. The sherry wasn’t half-bad and his body wanted to groan with the pleasure. “And I wish I could answer your questions, except I don’t know the answers. Dora has been in my care for all of—what? An hour? Maybe a bit more? Wait. She was fed shortly before being given to me.”

There, that was what he’d been trying to remember. Deb had told him she’d fed Dora before delivering her to him.