"I am relieved."
Chloe grimaced at the dry tone. "Are you cross about the music?"
"Disappointed, rather," he said, shrugging. "But I told you the decision would always be yours."
"Oh, now I feel horribly guilty." She looked so stricken, he couldn't help laughing.
"That was my intention, lass."
She threw a cushion at him just as Lady Smallwood rolled into the room. "Child!" she exclaimed. "Hugo, you really shouldn't permit-"
"I don't, ma'am," he interjected, bending to pick up the cushion. "But my permission wasn't asked." He threw the cushion back at Chloe. "My ward's a shameless, lazy, self-indulgent, hot-tempered chit."
Lady Smallwood sank into a chair with earpieces and fanned herself vigorously with her hand. "You may laugh, but it's no way to go on in Society… throwing cushions at people. Whatever next'"
"Oh, I do beg your pardon, ma'am." Chloe leapt up and kissed her chaperone with the genuine affection that never failed to disarm her most crusty critics. "Hugo was taking me to task for not practicing my music."
"Well, goodness me, that's no reason to throw cushions," her ladyship said, shaking her head. "Either of you!"
"How right you are, Dolly." Hugo rose from the piano bench. "Let me pour you a glass of ratafia. I'm sure you need it if you've been shopping with Chloe. Lass, you may have sherry if you wish."
He filled two glasses and then sat down again. "So, let me see the fruits of your expedition."
Lady Smallwood's intake of breath was portentous. His heart sank. "Ma'am?"
"I have to say, Hugo, that I approve of nothing … nothing that Chloe has bought. I was unable to influence her to the least degree." She took a sip of her ratafia and dabbed at her lips with her handkerchief.
"Oh, pah," Chloe said with her customary lamentable
lack of ceremony. "I have bought the most beautiful spencer and a net purse, and a spray of artificial flowers. Oh, and a bonnet, and an evening gown-you wouldn't believe how elegant it is, Hugo."
"I'm sure I wouldn't," he muttered gloomily, but Chloe was rushing on.
"Unfortunately it had to be altered, so I couldn't bring it home, but the modiste promised I should have it by tomorrow afternoon, so that I may wear it at the Bellamys' soiree."
A faint groan emerged from Lady Smallwood, and Hugo reckoned with increasing gloom that it was probably even worse than his imaginings. He prepared himself for battle.
"Show me what's in the boxes."
"This is the bonnet." Chloe lifted the lid of a hat box and drew out an enormous confection of niched and padded scarlet and black silk. She set it on her head and tied the black silk ribbons with a flourish. "Isn't that fine? And the spencer goes with it." The spencer was of black striped satin with scarlet piping to the sleeves.
Hugo stared at the black and scarlet vision before him. While there was nothing vulgar about the hat or the spencer-only, he suspected, because in the establishments patronized by Lady Smallwood vulgarity wouldn't show its face-they utterly drowned Chloe's exquisite fresh beauty.
"Black is not a debutante's color," he said finally.
"Oh, pah," Chloe declared again. "It's sophisticated. I don't care for all the niminy-piminy a lajeunefille colors. These are the flowers. I thought they'd go well with the spencer." She held an elaborate spray of gilded orchids to her bosom. They completely obscured the soft, perfect swell of her breasts.
Hugo said carefully, "Describe this evening dress if you will, Dolly."
"Oh, it's lovely-"
"I didn't ask you, Chloe." He cut her off smartly. "I'm sure you consider it to be lovely. Now, ma'am…? As accurate as you can make it."
Lady Smallwood shuddered. "It's purple and turquoise stripes embroidered with jet beads… and I believe there's a braided fringe at the hem and a matching fringe at the neckline… falling over the shoulders in place of sleeves. I could imagine it would look most striking on some women, but not on Chloe, and it's quite unsuitable for a debutante."
"It's dashing," Chloe said. "I wish to look dashing."
"Not while you're in my wardship," Hugo stated flatly, getting to his feet. "We are now going to return the spencer and the bonnet and the flowers, and we are going to visit the modiste and cancel the evening dress. You may choose something more suitable under my guidance, since you reject that of your chaperone."
"No!" his ward exclaimed, fired to more than usual vehemence. "I won't take them back. Why should you know better than I do, Hugo?"
"I wish I knew," he said, sighing. He addressed his cousin. "Ma'am, I should beat a retreat if I were you; I have a feeling this is about to become ugly."
Lady Smallwood looked from Chloe's set face and indignant eyes to Hugo's calm but determined features and took the advice. She had found Chloe's will impossible to bend and her views utterly resistant to guidance. So it was with relief that she handed the matter over to the clearly stronger hands of the girl's guardian.
"Hugo, why must you be so stuffy?" Chloe broke out as soon as the door closed on her chaperone. "Why can't I wear what I wish to wear?"
"Because what you wish to wear, lass, is completely unsuitable," he said. "I do not understand why you should have been born without the first inkling either of
what suits you or is socially appropriate, but sadly it seems to be the case. Therefore you must learn to accept the judgment of those who know better."
"I don't," Chloe said mutinously, stroking the silk sleeves of the spencer. "I think I look very sophisticated in this… and I will not cancel the evening dress and buy some wishy-washy pastel thing, whatever you say."
"Oh, Chloe, don't throw down the gauntlet," he said, cajoling. "It will make everything so uncomfortable." He held out a hand. "Come, kiss and make up, and we'll go out and choose a truly beautiful gown. It doesn't have to be wishy-washy."
Chloe stood unmoving, her dislike of quarreling with Hugo warring with her absolute resistance to submitting to him over this. She'd been long enough in London now to know what sophisticated women wore, and it didn't suit her plans for Hugo to insist upon seeing her as a youthful debutante. He had to realize she was quite mature enough and sufficiently up to snuff to make him a perfectly suitable wife despite the difference in their ages. She was no fluttering virgin, after all. So why should she dress like one?
"I don't see why I should have to suffer your interference in something as personal as my wardrobe," she said finally. "I spend all my life in brown serge, and then I ought to be able to buy whatever I like, and everything I like you tell me I can't have. It's not just."
Hugo sighed and gave up conciliation. "Just or not, lass, it's the way it is. While I hold the reins, I'm afraid you'll run as I choose, in this as in everything. Now, let's be on our way." He went to the door, leaving Chloe fighting chagrin in the library.
She stomped after him into the hall, where he was instructing Samuel to bring around his curricle. "I don't see why you need me to go with you, since I'm not
allowed to have an opinion. It's just a waste of my time."
Both Hugo and Samuel blinked at her unusually petulant tone. Then Hugo said blightingly, "Don't be such a brat."
Chloe flushed and turned away, swallowing tears as her tone and words replayed in her head. It was no wonder Hugo refused to consider marrying her. What grown man would want to many a petulant brat?
Hugo regarded her averted back and drooping head with a slight smile. Castigating a seventeen-year-old for being seventeen seemed hardly just. "Hey!" he said softly.
She turned slowly to face him. "I'm sorry."
"Go and fetch your hat and we'll do some proper shopping. I promise you won't be disappointed."