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Her Wicked Proposal novel Chapter 21

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The Her Wicked Proposal story is currently published to Chapter 21 and has received very positive reviews from readers, most of whom have been / are reading this story highly appreciated! Even I'm really a fan of Internet, so I'm looking forward to Chapter 21. Wait forever to have. @@ Please read Chapter 21 Her Wicked Proposal by author Internet here.

London, March 1820

Cigar smoke hung in hazy clouds near the ceiling of Berkeley's dimly lit card room. The majority of the men lounging in chairs about the card tables were in their mid to late thirties. The young sensible bucks of marrying age were enslaved at the dances of Almack's that evening. Only the most dangerous of men were left free to prowl tonight and seek their pleasures without worry of crossing the paths of society mamas and their marriage-minded daughters. Cedric, Ashton, and their friend James Fordyce, the Earl of Pembroke, chose a table near the main fireplace to play a few games of whist before heading to a pleasure haunt in a few hours.

Ashton spread the deck of cards out and shuffled them while Cedric and James flagged down a club servant to bring three glasses of port.

"Thank God Letty did not expect me to accompany her to Almack's," James confessed to Cedric. James blew out a sigh of relief. Cedric chuckled at the relieved expression in the earl's eyes.

"Not a lover of the quadrilles, Pembroke?" Ashton asked.

James laughed. "When a man reaches twenty-eight, he shouldn't have to suffer escorting his sister to such events. I argue that it is a matter of principle to excuse myself from such abominable dances and pointless flirtations."

"Isn't your mother expecting you to choose a bride soon?" Cedric asked.

"Yes, but I don't want to marry just any chit. Any woman at Almack's tonight is not a woman I want to marry."

Cedric snorted. "Then my sisters are safe! What a relief that is."

"I would not wish to be there either," Ashton mused. "In fact, I feel quite guilty because I forced my brother into taking Joanna tonight. Rafe was not pleased, but when Thomasina and I pushed on him, he caved."

"It's been a few years since Joanna came out, hasn't it?" James asked, sipping his brandy.

"Yes, bless her heart, she'll be twenty-two in a month and no man has come around asking for her. I can't understand why. I've been most encouraging to any man who has even so much as asked for her to pass the salt at dinner engagements. But it's no use, not one man has shown he's even remotely interested." Ashton sighed and thumbed through his cards.

Cedric was only half listening to this-talk of marriage and sisters always put him on edge. He didn't like thinking of his own sisters marrying. Ashton's older sister, Thomasina, was already married with a passel of children, but Joanna was the baby of Ashton's family and her brother was apparently determined to see her wed.

"What? No suitors?" James exclaimed in surprise. "Joanna is such a lovely girl!"

Ashton shrugged. "Thomasina believes that she's too likeable, as a companion, not a woman. She has many men who admire her wit and humor, yet none of them so much as send a bouquet of flowers. Damned if I can figure out why. She has a sizeable dowry, and I've not hidden that fact from any man."

"Men are fools," Cedric announced grimly.

"So how is Letty?" Ashton inquired as he began to deal the deck between the three of them.

"Spoiled is what. Last week she told me that a genteel lady ought to own at least a dozen pairs of gloves. I dared to ask what was the use of so many gloves in the spring and she fairly bit my head off. She used some French words I've never even heard of..." James remarked with pensive amusement.

Cedric chuckled. "The fascination with fashion I once believed to be restricted to the fairer sex, but unfortunately I've seen far too many dandies prowling the streets who were arrested by the splendid sight of themselves reflected in a shop's window glass. A bunch of popinjays, the lot of them." Cedric sipped his port as he eyed one such colorfully dressed dandy who was chatting with a foreign-looking gentleman who had just entered the room.

"I say, Pembroke, do you know that man there?" Cedric gestured to the foreigner.

"Freddy Poncenby?" James asked, shooting a scathing glance over his shoulder at the dandy who was waving his arms excitedly as he spoke. Poncenby was not a favorite of any gentleman at their table. He was a tad too cowardly, and there was a touch of weasel in him that Cedric didn't trust.

"No, the other gentleman."

"Oh! Why that's Samir Al Zahrani. He's from Nejd in Arabia."

"Al Zahrani?" Cedric eyed the man curiously. He was tall with deeply olive skin and a harsh but handsome face and form. Dark brows swept over a pair of black eyes that scanned the room with a militaristic precision that stirred Cedric's curiosity.

"I heard he is a wealthy merchant, which given the power struggles and political upheavals in that part of the world is quite a feat."

"A merchant of what?"

James, a seasoned rake who had little occasion to act self-conscious of delicate matters, actually looked flustered.

"That depends on who you ask. Most people will tell you he deals in textiles, but I've heard that he runs another far more lucrative business on the side. Slave based." James uttered this last in a soft tone. Ashton and Cedric exchanged surprised looks.

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