Once the trio had departed, leaving Helen and George alone, Helen rounded on her brother. ‘I cannot believe that you acted so rudely.’
‘And I cannot believe that the man has the effrontery to want to bother me at home to ask for my sister’s hand in marriage. He has nothing. You only have to look at him to see that!’ He barked a laugh. ‘His shirt cuff! Did you see it? Frayed!’
‘Like this, you mean?’ Helen snapped and yanked down one of her own cotton sleeves for his inspection. ‘Philip’s sister cannot have offended you, yet you treated her with the same lack of manners.’
George tersely flicked away Helen’s furious accusations and turned his back on her.
‘I am ashamed of you, George. It is getting to the stage when I am loath to admit, even to myself, that we are related, for I am not sure that I like you.’
George pivoted back to glare at her. ‘I do not want Charlotte seeing him any more. Make that clear to her or I will make it clear to him. And, as you have just noticed, I shall not stand on ceremony when I do so.’ His face was livid when he added, ‘I am sick of the burden of two ungrateful sisters to support. I will never countenance being saddled with a good-for-nothing brother-in-law, too.’
‘I wish Charlotte had gained her majority and you no longer had power over her life.’
‘She is nineteen and I am her guardian. She can do far better than marry him. In fact, perhaps she has already done so.’
‘What do you mean by that?’
‘I mean that I would hazard a guess that she has caught the eye of an extremely eligible gentleman. I would go so far as to say that it is to that particular wealthy gentleman you are obliged for that delivery of coal.’
‘You are talking in riddles, George. Charlotte knows no extremely eligible gentleman. We do not frequent places where she might meet such a person.’
‘She has not needed to go anywhere. Recently a man came here, did he not?’ On observing Helen’s startled look, he added, ‘There’s no use in denying it, I’ve had the news firsthand.’
‘Has Sir Jason Hunter asked you if he may propose to Charlotte?’ Anticipating a dilatory response Helen came to her own scornful conclusion. ‘I know he has not; but you’d like to make me think differently, wouldn’t you? You might not like Philip, but this is truly absurd, George!’ Helen’s large golden eyes demanded a retraction from him, but a smug look was all she received. Helen sighed disappointedly. ‘Apart from the fact that a delivery of coal would be an extremely odd courtship gesture, Jason Hunter did not even see Charlotte earlier in the week. She was not at home when he called.’
‘I know she was not here. He mentioned that he missed seeing her … amongst other things.’
Helen stared at her brother, perplexity arching her dark brows. ‘What exactly did he say?’
‘That you were rude to him.’
‘I was not!’ she spluttered, but with guilty spots of colour seeping into her cheeks. ‘I simply told him some truths, and you cannot deny you didn’t want me to!’ She felt depressed from knowing Jason Hunter had immediately tittle-tattled about her to George. She had not believed him to be that sort of mean character. ‘In any case, it ill behoves a libertine to preach about good manners.’
‘Never mind about that now,’ George airily dismissed. ‘Whatever you said, I think it might have had a most beneficial result. Hunter came to see me within a short while of leaving here. He spoke of Charlotte in a way that makes me certain he finds our little sister … interesting.’
‘What did he say?’ Helen demanded.
‘I recall a mention was made of her beauty …’ It was a statement calculated by George to imply that the compliment had not been his. Briskly he continued, ‘Hunter made a point of asking her age. It is as well Charlotte has gone out for I wanted to speak to you in private. Do you think that he has recently spied her out walking with friends and taken a liking to her?’ George subdued a smile on noticing his sister’s deep concentration. ‘It might end in a family feud if Hunter takes her on. But at least Goode would be saved the indignity of going cap in hand to his cousin.’
‘Oh, be quiet, George!’ Helen exploded, unimpressed by her brother’s drollery. ‘Now I think sensibly on it, I see it is just another deluded fancy of yours, concocted in the hope of securing someone rich to clear your debts. None of it alters the fact that Charlotte loves Philip.’
‘And Hunter won’t give a damn either way.’ George bestowed on his sister an extremely patronising smile. ‘I realise you were not married long, Helen; perhaps that explains why you often seem too naïve.’
A suspicion of to what her brother was alluding made Helen’s soft lips slacken in disbelief.
‘Jason won’t countenance getting leg-shackled to a woman with nothing to offer but her looks.’ George snorted a coarse laugh. ‘I know of several ambitious chits with good dowries who would forgo being a duke’s wife to marry that particular baronet. He’s planning to use his cash to lure a high-born filly and found a dynasty.’
Alarm and anger vied for precedence in Helen’s mind now she clearly understood what her brother meant. If Jason Hunter wanted to buy his heirs a nobler lineage, so be it. She was not interested in his aspirations. But the prospect of her sister’s ruination was very much a concern close to her heart.
For a few fraught moments Helen played over in her mind all that had passed between Jason Hunter and her when he had come to Westlea House. Had she been so obsessed with lambasting him over his relationship with Iris that she had missed vital clues that he was preying on someone far dearer to her? Her conclusion was that there had been no word or deed of his to make her suspect him a callous seducer of innocents. When she had asked him to leave because Charlotte would soon be home he had not attempted to find an excuse to loiter, and surely he would have done so if he were attracted to their young sister.
With shocking and depressing insight she realised it was not Jason Hunter she mistrusted, but her own brother. ‘I cannot believe you would accuse a gentleman of being capable of anything so despicable!’ She glared at George, but he simply returned her an impenitent smile. ‘Sir Jason might have a reputation as a rake, but I’m certain he leaves maids alone.’
Helen’s mounting outrage had made her slender body tense as a spring and her censure increasingly vociferous. In fact, so absorbed had she been in railing at George that for a moment she was unaware that his attention was riveted elsewhere.
What wounded Helen most was the knowledge that their brother—the person their father had trusted would protect and care for his sisters—considered Charlotte’s degradation would be a surprisingly beneficial result to recent dealings with Jason Hunter.
Helen whipped about to face her brother and was momentarily struck dumb. Betty was, once more, hovering awkwardly on the parlour’s threshold, her red countenance bearing testament to her having overheard rather too much of the contretemps between sister and brother.
‘There is a gentleman caller, Mrs Marlowe,’ Betty announced in a croak, her eyes gliding to the side to indicate the hallway.
Obviously the visitor had also heard Mrs Marlowe shouting like a fishwife. Helen took a steadying breath and submerged her regrets at having been caught out in such unladylike passion, beneath a soaring optimism. She offered up a silent prayer that Samuel Drover had returned to collect his payment and was in no mood to be fobbed off. Fervently she wished the grocer might today succeed in cornering George into settling his account.
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