On the Way to the Wedding
surprise. “Why would you do that?”
    he asked, before he could think to temper his response.
    She just shrugged and said, “You are the lesser of two evils, Mr. Bridgerton.”
    He wanted desperately to ask her to clarify that comment, but he could not ask, not on such a fl imsy acquaintance, so he instead worked to maintain an even mien as he said,
    “Give her my regards, that is all.”
    “Really?”
    Damn, but that look in her eye was annoying. “Really.”
    She bobbed the tiniest of curtsies and was off.
    Gregory stared at the doorway through which she had disappeared for a moment, then turned back to the party. The guests had begun dancing in greater numbers, and laughter was most certainly filling the air, but somehow the night felt dull and lifeless.
    Food, he decided. He’d eat twenty more of those tiny little sandwiches and then he’d retire for the night as well.
    All would come clear in the morning.
    Lucy knew that Hermione didn’t have a headache, or any sort of ache for that matter, and she was not at all surprised to fi nd her sitting on her bed, poring over what appeared to be a four-page letter.
    Written in an extremely compact hand.
    “A footman brought it to me,” Hermione said, not even looking up. “He said it arrived in today’s post, but they forgot to bring it earlier.”
    Lucy sighed. “From Mr. Edmonds, I presume?”
    On the Way to the Wedding
    2 9
    Hermione nodded.
    Lucy crossed the room she and Hermione were currently sharing and sat down in the chair at the vanity table.
    This wasn’t the first piece of correspondence Hermione had received from Mr. Edmonds, and Lucy knew from experience that Hermione would need to read it twice, then once again for deeper analysis, and then finally one last time, if only to pick apart any hidden meanings in the salutation and closing.
    Which meant that Lucy would have nothing to do but examine her fingernails for at least fi ve minutes.
    Which she did, not because she was terribly interested in her fingernails, nor because she was a particularly patient person, but rather because she knew a useless situation when she saw one, and she saw little reason in expending the energy to engage Hermione in conversation when Hermione was so patently uninterested in anything she had to say.
    Fingernails could only occupy a girl for so long, however, especially when they were already meticulously neat and groomed, so Lucy stood and walked to the wardrobe, peering absently at her belongings.
    “Oh, dash,” she muttered, “I hate when she does that.”
    Her maid had left a pair of shoes the wrong way, with the left on the right and the right on the left, and while Lucy knew there was nothing earth-shatteringly wrong with that, it did offend some strange (and extremely tidy) little corner of her sensibilities, so she righted the slippers, then stood back to inspect her handiwork, then planted her hands on her hips and turned around. “Are you finished yet?” she demanded.
    “Almost,” Hermione said, and it sounded as if the word had been resting on the edge of her lips the whole time, as if she’d had it ready so that she could fob off Lucy when she asked.
    Lucy sat back down with a huff. It was a scene they had 3
    0 Julia
    Quinn
    played out countless times before. Or at least four.
    Yes, Lucy knew exactly how many letters Hermione had received from the romantic Mr. Edmonds. She would have liked not to have known; in fact, she was more than a little irritated that the item was taking up valuable space in her brain that might have been devoted to something useful, like botany or music, or good heavens, even another page in De-Brett’s, but the unfortunate fact was, Mr. Edmonds’s letters were nothing if not an event, and when Hermione had an event, well, Lucy was forced to have it, too.
    They had shared a room for three years at Miss Moss’s, and since Lucy had no close female relative who might help her make her bow into society, Hermione’s mother had
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