A heavy frosty atmosphere that had little to do with the glittering pavements accompanied the couple homeward to Bay House in St James’s. Once or twice June sought, with a fluttering glance, to decipher the expression on her husband’s shadowy countenance. She had believed he might take her in his arms as soon as they were settled on the upholstery for the hand upon her waist, as he helped her into their carriage, had been wonderfully caressing. But, once seated, he had put his head back into the squabs and assessed the carriage roof as though stars were visible through it. Far from rebuffing his amorous advances, as she believed she would—until she had some reassuring answers from him over that shameless widow stalking him—she now found herself summoning the courage to slip on to his seat and cuddle up to him. June tilted up her chin. She was not at fault in this. Neither, she suspected, was William. But she felt fragile and vulnerable and in need of a little reassurance from the man she loved that she was cherished now, tonight, as surely as she had been a few months ago when Lady Constance Bingham, née Palmer, was blissfully unknown to her.