A Study of Courtship-Chapter 25: The Viscount’s Birthday Ball

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 25: The Viscount’s Birthday Ball

Viscount Beaumont’s Birthday Ball — Beaumont London Estate

The chandeliers blazed in warm golden light, scattering diamonds across the polished floor. A fresh set of musicians tuned their strings as titled men and women walked toward the dance floor with a quiet elegance that drew murmurs from every corner.

Sophia watched them go, head tilted, looking as if she were analyzing a painting rather than two people clearly enchanted with each other.

"How peculiar," she murmured. "Felix seems unusually polite tonight. I shall ask him for the next dance, I suppose—after all, we are friends."

Before she could take a single step forward, Benedict gently caught her elbow.

"Sophia," he said lowly, "you must stop."

She blinked up at him, baffled. "Stop what? I am simply going to make an inquiry."

Benedict exhaled as though bracing himself. "You cannot ask Felix for a dance right now."

"Why ever not?"

"Because," he said, staring at her as though she were the sun—brilliant, blinding, impossible to direct—"he is smitten with Lady Beatrice."

Sophia’s brows furrowed. "Smitten? Because I introduced them? They are both two and twenty—what else was I supposed to do? Leave them standing there like abandoned statues?"

Benedict pinched the bridge of his nose in a way startlingly similar to Duke Alexander when Victor was being... Victor.

"Sophia... you introduced them, yes. But Felix was staring at Beatrice as though she’d stepped out of a painting."

Sophia’s eyes widened. "Oh! Romantic admiration." She considered this. "That explains the shine in his eyes, I suppose. I thought perhaps he was simply grateful I recalled all the languages she speaks."

Benedict stared at her, helpless and charmed all at once. "You truly did not notice?"

"No," she answered simply, then added, "Felix never looks at me like that."

The admission—so honest, so oblivious—hit Benedict square in the chest.

He leaned closer. "Perhaps," he said softly, "it is because he is not meant to."

Sophia looked up at him, puzzled. "Meant to what?"

His gaze softened, a warm, earnest thing that made his voice drop even lower. "Look at you that way."

And for once, Sophia—Lady Sophia Fiennes, breaker of debutante expectations, wielder of flintlocks, reader of philosophers—forgot every prepared argument in her head.

Beatrice stood at the edge of the crowd, hands folded neatly before her, every inch the composed duchess’s daughter. Her pale pink gown shimmered softly when she moved, its embroidery catching the light like cherry blossom on silk. She seemed made for this world—elegant, poised, gently luminous.

Which was precisely when Prince Felix stepped into her orbit.

He bowed with quiet precision, the sort that made nearby debutantes sigh behind their fans.

"Lady Beatrice," he said, his voice as calm and delicate as the brushstrokes in one of his watercolors, "may I have this dance?"

Beatrice blinked once—surprise rippling through her usually placid expression—but she inclined her head gracefully.

"You may, Your Highness."

He offered his hand.

She placed hers atop it, light as a feather... yet steady.

They moved onto the dance floor just as the quadrille began. Their first steps were measured—formal, almost cautious. But it took only a few passes, a few exchanged glances, for something unmistakable to settle between them.

Felix seemed... fascinated.

Not in the way other men were fascinated by Beatrice’s beauty (though it was undeniable), but in the way a scholar discovers a rare manuscript after searching for years. His eyes followed the small things: the careful precision of her footwork, the controlled lift of her chin, the quiet intelligence that lived in every shift of expression.

When partners turned away and then returned to face one another again, Beatrice found Felix studying her with clear curiosity—not bold, not indecent... merely present.

"You dance with excellent timing, Lady Beatrice," he said softly as they crossed paths.

"My governess insisted upon it since childhood," she replied with a faint smile. "She believed that discipline in movement cultivates discipline in mind."

Felix’s eyes warmed in recognition."A familiar philosophy. My tutors believed the same."

The next turn brought them close again.

"Your cousin speaks highly of you," he added. "Languages, music, geography, history—she listed your talents with rather impressive detail."

Beatrice nearly stumbled. "Sophia said all that?"

"She did. Quite proudly."

A soft flush colored her cheeks, the first crack in her usual serene mask.

They separated for the next figure; Felix’s gaze lingered even as other dancers passed between them. When the steps reunited them, he leaned just enough to be heard over the music—but not enough to be improper.

"And Japanese?" he asked. "I confess that piqued my interest most."

Beatrice’s lips parted in surprise. "I... have only read its script in scholarly texts. It is difficult, but beautiful."

Felix’s eyes—cool grey-green—seemed to brighten.

"Beautiful," he echoed softly, though he was no longer speaking about the language at all.

For the final sequence, they turned in a slow, sweeping circle. The candles across the room cast a warm glow over Beatrice’s features; Felix watched her as if trying to memorize the moment.

As the music faded, he bowed again—lower this time.

"Lady Beatrice... may I request another dance later this evening?"

Her composure faltered for just a breath.

"I—yes, Your Highness. I would be honored."

Felix’s smile was small. Gentle. Almost secretive.

"And I," he replied, "am already looking forward to it."

Beatrice curt