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Sophie forced a smile at the words. “Of course,” she said, attempting to hide her confusion. “I simply did not know that you knew, Your Grace.”

He laughed. “We have lax rules in Scotland, my lady, but the ones governing witnesses to weddings are fairly firm. I know, as your officiant.”

Sophie blinked. “Our officiant.”

“Yes! Don’t worry, I’ve been to several weddings. I shall take today seriously.”

“Today,” she said.

“Yes.”

“We’re to be married, today.”

“Aye,” the massive Scot said with a smile. “Else why would King have ferreted you away to Scotland?”

“Of course,” she said. “Why else?”

But she wanted to scream.

“You make a beautiful bride, if I may say so,” the duke continued as though all was perfectly normal. “Of course, the last time I saw you, you were much more . . . interestingly . . . dressed.”

“Shut up, Warnick,” King growled.

Sophie blinked, unable to be embarrassed of her footman’s garb as all her affront was taken up with the fact that she was about to be wed. “We’re to be married here. In your house.”

Warnick looked back at the massive keep. “One of them. Unfortunately, it’s not the nicest.”

“We won’t be going in,” King said. “If nothing else, the Scots understand marital expediency.” He looked to the plaid-covered girl. “I assume you are our second witness?”

“Aye, m’lord,” she said.

“And what’s your name?” he asked, the words an octave lower than his usual voice.

“Catherine.”

He smiled at her, and Sophie couldn’t help the way her heart pounded at the dimples that flashed there, in his handsome face. “Well, Catherine, you may call me King.”

The girl returned his smile warmly, and Sophie wanted to hit him. Hard.

King turned to Warnick, who was watching the scene carefully. “Let’s have this done.”

Warnick nodded. “I suppose we can skip the dearly beloved bit.”

“Indeed,” said King.

“I don’t know,” snapped Sophie. “Catherine seems fairly beloved.”

Warnick’s black brows rose and he looked to King. “Dearly beloved, then.”

King smirked. “Whatever my betrothed wishes.”

“Dearly beloved,” the duke intoned, “we are gathered here today to join this man”—he indicated King—“and this woman”—he waved to Sophie—“in holy matrimony.”

“Wait,” Sophie said.

“My lady?” asked the duke, all solicitousness.

“We’re doing this now?”

“Yes,” said King.

“In the drive of the Duke of Warnick’s castle?”

“Och. You see? She doesn’t like the castle.” Warnick pointed out before leaning in. “My highland keep is much nicer.”

“No no. It’s not the castle. The castle is lovely. But the drive—we couldn’t do it in a place more . . . authentic?”

King stared at her for a long moment and then said, “If I were marrying a more authentic bride, I might be troubled to find somewhere better.”

She gasped at the words. “You’re horrid.”

“Indeed, it seems I am. Aren’t we a sound match.”

“Perhaps we should wait and finish the ceremony another time,” the duke said, looking from King to Sophie.

“Perhaps so,” she said. She wasn’t going to marry him. Not like this. Not with him furious. She turned for the curricle and took several steps before landing herself on a particularly jagged rock. She gasped her pain and reached down to inspect her slipper. “Perhaps never is a good time for Lord Eversley.”

“You should be more careful about where you walk,” King said, his gaze on her foot. For the first time since she’d met him in the drive at Lyne Castle, he revealed emotion. He was livid.

“Well I’m sorry if I wasn’t prepared for a craggy-drived wedding. You should be more careful about where you take me,” she retorted. “Now you’ve torn my slipper.”

Warnick snorted his laughter.

“We’re to be married. In this place. At this time,” King said, looking away from her, the words cold and certain. He glowered at the duke. “Do it.”

She stopped and turned back. “I don’t think you understand,” she began. “I’m not—”

Catherine interrupted her, speaking from her place in the doorway to the castle. “It’s done.”

Everyone looked at her.

“I beg your pardon?” Sophie asked.

“I said it’s done.” Catherine pointed at her. “You said, We’re to be married here.” She pointed to King. “And he said, We’re to be married in this place, at this time. I witnessed it, as did Alec.” She looked to the duke. “You heard it, didn’t you?”

“I did,” Warnick said, surprise in the words. “It’s that simple? No dearly beloved required?”

Catherine shrugged one shoulder. “It’s the marriage that’s important, not how you get to it.” She looked to Sophie and King. “It’s done. We’ve witnessed your intent to be married, and so, you’re married.” She smiled. “Congratulations.”

It couldn’t be true.

Warnick’s brows rose and he nodded. “Fair enough.”

“That was significantly less painful than I expected it to be,” King said.

“No!” she said. If she was to marry him, she wanted something to feel like marriage. They couldn’t be. This couldn’t be it.

The duke looked to her. “You don’t wish to marry him?”

“Not like this,” she said.

“This is the only way it happens,” King replied. “I want it over and done.”

Sophie met his gaze, hating him. Loving him.

“My lady, do you wish to marry him?” Warnick asked again, serious this time.

She didn’t look away from King. Couldn’t. And she told the truth. Made the vow there in that mad place. “I do.”

Fury flashed in King’s eyes before he looked away.

He collected a box from the floor of the curricle and left to deliver it to the floor of the coach.

As Sophie saw it, she had two options. She could watch him leave her there, in the drive belonging to the Duke of Warnick and whoever Catherine was, or she could tell him the truth. Every bit of it. And let him decide what came next.

One month earlier, she might have chosen the first option.

But she was a different Sophie now, and so she followed him, not caring that their first argument as husband and wife was going to be immediately following their wedding, which she seemed to have missed, anyway.

“I didn’t want this,” she said. “Not like this.”

“I’m afraid I was not in the market for half the ton at St. George’s,” he said.

“You needn’t have been in the market for any of it,” she sai

d. “I never asked for you to marry me.”

“You are correct. There wasn’t a moment of asking.”

She closed her eyes, hating the words. “I thought you did not intend to be saddled with me.”

He moved to the front of the coach and six, inspecting the perfectly matched chestnuts, and testing the harnesses for each of the great beasts. “I shan’t be,” he said, unhitching one of the horses and reconnecting it to the coach. “We may be married, but there’s no reason for us to ever interact again.”

The words made her ache. The thought of having him so close, and yet impossibly far away, made her want to scream her frustration. She’d never intended for any of this. “It’s that simple?”

“It is, rather,” he said, moving to the next horse. “I’ve a half-dozen houses throughout Britain. Choose one.”

She watched him. “I choose the one where you are.”

His hands hesitated on the harness, briefly, barely enough to be noticed. “You want Lyne Castle?” He laughed humorlessly. “By all means. My father will no doubt adore having you in residence. What with you being everything he’s always dreaded in a daughter-in-law.”

She ignored the pain that came with the cold words. “I don’t choose Lyne Castle. I choose wherever you are. The castle today, the town house in Mayfair tomorrow. I choose to live with my husband, whom I—” Love.

She trailed off, but he heard her nonetheless. “You needn’t lie any longer, Sophie. You got the marriage you were hoping for. I’ve no need for your professions of love. And you lost the chance to live with me when you lied to me and trapped me into marriage.”

She did her best to suffer the blow. “I had plans to leave.”

“And be found by your father. I’m aware of those plans. They worked well.”

“No,” she said. “I had plans to leave the castle. To leave Cumbria. I never wanted anything from you but the one thing I knew you couldn’t give me.”

“And yet, somehow, you managed to require it of me,” he said, the words filled with ire. “Lady Eversley,” he fairly spat, moving to the next horse, checking its harness. “Marchioness. Future duchess. Well played.”

“Not the title, King. Not the marriage.” She paused. “I didn’t wish to marry you. I only wished to love you.”

He looked back at the harness, securing it carefully before coming around the horses to face her. “Never say those words to me again. I’m tired of hearing them. I’m tired of believing them. Love is nothing but the worst kind of lie.”


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