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“What sort of significance could a chapel have in a family’s history?” Sherry inquired, baffled.

“I believe the viscount’s earliest known ancestor forced a friar to marry him to his unwilling bride within the chapel’s walls.” When she shivered, Nicki added dryly, “Now that I think about it, it seems to be something of a family custom.”

“It sounds Gothic and—and not amusing or appealing in the least! I see two other coaches around the other side, but no one is in them. What sort of service could he be attending at this hour and in such an out-of-the-way place as this?”

“A private one. Very private,” Nicki said, then he changed the subject. “Let me see how you look.”

She faced him, and he frowned. “Your hair seems to be sliding free of your tidy coil.” Puzzled because her hair had felt secure, Sherry reached up, but he was too quick.

“Here, let me. You have no looking glass.”

Before she could protest or warn him, he’d pulled on the long pins instead of pushing them in and twisting, and the whole mass came tumbling down around her shoulders in hopeless disarray. “Oh, no!” she cried.

“Do you have a brush?”

“Yes, of course, but, oh, I wish you hadn’t—”

“Do not fret. You will feel better able to voice your objections if you know you look more—festive,” he lied lamely.

“What possible objections could I have to his offer?”

Nicki waited for the coachman to let down the steps, then he climbed out and offered her his hand, before he replied vaguely, “Oh, I think you may have an objection or two. At first.”

“Is there something you haven’t told me?” Sherry said, pulling back a little, then stepping aside in surprise as the coachman abruptly moved the horses forward. The breeze caught her skirt, blowing it gently and teasing her hair as they walked side by side. From the corner of her eye, Sherry searched the side yard of the picturesque little chapel for some sign of the sort of man who would have to pay a fortune to keep a governess.

She thought she saw something move off to the left, and her hand went to her heart at the same time Nicki looked sharply at her. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing. I thought I saw someone.”

“It was probably him. He said he would be waiting for you over there.”

“Over there? What is he doing out here?”

“Meditating, I imagine,” Nicky said succinctly, “on his sins. Now, run along and listen to what he has to say. And, chérie?”

She turned to step across the rutted lane and stopped. “Yes?” she said over her shoulder.

“If you truly do not wish to accept the position he offers, you will leave here with me. Do not feel obliged to remain if you wish to leave. You will receive other offers, though not perhaps as—diverting in some ways—as this one would turn out to be. Remember that,” he said firmly. “If you truly wish to decline, you may leave here with me under my protection.”

Sherry nodded and turned back, picking her way across the road, avoiding getting her slippers dusty, then she walked up to the little white fence and pushed it open, blinking to adjust to the dimmer light of the grove. Ahead of her, a man was in the shadow of a tree, his arms crossed over his chest, feet braced slightly apart, gloves clutched in one hand, idly tapping his hip. Only dimly aware there was something familiar about that stance, she continued forward, her heart beginning to hammer in nervous anticipation and a little dread of the coming interview.

She took three steps forward. So did he. Sherry stopped cold at the sound of his solemn voice. “I was afraid you weren’t coming.”

For a split second, her feet felt rooted in the ground—then she whirled and ran, rage and shock propelling her with unusual speed, but she still couldn’t outdistance him. Stephen caught her just as she neared the gate and pulled her back around, his hands clamped on her arms. “Let go of me!” Sherry warned, her chest heaving with each tortured breath.

Quietly, he asked, “Will you stand here and listen to what I have to say?”

She nodded, he released her, and she swung at him, but this time he had expected it and recaptured both her arms. With a pained look in his eyes, he said, “Don’t make me restrain you.”

“I’m not making you do anything, you loathsome—despicable—lech!” she raged, trying ineffectually to twist free. “And to think Nicki DuVille was a part of this! He brought me here—he convinced me to resign my position, he made me believe you had a position to offer me—”

“I do have a position to offer you.”

“I’m not interested in any more of your offers!” she raged, giving up her futile physical struggle and facing him in a fury of helplessness. “I’m still hurting from the last one!”

He winced at the mention of his last offer, but he went on talking almost as if he hadn’t heard her. “The new position comes with a house—several of them.”

“I’ve heard all this before!”

“No you haven’t!” he said. “It comes with servants to do your every bidding, all the money you can spend, jewels, furs. And it comes with me.”

‘I don’t want you!” she cried. “You’ve already used me like a—a common doxy, now stay away from me! God,” she said, her voice breaking, “I’m so ashamed—it was so trite—the governess who falls in love with the lord of the manor, only in the novels he doesn’t do the things to her you did to me in bed. It was so ugly—”

“Don’t say that!” he cut in, his voice raw. “Please don’t say that. It wasn’t ugly. It was—”

“Sordid!” she cried.

“The new position comes with me,” he continued, his face white with strain. “It comes with my name and my hand and all I possess.”

“I don’t want—”

“Yes you do,” he said, giving her a shake, just as his full meaning sunk in. Sheridan felt a brief spurt of joy before she realized he was merely having another attack of conscience and duty, this time over seducing her, evidently.

“Damn you!” she choked. “I am not some foundling you’re obliged to propose to every time you have an attack of guilt. The first time you did it, I wasn’t even the right woman to feel guilty about.”

“Guilty,” he repeated with a harsh, embittered laugh. “The only guilt I ever felt where you were concerned was for wanting you for myself from the moment you regained consciousness. For God’s sake, look at me and you’ll see I’m telling the truth.” He put his hand under her chin, and she neither resisted nor cooperated, but focused her gaze over his shoulder instead. “I stole the life of a young man, and then I saw his fiancée and I wanted to steal her too. Can you understand just a little of how that made me feel about myself? I killed him and then I lusted after the fiancée he couldn’t have because he was dead. I wanted to marry you, Sheridan, right from the beginning.”

“No you didn’t! Not until after you were informed Mr. Lancaster had died, leaving his poor, helpless daughter alone in the world except for you!”

“If I hadn’t wanted an excuse to marry his ‘poor, helpless daughter’ I’d have done anything I could for her, but marriage was not one of them. God forgive me, but an hour after I got that letter, I was drinking champagne with my brother to toast our wedding. If I hadn’t wanted to marry you, I’d have been drinking hemloc

k.”

Sheridan bit back a teary smile at his quip, afraid to believe him, afraid to trust him, and unable to stop herself because she loved him. “Look at me,” Stephen said, tipping her chin up again, and this time her glorious eyes looked into his. “I have several reasons for asking you to walk into that chapel, where there is a vicar waiting for us, but guilt is not among them. I also have several things to ask of you before you agree to go in there with me.”

“What sort of things?”

“I would like you to give me daughters with your hair and your spirit,” he said, beginning to enumerate his reasons and requests. “I would like my sons to have your eyes and your courage. Now, if that’s not what you want, then give me any combination you like, and I will humbly thank you for giving me any child we make.”

Happiness began to spread through Sheridan until it was so intense she ached from it. “I want to change your name,” he said with a tender smile, “so there’s no doubt who you are ever again, or who you belong to.” He slid his hands up and down her arms, looking directly into her eyes. “I want the right to share your bed tonight and every night from this day onward. I want to make you moan in my arms again, and I want to wake up wrapped in yours.” He shifted his hands and cradled her cheeks, his thumbs brushing away two tears at the edges of her shimmering eyes. “Last of all, I want to hear you say ‘I love you’ every day of my life. If you aren’t ready to agree to that last request right now, I would be willing to wait until tonight, when I believe you will. In return for all those concessions, I will grant you every wish that is within my power to grant you.

“As to what happened between us in bed at Claymore, there was nothing sordid about it—”

“We were lovers!” she countered, flushing with guilt.

“Sheridan,” he said quietly, “we have been lovers since the first moment your mouth touched mine.”

He wanted her to find pride, not shame, in that, and to accept it as a special gift from fate, and then he realized he was expecting the impossible of a young, inexperienced girl. He was about to absolve her completely by assuming all of the blame for the desire they’d shared, but after a moment the woman he loved turned her face into his hand to brush a soft kiss against his palm. “I know,” she whispered simply.


Tags: Judith McNaught Westmoreland Saga Romance