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“Ah.” Vale stared at him for a moment, and then a wide smile spread across his face. “Like that, is it?”

“That,” Reynaud snarled, “is none of your business.”

“Indeed?” Vale was grinning like an idiot now. “Well, well, well.”

“What is that supposed to mean?”

“I have no idea. I just like saying it. Well, well, well. Makes one sound uncommonly insightful.”

“Not you it doesn’t,” Reynaud muttered.

Vale ignored him. “Have you asked the question yet? I’m rather good at it, if I do say so myself. I got three different ladies to agree to marry me while you were gone. Did you know? Some didn’t actually make it to the altar, but that’s another problem altogether. Perhaps you’d like some pointers on—”

“I would not like any pointers from you, damn your hide,” Reynaud growled.

“But are you sure the chit even cares for you?”

Reynaud thought back to Beatrice eagerly parting her legs for him, her eyelids lowered, her throat suffused in a blush of desire. “I don’t believe that’s a problem.”

“You never know,” Vale said chattily. “Emeline threw me over for Samuel Hartley, and the man’s not nearly as handsome as I.”

Reynaud blinked. “You were engaged to my sister?”

“Didn’t I tell you?”

“No, you did not.”

“Well, I was,” Vale said airily. “Not that it lasted once Hartley put his fascinatin’ hooks into her. Now, my second fiancée threw me over for a curate.”

Reynaud looked at him.

“A butter-haired curate.” Vale nodded. “I assure you. ’Course, that’s how I came to be married to my own sweet wife, but at the time you could’ve knocked me over with a feather. I don’t suppose Miss Corning knows any butter-haired curates, does she?”

“She had better not,” Reynaud growled. And right then he determined that this thing would not drag on with Beatrice. He needed a wife. She’d already given herself to him. It was as simple as that.

And tonight he’d prove it to her.

IN THE MIDDLE of the night, Beatrice woke and opened her eyes to a single candle shining in her bedroom. It should’ve startled her—frightened her, even—but instead she lay quietly and watched as Lord Hope set the candle on a small table near the door.

“What are you doing?” Beatrice asked.

“Coming to see you,” he said, equally matter-of-fact. He had on a red and black banyan, and his head was bare.

He took off the banyan.

“See you seems to be a euphemism,” she observed.

He paused, his hands on the buttons of his shirt. “You’re right.” And he drew the shirt off over his head.

For the first time, she felt a flicker of fear. He hadn’t smiled. He was serious and intent, as if he performed a grim duty.

“You don’t have to do this,” she whispered.

“It seems I do,” he replied. He sat on a chair to remove his shoes. “You seem to be uncertain of me—of us together. I intend to make sure there are no uncertainties after tonight.”

She noted that he made no mention of love, and she felt disappointment shoot through her.

“Seducing me won’t prove anything,” she said.


Tags: Elizabeth Hoyt Legend of the Four Soldiers Romance