Read That Perfect Someone Online
Authors: Johanna Lindsey
Tags: #Aristocracy (Social Class) - England, #Love-hate relationships, #Romance, #England - Social Life and Customs - 19th Century, #Heiresses, #Contemporary, #Romance: Historical, #Love Stories, #Historical, #Pirates - Caribbean Area, #England, #pirates, #Aristocracy (Social class), #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Betrothal, #Malory Family (Fictitious Characters), #General, #Romance - Historical, #Fiction, #American Historical Fiction, #Fiction - Romance.
Chapter Fifty-three
J
ULIA WAS ONLY SLIGHTLY
embarrassed when they left Willow Woods—for the last time. She hadn’t meant to display her no-nonsense business instincts in that meeting with the earl. She hadn’t meant to display her disgust either. But she’d been unable to stop herself. Now she was a bit concerned about Richard’s reaction not only to what he’d learned today, but to her indecorous behavior.
But she didn’t get a chance to discuss it with him until that night when they were finally alone at the inn they’d stopped at to break up the journey back to London. Charles and Mathew had ended up sharing the coach with them.
Charles hadn’t wanted to spend another moment in that house any more than they did, not even long enough to pack. He would send for their belongings later. Right now, he wanted to spend as much time with his brother as he could, before
The Triton
sailed again. Then he intended to stay with Mathew’s real grandfather briefly, until he found them a house of their own in Manchester.
Julia worried that that would be too close to Willow Woods and mentioned it to Richard on the way into the inn when Charles and Mathew went ahead of them. She was actually delighted to hear about Charles’s lady friend and that he couldn’t bear to move too far from her. But she got Charles to promise that they would visit the islands after she and Richard were settled there. Mathew was already excited by the idea, so she didn’t expect them to wait too long.
The four of them shared a relaxing dinner that evening, the tension gone, the burdens gone. Mathew didn’t yet know that he and his father were no longer going to live at Willow Woods. Charles had told Julia in an aside that he would eventually tell his son a story about two brothers and a not-so-nice father and let him decide for himself if he wanted such a person in his life. Again, choices were very, very important to these two men who’d never been allowed to make any of their own while growing up.
She retired first, leaving the brothers a little time on their own. But Richard wasn’t long in joining her in their room. She’d been sitting cross-legged in the center of the bed, combing her hair, but she immediately got up to meet him in the middle of the room and put her arms around him.
“I’m so glad this day is behind us,” she told him.
“So am I. But I’ve been dying to ask you since we left there—you’re not feeling sorry for him, are you?”
“Me?” she said, somewhat in surprise. “I was going to ask that question of you.”
He chuckled. “Well, my answer is a resounding no. What about yours?”
“The same.”
“Glad to hear it. Because he really did kill whatever love I had for him when I was a child. That I’m apparently his only son now is simply an amusing irony. As I said before, I couldn’t care less.”
She grinned. “You know that means his title will eventually come to you.”
Richard snorted. “I don’t want it. I don’t want anything of his. I’d rather it went to Charles as I always assumed it would, then to Matthew after him. I’m sure Milton will consider that, too, and tell no one of this. Besides, you’re the only thing I want, Jewels.
But
…”
She leaned back and swatted his chest lightly. “You
can’t
put a
but
after that statement!”
“However?”
he teased.
“No
however
either.”
“Then maybe you should just let me finish. I can’t deny you got my hopes up that I was a bastard, and now I’m a little disappointed that I’m still related to Milton Allen by blood. But I’ll get over it.” Then he grinned roguishly. “Will you help me get over it?”
That was practically the same question he’d asked her when he came back into her life the night of the Malory ball. She laughed and leaned into him suggestively and said, “That’s—very likely.”
He laughed with her. “God, I love you. And that’s yet another irony, isn’t it?”
“I beg your pardon? You’re
really
stepping on thin ice now.”
He pulled her closer despite her huffy warning. “I thought my forced marriage would be just like my father’s.” He gave her a loving smile before he kissed her, then kissed her again. “The irony is, how wrong I was.”
She’d been touching him too long. Any more discussion could wait until later. She wrapped an arm around his waist, drew his lips down to hers with the other, threaded her hand through his hair—and finally realized what was missing! With a gasp, she turned him around to verify that his long queue was nowhere to be found.
“Good God, what’d you do?” she cried, aghast. “I
liked
your hair!”
“I thought it was time to finally cut it, since I don’t have anything to rebel against anymore, so Charles, Mathew, and I hunted down a barber after dinner. But I’ll grow it back for you.”
“No, not for me. It’s your choice.”
He laughed at her effort not to sound disappointed. “You’re my choice, Jewels, and whatever makes you happy makes me happy.”
She wondered if he realized he’d just ceded all his future choices to her. But not really, because perfect matches—and he was certainly hers—had many benefits. Happy compromises, for one. With her loving him so much, whatever made him happy would always make her happy, too. It could be no other way.
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