gentleman — one who offered nothing
but fealty, trust, and protection — to
cover up her pregnancy.
“Dearest,” Mrs. Mortimer cooed.
“Do wear the yellow ribbons that match
your dress when you break your fast.
The color will lighten up your face and
buoy your spirits. To be sure, His Grace
will be your slave ’ere long.”
“My slave? I cannot imagine Percy
being
anyone’s
slave.”
Nor can I
imagine he will believe my sudden
support of Burton, should I do as the
bastard commands.
“Well, slave or free man, he will
take one look at you and fall to his
knees. Yes,” she said, happy with her
choice of words. “It’s a grand day, a day
to make a new start. And no finer time to
begin winning your husband’s heart then
the present.”
Constance’s
spirits
soared.
“Indeed. I have but one goal in mind,”
she said honestly. “The happiness of my
child.”
• • •
“I prefer not to gossip, Your Grace.
That does not suit.”
Percy harrumphed. “Must you
adhere to protocol at all times? I do not
want to be reminded that I am not worthy
to eat your bannocks.”
“Old habits die hard, Your Grace.”
Percy folded the Gazette and
placed it near his plate. He had no
interest in the news. Jeffers’s attempts at
humor thwarted his concentration and he
grew sour with impatience. He was
eager to see Constance. Heaven help
him, he couldn’t get enough of the
woman. What was taking her so long to
appear?
Plagued by thoughts of his father’s
death and his pleasurable night in
Constance’s bed, he brooded over on
her new status as the Duchess of
Blendingham and what that would entail.
He walked a tight rope where she was
concerned, risking a legacy hundreds of
years in the making.
“I’m not who you think I am,”
she’d said.
Those seven words were ingrained
into his mind. But what had she really
been trying to tell him? Was she going to
admit she was pregnant with a pirate’s
baby,
his
baby? The idea was ludicrous.
Had she been prepared to admit she was
an informant? That she was, in fact, in
cahoots with Josiah Cane and Frink?
Improbable. He doubted there could be
any involvement with Frink. He’d been
aboard the
Octavia
and witnessed her
violent interaction with the captain.
Still, something wasn’t quite right.
For nigh onto a week, he’d watched
her toss and turn in her sleep. Last night
he hadn’t meant to wake her, but she’d
seen him. His father’s death, the heavy
weight the duchy placed upon him, and
questions about her loyalties had driven
him to her side. That he’d needed her
more than anything else in this world
jolted him. He had never needed anyone
like he needed, wanted, Constance. But
he had to admit there were burdensome
complexities
arising
from
that
admission.
He was playing a game that might
destroy her.
She had feelings for another man.
To add to his dismay, he also had two
buffoons seeking their marital demise,
Burton and Frink.
His fingers played with the locket
in his pocket, tracing the engravings as if
he knew each curve by heart. As well he
should after spending a week pondering
how it had gotten into the wrong hands.
Retrieving the silver locket, he glanced
down at the polished surface, engraved
with the initials OD and caught his
reflection. His powdered skin and
hawkish eyes condemned him for being
false. He was a fool to expect a woman
to fall in love with a popinjay.
Constance wasn’t a fool. She was very
much like the sparkling silver between
his fingers, a polished embellishment,
providing a gentleman distinguished
swagger, making him the envy of every
other male in town.
Burton wanted her, badly enough to
threaten her. Guffald wanted her, but
Percy discounted his friend, knowing he
would sidestep if Percy demanded it.
And there was Thomas Sexton to
consider. Making love to his wife was a
difficult affair. In her arms, he could
neither be a duke by light of day or a
pirate by night.
Voices carried down the stairs,
alerting him that he would no longer be
alone. Setting aside his concerns, he was
eager to share Constance’s company, to
gauge whether or not she still had that
same passionate glow in the wake of
their lovemaking. He placed the locket
back in his banyan.
“Good morning, Jeffers,” her
melodic voice sang. Her skirts swished
and he could hear the tap, tap, tap, of her
slippered feet on the marble floor.
“You’ll find a vast array of
delicacies to sample this morning, your
Ladyship. His Lordship is already
seated. Ring if you need me. I shall not
be far.”
“Thank you, Jeffers. You’re most
accommodating.”
Percy closed his eyes as he listened
to her gentile words. Within seconds,
she rounded the corner with Mrs.
Mortimer at her side. The two women
who stood before him could not have
been more different. Mrs. Mortimer,
with unruly graying hair and dour skin,
paled beside his lovely wife whose
blonde hair had been arranged in looped
braids. Dangling curls fit for a Grecian
goddess appeared like a halo around her
head. And her sunny disposition was a
boon to his spirits.
Mrs. Mortimer glared at him
strangely, making his gut tighten with
apprehension. Lies and secrets had been
forced upon more than one soul at his
table.
“Good morning, Your Grace,”
Constance said, her eyes warming.
“My gel,” he stood and bowed.
“Mrs. Mortimer,” he offered with a
polite nod from the head of the table.
Constance
curtsied.
“Mrs.
Mortimer has told me the terrible news
about your father. Please accept my
heartfelt
condolences,”
she
said,
reaching for him.
He accepted her hand. “Thank you,
madam, for your concern.”
Constance responded so quickly he
couldn’t keep up. “I hope your father did
not suffer. Were you able to attend his
funeral? Did any of your relatives join
you? I am heartily sorry that I could not
attend. A wife ought to be with her
husband during times like these. Why
didn’t you send for me?”
“Odd’s
fish,
madam,”
he
exclaimed,
trying
to
remember
everything she’d just said. “I have only
just returned and you waylay me with
questions like a constable.”
“How am I supposed to react?” she
asked. “My heart aches for you, Your
Grace.”
“You are overly generous,” he said.
“Were I the wiser, I’d suggest you had
your eyes set upon a bauble or some
trifle to go along with your new
position.”
Her eyes narrowed. “I only want
your happiness, Your Grace,” she said.
“If you loved your father half as much as
I love mine, I understand how greatly
affected you must be by his death.”
He nodded, placing his hand over
his heart. She’d gone to great lengths for
her father. Would she be proud of the
lengths to which he’d gone to console
his? But she couldn’t know. Because
play it he must to the bitter end without
involving her and putting her in danger.
“Fortunately, I know how much
your father means to you and therefore,
cannot be tempted to take offense.”
She settled into the seat beside him.
With tactical ease, she reached across
the divide, grabbed his right hand, and
began stroking the sapphire set within
the silver Blendingham family crest —
his grandfather’s ring. She’d never seen
him without the ring, a purposeful
invention on his part and one he’d meant
to use to keep her from confusing his two
personas.
What brokered her fascination with
the trinket now? Or was the ring an
excuse to touch him? He preferred the
later.
“My heart aches for you. I assure
you that your father has been ever in my
prayers since our wedding night.” Did
she have to bring up that night? Though
he’d remedied their union, their wedding
night was the night he’d uncovered her
locket in enemy hands. “What is dear to
you is dear to me, as well,” she
confided.
Her eyes sparkled like dew drops
on newly opened petals in a misty
garden. She appeared innocent, adoring.
Perhaps he’d been wrong. Was she
simply a pawn in Cane’s devilish game?
Or was she the instrument of his demise?
He squirmed beneath her adoring eyes.
She made him thankful he was alive.
She’d bewitched him, unarmed him in
the daylight, and charmed him out of
darkness. No. This definitely would not
do. The yellow-ribboned fluff seated
before him, the woman he called wife,
was his Achilles heel. And woe to them
both when his enemies became aware of
it.
Shifting in his chair, he snatched his
hand away. “Cream?”
Nothing scared him more than the
slip of a girl perched at his right. He
stirred his morning libation and flipped
open
the
Morning Post
, then the
Gazetteer
. She mumbled something
under her breath, making him extremely
grateful for his sanctuary behind the thin
paper
barrier.
China
clanked
unceremoniously into the quiet. Putting
aside the dailies, he noted the glistening
sheen in Constance’s eyes and was once
more overtaken with unease. What now?
Removing his ring, he held it within
reach. “There, there. Since you’ve
shown fascination for my ring, I wish
you to have it, my gel.” She stared,
dumbfounded. “No more tears. Take the
bauble. It’s my gift. No harm will ever
come to you with it on your finger.”
Speechlessly, she stared at his gift.
Percy reached over and gently closed
her gaping mouth with his fingertip. Her
gaze dropped to his hand, and then her
lap. “I cannot accept it,” she said.
“Does my gift displease you? I
thought ladies of every ilk trembled with
delight at beautiful things.”
She shook her head. “Oh, no — I
mean to say, yes!” she stuttered. “But I
cannot accept your gift. The ring is
important to you and your family, Percy.
If I should ever — ”
“I trust you,” he interrupted, if only
to win her confidence. “It would do me
great honor to have you wear it. I want
everyone to know you are an Avery
now.” He wanted to send a silent
message to those she conspired with that
he was fully aware of their connections.
That it was only a matter of time before
her identity was revealed, if she was at
risk.
“It’s too large for my finger, Your
Grace,” she protested.
Clucking momentarily, he said,
“Then you shall wear it around your
neck as you did your mother’s necklace.
Perhaps you will cherish it as much.”
Mrs. Mortimer dropped a serving
utensil and her plate abruptly hit the
floor. “Oh!” the woman squealed,
mortified. “Do forgive my clumsiness.”
“Let
me
help
you,
Morty,”
Constance said, providing him a
delectable view of her derriere as she
bent to retrieve the broken pieces
scattered about their feet. “No harm
done,” she added, turning, moving closer
still, and revealing two mounds of
woman’s flesh for his perusal. Though
his eyes fixated on her ample gifts, he
did not miss her concern. Did she think