generation were as wild, hedonistic, and unpredictable as any Cynsters ever were. And the current head of the clan was the wildest, most hedonistic, and unpredictable of them all. The present duke of St. Ivesâhe who had tossed her up to his saddle and declared he was taking her home. The same man whoâd told her to get used to his bare chest. The piratical autocrat who had, without a blink, decreed she was to be his duchess.
It suddenly occurred to Honoria that she might be assuming too much. Matters might not be proceeding quite as sheâd thought. Not that it matteredâshe knew where life was taking her. Africa. She cleared her throat. âWhen next you meet them, the Claypole girls might prove tryingâthey are, Iâm sorry to say, their motherâs daughters.â
She felt him shrug. âIâll leave you to deal with them.â
âI wonât be here.â She made the statement firmly.
âWeâll be here often enoughâweâll spend some of the year in London and on my other estates, but the Place will always be home. But you neednât worry over meâIâm not fool enough to face the disappointed local aspirants without availing myself of your skirts.â
âI beg your pardon?â Turning, Honoria stared at him.
He met her gaze briefly; his lips quirked. âTo hide behind.â
The temptation was too greatâHonoria lifted an arrogant brow. âI thought Cynsters were invincible.â
His smile flashed. âThe trick is not to expose oneself unnecessarily to the enemyâs fire.â
Struck by the force of that fleeting smile, Honoria blinkedâand abruptly faced forward. There was, after all, no reason she should face him unnecessarily either. Then she realized sheâd been distracted. âI hate to destroy your defense, but Iâll be gone in a few days.â
âI hesitate to contradict you,â came in a purring murmur just above her left ear, âbut weâre getting married. You are, therefore, not going anywhere.â
Honoria gritted her teeth against the shivery tingles that coursed down her spine. Turning her head, she looked directly into his mesmerizing eyes. âYou only said that to spike Lady Claypoleâs guns.â When he didnât respond, just met her gaze levelly, she looked forward, shrugging haughtily. âYouâre no gentleman to tease me so.â
The silence that followed was precisely gauged to stretch her nerves taut. She knew that when he spoke, his voice deep, low, velvet dark. âI never teaseâat least not verbally. And Iâm not a gentleman, Iâm a nobleman, a distinction I suspect you understand very well.â
Honoria knew what she was meant to understandâher insides were quaking in a thoroughly distracting wayâbut she was not about to surrender. âI am not marrying you.â
âIf you think that, my dear Miss Anstruther-Wetherby, I fear youâve overlooked a number of pertinent points.â
âSuch as?â
âSuch as the past night, which we spent under the same roof, in the same room, unchaperoned.â
âExcept by a dead man, your cousin, who everyone must know you were fond of. With his body laid out upon the bed, no one will imagine anything untoward occurred.â Convinced sheâd played a winning card, Honoria wasnât surprised by the silence which followed.
They emerged from the trees into the brightness of a late-summer morning. It was early; the crisp chill of the night had yet to fade. The track followed a water-filled ditch. Ahead, a line of gnarled trees lay across their path.
âI had intended to ask you not to mention how we found Tolly. Except, of course, to the family and the magistrate.â
Honoria frowned. âWhat do you mean?â
âIâd rather it was thought that we found him this morning, already dead.â
Honoria pursed her lips, and saw her defense
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