remember Daâ saying as the ton had labelled them invincible because all seven returned with nary a scratch.â
Catriona humphed. âAre they wealthy?â
âAyeâIâd say so.â
âProminent in society?â
âAyeâtheyâre well connected and all thaâ. Thereâs this group of themââ Jamie broke off, coloring.
Catriona narrowed her eyes. âThis group of them?â
Jamie shifted. âItâs nothing as . . .â His words trailed away.
âAs should concern me?â Catriona held his gaze mercilessly. âLet me be the judge of that. This group?â
She waited; eventually, Jamie capitulated. âSix of themâall cousins. The ton calls them the Bar Cynster.â
âAnd what does this group do?â
Jamie squirmed. âThey have reputations. And nicknames. Like Devil, and Demon, and Lucifer.â
âI see. And what nickname is Richard Cynster known by?â Jamieâs lips compressed mulishly; Catriona levelled her gaze at him.
âScandal.â
Catrionaâs lips thinned. âI might have guessed. And no, you need not explain how he came by the title.â
Jamie looked relieved. âI dinna recall Daâ saying much moreâother than they were all right powerful bastards wiâ the women, but he would say that, in the circumstances.â
Catriona humphed. Right powerful bastards with womenâso, thanks to her late guardianâs misbegotten notions, here she was, faced with a right powerful bastard who, on top of it all, was in truth a bastard. Did that make him more or less powerful? Somehow, she didnât think the answer was less. She looked at Jamie. âSeamus said nothing else?â
Jamie shook his head. âOther than that itâs only fools think they can stand against a Cynster.â
Right powerful bastards with women âthat, Catriona thought, summed it up. Arms crossed, she paced before the windows of the back parlor, keeping watch over the snow-covered lawn across which Richard Cynster would return to the house.
She could see it all nowâwhat Seamus had intended with his iniquitous will. His final attempt to interfere with her life, from beyond the grave, no less. She wasnât having it, a Cynster or not, powerful bastard or otherwise.
If anything, Richard Cynsterâs antecedents sounded even worse than sheâd imagined. She knew little of the ways of the ton, but the fact that his fatherâs wife, indeed, the whole family, had apparently so readily accepted a bastard into their midst, smacked of male dominance. At the very least, it suggested Cynster wives were weak, mere cyphers to their powerful husbands. Cynster males sounded like tyrants run amok, very likely domestic dictators, accustomed to ruling ruthlessly.
But no man would ever rule her, ruthlessly or otherwise. She would never allow that to happen; the fate of the vale and her people rested on her shoulders. And to fulfill that fate, to achieve her aim on this earth, she needed to remain free, independent, capable of exercising her will as required, capable of acting as her people needed, without the constraint of a conventional marriage. A conventional husband.
A conventional powerful bastard of a husband was simply not possible for the lady of the vale.
The distant scrunch of a boot on snow had her peering out the window. It was mid-afternoon; the light was rapidly fading. She saw the dark figure sheâd been waiting for emerge from the trees and stroll up the slope, his powerful physique in no way disguised by a heavy, many-caped greatcoat.
Panic clutched herâit had to be panic. It cut off her breathing and left her quivering. Suddenly, the room seemed far too dark. She grabbed a tinderbox and raced around, lighting every candle she could reach. By the time heâd gained the terrace, and she opened the long windows and waved him in, the room was ablaze.
He entered,
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