The Proposal

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Authors: Mary Balogh
Tags: Fiction, Historical, historcal romance
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life.
    “If Hugo had fetched a gargoyle, Vincent,” the Earl of Berwick said, “it would have made no difference to you, would it?”
    “Ah,” Lord Darleigh said, turning his eyes with great accuracy in the direction of the earl and smiling sweetly, “it would not matter to me, Ralph, would it, provided she had the soul of an angel.”
    “A hit indeed, Ralph,” Viscount Ponsonby said.
    And that was when Gwen heard the echo of what Viscount Darleigh had said to her— We sent Hugo down onto the beach today to find you … He fetched a rare beauty.
    “Lord Trentham came to find me?” she asked. “But how did he know I would be there? I did not plan that walk ahead of time.”
    “You would do well, Vincent,” Lord Trentham said, “to tie your tongue in a knot.”
    “Too late,” Viscount Ponsonby said. “Your secret must out, Hugo. Lady Muir, for a number of reasons, all of which seem sound to Hugo, he has decided to take a bride this year. His only p-problem is selection. He is arguably the finest soldier the British armies have produced in the last twenty years. He is not, alas, equally renowned as an accomplished l-lover and wooer of the fair sex. When he explained his situation to us last evening and added, wise man, that he was not in search of any grand love affair, he was advised to look about him for a personable female, explain to her that he is a lord and really quite f-fabulously wealthy, and then suggest that she marry him. He agreed that he would go down to the beach today and find such a woman. And here you are.”
    If her cheeks grew any hotter, Gwen thought, they would surely burst into flame. And all her earlier embarrassment and anger had returned with interest. She looked at Lord Trentham, who was standing stiff and erect like a soldier at ease, but not at ease, and her chin lifted and her eyes sparked.
    “Perhaps, then, Lord Trentham,” she said, “you would care to inform me of your stature and wealth now, in the presence of your friends. And make me your offer of marriage.”
    He looked directly at her and said nothing. He was not really given the chance.
    “Ma’am,” Lord Darleigh said, his blue eyes on hers again, though now they looked as troubled as his voice sounded. “I spoke to make everyone laugh . It was not until the words were out of my mouth that I realized how unpardonably embarrassing they were to you. We were, of course, all joking last evening, and it was pure chance that you were on the beach and hurt yourself and that Hugo happened to be there to offer you assistance. I beg you to forgive me and to forgive Hugo . He is blameless in your embarrassment. The fault is all mine.”
    Gwen transferred her gaze to him. And she laughed.
    “I beg your pardon,” she said. “I can quite see the funny side of the coincidence.”
    She was not sure she spoke the truth.
    “Thank you, ma’am.” The young lord sounded relieved.
    “It is time that particular topic of conversation was put to rest,” Sir Benedict said. “Where is your home, Lady Muir? When you are not staying with … Mrs. Parkinson, is it?”
    “I live at Newbury Abbey in Dorsetshire,” Gwen said. “Or rather, my home is the dower house in the park. I live there with my mother. My brother and his family live at the abbey—the Earl of Kilbourne, that is.”
    “I knew him slightly in the Peninsula,” Lord Trentham said, “though he had a viscount’s title then. He was shipped home, if I remember correctly, after his scouting party was ambushed in the mountains of Portugal, leaving him close to death. He made a full recovery, then?”
    “He is well,” Gwen said.
    “It was Kilbourne’s wife, was it not,” the duke asked, “who turned out to be the long-lost daughter of the Duke of Portfrey?”
    “Yes,” Gwen said. “Lily, my sister-in-law.”
    “Portfrey and I were close friends in the long-ago days of our youth,” the Duke of Stanbrook said.
    “He is married to my aunt,” she said. “Those

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