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“The thing is .  .  .” she began.

“Were you happy as a governess?”

“Beg pardon?”

“It could not have been easy, submerging your own personality to fit someone else’s preconceived notions of what you should be.”

She didn’t mind being a governess. It was the necessity for her elaborate disguise that was hard to bear. In some ways it was like a prison sentence, but she couldn’t tell him that. Behind the spectacles, her lashes flickered. She didn’t want his sympathy, she wanted his respect. She had to convince him that she was the right candidate for the position.

“Mr. Gray, the point I am trying to make is this.” Conscious that her tone verged on the tart side, she tried to sweeten it with a smile. “You may not think it to look at me, but I have knowledge of court life; I know what it is to prepare a girl for her first season; I am well versed in the modes and manners that prevail in the upper echelons of court circles. I don’t have the credentials to prove it, but I am quite willing to be put to the test. Ask me something, anything you like, and I shall endeavor to answer you.”

He could almost taste the desperation behind her words. She would know, of course, that he was after her. Did she fear him? If so, that was all to the good. One thing was certain. She did not fear Mr. Gray.

He had her in the palm of his hand. The thing to do now was to bring the interview to a speedy conclusion and arrange a time convenient to them both to convey her to the “villa” Nick had rented outside Wells. He did not wish to bring the interview to a close, not yet. There was something about Miss Deborah Weyman, a sadness, a wistfulness, and yes, a heart-tugging bravado that drew him like a magnet. If only for a few moments, he wanted to prolong the pleasure of her company. It might well be the only time she would look upon him with favor. Once again, he felt the sting of regret, and was taken by surprise.

“I don’t know what to ask,” he said, throwing her a helpless look.

“Think of your sister. What is it you wish for her?”

That was easy to answer. The real Margaret was quite a handful, and likely to give him a crop of silver hair before he had safely married her off. “Well .  .  .,” he began, warming to his part.

“Nothing you can say will embarrass me, I promise you.”

His lashes lowered to half mast. If the lady was eager to play games, he was willing to indulge her. “As Miss Hare may have told you,” he said, “my sister, Margaret, is quite an .  .  . um .  .  . heiress. Oh don’t mistake me. Margaret is no fool. She knows about fortune hunters and men of that ilk. It is experience in turning them off that she lacks. What advice would you give her?”

“Nothing could be simpler,” said Deborah, bringing to the question the same directness she would bring to a problem that one of the girls had raised in class. “Avoid such men as if they were poison.”

And that’s exactly what he had told Meg, not that she’d listened to him. For all her paucity of years, she thought she knew how to handle men. He’d wager that Meg knew more than Miss Weyman did.

Her bright eyes were watching him. Making a steeple with his fingers, he said, “With some gentlemen, that only makes them more persistent. They see it as a challenge. What if .  .  . what if she were caught unawares, like .  .  . like you, for instance, alone, with me, behind closed doors?”

Deborah’s eyes flicked nervously to the closed door, then back to Gray. Cautiously inching forward in her chair, she looked with alarm at his left shoulder.

“What is it?” asked Gray, frowning.

“Don’t move,” she whispered. “There’s a wasp crawling inside your collar.”

“What?!”

While Gray lurched to his feet and batted ineffectually with his hands, Deborah darted to the door. With her hand
on the knob, she turned back to laugh at him. “It’s all right, Mr. Gray,” she said. “There was no wasp.”

By degrees, his glare gave way to a sheepish grin. Shaking his head, he said, “That was diabolical!” and he strolled toward her. When he came to the door, he negligently propped one shoulder against it. “You have convinced me that Margaret could do no better,” he said. “In the interests of harmony, though, I think we should avoid the word ‘governess’ and substitute ‘companion.’ What do you say, Mrs. Mornay?”

Deborah’s eyes were brilliant. Her voice wavered. “You won’t regret it, Mr. Gray. I promise you.”

“No, I daresay I won’t. Then it only remains to arrange the day and the hour when I may convey you to my sister.”

“I must speak with Miss Hare first.”

“Naturally.”

Deborah pulled on the doorknob to no avail. “Would you mind, Mr. Gray?” she said, indicating that the door would not budge because he was still propped against it.

In one smooth, unthreatening movement, he caught her by the wrist and held her fast. There was no fear in Deborah’s eyes, only a question.

“And what if, my dear Mrs. Mornay,” he said, “my sister should find herself in this predicament?” He raised her wrist and resisted her feeble struggles when she tried to free herself. “What advice would you offer then?”

Deborah dimpled up at him. “Assuming the girl has lungs, I would advise her to use them. Scream, Mr. Gray. She should scream, and when she is rescued, as she is sure to be, she should give out that a wasp crawled inside
her
collar.”

“You have an answer for everything,” he said in a slow, sleepy voice, and he edged closer. “I know how to prevent a scream. What if .  .  . what if the gentleman in question were to kiss her?” His eyes dropped to Deborah’s mouth.

He was close, so very close, and she could feel his warm breath on her cool cheek. It wasn’t fear or curiosity that
held her captive, nor yet the restraining grasp on her wrist. A strange yearning uncurled inside her, then spread out in ripples, till she was shivering in anticipation. Slowly, inexorably, he tugged on her wrist, bringing her closer. Her lips parted and she forgot to breathe. His head descended. Hers lifted.

A gong sounded, just outside the door. Gray’s eyes flared. Deborah blinked rapidly, then she looked about her as though she had no recollection of how she had got there.

When she gasped, he released her and took a quick step back. She was still gazing up at him, horror-struck, when he opened the door with a flourish and motioned her to precede him.

“If I’m not mistaken,” he said, “study hall is over.”

Her cheeks flooded with color and her eyes anxiously searched his. “Mr. Gray, I don’t know what .  .  .”

He spoke at the same moment. “You were going to stamp on my foot. That’s it, isn’t it?”

“What?”

“You were playing up to me. Then, when I was distracted, you were going to stamp on my foot?”

She fastened on his words as if he had thrown her a lifeline. “Y-yes,” then more emphatically, “Yes. That’s exactly what was in my mind.”

When they came into the corridor, they were caught up in the rush of girls who were coming and going to their various classes. Deborah was glad of the confusion, and embarked on a disjointed flow of small talk that lasted till Mr. Gray had taken his leave of her. As soon as the door closed upon him, she spun on her heel and made for the long pier glass in the teachers’ common room.

Her reflection was vastly reassuring, she told herself. Mr. Gray could not possibly have been flirting with her. It was all in her head. Her steps were slow and heavy as she made her way to Miss Hare’s office.

DANGEROUS TO LOVE

A Bantam Book / July 1994

Bantam reissue / April 1997
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1994 by Mary George.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information address: Bantam Books.

eISBN: 978-0-307-56733-8

Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words “Bantam Books” and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540 Broadway. New York, New York 10036.

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