Authors: Mary Balogh
“No,” he said.
“It is a love worth fighting for,” she said.
His arms tightened still further.
“I want to fight for it,” she said. “It won't be easy. Not for either of us. And not for our children. But if you think there is a chance for us, Alexander, I want to take it. I think our love is a precious gift. I don't want to throw it away. I won't throw it away.”
He kissed her cheek, the only part of her face exposed to him. “I'll call on your father tomorrow and ask for you,” he said.
She chuckled against his shoulder and then sobered again. She lifted her head and looked into his eyes. “Will you, Alexander?” she asked. “It will mean so much to him. And to me.”
“And then I will call on your grandparents,” he said, “and ask them. A more thorny matter, I believe. If I get past those hurdles, I will take you to Glanrhyd and we can ask Verity together.”
She smiled slowly at him. “Alexander,” she said, “are you sure? Are you quite, quite sure?”
“Yes,” he said. “Are you?”
She nodded. “Yes, I am sure.”
He kissed her then and they clung together, breathless with the realization of how close they had come after all to cowardice, to giving in to the fear of facing down the unknown and stepping firmly into an impossibility.
“It is dusk already,” he said. “Darkness has fallen while we have been sitting here.”
She was aware of her surroundings for the first time in many minutes. “It comes early at this time of year,” she said.
“It is chilly up here,” he said. But his words were more question than statement.
“But not too chilly.” She lay back against the ground, drawing
him down with her. “It is not too cold, my love.” She smiled into his eyes, so blue, so intense with his love, so close to her own. “My love.”
He smiled back as his hands began to love her, before his mouth followed suit.
“Cariad,”
he whispered. “You are going to teach me Welsh, Siân. My vocabulary is severely limited. But I learned the best word first.” He rubbed his nose against hers.
“Cariad.”
But then for a long time he did not need words at
all.
T
HE
failure of the demonstration at Newport in November 1839 spelled the effective end of Chartism in the British Isles, though it limped on for several more years.
Of the many men who were arrested after the demonstration very few were actually put on trial. Of those who were, most were jailed for a year. Some were transported.
The three leadersâJohn Frost, Zephaniah Williams, and William Jonesâwere all sentenced to death. However, at the last moment they were reprieved and sentenced to transportation for life instead. Only John Frost ever came back home.
I have taken two deliberate liberties with history.
Some women did attend the Chartist meetings and take out membership in the Chartist Association. For the sake of my plot I have made it seem as if women were forbidden to have anything to do with the movement.
The mayor of Newport was wounded in the shooting at the Westgate Inn. I have been kinder to him. In my story he is still hale and hearty enough to entertain my hero after all the shooting has stopped.
Read on for a look at the next book
in the Survivors' Club series,
Â
Only a Promise
by Mary Balogh
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Available from Signet in June 2015.
T
HERE
could surely be nothing worse than having been born a woman, Chloe Muirhead thought with unabashed self-pity as she sucked a globule of blood off her left forefinger and looked to see if any more was about to bubble up and threaten to ruin the strip of delicate lace she was sewing back onto one of the Duchess of Worthingham's best afternoon caps. Unless, perhaps, one had the good fortune to be a duchess. Or else a single lady in possession of forty thousand pounds a year and the freedom to set up one's own independent establishment.
She, alas, was not a duchess. Or in sole possession of even forty
pence
a year apart from her allowance from her father. Besides, she did not
want
to set up somewhere independently. It sounded suspiciously lonely. She could not really claim to be lonely now. The duchess was kind to her. So was the duke, in his gruff way. And whenever her grace entertained afternoon visitors or went visiting herself, she always invited Chloe to join her.
It was not the duchess's fault that she was eighty-two years old to Chloe's twenty-seven. Or that the neighbors with whom she consorted most frequently must all have been upward of sixty. In some cases they were very much upward. Mrs. Booth, for example, who always carried a large ear trumpet and let out a loud, querulous “Eh?” every time someone so much as opened her mouth to speak, was ninety-three.
If she had been born male, Chloe thought, rubbing her thumb briskly over her forefinger to make sure the bleeding had stopped
and it was safe to pick up her needle again, she might have done all sorts of interesting, adventurous things when she had felt it imperative to leave home. As it was, all
she
had been able to think of to do was write to the Duchess of Worthingham, who was her mother's godmother and had been her late grandmother's dearest friend, and offer her services as a companion. An
unpaid
companion, she had been careful to explain.
A kind and gracious letter had come back within days, as well as a sealed note for Chloe's father. The duchess would be delighted to welcome dear Chloe to Manville Court, but as a guest,
NOT
as an employeeâthe
not
had been capitalized and heavily underlined. And Chloe might stay as long as she wishedâforever, if the duchess had her way. She could not think of anything more delightful than to have someone young to brighten her days and make her feel young again. She only hoped Sir Kevin Muirhead could spare his daughter for a prolonged visit. She showed wonderful tact in adding that, of course, as she had in writing separately to him, for Chloe had explained in her own letter just why living at home had become intolerable to her, at least for a while, much as she loved her father and hated to upset him.
So she had come. She would be forever grateful to the duchess, who treated her more like a favored granddaughter than a virtual stranger and basically self-invited guest. But oh, she
was
lonely too. One could be lonely and unhappy while being grateful at the same time, could one not?
And, ah, yes. She was unhappy too.
Her world had been turned completely upside down
twice
within the past six years, which ought to have meant if life proceeded along logical lines, as it most certainly did not, that the second time it was turned right side up again. She had lost everything any young woman could ever ask for the first timeâhopes and dreams, the promise of love and marriage and happily-ever-after, the prospect of security and her own place in society. Hope had revived last year, though in a more muted and modest form. But that had been dashed too, and her very identity had hung in the balance. In the four years
between the two disasters, her mother had died. Was it any wonder she was unhappy?
She gave the delicate needlework her full attention again. If she allowed herself to wallow in self-pity, she would be in danger of becoming one of those habitual moaners and complainers everyone avoided.
It was still only very early in May. A largish mass of clouds covered the sun and did not look as if it planned to move off anytime soon, and a brisk breeze was gusting along the east side of the house, directly across the terrace outside the morning room, where Chloe sat sewing. It had not been a sensible idea to come outside, but it had rained quite unrelentingly for the past three days, and she had been desperate to escape the confines of the house and breathe in some fresh air.
She ought to have brought her shawl out with her, even her cloak and gloves, she thought, though then of course she would not have been able to sew, and she had promised to have the cap ready before the duchess awoke from her afternoon sleep. Dratted cap and dratted lace. But that was quite unfair, for she had volunteered to do it even when the duchess had made a mild protest.
“Are you quite sure it will be no trouble, my dear?” she had asked. “Bunker is perfectly competent with a needle.”
Miss Bunker was her personal maid.
“Of course I am,” Chloe had assured her. “It will be my pleasure.”
The duchess always had that effect upon her. For all the obvious sincerity of her welcome and kindness of her manner, Chloe felt the obligation, if not to earn her living, then at least to make herself useful whenever she was able.
She was shivering by the time she had completed her task and cut the thread with fingers that felt stiff from the cold. She held out the cap, draped over her right fist. The stitches were invisible. No one would be able to tell that a repair had been made.
She did not want to go back inside, despite the cold. The duchess would probably be up from her sleep and would be in the drawing
room bright with happy anticipation of the expected arrival of her grandson. She would be eager to extol his many virtues yet again though he had not been to Manville since Christmas. Chloe was tired of hearing of his virtues. She doubted he had any.
Not that she had ever met him in person to judge for herself, it was true. But she did know him by reputation. He and her brother, Graham, had been at school together. Ralph Stockwood, who had since assumed his father's courtesy title of Earl of Berwick, had been a charismatic leader there. He had been liked and admired and emulated by almost all the other boys, even though he had also been one of a close-knit group of four handsome, athletic, clever boys. Graham had spoken critically and disapprovingly of Ralph Stockwood, though Chloe had always suspected that he envied that favored inner circle.
After school, the four friends all took up commissions in the same prestigious cavalry regiment and went off to the Peninsula to fight the forces of Napoleon Bonaparte while Graham went to Oxford to study theology and become a clergyman. He had arrived home from the final term at school upset because Ralph Stockwood had called him a sniveling prig and lily-livered coward. Chloe did not know the context in which the insult had been hurled, but she had not felt kindly disposed toward Graham's erstwhile schoolmate ever since. And she never had liked the sound of him. She did not like boys, or men, who lorded it arrogantly over others and accepted their homage as a right.
Not many months after they had embarked for the Peninsula, Lieutenant Stockwood's three friends had been killed in the same battle, and he had been carried off the field and then home to England so severely wounded that he had not been expected to survive.
Chloe had felt sorry for him at the time, but her sympathies had soon been alienated again. Graham, in his capacity as a clergyman, had called upon him in London a day or two after he had been brought home from Portugal. Graham had been admitted to the sickroom, but the wounded man had sworn foully at him and ordered him to get out and never come back.
Chloe did not expect to like the Earl of Berwick, then, even if he
was
the Duke of Worthingham's heir and the duchess's beloved only grandson. She had not forgiven his description of her brother as a lily-livered coward. Graham was a
pacifist
. That did not make him a coward. Indeed, it took a great deal of courage to stand up for peace against men who were in love with war. And she had not forgiven the earl for cursing Graham after he had been injured without even listening to what he had come to say. The fact that he had undoubtedly been in great pain at the time did not excuse such rudeness to an old school friend. She had decided long ago that the earl was brash, arrogant, self-centered, even heartless.
And he was on his way to Manville Court. He was coming at the duchess's behest, it must be added, not because he had chosen of his own free will to visit the grandparents who doted on him. Chloe suspected that the summons had something to do with the duke's health, which had been causing her grace some concern for the past couple of months. She fancied that he was coughing more than usual and that his habit of covering his heart with one hand when he did so was a bad sign. He did not complain of feeling unwellânot, at least, in Chloe's hearingâand he saw his physician only when the duchess insisted. Afterward, he had called the doctor an old quack who knew no better than to prescribe pills and potions that served only to make the duke feel ill.
Chloe did not know what the true state of his health was, but she did know that he had celebrated his eighty-fifth birthday last autumn, and eighty-five was an awfully advanced age to be.
However it was, the Earl of Berwick had been summoned and he was expected today. Chloe did not want to meet him. She knew she would not like him. More important, perhaps, she admitted reluctantly to herself, she did not want him to meet
her
, a sort of charity guest of his grandmother's, an aging twenty-seven-year-old spinster with a doubtful reputation and no prospects. A pathetic creature, in fact.
But the thought finally triggered laughterâat her own expense. She had whipped herself into a thoroughly cross and disagreeable
mood, and it just would not do. She got determinedly to her feet. She must go up to her room without delay and change her dress and make sure her hair was tidy. She might be a poor aging spinster with no prospects, but there was no point in being an abject one who was worthy only of pity or scorn. That would be too excruciatingly humiliating.
She hurried on her way upstairs, shaking herself free of the self-pity in which she had languished for too long. Goodness, if she hated her life so much, then it was high time she
did
something about it. The only question was
what
? Was there anything she
could
do? A woman had so few options. Sometimes, indeed, it seemed she had none at all, especially when she had a
past
, even if she was in no way to blame for any of it.