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Authors: Sara Bennett - Greentree Sisters 02 - Rules of Passion

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Harold stretched out his hand and after a moment Max took it. Their fingers gripped hard.

“Do you think she really wanted me dead?” Max asked as if he couldn’t help it.

Harold hesitated. “She tried so many times and failed. I wonder if she really meant it to happen. She
was such a good shot, Max, and yet she missed you that day.”

“Yes,” Max seemed to take comfort from that.

“What does it matter anyway?” Harold went on, his voice shaking. “We’ll be gone and the duke will make you his heir again. You will be Duke of Barwon and live at Valland House. It’s your destiny and it seems that no matter how you wriggle like a worm on a hook, you can’t escape it.”

And with a grim smile, Harold followed after his wife.

Max sat down on the piano seat as if his legs could no longer hold him. He felt sick. How could he have thought he knew Susannah so well? She had been a stranger to him. Had he failed her when she first came to England? Perhaps if he had paid more attention to her, got her to talk about her past…But the duke hadn’t wanted that. He had warned Max and Harold not to remind the girl of sad memories, and they had obeyed him.

“Max?”

The voice was familiar, but for a moment he was so lost he couldn’t place it.

“Max, it’s me,” it went on gently. “It’s Marietta.”

He turned to look at her. “Marietta,” he said. He rubbed a hand over his face. “I suppose you’re going to tell me you can’t marry me now.”

She stepped back from him, startled, her eyes as blue as the ocean. He wanted to lose himself in them, find the love and peace he knew was there, but he held back.

“It’s ironic, isn’t it? My father will want to reinstate me as the heir to the dukedom of Barwon, and
all that goes with it—I’ll be one of the richest men in England—and you don’t want me.”

He was not himself, Marietta could see that. She did not blame him for being angry and hurt after what he had just witnessed; he must be wondering if he could trust anyone ever again. But Max had nearly died tonight; Marietta had nearly lost him forever. That tended to put things like soiled reputations and scandals into perspective.

“I want to marry you, Max. I love you. I can be a duchess if you want me to be, in fact I think I would make an extremely good duchess.”

Was that a smile in his eyes? But it was gone as quickly as it came. He looked bruised. “But there’s more, isn’t there?” he asked bleakly.

“Yes, there’s more. I was about to explain to you at Vauxhall Gardens, when we were interrupted by Slipper.”

“Marietta,” he groaned, “will you just tell me.”

“Aphrodite and my father plan to leave me the club. Not now, of course, but later on, when Aphrodite can no longer run it. They’ve said they want me to have it and, Max, I think I would like that very much. But I can see you may not approve of your wife being the owner of a place like that, and I’ll understand if—”

Max frowned. “What nonsense is this?”

Marietta was trembling.

He stood up. And then he said, loudly, so there could be no mistake, “I love you. If I have to be a duke, then the least you can do is make it bearable by being my duchess. And as for the club, I don’t give a damn. Do what you like. Open half a dozen.”

He meant it; he really didn’t care about anything except having Marietta as his wife.

She began to cry, and then she clung to his neck and kissed him, and he kissed her back.

“I thought he was going to shoot you,” she sobbed. “I thought I would lose you, Max, oh Max, I love you so.”

“I thought I was going to lose you,” he retorted hoarsely. “Don’t ever play the heroine again.”

And then they just held each other, finding comfort in their love, and grateful that despite all of the bad things that had happened they still had each other. And that was the best thing of all.

One year later in Cornwall…

B
lackwood wasn’t as grim as Max had threatened, although it was certainly no Valland House. Marietta found its isolation rather exciting, especially at night, like now, with the sky ablaze with stars and the sea breaking gently against the sand. They had been married for ten months and every day was wonderful, but it was no easy matter being the wife of a man in Max’s position. She had duties to perform and tasks to oversee, and hundreds of underlings who looked to her for guidance.

Exhausting.

Which was why it was so nice to be here, at Blackwood, alone together. Well, almost.

Marietta grimaced as she picked her way down the cliff path that led to the cove and its white sand. Max had been very diligent, checking over the details of the running of the old mine he had reopened.
The people in the village had applauded him, actually cheered and clapped as their coach passed through, on the way to the house. Marietta had not realized until then how much the mine meant to them, and how desperate they were for the employment Max had given them.

He was a hero.

But even heroes need to enjoy themselves, and Marietta had something she wanted to tell him, so she’d left a note on his desk, where he could not help but see it.

The duke had reinstated Max as his heir and publicly apologized. Max had not forgiven him yet, not completely, but Marietta had seen signs of him weakening. Whatever the duke had done in the past, he was Max’s father after all, and despite herself, she had felt almost sorry for him. Sensing it Barwon had begun to turn to her more and more—they dealt quite well together these days. But Max had warned her not to take sides against her husband, and proceeded to show her what she would be missing if she did. Very pleasurably.

Harold and Susannah were gone, although there were letters. Max had insisted that the duke return Susannah’s property to her, and although it was far too late and far too little, at least it went some small way to balancing the ledger. Susannah seemed not to remember what she had done and why, and Harold spent his days making her happy. Marietta wanted to be angry, and she was, for Max’s sake, but she pitied them, too. At least, she told herself, they had each other.

Lady Greentree and Mr. Jardine were very coy of
late, but Marietta was beginning to believe they might find their happy ending. As for Lil and Ian Keith…matters had cooled between them. Lil would not discuss it, but Marietta hoped that whatever impediment lay between them would eventually be resolved.

Love conquered all. Didn’t it?

The night was warm, and a salty breeze stirred the sea. It was calm, hardly any waves at all, and Marietta smiled as she reached the sand at last. She glanced back then and saw him following, his dark shadow against the moon. She begun to remove her robe as she walked, letting it fall to the sand. The air was cool against her skin.

She heard his steps quicken, drawing closer.

“Marietta?” he sounded as if he needed to swallow.

“You’ve been neglecting me,” she said gently, walking naked toward the waves, her golden hair rippling down her back and brushing the curve of her bottom and thighs.

He cursed, and when she glanced over her shoulder, saw that he was hastily removing his own clothing. With a smile she began to wade into the water, shivering a little.

His arms came around her, his hands cupping her breasts, his mouth hot against her cheek. “My darling courtesan,” he murmured. “Have I really been neglecting you, Madame Coeur?”

“A little. I just wanted you to myself for an hour or two. It’s impossible at Valland House, and even in London there’s always something to do or someone to see.”

“Ah, the hectic life of a budding duchess.”

He turned her in his arms, letting the waves wash over their legs, content for a moment to hold her naked body against his.

“Are you sorry you married me after all?” he asked her at last.

Marietta reached up to kiss his mouth, her hands stroking the hard flesh of his chest, and smiled into his eyes. “No, never. Every moment is wonderful.”

Max grinned back at her. “My scandalous wife.”

“Very scandalous,” she whispered.

He dipped his head to kiss her breasts, eagerly, his hands sliding down her back to cup her bottom and lift her, so that when he bent his knees slightly, and parted her thighs, he could enter her and be where he longed to be.

Marietta gasped and arched her throat, gazing up at the night sky. The stars shone down on them, their reflection dancing in the wash of the waves. The pleasure built as gently, peaking and then slipping away to leave them basking in its glow.

When they were dressed again, Max carried her in his arms across the sand, back toward the house on the cliff.

“I have something to tell you,” Marietta said, nuzzling against his throat, enjoying the scent of him.

“You’re not opening a bordello?”

She smiled against his skin. “No, I’m having your baby.”

He stopped and looked down into her eyes, and the joy and elation in his face brought her to tears. And then he began to walk again, his arms tightening about her, as if she was the most precious thing in the world.

About the Author

S
ARA
B
ENNETT
has always had an interest in history, and to survive a series of mind-numbing jobs, she turned to writing historical romance. She lives in an old house with her husband and two children in the state of Victoria, Australia, where she tries to keep the house and garden tidy, but rarely succeeds—she’d rather be writing or reading.

Sara is hard at work on Francesca’s story, the final book in this sexy Victorian-era trilogy. And to the delight of her fans, this prolific author is also currently writing a paranormal series that will be out in Summer 2006, under the pseudonym Kaye Mackenzie.

You can write to her at
www.sara-bennett.com
(don’t forget the hyphen!) or Publicity Department, Avon Books, 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022-5299.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

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This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

RULES OF PASSION
. Copyright © 2005 by Sara Bennett. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

ePub edition February 2007 ISBN 9780061753381

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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