would know her shame. Why prolong the
inevitable?
Burton’s eyes gleamed with feral
delight.
“Guffald,”
Stanton’s
voice
deepened. “Do not take part in this
grievance.”
Guffald’s gaze slanted toward
Constance, where it lingered. His eyes
glazed with unreciprocated desire. He
appeared lost in emotion. When he
finally spoke, an odd smile broadened
his face and his words cut deep.
“I was on the
Octavia
when she set
sail with Lady Constance aboard.
Midway to Spain, we were brutally
attacked. My life was spared,” he said.
“And while I was allowed to move
freely about the ship, Lady Constance
spent her days and nights in the captain’s
cabin.” He paused. “I have no
knowledge of what transpired there.”
Constance stiffened but Stanton’s
reaction buoyed her spirits. His grip on
her upper arm offered silent support. But
the damage was done. Her reputation lay
in tatters. All the doors her father had
strived to protect slammed forcefully
shut. Time alone would reveal the
product of her days and nights in a
pirate’s cabin, a swollen belly. Soon
everyone would know she was a harlot.
She was a fool to believe, even for a
moment, that she could find happiness.
“It is plain Lady Constance has
been compromised,” Burton erupted.
“You appear to have done that
yourself, Burton! Need I remind you that
is not the mark of a gentleman?”
Burton sneered. Stanton’s hand
flexed.
Higgins
and
his
fellow
politicians gathered at the edge of the
crowd to shield Constance from further
disgrace.
Stanton spoke. “I’ve known Henry
Guffald for many years. He is an honest
man. A man who speaks about things he
has firsthand knowledge of, unlike some
who would disparage the innocent on
gossip alone.” Guilt registered on
Guffald’s face. That he appeared
shocked by Stanton’s support proved he
regretted his participation in the fiasco.
Constance stared incredulously at
Stanton, once more perplexed by the man
who had asked to become her husband.
“Does this vision of loveliness
look ill-used?” Stanton asked the crowd.
Guffald
didn’t
need
further
prodding. “No,” he volunteered.
“Privilege masks deceit,” Burton
said.
“Indeed it does,” Stanton charged.
“Look in the mirror, sir.”
Burton’s eyes hardened. Above his
cravat, his neck reddened. His chest
heaved and Constance feared he would
combust.
“I
do
not
believe
Burton’s
deception,” Stanton continued. “As the
future Duke of Blendingham, I have a
reputation to uphold and my father’s
legacy to protect.” Turning toward
Constance, he lifted her hand and placed
a chaste kiss upon her trembling fingers.
“It is still my wish to marry Lady
Constance, if she will accept my hand.”
The crowd broke into applause.
Someone screamed as Burton advanced,
a vicious scowl marring his face.
“I will see you in Green Park,” he
growled.
Guffald sprang forward, blocking
Burton’s path. “Lord Burton, it’s my duty
to inform you that Stanton is not a man to
trifle with on the field. He’s quite
skilled with powder and steel. You will
not find victory in the park.”
Burton hesitated, and then spat,
“You’ll regret this, Stanton. You cannot
outwit a fox.”
“Fox?
What
a
peculiar
comparison,” Stanton noted.
Stanton’s gaze flitted to Guffald,
but the lieutenant, Constance noted, had
disappeared. He turned back toward
Burton with a smile, and in one graceful
action, flipped his quizzing glass up to
his eye.
“I do believe you’ve outfoxed
yourself, sir, for you’ve lost said lady in
a pitiable attempt at the cut direct.
Inopportune and badly done.”
Burton smoothed his rumpled
jacket, scanned the frowning faces
focused upon him, and turned his rabid
gaze upon her. She shivered. Stanton
chuckled. As she turned to gaze into her
husband-to-be’s eyes and found they did
not mirror his mirth, she was led to
believe he fought terrible demons to
maintain his poise.
“Mark my words, Lady. You will
be mine,” Burton professed, hoping to
make her tremble head to foot. He
succeeded.
Simon swiftly ended Burton’s
tirade. He escorted the man toward the
exit where Cooper stood ready with
Burton’s coat, gloves, and hat in hand. “I
always get what belongs to me,” the
braggart boasted as he marched through
the large oak doors.
Though
Stanton’s
merciful
deliverance
had
diminished
her
mortification, Constance worried that
she’d woven a more intricate and
deadlier web than Burton could have
spun. She had given herself to a pirate,
was pregnant with said pirate’s child,
and was now in jeopardy of losing a
duke’s trust and compassion.
Burton wanted her. Denied his
chief desire, he’d attempted to ruin any
happiness she might have found.
How long before Lord Stanton
sought to do the same?
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
Within in a few short weeks, the Sunday
bans were read and a special marriage
license had been obtained through
Constance’s father’s business solicitor
at the offices of the Bishop of
Canterbury. There were fittings and
meetings, little time to learn each other’s
likes and dislikes. A local clergyman,
Reverend Hastings, commissioned to
marry Constance and Lord Stanton in
Throckmorton House, officiated at the
ceremony with her father, uncle, and
Mrs. Mortimer in attendance. Shortly
after reciting their vows, a breakfast
feast awaited of various sweet breads,
buttered toast, tongue, stewed oysters,
eggs, fruit, tea, and chocolate. At
Constance’s request, a beautiful fruity
cake, to commemorate the occasion, sat
on Aunt Lydia’s side-table in the parlor.
Bound in matrimony, Constance and
Stanton ate in silence while newly
bonded brothers, her father and Uncle
Simon, caught up on various financial
prospects. With little else to occupy her
time,
Mrs.
Mortimer
cast
her
unwavering attention upon Constance’s
new husband, meticulously observing his
mannerisms and character, as if eager to
find just cause not to let Constance out of
her sight.
I do not like it, Constance. He’s a
strange man with unruly desires!
Constance had little to reassure
Mrs. Mortimer. Though Stanton had been
quite amiable, sending flowers, edible
sweets, and notes promising his undying
devotion, his visits had been infrequent
since the ball. And then there was the
matter of having lost her most precious
possession — her mother’s necklace.
The house had been scoured three times,
servants interviewed, but no clues as to
its whereabouts had been revealed.
Constance had been devastated.
Inconsolable, she’d longed to be
comforted by Stanton. But along with the
necklace’s
disappearance,
she’d
suffered cruelly from his inattention. No
matter apologies to the contrary, an
unwelcome chasm had grown between
them. Now they were practically
strangers.
Gazing quizzically across the table
at her new husband, she wondered if
he’d even taken notice of the extra care
she’d taken with her toilette. A man of
distinct
tastes,
he
was
dressed
immaculately from head to toe in a black
double-breasted coat, silver waistcoat,
and gray inexpressibles that reached
downward to his stockings and shiny
black pumps. His stiff collar flattered a
flawlessly tied cravat, in keeping with
Percy’s dramatic élan. Lace peaked out
from beneath his linen sleeves, caressing
the tips of his long, lean fingers, and
bold family ring. His hair, pulled tightly
away from his face, accentuated his
features, making his powdered face
appear dashing. Perhaps it was wishful
thinking on her part, but without the
immaculately tied cravat at his neck,
which gave his lips a sensuous fullness,
somehow he reminded her of Thomas.
Constance
shook
off
the
preposterous thought and dabbed a
napkin to her mouth, moistening her lips
with the tip of her tongue to summon her
courage. She quickly buried thoughts of
Thomas’s kiss, the babe growing in her
womb, all that reminded her that her
marriage was built on deceit. Lowering
her gaze, she cringed at the thought of
losing Stanton’s affections, which she
reasoned would be an inevitable event.
A man was a man, after all. Her new
husband would not find pleasure in a
broken bride or another man’s bastard.
Somehow, as if sensing the
downward turn of her thoughts, Stanton
reached across the table and tilted her
chin toward him. “What thoughts disturb
the lines of your beautiful face, this day
of days, my gel? You look as though you
are about to melt into tears.”
His smile was infectious, but could
not banish a wash of tears threatening to
spill down her cheeks. She felt unworthy
to have won such a temperate man.
“Tears of joy, no other,” she lied.
“You have nothing to fear. Ours
will be a perfect union,” he insisted,
striving to calm her nerves. He took her
trembling hand in his and brazenly
placed a kiss upon her fingers. The heat
of his breath warmed her flesh, a
startling sensation. He peered over her
hand with eyes promising a lifetime’s
devotion.
“No one is perfect, my Lord,” she
said. “Do not place me on a pedestal.”
Squeezing her hand affectionately,
he yielded, “Enjoy the heights. I predict
you shall reign over my heart forever.”
His brow perked and he added, “Don’t
you think it is high time we dispense
with formalities, Constance? You are my
wife, after all. Percy, will do quite
nicely, henceforth.”
She opened her lips to comply, but
then hesitated. More than anything, she
desperately wanted to mouth the one
name she could never utter before him
— Thomas.
“Come now, I promise it will not
hurt,” he jested.
“Very well … Percy,” she blurted.
Saying his name was not the
struggle she expected. Percy, of course,
sounded much better than Lord Burton,
for she was sure that man would never
have allowed her use of his given name.
An overpowering chill crept up her
spine. Though destiny had steered her
away from Thomas, she thankfully had
not been forced to promise her undying
devotion to such a one as Burton.
“You
have
nothing
to
fear,
Constance,” Percy said with an uncanny
way of reading her thoughts. “Life in
Sumpton Hall will bring you the peace
and solitude you seek.”
Solitude was not exactly what she
desired. She wanted her child’s father.
Yet, that was impossible. However,
there was solace in knowing her babe
would have a decent upbringing. With a
binding marriage contract, her next feat
would be to ensure Percy believed the
child was his.
She smiled what she hoped was her
most becoming smile. “With you at my
side, Percy, what more could I want?”
• • •
Constance, dressed in a white
muslin gown with the faintest pale green
floral accents, looked good enough to
eat. Her hair, swept back with pale