Mortimer’s hand. “It can’t be true,” she
said. “My mother’s locket means
everything to me. Why would anyone
steal it, especially before my wedding?”
A sympathetic smile brightened the
woman’s features. “You’re such an
innocent.”
A knock sounded once, then twice.
Within
moments,
Constance
found
herself alone as Morty was summoned
away. She gazed about her bedroom,
dejectedly. She wasn’t innocent. She’d
given herself to a pirate. She didn’t
belong in Percy’s townhouse. She didn’t
deserve to be a duchess. And the loss of
her mother’s locket revealed she wasn’t
responsible enough to wear the rubies
Percy had given her. The babe in her
belly proved she was a wanton who’d
sold herself for respectability and
protection. Her attempts to play the
dutiful wife, while mourning for the
father of her child, confirmed she didn’t
deserve Percy’s love. She owed Percy
her loyalty, her life, her trust — the truth.
Perhaps it was time he learned her true
identity, that Burton’s accusations were
sound, that she carried a bastard’s child.
Constance walked to the door of
her room and turned the knob. She was
spoiled goods. She couldn’t possibly
hope for her husband’s forgiveness and
there was no joy in being honest. But she
had to purge her soul. Now. Before the
love she felt blossoming in her heart
overwhelmed her. No man should be
forced to raise another man’s child.
Sneaking out of the bedroom, so as
not to direct attention, she spied Jeffers
exiting Percy’s room. She drew back
upon her bedroom threshold and waited
for him to descend the stairs. Then, with
a swish of her skirts, she headed through
the darkened mahogany-lined hallway.
Ample light beaconed from below the
staircase, where voices indicated Mrs.
Mortimer officiated. She had little time
to do what she knew she must do —
catch her husband alone. What she had to
say was not for servants’ ears.
Her heart thumped wildly behind
her ribs as she knocked on the door to
Percy’s room.
Silence.
She lifted her hand and knocked
again, eyes alert for a wayward servant,
Mrs. Mortimer’s or Jeffers’s return.
“Percy,” she whispered.
Her mind revolted and her nerves
entreated her to withdraw. But her
conscience would not allow it. If she
was to expel her sins, she could not back
down now. Eager to reveal the truth
about herself and the baby before she
changed her mind, she tested the
doorknob
and,
finding
the
door
unlocked, slipped inside.
“Percy?” she called.
To her left stood a large wooden
bed, a tangled mass of fabric heaped
upon the surface. The room was sparsely
decorated and smelled of sandalwood,
Percy’s scent, and something else — the
sea. Curiously, her gaze shifted about the
room. By the hearth, a tepid tub
indicated that her husband had recently
bathed. Was she too late?
Heartbroken, her gaze scanned the
haphazardly strewn room to the bed and
a side table stacked with odds and ends.
Nearby, a lit candelabrum fluttered on a
desk near the open window. Shadows
played across the bedroom walls,
teasing with telltale shapes. She stepped
further into the room, hesitant to explore,
prepared to flee at a moment’s notice.
There was something overpowering
about the room. She didn’t belong. She
knew it instantly and decided she’d
made a horrible mistake. Her senses
came alive with an awareness that
scared her. What if her husband found
her snooping through his belongings?
Her position in the household was
tenuous enough. Add to that the
revelation that she was carrying another
man’s child and she would most
assuredly find herself out on the street.
A breeze whipped the drapes in the
window, bringing them dangerously
close to the flaming candlewicks.
Constance reacted by instinct. She
grabbed the silver base, and then set the
candlestick
upon
the
side
table,
breathing a sigh of relief. With the threat
of fire over, she closed the window,
careful not to make a sound. Smoothing
her hair and skimming her hands over
her skirts, she turned to grab the
candelabra and place it back upon the
desk, but her hand struck a book
dislodging a shiny silver object. The
oval case gleamed as she brought the
light closer.
“No.” She gasped. “My locket?”
She lifted the book, a sudden wave of
nausea roiling inside her abdomen.
“How?” She looked around the room,
speechless.
She took hold of the chain and
dangled the case from her fingertips.
Percy had had her locket all this time?
But how was it possible? She thought
back. Had she laid it out, handed it to
him? When had he been present when the
necklace had been off of her neck? They
hadn’t been lovers until after the
wedding and it had been noticeably
absent during that event. How had it
come into Percy’s possession? And why
hadn’t he returned it to her?
Constance gazed about the room,
her locket fisted in her hand. Anger
enveloped her. She expected lies and
dishonesty from Thomas, from Burton,
but not Percy.
Visibly shaken, she clasped the
locket around her neck, and then
guardedly
flipped
through
various
papers on Percy’s desk. It was unlike
her to be meddlesome, but her trust had
been violated. What else had her
husband kept from her?
The books upon Percy’s desk were
volumes dedicated to shipping lanes,
investments, and law, nothing out of
sorts for a man of position and wealth.
She continued her search, locating
another image of the woman called Lady
Celeste. A different miniature sat on his
bedside table. She held it up to the light,
her thumb stroking the woman’s flowing
hair. Her heart hitched in her chest as the
resemblance shook her unsteadily. No,
she thought, it was beyond the realm of
possibilities.
Thomas.
Placing the striking resemblance
back upon the bedside table, Constance
turned unable to breathe. She leaned
onto the coverlet for balance. The room
was small, unsuitable for a man of
Percy’s rank, and it closed in ever
tighter. Why had he continued to abide
here when her room, her bed, her arms
were willing to share everything and
more?
Why? Why had Percy kept quiet
about
his
father’s
illness,
his
relationship with the woman in the
picture? She choked back a sob.
Couldn’t she be trusted to keep his
secrets, to share his burdens? Burton had
threatened to discredit her father if she
didn’t resort to investigating Percy’s
involvement in her father’s accounts. But
based on trust, she had not acted upon
that threat.
This was madness!
Constance gained control of her
senses and turned to tamp the wick on
the candle by Percy’s bedside. She had
to leave before she was discovered. As
she did, her slipper caught upon
something on the floor, nearly tripping
her as she moved away. Reaching down,
she picked up a discarded piece of
fabric entangling her feet and rolled the
fabric between her fingertips. Curious,
she held it up to the candlelight. The
garment was black as pitch. Her fingers
paled in comparison. Her heart beat out
a tortuous rhythm as her fingertips slid
through gashes cut along the forearm.
It couldn’t be!
Dropping to her knees, Constance
sank into an abyss. What more?
Hesitantly, she inspected the floor, and
then reached into the dark void beneath
the mattress. There she found Hessians,
black breeches, and — Lord help her —
a red handkerchief!
Paralyzed, she sat back on her heels
and attempted to recover from the shock.
Thomas had been here? Percy had lived
in this room since they’d been married.
Did he know Thomas? Had he been
hiding him here? Or were the two men
she loved — brothers or one and the
same? No. Her mind screamed. It simply
couldn’t be!
Her
mind
spun
with
the
ramifications, replaying image after
image of time spent with the rogue,
Thomas, contrasting wildly with the
impish dandy, Percy, whose gentlemanly
portrayal had won her trust. And yet
she’d been betrayed! Doubly so!
Seduced by a pirate, she’d become
pregnant and then, thanks to Burton,
forced to partake in a sham of a marriage
to a popinjay. Who was she married to
— Percival Avery or Thomas Sexton?
How had her life become so twisted, so
beset upon by lies and deceptions? Oh
God. If Thomas was Percy, then Percy
was the father of her child. He’d been
aware of her pregnancy all along.
Within
seconds,
anger
more
destructive than any feeling she’d ever
known took hold of her senses. Jumping
to her feet, she walked dazedly to the
door, the very threshold she’d crossed to
humble herself before her swine of a
husband and divulge her sins. Unaware
of her actions, she put her hand on the
knob and jerked the door open, uncaring
who heard her exit the room.
Darkness in the hallway swallowed
her whole. Constance paused, allowing
her eyes to adjust, clinging to the
shadows a moment longer to regain her
wits. She started to hyperventilate and
clutched the wall in order to take deep
breaths to steady herself so she didn’t
faint.
What she had done to deserve this?
Her father had relinquished Burton’s
proposal
in
favor
of
another
advantageous one. Not out of sympathy
but out of practical greed. What had
Percy offered that would force her
father’s hand? Was her uncle involved?
Or had her father known all along the
two men were one and the same? Was
everything she knew or thought to be true
a lie?
Never trust a pirate.
A sob tore from her throat. She’d
married a pirate! Constance clutched her
mouth to stifle her anguished sobs.
All at once she understood what her
mother must have experienced in the
perilous moments before her death.
She’d been betrayed by men who’d
schemed to use her for their benefit.
Now it was her turn. She’d been taken
advantage of by a rogue, made a
laughing stock of the ton by a rake. How
the devil must have enjoyed his disguise.
How he must have laughed at her
naivety.
What was she to do now? Where
was she to go?
Her mind sorted recent events,
especially the carriage ride in Hyde
Park.
“A ship cannot sail without a
crew, Your Grace. You cannot claim
ignorance of this.”
Was Guffald
involved?
Her heart clenched and an iron vise
gripped her lungs. She’d been saved by
Thomas’s narrow thread of decency
aboard the
Octavia
and when she’d
arrived in London, Percy’s sense of
decorum. She paused. No matter how
dismal her life appeared, both men had
tried to protect her. In some twisted
sense of duty they had stepped forward
to save her. Thomas from Frink. Percy
from Burton. Her child needed a father.
He’d been given one, one she was
legally honor bound to obey whether she
wanted to or not.
Tears filled her eyes. Dabbing her