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Authors: Mary Balogh

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Brampton had loosened his hold immediately, cradling her body against his, lightly holding her head against his shoulder.

“I am sorry, my angel,” he had whispered softly into her ear, “I did not mean to frighten you. Are you just a little innocent after all? But a very passionate little innocent,” he had commented, kissing her temple gently. “Will you remove your mask for me, little sweet?”

“No, monsieur,” Margaret had replied, remembering the French accent, but her voice shaking slightly.

“Ah, but I shall discover you at unmasking time,” he had teased, smiling down into her eyes, “and I shall be coming to call on you, my angel.”

“Please, monsieur, I think we should go inside now,” Margaret had said, and added as an after thought, “I should like a glass of lemonade, please.”

Brampton had drawn her arm gently through his again and led her back to the terrace.

“Stay here, angel,” he had said, releasing her arm. “I shall bring you some lemonade without delay.”

“Margaret!” a shocked voice had hissed as the earl disappeared into the ballroom. “Where have you been, my girl? Your father and I have been searching for you this half-hour past. Do you know no better, child, than to walk alone in the garden at night, with a man?”

Margaret’s mother had whisked her away home without more ado, and she had not been allowed to attend any social functions for the next week.

That night had been an end and a beginning for Margaret. It had been the end of her delight in the activities of the
ton.
She had participated in a vast number of events for the rest of that Season and for the next five, and she had received three offers of marriage, one at the end of that first Season from an earnest young man who wrote a sonnet to her eyes, and two others in later years. But she had not been able to force herself either to enjoy the activities or to welcome any of the proposals. It had been the beginning of her undying and hopeless passion for the Earl of Brampton.

She had seen him with fair frequency. She had even danced with him on rare occasions, always for country dances or quadrilles, never for the waltz. And he had never shown the slightest hint of recognition or even a gleam of interest in her. Margaret had borne it all in patient silence. Only Charlotte had guessed that she had had an unhappy love experience in her past, and Charlotte thought the whole painful situation unutterably romantic.

And now, by some bizarre twist of fate, Brampton had chosen her for his bride. Margaret was in no doubt of the reason. A nobleman in his thirties, who had a reputation as a habitual womanizer, could have only one possible reason for wanting to marry a virtual stranger. He wanted children to secure his line. Like other men of his type, he would turn elsewhere for love, and she would be expected to act as if she did not know or care. Margaret suppressed a sob of despair.

But at least she would have part of him. She would share his name. She would live with him and see him daily. She would finally, after six long years, find out what it was like to be in bed with him. Margaret, even at the age of twenty-five, was still not quite sure what happened between a man and a woman in bed, but she remembered quite clearly what had started to happen to her body when he had caressed her with expert lips and tongue and hands.

Margaret shivered and sighed. And finally she closed her eyes and slept deeply.

CHAPTER 2

R
ichard and Margaret Adair, Earl and Countess of Brampton, sat side by side on the comfortable green velvet seat of his traveling couch. They had been wed that morning and were on their way to the earl’s chief seat, Brampton Court in Hampshire, for their honeymoon. They sat now in silence, their forced and stilted conversation having flickered to an end an hour before. Margaret had her eyes closed and pretended to sleep.

Brampton looked across at her from his comer, his eyes inspecting her slowly from head to foot. She had removed her pink bonnet; it lay on the seat opposite. He looked at the brown hair, drawn severely back from her forehead and the sides of her face and coiled in heavy braids on top of her head. Not a wisp or a curl had been allowed to escape, to tease a man’s imagination or make his fingers itch to explore. Her face (yes, it was definitely heart-shaped!) was composed, eyes closed, long eyelashes resting lightly against her cheeks, her lips set together.

She still wore her deep-pink velvet pelisse. It hid her figure, though he could see the regular rise and fall of her slight breasts. Her hands, clad in white kid gloves, were clasped neatly in her lap. Her feet in their white ankle boots were set side by side on the floor. He tried to feel some flicker of desire for this meek little wife of his, and felt nothing. He looked into her face again, and at the same moment, those large eyes opened and gazed blankly into his. Brampton felt that same uncomfortable jolt he had experienced on other occasions when he had unexpectedly met her eyes.

“Has the journey tired you, my dear?” he asked kindly.

“A little, my lord,” she replied. “These last four weeks have been busy.”

“You must call me Richard now,” he said, irritated, and turned to the window to stare out at the passing countryside.

Yes, they certainly had been busy weeks, but he thanked Providence for that. He had had little time to think about the fate in store for him, little time to grasp at dishonorable schemes for getting out of his unwanted betrothal.

He had Devin Northcott to thank. His mother and Margaret’s had immediately swept to the attack and taken over all the organization of the wedding. Devin, Brampton’s friend since childhood, whose parents owned the estate adjoining Brampton Court, had devoted himself to filling every spare moment of his friend’s time to keep his mind off his inevitable doom.

“I say, Bram,” he had said on first learning of his friend’s betrothal, “didn’t know the wind lay in that direction. And Miss Wells? Do you have a
tendre
for her, old man?”

Brampton had snorted. “My mother’s and Rosalind’s choice,” he had explained. “Impeccable lineage and reputation and morals and all that.”

“I say, though, Bram, you are planning to turn respectable?” his friend had asked anxiously.

“Have I ever been anything but?” Brampton had raised his eyebrows and favored his friend with a haughty glare.

“Oh, say, Bram, don’t come the frosty aristocrat with me,” Devin had said, unperturbed. “No offense meant. Was referring to Lisa.”

“I shall be quite respectable enough for my wife and my mother and my sisters—all three of them, Dev,” the earl had said decisively. “What I do privately and discreetly will hurt no one.”

“So Lisa stays,” Devin had concluded. “Not fair to the little Miss Wells, though, Bram,” he had added daringly.

Only a close friend could have got away with such open criticism of the Earl of Brampton.

“I live my own life, Dev,” was the stiff reply he received.

And Devin Northcott had devoted himself to seeing that his friend enjoyed his last few weeks of freedom. They had ridden, played cards, drunk, gone to the races and to boxing mills, spent hours at Jackson’s boxing saloon, and wandered from club to club at night, very often not returning home until the early hours of the morning.

Lisa had not been too perturbed by his approaching nuptials. She knew that there was no hope of his marrying her, a mere opera dancer. He was a generous and an attentive protector. She had a comfortable home, an adequate number of servants, many expensive clothes and jewels, and a generous allowance of pin money. She knew from research she had done when he had first suggested becoming her protector that he made generous settlements on his ex-mistresses. She also knew from similar research that Miss Margaret Wells was a little mouse of a woman, almost middle-aged—all of twenty-five to Lisa’s twenty—and quite unlikely to be a rival in her lover’s bed.

Brampton had visited her more frequently than usual in those last few weeks. He had not been sure how frequently he would be able to get away to her for the first weeks of his marriage, and Devin’s comment had made him wonder whether his conscience would allow him to enjoy the illicit liaison once he was a married man. He had bedded Lisa with almost desperate passion in those weeks, allowing his body to become satiated with her practiced feminine charms. His mind had constantly made comparisons with his fiancee’s body.

Gazing now out of the carriage window without seeing the passing scenery, Brampton acknowledged he felt some relief that the waiting period was finally over, that the knot was tied. Now that he knew there was definitely no way out, perhaps his mind would be less tortured. The only big ordeal ahead was the consummation of the marriage that must take place within the next few hours. Once that was over, they would be able to settle down into some sort of routine. And he would see that he spent much of his time alone. It was a while since he had visited Brampton Court; there would be plenty of estate business to keep him occupied. And his wife would have much to learn about the house and the running of the household. He would feel contented to leave her in the capable hands of Mrs. Foster, the housekeeper.

Margaret was grateful for the long silence, grateful that her husband did not feel the necessity to keep up the meaningless conversation that had occupied them for the first several miles of their journey.

She needed time to compose her mind after the frantic bustle of the last month. Her mother had taken care of all the arrangements for the wedding. She had been whisked through an endless round of visits to dressmakers, milliners, bootmakers, and the like. She had stood through hours of fittings, standing until every muscle ached as Madame Dumont pinned and measured and tucked and snipped. Margaret had thought that she had ample clothes. But it seemed that none was suitable for a bride’s trousseau, especially the bride of the Earl of Brampton.

When she was not shopping or at endless fitting sessions, there were the numerous visitors to receive, flocking to congratulate her on capturing one of the greatest prizes on the matrimonial market. All seemed to think that she was incredibly fortunate; no one commented that the earl was the fortune one.

Of the earl himself, Margaret saw almost nothing. It seemed that her schedule was too full to allow of something so unimportant as meetings with her betrothed. Margaret was not sorry; she felt shy to the point of gaucheness before her very handsome fiance.

The only person who helped Margaret keep a firm hold on sanity and apparent serenity during those weeks was Charlotte. She was ecstatic over her sister’s engagement.

“Just think, Meg,” she had said, clapping her hands and twirling around the drawing room, on that first day after the earl had left, “you have been insisting for the last year or more that you are just a spinster. And you have been wearing those stupid caps for the last year, though I told you and told you that you were far too pretty and had far too much character to do any such thing. And now you are to be married! And to the Earl of Brampton. He’s ever so gorgeous, Meg, even though he’s so old.”

Margaret smiled as Charlotte paused for breath, and quietly folded her embroidery.

“You see, Meg,
he
must have realized what a diamond you are.”

Margaret smiled again. “He is an older son, Lottie,” she explained patiently. “He must marry soon. Do not make a grand romance out of this, my love.”

“Phooey!” Charlotte commented inelegantly. “You are eminently suited, Meg. You so small and dainty and
so
pretty; and he so tall and strong and handsome.”

Margaret laughed. “You are looking through the eyes of a fond sister,” she said. “I fear not many people would agree with you.”

“Well, perhaps he is not
that
strong or
that
handsome,” Charlotte agreed mischievously.

“You know what I meant,” Margaret replied, smiling affectionately at her sister.

Charlotte was to be bridesmaid at the wedding and delighted in every moment of the fittings and the shopping sprees. She had not yet made her come-out, and to her, all the activity was magical. Through a complicated set of negotiations that involved mainly the mothers of the bride and groom, it was agreed that Charlotte would live with her sister and brother-in-law for the Season, after they returned from Hampshire, and that Margaret would undertake to chaperone her come-out. Mr. Wells was relieved to have the chance to return to his own estate after the unexpected expense of Margaret’s wedding. Both sisters were delighted by the arrangement.

Margaret wished that they were already back in London. Surely life would be easier there, where there would be numerous activities to occupy their time and furnish them with topics of conversation, and where Charlotte’s vivacious personality would fill in any awkward silences.

Margaret was dreading the next week. What, would they do to occupy the days? Would Richard take it upon himself to entertain her? She wished for and dreaded such intimacy. How would she converse with him without appearing dull or stupid or silly? Would he go about his own business and leave her to her own devices?

And, of course, the biggest ordeal of all was the night ahead. Would he kiss and caress her as he had so long ago in the Hetheringtons’ garden? Her breathing quickened at the thought and she made an effort to control it. She opened her eyes for a moment and found herself looking straight into her husband’s eyes. She felt dazed with shock until he asked her if she was tired.

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