The Historical Collection 2018: The Duchess Deal / From Duke Till Dawn / His Sinful Touch / His Wicked Charm. Candace Camp

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in every way. You were not only healthy enough to bear children, but strong enough to bear with me. A gentleman’s daughter—but one with the courage to stand up for herself against the whole of society. You’re educated, yes, but also you’re witty and damnably clever.”

      “Pretty,” she filled in. “You did give me that one compliment. You called me pretty.”

      “Well, I lied. I don’t find you pretty. I find you the most beautiful person I’ve ever known, inside and without.”

      “There was one more, if I recall.” Oh, and Emma was curious to hear this. He was going to have to work hard to redeem that fifth one.

      “Yes. The last reason is this: You’re here.”

      Well. Interesting strategy, doubling down on the original insult. She hadn’t been expecting that.

      “You’re here,” he repeated, taking her hand and drawing it against his chest, right above his pounding heartbeat. “In my heart. Somehow you crashed your way into it when I wasn’t looking. The same way you barged into my library, I suppose. But you’re here now, inside. Emma, you’re the very life of me.”

      She could scarcely speak. “That was quite nicely said.”

      “You think so?”

      “Did you practice it on the way here?”

      His chin pulled back in a gesture of offense. “No.”

      “I wouldn’t think less of you for it.”

      “Then yes, I did. But that doesn’t make it any less sincere.” He stroked his thumb down the space between her shoulder blades. “Can you possibly comprehend how much I love you?”

      “I’m tempted to say yes. But I think I’d rather listen to you explain it some more.”

      “It might take years.”

      “I’m amenable to that. Of course, that means you’ll have to listen to all the reasons I love you.”

      He grimaced. “Ugh.”

      “Don’t worry. You’ve survived worse.”

      “Yes. I suppose I have.” He smiled that slow, one-sided smile she’d come to adore.

      And then, in front of everyone, he bent his head to give her a kiss.

      “God’s liggens,” Ash grumbled when they finally reached his suite. “That was our last dinner party.”

      “It was our first dinner party,” his wife pointed out.

      “Precisely. One was enough. I thought they’d never go home.”

      “It’s only ten o’clock. I thought our guests left rather early. We’d scarcely finished opening Christmas gifts.” She unloaded an armful of objects onto the bed. “I must say, Nicola’s is the most delicious.”

      With that, Ash heartily agreed. He stole a bite of plum cake from the slice in Emma’s hand. “All her talk of science and precision is only a ruse, I tell you. That woman is a witch with an enchanted oven.” He plucked a mysterious knitted thing from the heap and dangled it from his thumb and forefinger. “What is this? Is it for the baby?”

      “Perhaps. But who can know with Penny.” Emma took it from his hands and turned it this way and that. She counted the holes that one might surmise were meant for chubby infant arms and legs. “One, two, three, four . . .” She poked her finger through another round opening. “Five? Oh, Lord. I think she’s made us a jumper for the cat.”

      “Good luck dressing him in it.”

      She gave him a coy smile. “I think Khan appreciated your early Boxing Day gift.”

      He went to the dressing table to remove his stickpin and undo his cuffs. “The man’s been going on and on about being owed a pension. I managed to get my revenge.”

      “How is giving him a cottage at Swanlea a form of revenge?”

      “Isn’t it obvious? He can’t get away from me now. He’ll be wishing he were a butler again when I send our son over for cricket lessons.”

      “Oh, and there’s this one.” Emma sat on the bed. She lifted a hand-bound scrapbook into her lap and paged through it lovingly. “What a dear Alex was. I can’t imagine how much effort this must have taken, compiling all these headlines.”

      Ash was a bit peevish. “Well, what about the effort I went to, generating them?”

      His wife ignored him. And justly so.

      Miss Mountbatten’s gift was secretly his favorite, too. She’d collected all the broadsheets and gossip papers with the Monster of Mayfair’s exploits splashed across them, then carefully cut and pasted them into a memento book. The closest thing to a biography he’d ever have, and considerably more interesting.

      He turned away from the dressing table and crossed his arms over his chest. “I hope that scrapbook has an empty page or two.”

      “It won’t need any.” She raised an eyebrow in warning. “The Monster of Mayfair will not make the papers, ever again.”

      “Too late, I’m afraid.”

      Ash reached into a drawer for the early copy he’d wrangled of tomorrow morning’s Prattler. Then he held it up for her, revealing the headline:

       Duke Tells All.

      She gasped. “You didn’t.”

      “Oh, but I did.” He read aloud from the first paragraph. “‘The Duke of Ashbury reveals the tragic tale behind the Monster of Mayfair and professes his undying love for the seamstress-turned-duchess who healed his tortured soul.’” He flung the paper on the bed near her elbow. “Sensationalist rubbish, naturally.”

      She covered her mouth with one hand and reached for the newspaper with the other. He watched her face as she scanned the page. Her eyes reddened and watered.

      Ash didn’t make much of it. Along with feeling poorly in the mornings, she seemed to be on the brink of tears at any time of day.

      She sniffed. “This is best gift I can imagine.”

      “Is it? I suppose you don’t need the other, then.” He pulled the small box from his pocket and placed it on her lap. “I’ll let you have it anyway. You never did have a proper one.”

      She stared at the box with weepy eyes.

      “It’s a ring,” he said.

      “I love it.”

      “Emma, you haven’t opened it.”

      “Yes, I know. I don’t have to. I love it already.”

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