The Historical Collection. Stephanie Laurens

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too.”

      She paused in the act of brushing a crumb from the corner of his lips. “You delivered it yourselves? The three of you?”

      “Mostly me. They were no help at all. At least Chase had this on him.” He shifted the baby goat to one arm and handed her a silver object approximately the size of her hand.

      Penny examined the makeshift feeding bottle fashioned from a silver flask. In place of a teat, he’d severed the fingertip of a leather glove, stretched it over the uncapped opening, and pricked a hole at the end.

      “Marigold was too weak to let the baby nurse,” he explained. “We had to milk her, which was a miserable adventure on its own.”

      “This is ingenious. I doubt Nicola could have devised anything better. Though I do hope you emptied it of brandy first.”

      “Believe me, we’d already drained the brandy ourselves.” He heaved a weary sigh. “It was a close thing, Penny. We nearly lost them both.”

      “But you did beautifully. Marigold survived, and he’s perfect.” She tilted her head. “Or is it a she?”

      “Damned if I know. Never thought to investigate, and I don’t care to. After today, I’ve seen enough of goat hindquarters to last me a lifetime.”

      She laughed a little. Hooking one of the baby goat’s hind legs with a finger, she made her own examination. “It’s a he. And he’s darling.”

      “The veterinarian’s already come and gone. He said Marigold would recover, but we mustn’t be surprised if she refuses to nurse. Or she might reject the kid entirely. It happens, he said. Sometimes—” He stroked the kid’s velvety ear with a single fingertip, as though he were afraid he might break it. “Sometimes, if she’s ill or weakened, the mother knows she can’t save both her offspring and herself. So she abandons her baby in order to survive.”

      Penny’s heart squeezed. She rested her chin on his shoulder. “What a heartbreaking choice for a mother to make.”

      He stared into the fire. Amber warmth and cool shadows fought for dominion over his hard, unshaven jaw. “She’s a goat. Goats have instincts. People have choices.”

      “You’re right. People do have choices. Sometimes they make cruel, unforgivable ones. But we can choose to keep our little corner of the world warm and safe.” She slid her arms around his chest and hugged him tight. “If Marigold isn’t able to care for him, we will.”

      She reached to take the kid from his arms, but he pulled away.

      “Oh, no, you don’t. I’m not letting you coo over him. This one is mine, and I’ll do with him as I please. Send him to Ashbury’s estate. Banish him to a parsnip farm. Fatten him up for Christmas dinner. I told you she was breeding, and you didn’t believe me. I delivered the thing, and you weren’t here. You have no say in the matter.”

      “I suppose that’s only fair.”

      Although, watching him tenderly hold the little dear, she didn’t feel too worried about the kid’s future. Nor Gabriel’s. She would find it easier to part with him knowing he had some love in his life. Even if it came from a bottle-fed baby goat.

      “Have you given him a name?”

      “Considering what an insufferable pain he is, I’m leaning toward Ashbury.”

      Penny chuckled. “I’ll tell you a secret about Ash. His Christian name is George. He hates it.”

      He nodded. “George it is.”

      George stirred and nosed at Gabriel’s chest and gave a warbling, plaintive bleat.

      “We should take him back to the mews, to be near Marigold,” Penny suggested, “so they don’t lose the scent of each other. Perhaps she’ll feel strong enough to nurse him now. If not, I’ll help with the milking.”

      George took another flask of milk a few hours later, and then again sometime after midnight, by the light of a lantern.

      At some point, Penny must have fallen asleep, because she woke to the first glow of daylight. They’d leaned against each another in one corner of the stall, atop an uncomfortable heap of fresh straw.

      Gabriel nudged her with his shoulder. “Look.”

      The newborn goat was standing on his own wobbly legs, taking drunken steps. When he toppled sideways, he bleated indignantly.

      Gabriel started to reach for him, but Penny held him back. “Wait.”

      Marigold roused herself and ambled over to her kid, licking him about the head until George lurched and swayed himself to his hooves, and when he nosed at her swollen underside, she allowed him to nurse.

      “Oh. That’s lovely.” Penny snuggled under Gabriel’s arm.

      “Thank God she finally took to him,” he said.

      “How could she not? Look how adorable he is. Best little goat in the world.”

      For a few minutes, they watched mother and kid in exhausted silence. Then Gabriel caught Penny’s hand and brought it to his chest.

      “They will all believe I ruined you,” he said quietly. “Married you for your money.”

      They will. Penny tried not to betray how her heart leapt at those two simple words. Not “they would,” or “they might,” but “they will.” “I don’t care.”

      “Others will care. Your family. Your peers. In society’s eyes, I’m unfit to stand on your carpet, much less share your bed.”

      She smiled. “I’ve shared my bed with far muddier, furrier creatures.”

      “You’re the daughter of an earl. I’m a bastard from the rookery.”

      “You’re a self-made marvel of business acumen. A brilliant financier. Besides, just look at Ash and Chase. They married a seamstress and a governess, respectively. It can be done.”

      “It’s not the same. Emma and Alexandra were elevated by those matches. You’d be the lady who lowered herself to marry a commoner. Not merely a commoner, but a criminal from the streets. The rumors would be vicious.”

      She lifted her head. “And you believe I care what the gossips say? You can’t think so meanly of me as that.”

      “I think that meanly of myself.” His eyes were dark with an emptiness that yearned to be filled. “You cannot understand. I can be wealthy as sin, live in the grandest houses, wear the finest clothes—and underneath, I’m still that starving, ragged boy from the streets. The hunger, the resentment … They never go away. I’ll never belong in the ton. I can take their money. I can command their fear. But I will never have their acceptance, much less their respect.”

      “You’ll have my love. And if I have yours, that will be more than enough.”

      “It’s romantic to think so. But years from now, when the respectable ladies still snub you in church, or when our children come home bruised or crying because their schoolmates

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