An Improper Aristocrat. Deb Marlowe
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Chione was glad he was made of sterner stuff than that. ‘Richard wrote of you so often,’ she began. ‘I know he held you in very high regard. Forgive me if I am rude, but I was surprised that you did not know of our…unusual family. Did he not speak to you of us?’
She had chosen poorly, perhaps, because his frown deepened. ‘He spoke of you,’ he said gruffly. ‘And of your grandfather.’ He paused. ‘I should have asked sooner—is he still missing? Have you had no word of him?’
‘No, not yet. Soon, I hope.’
‘Do you still have no idea what might have happened to him, then?’
‘On the contrary, there are many ideas, but no proof of anything.’
‘It has been what? Two years? And yet you hold out hope?’ He sounded incredulous.
‘Not two years, yet, and indeed, I do have hope. I hope every day that this is the one that brings him home. My grandfather has been in a thousand scrapes and survived each one. He told me once that he meant to die a peaceful death in his bed, an old man. I believe he will.’
The earl looked away. ‘Richard felt much the same,’ he said.
Chione felt a fresh pang of loss at his words. Yes, Richard had understood. She blinked and focused intently on the surrounding wood. The forest was alive around them as the birds and the insects busily pursued all the industries of spring. She sighed. Life did go on, and Richard’s responsibilities were hers now.
‘I am happy to have the chance to thank you for the letter you sent to us, on my brother’s death. It was a comfort to know that he had a friend like you with him when he died.’
For a long moment, Lord Treyford made no reply. The path had begun to climb and he paid careful attention to her footing as well as his. When at last he did speak, he sounded—what was it—cautious? Subdued? ‘That is truly what I’ve come for, what I’ve travelled all this way to do. To speak to you about Richard’s death.’
He fell silent again. Chione waited, willing to give him the time he needed. She harboured a grave feeling that she was not going to like what he had to say.
‘Richard’s last thoughts were of you,’ he finally said. They had come out on a little ridge. A bench had been strategically placed to take advantage of the spectacular view. The earl motioned her to it and gingerly lowered himself beside her.
His gaze wandered over the scene. ‘When one hears of Devon, it is always the desolate beauty of Dartmoor.’ He paused. ‘It seems that nothing here is as I expected.’ His gaze was no longer riveted on the view. Instead it roamed over her face, the blue of his eyes more than a match for the sky overhead. After a moment the intensity of his regard began to discomfort her.
She ducked her head and ruthlessly clamped down her own response. She breathed deeply, gathering her strength and reaching for courage. She raised her head and looked him in the eye. ‘Tell me about Richard’s death.’
It was enough to sweep clear the thickening tension between them. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Of course.’
He reached into an inner pocket, drew something out. ‘Just before he died, your brother asked me to give this to you.’ He took her hand from where it rested in her lap and placed the object in it.
It was sharp-edged, and warm from the heat of his body. For several moments that was the sum of Chione’s impressions, for she could not see through her sudden swell of tears. She breathed deeply again, however, and regained control of her emotions. As her vision cleared she got her first good look at the object.
Only to be seized by something uncomfortably close to panic. A wave of nausea engulfed her and she let the thing fall from her suddenly lifeless fingers.
Good God, he had found it.
Chapter Three
Trey watched, shocked, as Miss Latimer dropped the scarab as if it had seared her. She sat lifeless, eyes closed, fists clenched, neither moving nor speaking. He could see the sheen of sweat upon her brow. She really was frightened.
‘Miss Latimer?’ He grasped her cold hands and began to chafe them. Still she sat, frozen. ‘Miss Latimer?’ Already unnerved, he began to get impatient. ‘Damn it, answer me!’
‘Yes.’ Her voice was faint.
‘What is it?’ Her eyes were opened now, but glazed, her focus obviously fixed on some inner torment. ‘What ails you?’
There was no response. Trey bent down and retrieved the scarab, still on the chain that Richard had worn around his neck, and tried to press it into her hand.
‘No,’ she said sharply, shying away.
He closed his hand around it, feeling the bite of the insect’s sharp legs. ‘Richard’s last wish was for you to have this,’ he said roughly.
‘I don’t want it.’ The words emerged in almost a sob. She clapped a hand over her mouth, eyes wide as if in horror at her own lack of control. Trey watched as she drew a deep breath and stood. ‘Do you hear me, Lord Treyford? I do not want it!’
Trey was dumbfounded. Here was yet another twist to this horrifyingly convoluted day. He stared at the girl, wondering where the calm and remote young lady he had walked out with had gone. ‘That is unacceptable,’ he said flatly. ‘I made a pledge to your brother that I would deliver it to you.’
She looked unimpressed.
‘I gave my word of honour.’ As far as he was concerned, that was the end of the matter.
Apparently it was for the girl, as well. It quickly became obvious that he had pushed her past the point of restraint. She stood poised, indignation in every taut line of her body, those incredible dark eyes glittering with emotion. ‘I don’t give a tinker’s damn for your honour,’ she ground out. ‘Family honour, a man’s pride, I’ve had my fill of it. It is all just fancy trappings and convenient excuses for doing whatever fool thing engages you, regardless of who you hurt or neglect in the process.’ She cast a scornful glance over him. ‘You keep it, Lord Treyford, and if by some miracle you do find the Jewel, then you may keep that as well.’
‘Jewel?’ Trey asked. He was getting damned tired of feeling like the village idiot, not understanding who was who or what was happening around him.
She let out a distinctly unladylike snort and turned away from him.
‘Now, you wait just a moment. Keep it?’ Hastily Trey got to his feet, trying to tamp down on the flickering rise of his own anger. ‘Keep it, you say? If I had wanted to keep the cursed thing I would have stayed in Egypt,’ he said, growing more furious with each word. ‘I would not have abandoned my plans, given up my work, and tramped halfway around the world to this…’ he swept his arm in an encompassing gesture ‘…this insane asylum.’
He rubbed a hand across his brow, dampened the flames of his temper, searching for patience. ‘Months, this has cost me months.’ With a sudden fluid movement, he thrust his arm out, dangling the scarab from its chain, forcing her to look at it. ‘This thing meant something to your brother. It was so important that he spent his dying breath securing