Surrender. Brenda Joyce

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him. “I heard you and Henri discussing the arrival of a new foreman. Did the previous foreman leave?”

      Laurent was grim. “He was dismissed, madame.”

      “Why?”

      “We have suspected theft, Lady D’Orsay, for some time. When le comte purchased this estate, the mine was doing handsomely. Now, there is nothing.”

      So there was hope, she thought, staring at the dapper Frenchman.

      “I am afraid to ask what you are thinking,” he said.

      “Laurent, I am thinking that I have very little left to pawn.”

      “And?”

      He knew her so well, she thought. And he knew almost everything there was to know about her, Henri and their affairs. But did he know about the gold? “Two weeks ago, Henri told me that he had buried a chest filled with gold at the château in Nantes.”

      Laurent simply met her gaze.

      “You know!” she exclaimed, surprised.

      “Of course I know—I was there—I helped him bury the chest.”

      Evelyn started. “So it’s true. He did not leave us penniless. He left a fortune for us.”

      “It’s true.” They stared at each other. “What are you going to do?” he said unhappily.

      “It has been quiet in France, since the fall of Robespierre.”

      He inhaled. “Please do not tell me that you are considering retrieving the gold!”

      “No, I am not considering it—I have made up my mind.” And she was resolved. Her decision was made. “I am going to find someone to take me to France, and I am bringing that gold back—not for myself—but for Aimee.”

      “And who could you possibly trust with such a fortune?” he cried, paling.

      But even as he spoke, the image came to her mind of a tall, powerful man standing on the deck of a ship racing the sea with unfurled black sails, his golden hair blowing in the wind....

      She could not breathe or move. She hadn’t thought about the smuggler who had helped her and her family escape France in years.

      My services are expensive.

      Thank me when we reach Britain.

      Evelyn looked up at Laurent, stunned.

      “Whom could you possibly trust with your life?” he added desperately.

      She wet her lips. “Jack Greystone,” she said.

      CHAPTER TWO

      EVELYN STARED OUT of her bedroom window, still in her nightclothes, her hair braided. She was hugging herself.

      She had just awoken. But she had slept fitfully, and her rest had been interrupted with terrible dreams. Oddly, she had been dreaming of her childhood. Of going to bed without supper, and being so lonely she had cried herself to sleep. And she had dreamed of Lucille and Enid, both of them mocking her for her airs, and declaring that she had gotten just what she deserved.

      But then her dreams had changed, and she had dreamed that she was running through the night, being chased by evil. The night had become familiar, and she realized she wasn’t on foot—she was in a carriage, and Aimee was crying in her arms. But they were being pursued. The gendarmerie were after them, and if they did not escape, Henri might be arrested and executed. She was terrified. The hand of evil was right behind them, ready to snatch them back....

      She had awoken in a sweat, shivering with fear, her stomach in knots, tears upon her cheeks. It had taken her a second to return to reality and recall that she was not in the midst of fleeing France on that particular summer night. Henri had been buried yesterday, at the local parish church. She wasn’t in France; she was at Roselynd.

      Her chest seemed to tighten.

      The sight of Jack Greystone standing at the helm of his black ship, all sails unfurled, his legs braced against the sea, his tawny hair whipped by the wind, assaulted her. The image was one of power and command.

      She suddenly found it hard to breathe.

      She hadn’t thought about Greystone in years—not until yesterday.

      Was she really going to approach him and ask him for his services—again?

      Did she have any other choice? Henri was dead, and she had to recover the gold he had left for them.

      She trembled, because Henri’s death still felt unreal—as if a part of her dream. Grief rose up instantly, choking her. So did fear, and even the feeling of abandonment. God, she was so alone, so overwhelmed, and frightened.

      If only Henri had retrieved the gold before his death. But he had left that monumental task up to her, Evelyn. She prayed she was up to it.

      Aimee would never find herself in the straits that Evelyn had been left in as a child, she vowed. Evelyn’s father had loved her, or so she believed, but he had failed in his responsibility to her. He had been right to leave her with Robert, as he was too reckless and irresponsible to care for her, but it had been wrong to leave her penniless. She, Evelyn, must never fail her daughter.

      “Mama? Are you crying?”

      Aimee’s small, frightened voice cut through her thoughts. Evelyn realized she was battling rising tears, but some of them were due to the great strain she was under. She faced her daughter, but not before wiping her eyes quickly with her fingertips. “Darling! Have I overslept?” She swept her close, into a big embrace.

      “You never sleep in,” Aimee whispered. “Are you tired today?”

      “I was very tired, darling, but I am back to being myself now.” Evelyn kissed her. “I will always miss your father,” Evelyn said softly. “He was a good man, a good husband, a good father.” But why hadn’t he retrieved the gold in the past five years? Why had he left her with such a daunting task? When he hadn’t allowed her any duties except those of being a mother and a wife, when he was still alive? If she had been allowed more independence, she might not feel so overwhelmed now.

      She stepped back from Aimee, knowing she must find the kind of courage she never had before.

      “Is Papa watching us from Heaven?” Aimee asked.

      Evelyn wet her lips and somehow smiled. “Papa is certainly still with us—he will always be with us, even when he goes further into Heaven, he will be in our hearts and in our memories.”

      But suddenly she didn’t understand why he hadn’t at the very least made arrangements to have that gold brought from France to them. He had been of sound mind until the very end.

      Was she actually angry with Henri now? She was incredulous. He had just passed, and she must not be angry with him! He had been so ill, he had loved her and Aimee, and if he could have recovered that gold for them, he would have done so!

      And if Henri

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