The Blackmailed Bride. Mandy Goff
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Название: The Blackmailed Bride

Автор: Mandy Goff

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

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СКАЧАТЬ could you not see them? Shameful. And in church, no less.”

      “Now, Josephine,” came a third voice, “they were hardly doing anything shameful. They were sitting in front of God and the whole congregation.”

      “Well, where are they now?” one of the other women— Olivia assumed it was Josephine—shot back.

      Silence followed. Apparently this question stymied the other two ladies.

      Olivia started to rise, prepared to step from behind the shelter of the towering rosebushes and into the women’s path, but Nick laid a hand on her arm, stilling her. His touch scorched her skin. But she didn’t recoil from it.

      “Well,” the third woman, who Olivia was beginning to think of as her champion, began, “I’m sure they both have a perfectly innocent explanation. Perhaps Lady Olivia had a headache,” she offered.

      One of the other women made a ribald joke, and Olivia cringed. Humiliation alone was bad enough, but humiliation in front of the marquess was unbearable.

      “Well, I’m not surprised,” another voice returned. “The marquess has quite a way with women, at least that’s what I heard from Eleanor at the dressmaker’s.”

      Their advocate scoffed. “The man was in church.”

      The cynical woman laughed. “Probably looking for an innocent woman to corrupt.” She made the statement as calmly as one might if she were suggesting he’d gone to the market to select produce.

      Judging from the fact that the voices had stopped wafting to her from different points down the path, Olivia knew the women were standing not too far from where she and Nick were sitting.

      “I wouldn’t be surprised,” one returned. Olivia was beginning to lose track of who was speaking. “Alfred was telling me all sorts of lurid tales of the marquess’s exploits in France. Shocking,” she added unnecessarily.

      “Well, he won’t be able to parade about in polite society for long. He’s no better than his parents. And his bad blood will out eventually.”

      Lord Huntsford’s grip on her arm tightened, and she looked at him in surprise. His jaw was clenched, and while Olivia didn’t know him well enough to be able to decipher his moods with any accuracy, he looked furious.

      What would he do? Charge out from behind the bushes and defend her honor? Defend his? But the marquess had been correct in the beginning; it was best they remain undiscovered.

      She laid her hand atop his, hoping to both comfort and subdue him. It was the least she could do after he’d set himself up for this sort of slander just by helping her out of doors. Besides, it certainly wouldn’t do for the three women to happen upon them. Or for him to step out and confront them.

      Once Lord Huntsford felt her touch, he turned to look at her, and his pursed lips and set jaw were the only visible signs he was warring with indecision. Casting another glance to where the women had resumed strolling by, he sighed. As he looked back at her, his face softened. He ventured a tentative smile, and Olivia couldn’t help but return it.

      She wondered how he had managed to so completely erase the anxiety and panic she’d felt only moments earlier. Yet even with a feeling of peace and contentment stealing over her, a small voice in the back of her mind cautioned against softening toward him and warned that she’d have to double her efforts to stay away from the marquess.

      Chapter Six

      Later that evening, past the time when everyone should have been abed, Olivia opened the door to the hallway, looked down both sides to make sure neither her brother nor the marquess were loitering about and stepped out. She pulled her wrapper tighter around herself and padded on bare feet down to a scarred wooden door that remained closed at the end of the hall.

      Her father’s study.

      She approached it with a sort of reverence, as though the room she was about to enter was holy in its own right.

      With her hands braced on the frame, she leaned her forehead against the cool wood of the door.

      Breathe, she instructed herself.

      How many years had it been?

      Five, already…

      And she still felt the fear and uncertainty of the past, while only standing outside.

      She pushed the door open and didn’t immediately notice there were a few candles burning in the room.

      Her mind was too consumed with other images. Brief, fleeting pictures from that night, ones she couldn’t banish from her memory—no matter how hard she tried to erase them or dull their influence.

      Olivia sank into a chair, one closest to the door. She noticed the faint light in the room now but didn’t give much thought to why it was there.

      What thoughts had her mother had that evening five years ago? Olivia couldn’t begin to imagine.

      They’d all been mired in grief. Her father had passed away from a sickness a few months before her mother decided she couldn’t live anymore. Her devotion to her husband so complete, she couldn’t bear to part with him—even in death.

      And Marcus, the earl for three short months, had to assume another role…her guardian.

      Most of the room was still cast in shadows, making the memories more eerie than she’d thought they’d be. No one ever asked why she avoided the room. The assumption was that fear kept her away. Of course, to hear everyone talk about it, this was the room the countess was murdered in—by an intruder who had only upended some drawers and strewn around some papers before he left the dead countess sitting at the desk.

      Olivia was surprised anyone had believed that.

      The story had been as flimsy as a gossamer thread.

      But it had held.

      And Olivia had to live with not only the lies and deceptions, but also the weight of her mother’s crime.

      “Oh, Mama,” she choked. She put her fist to her mouth, stifling the sound. She wasn’t sure if it was a plea or a condemnation…perhaps both.

      “Olivia?” a voice echoed from the shadows.

      She jumped. Her brother sat forward. He’d obviously been reclining, and neither had noticed the presence of the other.

      “What are you doing here?” she asked, hoping her voice didn’t sound as shaky as it felt.

      “I don’t know,” Marcus confessed.

      She squinted into the darkness at him, rose from her seat and crossed to sit with him. He obligingly moved his legs off the settee, so she would have room. “I don’t know, either.”

      “It’s funny, isn’t it?” he asked after a few minutes of silence.

      “What is?”

      “That the one room that holds such grief for us is the one we can’t stay away from.” He stared off СКАЧАТЬ