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  A BATTLE OF WILLS …

  “You know, I’ve never before had the slightest urge to offer a woman violence,” the earl said in a tone of mild curiosity. “But you, cousin, are in a category all your own.”

  Theo stepped backward away from his hands. It seemed a prudent move. She drew the folds of her thin cloak around her and regarded him as steadily as the renewed thumping of her heart permitted. She took a deep breath and said what she’d told herself she wouldn’t say.

  “I will agree to help you in your work on the estate, sir, if you still wish it.”

  “Such concession, cousin.” He stepped forward. Theo took another step backward. “But I’m not sure that I do still wish it.” There was an openness in her face, a vulnerability about her eyes … the result of explosive emotions. Take advantage of her disadvantage. There was one way, he thought, one last possible tactic.

  With a swift movement he caught her arm and swung her into his body, twisting the folds of the cloak securely around her, imprisoning her limbs before she could employ them to devastating effect. “This is what I wish,” he said, engulfing Theo in a savage kiss….

  Also by Jane Feather

  VICE

  VANITY

  VIOLET

  VELVET

  VIXEN

  VIRTUE

  THE DIAMOND SLIPPER

  THE SILVER ROSE

  THE EMERALD SWAN

  THE HOSTAGE BRIDE

  A VALENTINE WEDDING

  THE ACCIDENTAL BRIDE

  ALMOST INNOCENT

  THE WIDOW’S KISS

  TO KISS A SPY

  KISSED BY SHADOWS

  THE GREAT COPPER ball of the sun hung in the metallic-blue sky where not a cloud offered a veil to the punishing heat torturing the bare plain beneath. Far in the distance, snowcapped mountains shimmered like a mirage, and behind the low hills surrounding the plain, the Atlantic Ocean crashed against the wild, rocky coastline.

  But for the fifty men of His Majesty’s Third Dragoons, sweltering in their scarlet tunics, gasping on the parched earth, the cold surf-tipped waves of the ocean and the icy white of mountain snow were a dream.

  Again and again the thin blue line of Frenchmen came at them over the hills. They fired into the line, saw men fall, saw the line falter, retreat, only to reappear, reinforced. Their own men lay dead and dying, their bodies crushing the wild thyme that scratched a living with spindly olive trees and cactus, releasing its fragrance into the unstirring, burning air.

  How many more Frenchmen were there the other side of the hill? How many more times would they pour onto the plain?

  The major commanding this little company of dragoons stared into the shimmering distance behind them, across the sluggish gray river to the hills from which his reinforcements would come. His ear strained to catch the triumphant bugle call that would signal relief. It had been promised. It wasn’t possible it wouldn’t come.

  But as the long afternoon in hell dipped toward sunset, he began to believe that there was to be no reinforcement. They were destined to die here in this blazing furnace, watering the parched ground with their blood.

  A tiny breeze wafted from the sea as the sun began to sink behind the hills. It stirred the regimental colors, planted in the ground beside the dead body of the young cornet who’d been carrying them.

  “Here they come again!” a private shouted from behind the insignificant earthwork that offered their only protection from the enemy guns.

  The major looked out over the plain at the inexorable advance of the enemy line. An ensign came up behind him, panting, perspiration dripping from beneath his shako. His eyes were wild with panic, and the unbelievable words that spelled a fearful death tumbled from his lips.

  “MARRY ONE OF them? Good God, man, don’t be absurd.” Sylvester Gilbraith, fifth Earl of Stoneridge, stared incredulously at the nervous little man sitting dwarfed behind the massive desk in the lawyer’s office on Threadneedle Street.

  Lawyer Crighton cleared his throat. “I believe his lordship was very fond of his granddaughters, my lord.”

  “What has that to do with me?” demanded the earl.

  The lawyer shuffled the papers on his desk. “He wished to ensure they were well provided for, sir. Their mother, Lady Belmont, has her own substantial jointure and requires no additional provision. She will, of course, remove to the dower house as soon as you are ready to take up residence at Stoneridge Manor.”

  “The mother doesn’t concern me,” the earl commented curtly. “Be so good as to explain in words of one syllable the precise conditions of my cousin’s will. I feel sure I must have misunderstood you.”

  The lawyer regarded his client unhappily. “I don’t believe so, my lord. There are four granddaughters, the children of Viscount Belmont and Lady Elinor….”

  “Yes … yes … and Belmont was killed at the Battle of the Nile twelve years ago, making me, by virtue of the entail, Stoneridge’s heir.” The earl began to pace the room, his large stride eating up the narrow space from window to door. “Get to it, man.”

  Lawyer Crighton decided that the new Earl Stoneridge was even more intimidating than his predecessor, the crusty, gouty fourth earl. Sylvester Gilbraith’s clear gray eyes were uncomfortably penetrating in his lean face, and the white scar slashing across his forehead lent a menacing cast to his well-bred countenance. His mouth was a taut line of impatience, one characteristic he obviously shared with his late cousin.

  “Perhaps it would be best if your lordship were to read the conditions for yourself,” he suggested, selecting one of the papers in front of him.

  A glint of sardonic amusement enlivened the cool eyes. “Afraid to be the presenter of ill tidings, Crighton?” His lordship extended a slim white hand and twitched the paper from the lawyer’s grasp. He flung himself into a chair, crossing one buckskin-clad thigh over the other, and began to read, flicking all the while at his top boots with his whip.

  The long case clock in the corner ticked, a fly buzzed indolently at the open window, and the shout of a costermonger rose on the June air from the street below. Lawyer Crighton swallowed nervously, and the sound seemed magnified in the tense stillness of the room.

  “Good God!” Stoneridge flung the paper onto the desk as he sprang to his feet again. “It is iniquitous. I inherit the title, Stoneridge Manor, and the London house, but not an acre of land or a penny of the old curmudgeon’s fortune unless I marry one of these girls! This couldn’t stand up in a court of law, it’s the will of a lunatic.”

  “I assure you, sir, the will is perfectly legal. His lordship was in sound mind, and I witnessed it myself, together with two members of this firm.” The lawyer pulled his chin. “Only the title and the two properties are entailed. His lordship had the right to do as he pleased with the rest of his fortune.”

  “And he’s left it to a gaggle of girls!”

  “I believe them to be very personable young ladies,” Crighton ventured. The earl’s expression indicated he found the observation less than reassuring.

  The lawyer cleared his throat again. “Lady Emily is twenty-two, my lord, and I understand she is betrothed. Lady Clarissa is twenty-one, and I believe unattached. Then there is Lady Theodora, who is approaching twenty. And Lady Rosalind, who is still a child … not quite twelve.”

  “So I seem to have the choice of two,” his lordship said with a grim smile. “If I refuse to make such a choice, my cousin’s fortune is divided among his granddaughters, and I am left with an empty title and not a feather to fly with.” He swung toward the fireplace, resting an arm on the mantel, gazing down into the empty grate. “The bastard was determined to be revenged for that entail somehow.”

  The lawyer cracked his knuckles, and the earl raised his head, casting him a look of powe
rful dislike. Hastily, Crighton rested his hands on the desk. The violent estrangement between the Gilbraith and Belmont branches of the Stoneridge family was as well-known to him as it was to the London ton … but its genesis was lost in family memory.

  The fourth earl had never been able to reconcile himself to the fact that his distant cousin’s family would come into the title. It had added gall and wormwood to his bitter grief at the death of his only child.

  “I don’t believe it’s as simple as that, my lord,” the lawyer said diffidently. “There is a codicil.”

  The earl’s clear eyes sharpened. “A codicil?”

  “Yes, my lord.” Crighton drew out another piece of heavy vellum. “The young ladies and their mother are not to be informed of these conditions of the will until one month after you have been notified.”

  “What?” A sharp crack of disbelieving laughter broke from the earl. “For one month they are to believe they inherit nothing? And you say the old man was fond of them?”

  “I believe, my lord, that his lordship wished to be fair … to give you a fair chance,” Crighton said. “There will be some incentive for one of the young ladies to favor your suit … should you, of course, decide to press it.”

  “And just how am I supposed to pay court immediately after his death to a young lady in deep mourning for her nearest male relative?” The earl’s eyebrows disappeared into his scalp. “I’d look an egotistic fool … but perhaps that was my cousin’s intention.”

  Lawyer Crighton cleared his throat yet again. “Lord Stoneridge instructed his relatives that there was to be no formal mourning period. They are forbidden to wear mourning or to refrain from their usual pursuits.” He scratched his head. “If you knew his lordship, sir, you’d understand that such instructions were quite in character. He was not a conventional man.”

  “And why is he going to such lengths to give me a fair chance, as you put it?” The earl shook his head in disbelief.

  Crighton was silent for a minute before saying, “His lordship would not care to see Stoneridge Manor go to rack and ruin for lack of funds to maintain it, and I also believe he wished it to remain in the hands of a member of his son’s family.”

  “Ah.” The earl nodded slowly. “One could almost feel sorry for the devious old devil … torn between loathing the idea of a Gilbraith in residence and ancestral pride.”

  He drew on his York tan gloves, smoothing the fine leather over his fingers, a deep frown between his chiseled brows, wrinkling the scar. “A union between a Gilbraith and a Belmont would be something indeed.”

  “Indeed, my lord.”

  “I give you good day, Crighton.” Abruptly, his lordship strode to the door.

  The lawyer bounced up to bow his client from the room and down the narrow flight of stairs to the street door. He waited politely as the earl mounted the glossy black being held at the door by a street urchin and rode off down Threadneedle Street toward Cheapside.

  Lawyer Crighton returned to his office. It was to be hoped the young Belmont ladies hadn’t heard the scandalous accusations dogging the heels of the Earl of Stoneridge. Such rumors would hardly endear a prospective suitor, particularly one of Gilbraith parentage—surely sufficient a disadvantage.

  Sylvester rode back to his lodgings on Jermyn Street. Two years ago he would have gone to one of his clubs and sought companionship, port, and a game of faro. But he could no longer bear that instant of silence as he walked into a crowded room, the averted eyes, the stiff acknowledgments of his onetime friends. Never the cut direct—except from Gerard. He’d been acquitted, after all. But he’d not been exonerated.

  Cowardice was a charge that clung like slime.

  “It’s insufferable! How can we possibly be expected to live five miles from a Gilbraith!” The young lady at the pianoforte slammed her hands onto the keys in a crashing chord. “I don’t understand why grandpapa should have insisted on such a thing.”

  “Your grandfather didn’t insist we live in the dower house, Clarissa,” Lady Elinor Belmont said mildly, examining her embroidery with a critical frown. “I think a paler shade of green …” She selected a silk from the basket on the table beside her. “But while we’re hardly in danger of debtors’ prison, we need to husband our resources. If I dip into capital to set us up in our own establishment, it’ll cut into your dowries.”

  “I don’t give a hoot about a dowry,” Lady Clarissa declared. “And neither does Theo. We’ve no intention of marrying, ever.”

  “‘Ever’ is a big word, dear,” her mother remarked. “And there’s still Emily and Rosie to consider.”

  Clarissa swung round on the piano stool, her big blue eyes stormy. “It’s just so galling,” she said. “To have to remove to the dower house, when we’ve always lived here.”

  “Don’t fuss so, Clarry. We’ve always known it would happen … ever since Papa was killed.” A tall young woman looked up from a fashion magazine, a ray of sunlight picking golden glints in her dark brown hair. “And the dower house is very spacious. Besides, once Edward and I are married, you can all come and live with us.”

  “Poor Edward,” murmured Lady Elinor with an amused smile. “I hardly think a young man, even one so accommodating as Edward, would relish starting married life in the company of his mother-in-law and three sisters-in-law.”

  “Oh, fustian, Mama!” Her eldest daughter leaped to her feet and flung her arms around her mother. “Edward loves you.”

  “Yes, I’m sure he does, Emily, dear, and I’m much obliged to him,” Lady Elinor said placidly, returning the hug. “Nevertheless, we shall remove to the dower house and make the best of it.”

  Her two elder daughters knew the tone. Behind their mother’s mild exterior lay a will of iron, rarely exerted but never to be ignored.

  “Mama, where’s Theo? She promised to help me cut up these worms.” A young girl wandered into the room, extending a cupped hand.

  “Rosie, that’s revolting! Take them away,” her sisters commanded in unison.

  The child blinked through large horn-rimmed spectacles. “They’re not revolting. Theo doesn’t think they are. They’re to be part of an experiment … a bio … biological experiment.”

  “Theo doesn’t know the first thing about biological experiments,” Emily said.

  “But at least she’s interested,” Rosie responded with asperity, peering at the contents of her palm, “If you’re not interested in things, you never learn anything. That was what Grandpapa said.”

  “That’s very true, Rosie, but the drawing room is not the best place for worms,” her mother declared.

  “Alive or dissected,” Clarissa put in, closing the lid of the pianoforte. “Take them away. Theo’s gone fishing … heaven only knows when she’ll reappear.”

  Lady Belmont bent over her basket of embroidery silks so that her daughters couldn’t see the tears glazing her eyes. While they’d all had a close relationship with the old earl, Theo had been the closest to their grandfather and was struggling with a well of grief that Lady Belmont understood as perhaps the other girls didn’t. Theo had needed a father. Kit’s death when she was seven had left her with needs that her mother couldn’t satisfy. The others had adapted, it seemed, and their grandfather’s influence had been important, but not as vital as their mother’s. It had been the opposite with Theo.

  In the days since the earl’s death, she had plunged herself into the affairs of the estate and the solitary pursuits that had always pleased her with a single-minded dedication that would shut out her grief. She paid little or no attention to the household routine these days. Clarissa was right—Theo would return before dark, but there was no knowing exactly when.

  That same afternoon Sylvester Gilbraith downed his tankard of ale in the tap room of the village inn and leaned back, resting his elbows on the bar counter behind him. The room was dark and smoky, and he was aware of the surreptitious glances of the inn’s customers as they drank and spat into the sawdust at their feet. They didn�
��t know who he was and speculation was rife. Not many gentlemen of quality fetched up at the Hare and Hounds in Lulworth, demanding a room for the night.

  But it didn’t suit Lord Stoneridge to declare himself just yet. He guessed that the village inhabitants and the estate workers would share the Belmont hostility to a Gilbraith. Such attitudes were passed down from the manor and rapidly became entrenched, even when the reason for them was long forgotten.

  He pushed himself away from the bar counter and strolled outside. Summer had come early this year. The village street was bathed in sunshine, the mud hard-ridged, and the groom in the stableyard drowsed against the wall, sucking a straw, the brim of his cap pulled well down over his eyes.

  He straightened, rubbing his eyes with his knuckles as his lordship beckoned. A sharp command brought him running across the cobbled yard.

  “Saddle my horse.”

  The lad tugged his forelock and disappeared into the stable, reemerging after five minutes leading the earl’s black.

  “Is there a cross-country route to Stoneridge Manor?” His lordship swung himself astride his mount, tossing a coin to the lad.

  “Aye, sir. Through the village, and take the right fork. Follow the footpath ’cross the fields, and it’ll bring you onto Belmont land be’ind the manor.”

  Lord Stoneridge nodded and turned his horse. He’d never seen his ancestral home, except in paintings, and for a reason he couldn’t identify wanted to familiarize himself with the house, its grounds, and its dependencies before he announced himself.

  He followed directions and found himself approaching the house from the rear. He broke through a spinney, and the long, low Tudor manor house faced him on a hill, across a swift-running stream, spanned by a narrow stone bridge.

  Stoneridge Manor. His home … and it would be the home of his children. Gilbraith children. A surge of grim satisfaction rose in his breast. In two hundred years a Gilbraith had not set foot in Stoneridge. Now it would be theirs. The Belmonts’ unfortunate tendency to produce female progeny had finally excluded them. Except …