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A Bride for the Devilish Duke Bonus Ending

Bonus Ending

A Bride for the Devilish
Duke

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Extended Epilogue

Redmane Manor, Summer 1819

 

“Papa!” James’s indignant voice cut through the lazy hum of summer insects. “Uncle Harold says frogs eat boys who don’t behave. Is that true?”

Damien Fitzgerald, Duke of Redmane, paused in his conversation with the estate steward, a role now belonging to his former butler Wilkins, and cast a bemused glance toward his son. James stood ankle-deep in mud at the pond’s edge, sleeves rolled high, hair a tousled mess of fiery curls. Beside him, Harold’s daughters—Louisa and Marianne—hid grins behind grass-stained palms.

Damien raised a brow at Harry, who was idly sipping tea beneath a sprawling apple tree. “Really, Harry? Frogs?”

Harry offered a mild shrug. “Desperate measures, brother. He was threatening my last scone.”

Elsie emerged from behind the tree. “Damien, your brother is inciting rebellion again.”

“Elsie, my dear,” Harry drawled affectionately, “it seems you have forgotten, they inherited all rebellion from your side of the family.”

Elsie arched a brow. “Clearly. After all, the Fitzgerald men are renowned for their gentle temperament.”

Damien half-coughed into his hand. “She has you there, brother.”

He watched Harold and Elsie beneath the apple tree, hands occasionally brushing like they hadn’t been married half a decade. It suited them—this quiet domesticity. The village near Epping still thought of Harold as soft-spoken Harry, the bookish recluse with a surprisingly pretty wife and an even more surprising fondness for jam-making.

He’d worried, at first—spent a year half-expecting someone to recognize him. But Harold disappeared beautifully into quiet life. Elsie kept him grounded, and the villagers adored them both. Damien and Emma had been there when Louisa arrived, and again when Marianne came, red-faced and furious and unmistakably hers.

Damien glanced toward James now, who eyed the last scone with fierce determination. His son had inherited Emma’s tenacity, certainly—though Damien suspected stubbornness was as much Fitzgerald blood as Montrose.

James had come early in their marriage, just as Emma predicted the night of the fire. Yet Emma had taken motherhood with the same determination and responsibility she did everything, filling the manor with warmth and laughter that had seemed impossible during Damien’s childhood years.

Marianne took the quiet moment to triumphantly claim the last scone from Harold, who laughed as her father feigned mortal injury.

“Betrayal most foul!” he lamented theatrically.

Before Damien could respond, James barreled toward him again, muddy footprints in his wake. “Papa,” he panted again, clutching Damien’s coat sleeve, “I demand justice. Louisa stole my wooden sword while I wasn’t looking!”

“I borrowed it,” Louisa corrected primly, stepping up behind him. She brandished the toy proudly. “He never listens, so I had to defeat him for it.”

Damien fought back a chuckle. “It appears your honor hangs by a thread, James.”

His son’s expression shifted from earnest distress to determination. “Then we must duel for it properly. Papa, will you be referee?”

Harry smirked into his teacup. “Careful, brother. One step toward officiating children’s duels and next you’ll be dancing attendance on your wife’s every whim.”

Damien’s lips twitched. “A fate long since sealed, I fear.”

Harry chuckled quietly. “True enough.”

As James and Louisa resumed their cheerful battle across the lawn, Damien glanced toward the house, where Emma stood silhouetted at the window, arranging flowers with easy grace. Her figure was slender, poised—every inch the duchess. Yet Damien knew intimately the stubborn woman beneath.

Harry’s voice broke through his thoughts. “You are staring again.”

Damien adjusted his cuffs coolly. “I never stare.”

“Of course not. You merely gaze with ducal intent.”

“Subtlely is not your strong suit, is it, brother?”

“No. But candor is,” Harry said briskly, setting down his cup and rising. “Well, I promised Elsie a stroll. She claims my legs have forgotten how to move.”

“Do try not to frighten the frogs,” Damien murmured dryly.

The older brother’s smile widened. “No promises.”

As Harry offered Elsie his arm, Damien turned toward Wilkins, who had lingered respectfully at a distance. “Everything prepared for tonight?”

“Precisely as you instructed, Your Grace,” Wilkins replied crisply. “Musicians stationed, paths illuminated. Your… item,” he paused meaningfully, lowering his voice, “is safely hidden beneath the rose statue.”

“Excellent. Thank you, Wilkins.”

With a courteous nod, the steward withdrew, leaving Damien to briefly wander toward the east wing terrace alone. He paused, hand resting lightly on the stone balustrade worn smooth by countless seasons. His gaze traced the familiar path below, now alive with blooms and color, so different from the cold shadows the night he had first pursued Emma here.

“Fond memories?” a familiar voice came from behind him.

Damien turned, warmth blooming instantly at his wife’s presence—though concern shadowed her eyes. She came toward him, breathless, her auburn hair catching the sun in brilliant hues as she rapidly scanned the garden.

“Has Wilkins sorted the musicians for tonight?” she asked.

“He has,” Damien reassured gently.

“And the flowers at the veranda?”

“Are in fresh bloom.”

“And the lanterns along the walkway—”

“All precisely as you instructed,” Damien finished sweetly.

Emma’s shoulders relaxed only slightly. “Thank heavens. Charles and Rosie arrive tonight, and Josie’s condition—well, I want everything perfect. It has been over a year since everyone has got together.”

Damien caught her anxious hands, pressing them reassuringly. “You have managed far greater feats than a garden party, my sweet. Everything will be perfect.”

She hesitated, biting her lower lip gently. “You are sure we are not missing anything?”

His eyes softened. “Utterly.”

Emma exhaled slowly, finally noticing James, who had paused his campaign to wave cheerfully at her, scone in hand that Marianne had so kindly split with him.

“He has ruined his clothes again,” she smirked.

“He is our son,” Damien teased gently. “Expect rebellion.”

Emma laughed softly. “Impossible man.”

He took her hand in his, fingers entwined, savoring the quiet intimacy. Around them, summer whispered through leaves, carrying laughter from the gardens.

She glanced down at their joined hands, her tone softening. “You seem rather pleased with yourself this afternoon. What mischief are you plotting now?”

Damien smiled mildly, not betraying a hint of his true intent. “You wound me, dear. Must I always be plotting something?”

Her eyes narrowed suspiciously. “With you, always.”

 “Then perhaps, dear wife, you should brace yourself for tonight.”

Emma’s eyes flashed curiosity, tempered by her usual caution. “Should I be… worried?”

“Not in the slightest.” He raised her hand to his lips, pressing a gentle kiss to her knuckles. “But you may be very surprised.”

 “Surprised or scandalized?”

“Knowing you, probably both,” he chuckled.

Her eyes drifted to the terrace doors, suddenly anxious again. “I must double-check with Marshall about the seating. But tonight, I promise—I am all yours.”

Damien kissed his wife’s forehead tenderly. “I shall hold you to it then, dear.”

 

          ***

Redmane Manor, Later That Evening

 

Emma paused at the garden’s edge, her breath catching slightly. Twilight transformed the manor lawns into a dreamscape: paper lanterns bathed the paths in amber warmth, their delicate glow dancing among the white tents and silk-draped pavilions. Music from a string quartet floated gracefully through the evening air, mingling with bubbling laughter and the delighted shrieks of children darting in and out of tables laden with cakes and summer fruits.

She adjusted the ribbon on James’s collar absently, drawing his attention away from the jam tarts he’d been eying eagerly. “Mind your shirt tonight, please. We have important company.”

James sighed dramatically. “Mama, you say that every time. And every time, I forget.”

Elsie, standing beside Emma with quiet amusement, gave a soft laugh. “At least he’s honest.”

Emma smiled ruefully. “Frighteningly so. Too much like his father, I fear.”

Elsie’s eyes sparkled knowingly. “Not exclusively.”

Emma touched Elsie’s arm affectionately, feeling a rush of nostalgia as she surveyed the restored gardens. She nodded gently toward the vine-covered archway just outside the south garden room. “Do you remember, Elsie? That night I met Damien in those shadows.”

Elsie’s lips twitched into a mischievous smile. “You mean the night the gossip we spread came to fruition?”

Emma shook her head, laughing softly. “He never stood a chance.”

“Nor did you,” her sister-in-law murmured warmly.

Before Emma could reply, a carriage rolled to a halt at the gravel drive, interrupting her reverie. Josie emerged first, her face flushed, one hand supporting the pronounced swell beneath her gown. Thomas hovered protectively, his attentiveness both endearing and faintly amusing. Josie had bloomed wonderfully these past years, her once timid nature tempered by confidence and joy. Marriage to Sir Thomas had given her a steadiness, an elegance Emma admired deeply—though tonight, Josie’s mischievous grin promised trouble.

“Sister!” Josie called cheerfully, embracing her gently, mindful of her condition. “You look entirely too composed for a woman raising a boy with Redmane blood. How do you do it!”

Careful,” Emma teased affectionately, “You shall tempt fate. Your own is soon to arrive.”

Josie laughed brightly, pressing a fond hand against Emma’s cheek. “I live in hopeful denial.” She curtsied primly for Elsie. “I hope you are well too, Elsie. I may be asking some favors of you too. Louisa and Marianne are truly the two most well-behaved children among all of the ton.”

Elsie snorted. “Dear, you don’t know the half of it.”

Another arrival cut across their conversation—Rosie’s voice preceded her through the gathering twilight, her tone breathless and vividly theatrical. “Sisters! Disaster has struck—well, almost struck.”

Josie rolled her eyes as Rosie swept toward them in vibrant silk, her face a mixture of excitement and exaggerated despair. She had changed remarkably little; scandal still trailed her as stubbornly as her shadow, mostly because Rosie herself ensured it never lost sight of her. Her novels—half sensation, half thinly veiled family histories—had become society’s guilty pleasure.

Emma raised an amused eyebrow. “And what calamity brings you so swiftly tonight?”

“My publisher,” Rosie declared breathlessly, eyes widening with mock horror. “Claims the Duke of Flamebrook is too obviously Damien. Tell me honestly—is it so apparent?”

Emma’s lips twitched. “Considering Flamebrook broods in a ruined castle, wears a cravat resembling a funeral shroud—”

“And has the name Dorian,” Josie added, rolling her eyes once more.

Emma affected a subdued smile. “Yes, perhaps it is.”

Rosie gave a huff of exasperation. “Art imitates life! But do reassure Damien I shall change Flamebrook’s hair color. I am nothing if not accommodating.”

Emma laughed at that. “I am sure my husband will be deeply grateful.”

Just as Emma moved to guide her sisters toward the refreshments, she caught sight of another familiar figure arriving, and she paused, suddenly wary.

Charles Montrose stepped confidently from his carriage, helping a slender woman down with notable care. Emma studied her brother’s face carefully—he wore that familiar look of reckless pride, the one he’d sport every morning after Emma and their father settled his gambling debts years ago.

She sighed softly, shaking her head as Charles approached, proudly guiding the mysterious woman toward them.

He offered a breezy smile. “Sisters, may I present Lady Catherine Davenport. My fiancée.”

Rosie gasped theatrically, Josie blinked in surprise, and Emma struggled to maintain composure. Catherine Davenport was striking, certainly, with quiet grace in her poise and warmth in her intelligent eyes, but the delicate dignity about her only heightened Emma’s suspicions of Charles’s good fortune.

Catherine?” Rosie exclaimed.

“He truly was Mama’s boy,” Josie snorted quietly before being shot a stern look by her elder brother.

“It seems your fortunes have swayed rather dramatically, brother,” Emma assuaged.

Charles grinned again, dropping his voice conspiratorially. “But this time, dear Emma, I am gambling for keeps.”

Emma laughed despite herself, taking Catherine’s hand warmly. “Then welcome to the family, Lady Catherine. God help you.”

The lady’s eyes sparkled knowingly. “Thank you. And yes, your brother has warned me extensively about his… history.”

Emma began to relax, feeling the knot of anxiety from earlier slowly unravel. The gathering thrived around them, the music swelling softly as guests moved gently onto the lawn to dance beneath the twilight. Warmth settled gently around her shoulders, and for the first time all day, she allowed herself to breathe.

As dusk painted the skies in shades of violet and gold, Emma’s gaze fell on a solitary figure lingering quietly near the garden’s edge.

Isaac Fitzgerald stood watching, noticeably changed from the arrogant, troubled young man she’d once known. There was no trace of bravado now; he was quiet, dignified, humbled by the years and experiences.

Emma knew from Damien’s brief mentions that Isaac had spent the last two years rebuilding his reputation piece by careful piece, far from Jacob’s influence—Jacob, who now resided somewhere in the wilds of America after their spectacular family disgrace had cost him everything, even the Regent’s favor.

As Emma approached, Isaac inclined his head politely. “Lady Emma,” he greeted softly, genuine respect in his voice.

“Isaac,” Emma returned gently. “You are very welcome here tonight. Please, mingle with the rest of the guests.”

He glanced away briefly toward Harold, whose figure was just visible among the guests, engaged in quiet conversation with Elsie. “I hope you don’t mind,” Isaac said hesitantly, his voice lowered. “I wanted to see him—Harold, that is. He is the only person who still speaks my name with any dignity.”

Emma studied him, touched by the quiet sincerity in his words. “You deserve that dignity, Isaac. It takes courage to face one’s mistakes.”

Damien appeared at her side, his hand settling warmly against the small of her back. Emma leaned subtly into his touch, feeling the familiar comfort in his presence.

Isaac gave Damien a small, respectful nod. “Your Grace.”

Damien offered a firm handshake. “I am glad you could join us all the way from York, cousin.”

The three stood in quiet ease, the tensions of old bitterness smoothed by years and softened by time. Emma felt a quiet satisfaction witnessing it, sensing closure—hard-won but deserved.

As Isaac quietly withdrew to join Harold, Damien’s hand lingered gently on her waist. Emma exhaled softly, gazing out at the twinkling garden filled with life, laughter, and love she had not dared dream possible once.

 

***

 

The garden had fallen quiet.

The kind of quiet that came after laughter and lanterns and children darting through hedges with sticky fingers and muddy knees. The fête had dissolved into flickering windows and soft footsteps along polished corridors. Their guests had retired — some tucked into the east wing’s refurbished suites, others asleep in the smaller guesthouse nearby, all preparing for the promised seaside outing at dawn.

Emma stepped into the night air, her slippers whispering over the flagstone. The breeze was warm and gentle against her neck. She could still hear faint laughter—Rosie’s, almost certainly—drifting through an open window. She smiled to herself and wrapped her arms loosely around her waist.

A familiar figure approached from the shadows between two trimmed box hedges. Damien, without his coat, sleeves cuffed back, cravat abandoned somewhere—probably sacrificed to one of James’s more spirited tug-of-war games earlier. He looked at ease, which was saying something. He looked like home.

“You are out late,” he noted, his voice low and steady as he fell into step beside her.

She glanced sideways. “I could say the same.”

He offered her his arm. She took it.

They walked in silence for a moment. Not awkward. Comfortable. The way they always did when the weight of the day slipped off and it was just the two of them, back in step again.

“I saw Charles trying to bribe the cook with a bottle of brandy,” she said mildly. “Something about midnight pigeon pies.”

Damien made a soft sound of amusement. “And here I thought it was Rosie who’d test the staff’s limits first.”

“She did,” Emma replied. “She’s holding an informal court in the east drawing room. I believe she’s planning a novel about the events of this very evening.”

“I dread it already,” he said dryly. “Though I suppose I can’t be named something as deeply unflattering as the Duke of Flamestone this time.”

Flamebrook.” Emma tilted her head up to look at him. “And Flamebrook might be generous.”

He arched a brow. “Careful, dear. I still outrank you.”

“I outrank you in sheer competence,” she replied primly.

“You always have.”

There it was—that grin she rarely saw outside their bedchamber, the one that began in his mouth but finished in his eyes. It was soft, honest. For all his stoicism, Damien had never been closed off to her again. Not truly. He held the world at arm’s length, but never her.

They passed beneath a row of lanterns strung low between the trellises, the light shifting as it moved over their joined shadows. Emma felt his fingers flex slightly beneath hers. Not anxious. Just purposeful.

She realized, quite suddenly, that he was leading her toward the rose garden.

“I thought you hated this part of the estate,” she said, breaking the quiet again. “Something about the symmetry being an affront to natural chaos.”

“It has… grown on me.”

“I have that effect on things,” she giggled.

He didn’t look at her then, but she felt the curl of his fingers in answer. They moved past the hedgerows and the half-moon-shaped bench where she used to rest while James tried to build mud castles. A small pavilion waited ahead, nestled among the climbing roses. Lanterns had been hung carefully, their light warm and gentle, glowing like fireflies caught in a quiet waltz.

He stopped just outside the pavilion and faced her.

“I want to give you something.”

Emma blinked. “If you tell me you had another portrait commissioned, I daresay I shall burn it in front of the guests tomorrow.”

“No,” he said mildly, reaching toward the base of the old rose statue. “Just this.”

He pressed something at the pedestal’s base — a small catch — and pulled free a small box. He held it out to her without flourish.

When she took it and opened the lid, her breath caught.

A deep blue sapphire nestled in gold. Simple. Lovely. The sort of ring someone chose not to impress, but to mean something.

Damien’s voice came, quiet and sure. “I married you out of necessity. That day, I believed I was giving up the life I knew.”

He stepped closer, gently closing her fingers over the box. “But instead, I found something better. I found the woman who would outmaneuver me daily, steal my breath nightly, and make our son braver than I ever deserved.”

Emma looked up at him, her heart tightening in the way it sometimes still did when he surprised her with tenderness.

“Let me ask you properly this time,” he said. “Not because duty or circumstance demanded it. But because I love you. Because you are still the sharpest, most maddeningly magnificent thing to ever walk into my life.”

He paused. His voice dropped an inch deeper. “Lady Emmeline Montrose, will you marry me again?”

Emma didn’t speak. She closed the distance instead, pressing her hands to his chest, rising onto her toes, and kissing him with a hunger that had never dulled.

He responded without hesitation.

His hands slid to her waist, anchoring her, drawing her in so fully that her breath caught against his mouth. The kiss deepened — hot, slow, threaded with every inch of restraint he so often clung to and, with her, always lost. Her fingers gripped the back of his neck, pulling him down harder, until his sigh spilled into her mouth and he staggered them both back a step.

“You haven’t answered,” he murmured against her lips.

“I thought that was clear,” she whispered, dragging her mouth along his jaw.

His laugh was low, full of that heat she’d coaxed out of him so many times. She didn’t need candlelight to see how dark his eyes had gone.

“You will never be rid of me now,” he said.

“I should hope not,” she breathed.

They stood like that for a while. Bodies flush, breaths mingled, the scent of roses thick in the night air.

Eventually, they settled onto the garden bench, her legs draped across his lap, his coat wrapped around both of them. Petals swayed above in the breeze, and the moon cast its pale blessing over the quiet estate.

Emma rested her head on his shoulder. “You have given me a life I didn’t dare ask for.”

“You made the life,” he murmured into her hair. “I just… got lucky enough to live in it.”

She smiled, eyes drifting toward the upper windows of the manor — where James was almost certainly asleep with his boots on the wrong feet and his face still slightly sticky.

He was theirs. This life was theirs. Built from missteps, forged in laughter, stitched with arguments and apologies and late-night promises neither had ever intended to break.

The lanterns swayed. The garden breathed.

And Emma, Duchess of Redmane, kissed her husband again — not for ceremony, or duty, or spectacle — but because she could. Because she still wanted to.

Because joy, at long last, had been chosen on purpose. 

The End.

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A Bride for the Devilish
Duke

My name… is not a toy to be passed around for amusement—or gain. Not without consequences.”

Lady Emmeline Montrose has sworn never to belong to any man—not after a near scandal left her shaken and wary. To protect herself, she tells a lie: she is secretly courting the Duke of Redmane, a man so cold and untouchable no one would dare question it… Until he returns.

Damien Fitzgerald, Duke of Redmane, is ruthless, calculating—and furious. Emma used his name to keep her virtue. Now she will use his ring to save his reputation..

The arrangement is simple: a marriage in name only. But as tempers flare and desire simmers, Damien must choose—revenge, or the woman who was never part of the plan…

Chapter One

April 1813

New Montrose Hall

Duncan Montrose, seventh Earl of Eastwick, cleared his throat as he glanced up from the letter in his hands.

He peered over the rim of his spectacles at his eldest daughter, Emmeline, seated primly across the breakfast table. The morning sun, slanting through the tall windows, caught the streaks of silver threaded through his iron-grey hair. His eyes were pale hazel, matching those of his daughter.

Emmeline, known by all in the family simply as Emma, raised an eyebrow as she bit into her toast.

“I have some… news, which is rather thrilling,” Duncan began, holding up the parchment. “This letter reaches me from Redmane Manor, from the Duke of Redmane himself. It contains invitations for the entire family to a ball he is hosting in a week.”

Emma almost choked on her bite. She recovered quickly, of course, lifting her teacup to conceal the betraying flush that had crept up her neck. “That is indeed exciting, Papa,” she murmured behind the porcelain rim. “I imagine the girls will require new dresses for the occasion too.”

Duncan’s brows drew together in thought. “Ever practical, Emma. Yes, they will want something new to attend a Ducal ball. Though I do not know what is wrong with what they have.”

Emma offered him a beatific smile. “Nor I. They have many adorable dresses. But, you know how Rosie and Josie are.”

The door to the breakfast room burst open then, and Charles entered, his head immersed in the pages of a London gossip sheet. Close on his heels came his younger sister Rosaline—known to all as Rosie—craning her neck to peer over his shoulder.

“Have you seen this bit about the Duchess of Sussex, Charlie? Well, I’m not the least surprised, given all the nonsense surrounding the Earl of Somerset,” Rosie said in a thrilled and scandalized whisper.

Charles gave a solemn nod. “A disgruntled lady’s maid, formerly employed by the Duchess, is given credit for the story.”

“But so sloppy in its writing. I could do so much better.”

A heavy scoff came from the head of the table. “A female journalist, my dear? Over my dead body, and I should say all of the editors in London too. It is a man’s job.”

“Then I shall content myself with becoming an author. Though I should like to write about scandal and intrigue,” Rosie mused, hand pressed delicately to her heart as she gazed dreamily into the middle distance.

They sat, Charles still immersed in the paper, Rosie pointing to paragraphs and phrases she thought particularly worthy or unworthy.

“Enough of that literary effluent. I will not have it at the breakfast table,” Duncan grumbled, “we have news if the two of you would care to listen?”

How dearly exciting! And what news is that, Papa?” Josephine, known simply as Josie, effused, as she entered at the precise moment to hear their father’s words.

“Yes, do tell, Papa,” Rosie added before her sister had finished speaking.

The four children shared red hair and brown eyes of various shades. Emma was closest in color to their father, while Charles was the darkest.

While Rosie and Josie were pretty, that prettiness had matured into grace and true beauty in Emma. She resembled a woman who appeared in a portrait on the wall behind Emma’s seat. It depicted a radiant matriarch with crimson hair standing by a proud, handsome man in the uniform of the Royal Navy. The man was Duncan, and the woman was his late wife and mother to the four children.

“Is it that you have finally relented and purchased a townhouse for us in London?” Josie exclaimed in excitement.

“Do not be silly, Josie. Property is far too expensive at the moment,” Charles answered in their father’s stead. “I am sure Papa refers to the bloodstock we have in the stables. It is in dire need of replenishment. There is a stallion in Cheshire that would be an excellent sire. I could write to my friend—”

“If I may be allowed to speak at my breakfast table,” Duncan interjected irritably. “We are all invited to the Duke of Redmane’s ball at Redmane Manor. To be held next Saturday. No, I have no intention of buying a townhouse in London. And no, I shall not seek to breed the next Ascot champion either!”

He held up the letter, which bore the seal of the Dukes of Redmane, a tower atop a hill.

Charles and Rosie looked suspiciously at Emma.

Josie furrowed her brows. “That is quite short notice, is it not, father? One week?”

“Oh, you are so obsessed with etiquette, Josie,” Rosie groused.

“And you are too little concerned with it, Rosie. There is more to life than the gossip columns.”

“The girls shall require new dresses, Father,” Charles said, effecting a severe tone that all knew was not his true nature.

“Emma and I have just been discussing that very matter. That will be… arranged, I am sure,” Duncan acknowledged, his deep voice effortlessly calm and reassuring. The same voice he had used in his youth to bellow orders across the deck of a Royal Navy frigate. As he spoke, he was looking down the middle of the table, past the mismatched tea service and the silver-plated tray that concealed a patch in the tablecloth, to Emma.

She smiled, meeting Rosie’s suddenly anxious eyes.

“Of course there shall be new gowns, Rosie. You would not be attending the ball of a Duke without a new dress. Do not worry. On a related note, Papa, I shall be going into Nettlebed today and could visit with Mrs. Spinnaker, the seamstress, and her daughter. I can ask her to call on us.”

A meaning to her words passed between father and daughter that was lost on the others. Rosie bleated excitedly about being measured for a new dress, but Josie seemed lost in her thoughts. Emma wondered what could be tarnishing the bright, silvery shine of an invitation from a Duke.

Redmane has quite the reputation, you know,” Charles murmured, picking up his teacup and sipping, “something of an eccentric.”

“He has not hosted a ball since he became Duke, though his father was at the heart of the county set,” Rosie nodded soberly.

“He was a fine man and well respected by all,” Duncan deduced, “perhaps his son has taken his time to emerge from Geoffrey’s considerable shadow.”

“How can one be expected to maintain a social calendar if such events are announced without appropriate notice?” Josie wondered aloud.

“I am sure that the entire county will wish to cancel any conflicting appointments in favor of this one,” Emma reassured her.

Including Sir Thomas Donovan, she thought, the man who had Josie’s heart in his keeping. She did not say his name aloud, though.

“Yes, I suppose you are right, Emma. For example, I had been invited to afternoon tea at Brimley Park with Mrs. Donovan and her friends,” Josie said, coloring at the mention of the Donovan name.

“I am sure a family as prominent in the county as Sir Thomas will be invited,” Emma smiled.

The sisters exchanged a look. Emma tried to convey her calm reassurance, and Josie smiled nervously.

“Well, I, for one, am surprised at you all. I thought this would be the best news we have had for a long time. Attending a Ducal ball and a man who has the ear of the Regent, too, if the rumors are to be believed. And here you all are, finding reasons to be nervous. Your mother would be dancing a jig at such news.”

That brought a wave of genuine laughter to all. Emma smiled as she pictured her mother, fiery-haired and green-eyed, fierce in anger and even fiercer in joy. She was a woman who danced with servants and walked barefoot in the park, a commoner who had captured the heart of an Earl.

“Mama would not be at home to worry about social calendars,” Rosie shrugged.

“Nor to obtaining a new dress,” Josie replied.

“Or the reputation of her host,” Charles put in.

“Mama would be concerned only for the dancing and that we all enjoyed ourselves,” Emma finished, feeling the familiar twinge of sadness at the thought of her late mother, Catherine. There was a brief moment of quiet as all remembered her momentarily.

Duncan broke the silence with a loud throat clearing, blinking repeatedly.

“That should be most helpful, Emma. We should be glad to receive a visit from Mrs. Spinnaker. Perhaps you wouldn’t mind taking care of her daughter while she tends to your sisters?”

“Of course, Papa.”

Fortunately, Emma possessed a bookish nature and an aptitude for children, while the town seamstress wished to ensure her daughter received an education. The two needs had dovetailed when the Montrose family could not afford to pay for fine tailoring.

“Where is your brooch, Emma?” Charles suddenly asked around a mouthful of toast.

Emma’s hand instinctively went to the place above her heart, where she had become accustomed to wearing the brooch her mother had left her.

Brooch?” she asked innocently.

“You know—the one with the jade stone and the ivory backing. You always wear it,” Charles added, half an eye on an item in the gossip rag that Rosie was pointing out to him.

“I must have forgotten it this morning,” Emma said brightly, “I will have Elsie fetch it down.”

“Wherever did you find it?” Josie asked, curious. “It looked so old and worn.”

“I believe I found it in Mr. Gannet’s curio shop in Nettlebed,” Emma said lightly, “I was quite taken by it. It was only a few pennies.”

Duncan looked away. Rising from the table, he went to stand by the window, gazing out at the gardens.

“My, my,” he muttered, clasping his hands behind his back. “The rhododendrons are rather spectacular this year. I always dread the end of summer. The beds look so… empty without them.”

Emma’s eyes followed him, her smile slipping at the edges.

He knew.

She understood and wished the subject had not come up. Duncan knew where the brooch came from and how much it meant to Emma. He also knew that her brother meant more to her than any piece of jewelry.

“Well then,” she declared with a practiced brightness, “I suppose I must begin readying myself. There is suddenly quite a great deal to do before next Saturday.”

Her siblings nodded in distracted unison, and she slipped from the breakfast room.

From there, her feet carried her to the sanctuary of her chambers. She had dressed for a morning in the house with a book and would need to change before she went out in the trap.

When she reached her rooms, Elsie Potter was replacing her bed sheets. Younger than Emma’s twenty-three years by one year, Elsie looked older. She had black hair tied back tightly and a long face with coal-black eyes.

“Change of plans, Elsie. I shall need to redress and shall be taking the trap into town,” Emma announced as she entered.

“Very good, my lady. The gray is clean. May I ask what has prompted the change?”

Emma perched on the edge of the stripped bed, letting her shoulders slump and her head drop. A few times in Montrose Hall, she felt she could let the facade fall. The facade of being the lady of the house, always calm and collected, always in control of herself and circumstances. Elsie was the one person who saw her as she was.

“We have received an invitation to attend a ball held by the… Duke of Redmane. Papa thinks it is wonderful as he hopes to find husbands for the three of us. Josie is afraid that he will not accept her handsome but untitled knight, and Rosie worries about the state of her wardrobe.”

“And Charles?”

“Who knows these days? He noticed that my mother’s brooch was missing but did not seem to guess what I had done with it,” Emma sighed wearily.

“And has not questioned where you came by the money to pay his latest gambling debts?” she uttered with the disapproval only a servant to Emma would have the leeway to give. Emma did not care for hierarchies, preferring that her ladies’ maid should also be her confidante and friend.

Emma fell back on her bed. “Charles is a good man, albeit immature at times.”

“Is our errand into town related to this invitation?” Elsie asked.

“It is. I must speak to Mrs. Spinnaker about Margaret’s further tuition. And ask for my payment to be in dresses for Rosie and Josie,” Emma murmured, staring thoughtfully at the ceiling.

“And yourself?”

“I have dresses aplenty.”

Elsie moved to the wardrobe and picked out Emma’s gray and white walking dress. She then stood aside to allow Emma to see directly into the wardrobe, revealing how sparse the dresses were hung within.

“I often find myself wondering how this wooden contraption has not fallen apart under the weight of your imagination, my lady…” the maid began with an arched brow.

She kept a straight face, as did Emma. Elsie’s smile broke through first. Emma snorted, throwing herself back onto her bed with arms spread.

“I do not need new dresses. I do not require any attention. I am content as a spinster,” Emma sighed happily.

Elsie strolled over with the walking dress and sat beside her mistress. “The true question is… did our little ploy result in this invitation?”

Emma shot up. Heat flaring in her cheeks, she cupped her face in her hands.

“By the heavens, I thought you would never ask! I hoped letting a few rumors spread that I was courting the Duke of Redmane would frighten away any potential suitors. Now, the very man I never expected to meet invites me and my family to a ball. Goodness gracious, Elsie! How did this happen? I did not expect this result!”

“Nor I, my lady. And it was I who planted some of those rumors for you in town. Who would have thought it would reach his ears?”

“Who, indeed?” Emma mused aloud. “Perhaps the rumor hasn’t reached him, and this is all coincidence. I doubt I will even see him when we are there. Doubtless, there will be many guests and many ladies of far greater status and beauty than I.”

Chapter Two

May 1813

The Redmane Grand Ball

“It is magnificent, is it not?” Rosie exclaimed in a whisper for Emma’s ears alone.

Quite,” Emma replied faintly.

“Ah, the spoils of aristocracy!” came the amused boom of Charles as he appeared behind them, striding into the Great Hall with greater confidence.

He swept past them with the air of a man escorting three princesses into court, all charm and practiced poise. Josie, on the other hand, was still attempting to look serene and graceful, despite the nervous way she kept smoothing the skirts of her brand-new gown—pale blue silk that matched Rosie’s to the stitch. The poor girl looked less like a swan gliding into society and more like a lamb on the verge of bolting.

Charles offered Rosie his arm with a showman’s flourish. Emma took Josie’s, squeezing it gently.

“You look perfectly radiant, Josie. I daresay, you shall be the belle of the ball. And if Sir Thomas has any eyes at all, he’ll see it too.

Josie startled, her brows lifting, and then her cheeks lit with color—rising from throat to temple. Her lips curved in a guilty smile.

“I did not think you knew,” she said quietly.

“My darling Josie, I have noticed how you studiously avoid mentioning his name while finding reasons to talk about his family. And how any conversation that touches on the Donovan’s seems to leave you feeling… oh mythe heat.”

Emma fanned herself. Josie giggled.

“Sister, you are terrible! Does Papa know, do you think? He would disapprove of a husband without a title.”

“Papa is blissfully unawares. Charles and Rosie see everything of the ton but nothing of the family. Your secret is safe with me. Don’t worry, I shall help you find a way to win Papa over.”

Josie bounced on her toes gleefully. “I have corresponded with him, and he has also been invited! I have promised him the first dance tonight…”

“And the second, third, fourth, and fifth?” Emma teased.  

“I shall take as many as I dare! But enough about me,” she said, elbowing Emma gently. “What of you? Is there a handsome beau that you have your eye on?”

Emma’s gaze swept across the splendidly dressed ladies and gentlemen that thronged the Great Hall. She sobered, taking in their glittering decorations and ostentatious displays of wealth. Could there be any from that crowd that she could someday consider a husband?

She doubted it.

The thought of a husband—of love—was one she had long buried beneath the weight of memory. The scar she bore, hidden from the world and most especially from herself, was a cruel reminder of the price of a gentleman’s unchecked desire. It made warmth difficult. Made trust a fragile, vanishing thing.

“Truthfully?” she said at last. “No. I do not care for all this gold and glitter. It is… froth without substance.”

“You sound as though you seek to marry a farmer!” Josie snorted before catching herself and flushing.

Emma giggled at her sister’s blunder. “Mayhaps that would suit me best. A practical man who is wed to his land.”

Her sheepish sister grinned. “If Papa objects to a knight of the realm, then he would have apoplexy at the thought of a son-in-law wedded to his fields.”

Precisely. Therefore, I shall be content to remain unattached and help Papa run the estates and wrangle you three miscreants.”

Ahead, she could see their father conversing with a man his age in a militia officer’s uniform. Two young men stood beside the older, bearing similar looks and both in red and white tailcoats. Duncan looked around; his eyes alighted on Rosie and Charles, then Emma and Josie.

He beckoned all four. Emma swallowed.

“Josie dear, I believe Papa wishes to parade us before his friends and their eligible sons. I have no desire to make small talk just now, do you?”

Josie’s eyes darted to the uniformed trio, then back to Emma. Her grimace spoke volumes.

“I should rather converse with Sir Thomas about the merits of rose gardens than feign being besotted by some young officer merely because he sports a commission and a title.”

“Then let us seek out your gallant knight and lose ourselves in this crowd as we do,” Emma whispered conspiratorially. She tugged Josie’s hand, drawing her into the tide of satin and lace, giggling as they went.

“Emma! Papa will be in a taking!” Josie exclaimed.

“Let him,” Emma said gaily.

They slipped through the sea of silk and perfume, heads ducked, until they nearly collided with a man dressed in a perfectly cut coat of forest green. He was tall and lithe, with hair that gleamed pale gold in the candlelight and eyes the precise shade of spring grass after a storm. He swept an elaborate courtly bow, to which Josie clapped her hands in delight.

“Lady Josephine, what an unexpected delight to see you here,” Sir Thomas Donovan greeted.

He took Josie’s hand and kissed it tenderly before turning to Emma.

Emma gently disengaged from her sister, offering her gloved hand to be kissed, and then stepped aside. “A pleasure to see you again, Sir Thomas. I must dash, though; I am rather thirsty and in search of punch. May I entrust my sister to your care?”

Josie blushed, smiling demurely as Sir Thomas gaped for a moment. Then, he recovered himself with a broad and hearty grin.

“Why, of course, Lady Emmeline. I shall protect her with my life.”

Emma gave a bow of the head and promptly slipped back into the crowd. Seeing her sister in the company of a man she adored was rather gratifying. Another matter she added to her ever-growing list of familial chores was persuading her father to allow his daughter to marry a man without rank.

She made her way to the edge of the gathered crowd of guests, feeling relieved when she could step between two marble columns and be somewhat hidden from view.

A portrait hung on the wall behind her depicting a tall, dark-haired man with a stern, handsome face. It was too brutal and cruel to be genuinely attractive, but the features held an exotic appeal. She recognized Redmane Manor in the backdrop and wondered if she were looking at a portrait of either the current or one of the former Dukes. The style of the clothing, suggestive of fashions twenty years old, made her think that if it was not the current Duke, it could not be that of any other but his immediate predecessor.

The eyes of the man were icy blue and seemed to root Emma, gazing out of the painting as though it were in some way alive. She forced herself to look away, shuddering at the intensity of that painted gaze. The artist had certainly been talented enough to capture such charisma. Emma hoped it was not the current Duke, the Duke to whom she had linked herself by whispered rumors.

She did not wish to come face to face with those icy blue eyes.

A living man caught her eye then, though not for the reasons that her sister had hoped. It was the figure of Charles, who was striding swiftly around the fringes of the crowd, headed for a door in a corner of the Great Hall.

Emma frowned as she watched him go, casting frightened glances over his shoulder as he went. She moved in his direction, wondering what had her brother thusly apprehensive. She was even more afraid that she might know. Indeed, his debts should have been discharged this time. The brooch had been worth more than any of her siblings thought simply due to its three-hundred-year antiquity.

She reached the door through which Charles had disappeared and followed him. Ahead, she caught him vanishing around the corner of a corridor paneled in dark wood.

“Charles? Come back! Whatever is the matter?” she whispered urgently.

But either he did not hear or chose to ignore her.

She picked up her skirts and scurried after him. By the time she reached the corner, he was out of sight, but a door in the corridor ahead was swinging shut. She hurried to it and opened it into a dark room lit only by a shaft of light from a door opposite. The figure of a man was briefly outlined before that door was closed too.

Emma started gingerly across the dark room but stumbled over a stool, crashing to the floor clumsily. She clutched at a bruised shin and returned to her feet, backing into a chair and stumbling again. Her heel snagged at the edge of a poorly placed rug, and she fell down heavily on the floor with a thump.

Charles, she groused viciously, teeth clenched. When I get my hands on you…

She had been so caught up in trying to follow Charles that she had not heard the footsteps approaching the door through which her brother had disappeared. When the sound of the door opening reached her, she assumed he had heard her and returned.

“Charles! What are you about? Please come and help me up. I am on the floor because of you!” Emma grumbled, looking towards the figure of a man who stood silhouetted in the doorway.

She then realized that it was not Charles at all.

The man who stood, rendered faceless by the light behind him, was taller and broader than Emma’s wayward brother. His coat was black, but not mourning-black—black like ink still wet, fitted like armor. His waistcoat was patterned, faintly, like scales. Yet his cravat, beyond all reason—the color of flame.

For a moment, he stood unmoving and silent. Then, he flashed into the room, momentarily lost to the darkness.

True terror curled in Emma’s chest.

“Pardon, sir…!”

The scent of amber and musk reached her first.

Then came the sound of flint and steel.

The hiss of a flame, and a lamp flared to life.

His features shimmered into view. Cut from the same stone as ancient warriors. High cheekbones, a strong jaw, lips neither too full nor thin, and eyes the hue of pale silver-blue. His hair was fair, almost flaxen, the sort of gold that rarely caught sunlight without glowing.

“I do not know of your Charles,” came a rumble, a slow timbre like the first pour of brandy into a crystal glass, “but I feel compelled to apologize on his behalf.”

Emma blinked, cheeks tinged pink despite herself. There was something in his presence that made the room seem smaller, the shadows deeper.

He extended a gloved hand. Emma’s gaze flicked to it for a heartbeat—the finest kid leather—before her fingers reluctantly curled into the expensive material. With barely a twitch of his arm, she was hauled to her feet.

Emma brushed at her skirts in want of something to do. “Erm… thank you, kind sir. I think it rather careless of the owner to leave the rooms so dark. I might have sprained an ankle,” she chuckled nervously.

“A reasonable complaint, Miss…?”

Lady. Lady Emmeline Montrose,” Emma corrected, raising her chin with polite dignity.

Emmeline?” He let the intimate sound stew in the silence. “A rather… unusual name.”

“I am generally referred to by the shorter variant, Emma,” she hastened to say.

He inclined his head with courtly grace. “It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance then, Lady Emma. And who is this Charles, I wonder?”

Emma sighed in exasperation. “My deviant brother. I wished to speak with him, but he did not seem in the mood for conversation.”

The stranger pursed his lips in thought and had Emma’s eyes lingering there. “I seem to recall a young man heading towards the gardens in a hurry. Hair the color of yours. Perhaps a few years older than yourself?”

Emma narrowed her eyes. “Yes, that would be Charles. The gardens, you say? Thank you, kind sir. I will see if I can catch him up.”

“Allow me to escort you then, madam,” he offered smoothly. “This house is something of a labyrinth. New wings bolted onto old bones without any sensible design. I find myself getting lost rather easily.”

Emma faltered, caught between caution and something far more dangerous. “Thank you… kindly,” she said at last.

She felt a curious thrill at the offer to remain in the stranger’s company.

The man was older than her, perhaps in his early thirties. His visage had Emma’s heart thundering in her chest and set butterflies fluttering in her stomach. She chastised herself for being so taken by a man’s looks like some fawning debutante, but could not help it.

The moment she laid her hand upon his steely arm, a jolt of awareness sparked through her fingers. His coat did little to conceal the hardened muscle beneath, and she found herself, to her horror, nearly breathless.

As they stepped into the softer glow of the corridor sconces, Emma chanced another glance at him—this time catching the lines of his profile in sharper relief than the lamplight had allowed.

His eyes were sapphire blue, as bright as a panther. He was taller than her but did not appear spindly in the way that many tall men did. He might have been the descendant of giants—his body had such Herculean proportions.

Emma’s gaze dipped—traitorously—to the broad stretch of his chest beneath the fine cut of his gold-threaded brocade coat. There was nothing delicate about his form. He bore the build of an ancient warrior, the kind immortalized in marble, shoulders that strained subtly against the seams, arms that seemed born to carry—not letters or gloves—but battleaxes. Or, she thought with a shameful shiver, women.

He could lift her, she was certain, and never break stride.

It was only after they had walked fifty yards or so that she became aware that she was silent, lost in reveries of naked torsos and strong arms.

“Your pardon, sir,” she said abruptly, voice higher than intended, “but I do not believe I caught your name.”

He halted. Emma froze. It took a second longer than she would have cared to admit before she realized it was as they had reached their destination. A set of wide double doors were thrust open with effortless ease. Beyond was a broad paved area decorated with iron tables and chairs. A vast expanse of lawn lay beyond that, lit by flickering torches.

He turned to her, smiled enigmatically, and bowed.

Damien Fitzgerald, thirteenth Duke of Redmane, at your service, Lady Emma. I do hope you locate your brother and return to the Great Hall before the dances commence.”

Emma’s face paled. Suddenly, everything became crystal clear. Where she had seen that face before. The painting!

And then the rest of his words sank in, drawing her back to the moment with the subtle shock of cold water.

“Why is that?” was all she could whisper.  

“Because I believe I am owed your first evening dance.”

Chapter Three

Emma watched the Duke depart, as though he had taken the ground from beneath her feet with him.

I wanted to be ignored, and now I will share the first dance with the Duke himself, she thought ruefully. Why single me out? Heavens, was it because of that silly rumor?

It did not make sense to her. If the Duke had heard the rumors and wished to quash them, then surely distance would be the wiser course. Polite disregard. Chilly civility. Not… not a waltz.

To dance with her—publicly, no less—was to stoke the fire until it roared.

One part of her, the irrational part, longed to storm after him and demand an explanation. Another part quailed at the very notion. And a third, more shamefully persistent part, simply wished to be near him again. Foolish girl. She would be, regardless.

“Oh, what a tangled web… I will not be rendered a mindless fool by a handsome physique!” she snapped at herself.

The reason for her roaming Redmane Manor came back to her then.

Charles…

She looked out over the torchlit lawn. There was no sign of him.

Then, a sound reached her, almost like a muffled cry of surprise. Emma stepped out the door, across the paving, and onto the lawn. The sound of low voices came, and she changed direction and headed towards them. A hedge bordered the lawn with arches cut into it. She caught a hint of shadowed movement beside one of those arches.

Then Charles appeared. His hair was ruffled, and he was glancing over his shoulder.

“Charles, whatever are you doing out here?” Emma chided.

Her brother jumped, whirling around.

“Emma? Good heavens, do not startle me like that—you have taken years off my life!”

Just then, two shadowed figures stepped through one of the arches. Charles spun again, backing away from them slowly.

Charlie, we still have matters to discuss,” said the first.

Important matters,” echoed the second.

Their voices sounded similar, and as they stepped into the torchlight, Emma realized that they looked similar too—eerily similar, in fact.

“Isaac, Jacob…” Charles grimaced, “I believe our discussion has concluded. I have made my position perfectly clear.”

Isaac and Jacob had short, curling hair, the same color as the Duke. They had aspects of his hard, angular face too, but softened around the edges. Emma wondered if these men were related to him. They were rounder facially, but there was indeed a resemblance.

“You have,” said one of the men, his words laced with careful civility, “and yet, we find ourselves in rather vehement disagreement.”

“Quite so,” the other chimed in. “And we feel this matter deserves further exploration. In private.”

Charles stiffened but remained silent.

“We daresay it is in your best interests, old boy,” coaxed the first.

That one acknowledged Emma first and bowed courteously.

“By your resemblance and charming diminutive, I would wager you are Lady Emmeline Montrose?” he inquired with feigned curiosity.

“She is and does not need to make your acquaintance, Jacob,” Charles cut in, stepping before his sister.

“I can speak for myself, Charles,” Emma told him firmly.

“I am Jacob Fitzgerald, and this is my brother Isaac,” Jacob flashed a toothy grin.

Isaac bowed deeply.

“Relatives of the Duke?” Emma asked.

“Cousins,” Isaac replied smoothly. “Our father was brother to the late Duke.”

Charlie boy,” Jacob said again, his tone light as air, “we really ought to speak further.”

Charles raised his chin, looking down at the twins. “I do not think there is anything further to discuss,” he declared with finality.

The twins exchanged looks and sneered at each other. The hairs at the nape of Emma’s neck prickled unpleasantly at those sneers. They took their leave without further discussion, and Emma rounded on her brother.

“Charles. What was that all about? Have you offended these two gentlemen in some way?”

“No, it is nothing, sister. I can assure you. Please do not worry. As you saw, the matter is taken care of,” Charles assuaged.

“What matter? They seemed very keen to speak to you. Almost threatening…”

Was he indebted to them? She thought she had solved his financial woes.

Dear Lord, please do not let him embroil himself more. I do not have the means to dig him out of another hole!

Emma did not want to voice her thoughts or ask the question aloud. Charles was the eldest of the Montrose siblings yet behaved as the youngest—impulsive and juvenile.

“I can assure you that Jacob and Isaac are not in the least threatening. They are not their cousin,” Charles laughed nervously, “and you will not hear from them again after tonight. I promise it,” he added, hoping to sound reassuring.

By Emma’s estimation and brief encounter with their cousin, that would make them the merriest dandies in all of the land—much less threatening.

It was quickly becoming apparent to Emma that no resolution would be reached here, hovering about on the lawn. She glanced back towards the glittering gold of Redmane Manor’s windows.

“I suppose we ought to head in before the dancing begins,” Charles said with an easy shrug. “I have promised to ask Felicia Middleton’s hand for the first dance. Lovely girl, that one. And her father has coffers deep enough to fund a war.”

He grinned, and it was the grin of a boyish rogue. Indeed not the heir to an Earldom.

“And what of you, Emma?” he added, offering his arm.

Emma accepted it almost absently, slipping her hand into the crook of his elbow as they began to make their way back across the green.

“Have you allowed anyone to ask you to dance? I do hope so. I do not like to see you on the periphery at these events.”

“It is where I am most comfortable, Charles,” Emma reminded him gently as her mind wandered, “and no, I have not allowed anyone to ask me to dance…”

It was not a lie. Not precisely.

She had not allowed the Duke to ask her—he had simply declared his intention.

She wished she could spend the evening anonymous in the background. The idea of a man putting his hand to her waist, to where that horrible scar marred her…

To be in the arms of any man was terrifying, but the Duke, in particular, even more so.

He was handsome, undeniably so—his features all striking angles and that untamed sort of strength one might expect from a warrior carved into marble. The thought of him, of that formidable physique cloaked in such precise elegance, sent a ripple of heat coursing down her spine.

And yet, with the thrill came the inevitable echo.

The scar.

The memory.

The shame that clung to her like a second skin.

“Why ever not, Emma?” Charles asked suddenly. “I have seen the gossips. When half the ballroom believes you are being courted by the Duke of Redmane, you may as well take advantage of your new status and bag yourself a husband!”

“Charles, please do stop speaking in such cant. It is so vulgar,” Emma complained, “and if anything, these rumors poison the well. The Duke is a fearsome man, is he not?”

Charles looked at her oddly before nodding.

“He is. By reputation, he certainly is. If one did not care to be bothered by suitors, then I suppose rumors of the kind doing the rounds,” he emphasized the cant, “would deter most men. Almost as if one had arranged it that way…”

Emma forced an innocent laugh. “If I wished to stir up gossip of any kind, I should ask you and Rosie how to proceed. Personally, I don’t have… the foggiest!”

Charles blinked, then barked a laugh.

“I knew I would break you down, dear sister! It is the way of our generation not to be stifled by our oh-so-formal language.”

Emma chuckled, happy to see her brother laughing so genuinely and hoping she could trust him that his encounter with the Fitzgerald twins was not a presage of troubles to come.

They reentered the house and made their way back to the Great Hall. Returning to the magnificent ballroom, Emma saw that the crowd had cleared and that people were now selecting partners for the first dance.

Charles took his leave and approached a pretty young woman with large dark eyes and a pale, delicate complexion. She blushed as he approached and swept a courtly bow. Emma drifted back, seeking a place comfortably out of sight and out of mind from the gathered guests.

As she did, the sound of a gong struck the room. It reverberated around the space, and silence followed in its wake.

“My lords, ladies and gentlemen!” a servant announced, “I am honored to present your host this evening, His Grace, the Duke of Redmane!”

A rippling gasp swept through the Duke’s guests as a pair of ornately decorated doors were opened, and the Duke strode into the room. Emma realized that when he spoke to her, he had not yet made himself known to his guests.

She could not help but stare.

He strode down the middle of the hall, fair hair falling from his temples almost to his shoulders. It gave him the appearance of a barbarian prince. A savage Northman from the ancient annals of England’s past. Her pulse fluttered.

Not more than when the Duke’s eyes swept past every woman in the room until they landed on… Emma.

From that moment, they did not deviate.

Emma realized that he had been searching the crowd for her. Everyone must have come to the same conclusion: men and women, heads turned to observe the object of the Duke’s attention.

Oh, Lord. Make me invisible. Open the earth and swallow me up…

Feeling all those eyes on her, it was almost as though they could see through her clothes to the scar that blemished her. But she could not look away from those deep sapphire pearls.

Emma knew that it was expected of her to look away, to be demure.

But she could not. Would not.

The Duke had made her the center of everyone’s attention, and she would wilt under that attention.

When he reached her at last, he extended his hand with slow, deliberate grace.

“Lady Emma, would you do me the honor of the first dance?”

There was the faintest curve to his lips. Amusement flickered there—as though he saw through her poise, understood that she would not feign coyness, and found her defiance charming.

Emma held his gaze, letting the silence stretch until it shimmered between them like a taut ribbon. She could deny him—watch that charming smile flicker, just slightly, and perhaps silence the gossip that had been so carefully cultivated.

But she had sown those rumors herself.

And far more dangerously… she did not want to refuse him.

She inclined her head with practiced poise. “Of course, Your Grace. The honor is all mine.”

She slipped her fingers into his—warm, familiar, utterly assured—and let him guide her onto the dance floor. Around them, the orchestra struck up. Emma felt the weight of every watching eye—but none of it seemed to matter.

Not when his hand settled at the small of her back.

That single point of contact might as well have been a brand, sending heat spiraling through her corseted frame. His other hand clasped hers in a hold that was neither loose nor indecent, but suggested, quite boldly, that she belonged precisely where he had placed her. He drew her closer and she gasped.

A breathless inch of space separated them.

The music soared, and without warning, they moved.

The Duke glided with the grace of a man born to command ballrooms and battlefields alike—fluid, effortless, maddeningly composed. Emma, in contrast, felt every inch the mere mortal beside him. Her feet, ordinarily so nimble, now seemed reluctant participants. But by some miracle—or sheer force of will—she did not falter.

The room spun by in a glittering blur, all chandeliers and jewels and fluttering fans, but none of it touched her. The sweeping strains of the waltz lifted them into a world all their own, suspended in a silken bubble where only they existed.

“You dance well,” the Duke intoned, his breath brushing her ear like the ghost of a kiss.

Emma ducked her head coyly. “As do you, Your Grace.”    

A beat passed. Then, his voice dropped lower. “—Given that I was made to understand you rarely danced.”

Emma’s gaze shot up to meet his.  

Whom have you been talking to form that opinion? I have tried my hardest not to be noticed by anyone.

“Is that so…?” Emma replied coolly. “I am not sure where you have taken your information, but I am pleased to say, you have been misinformed.”

“Mm.” The sound was noncommittal. “It has also been observed that you seem to avoid courtship rather… actively. Which is curious.”

Emma lifted her chin. “Curious how, Your Grace?”

Curious—” he snarled abruptly, gaze sharpening like a blade catching light, “because women in your position tend to be surrounded by prospects. But curiously, you are not.”

The ill-conceived compliment landed like a match in dry straw. She opened her mouth to reply, but he pressed on.

“And curious-er still,” he drew her closer, visage contorting from a barbarian prince to barbarian tyrant, “is how the very idea of you being courted—by me, no less—has made such quick work of the local gossip circuit.”

Each word landed with the precision of an arrow. It suddenly became quite clear to Emma why he had earned such a formidable reputation. Without the hint of a warning, he spun her, a fluid motion that left her head reeling. Before she could regain her balance, he slammed her into the hard wall of his chest.

A faint tremor passed through her, though she did not let it reach her face. “Do I take you put stock in idle gossip, Your Grace?”

He smiled, but it no longer reached his eyes. “Not often. But I am more inclined to listen when the story spreads with such vehemence—almost as though encouraged.”

The implication was unmistakable. Emma’s stomach twisted, though her expression remained carefully neutral.

“I have spread no rumors if that is what you mean to say, Your Grace,” she defended, each word deliberate. Another technical truth. It was Elsie who had done the spreading. “And I do not concern myself with what others choose to say. If there are whispers, they began without me.”

And yet, she could feel the heat rising at the nape of her neck—because she had wanted the whispers. Just not like this.

He studied her then—not idly, not like a man indulging curiosity, but with the clinical focus of someone trained to find fault in steel.

“Then allow me to regale you, Lady Emmeline,” he said at last, voice dark with purpose. “You and I have been romantically linked in London’s more… enterprising gossip sheets. It would appear we are secretly in a passionate affair. With such secrecy, that even I had not been made aware.

“If I were, in fact, pursuing a courtship, such talk might be inconvenient. As it stands, I am not. But my name, Lady Emmeline Montrose, is not a toy to be passed around for amusement—or gain. Not without consequences.”

Emma saw the fury ignite in his visage and experienced a delicious thrill of fear. It was delicious because her entire body reverberated at his proximity.

“Consequences, Your Grace?” she said, her voice scarcely above a whisper. “That sounds very much like a threat.”

He tilted his head ever so slightly, not unlike a predator observing its prey.  

“I would not be so crass as to threaten a woman,” the Duke returned curtly, “but I do believe in consequences. Whether said consequences align with your original intentions… remains to be seen.”

Emma’s back stiffened. “Pardon?”

Whatever did he mean by such a cryptic remark?

Before she could prod further, the dance concluded, and the Duke bowed, precisely and without flourish. She curtsied awkwardly in response.

Then he offered his arm.

She took it feebly, and he led her across the room to where her father stood, a glass of claret in hand.

“Montrose,” the Duke greeted sternly.

“Your Grace!” Duncan exclaimed, the glass swishing to the brim as he spun to regard the pair.

Around them, the room began to stir once more. Instruments tuned for the second dance, the crowd swelled like a tide. Musicians changed sheets, partners exchanged places. As guests flitted back to the middle of the floor, the Duke, Emma, and Duncan were left in a private space.

And the Duke did not wait for ceremony.

“I have something to share,” he said, voice grave. “Until now, we have kept it close, but the time has come for it to be known.”

Duncan blinked, his gaze shifting uncertainly between the pair. “Yes… of course, Your Grace. Please, do tell.”

The Duke twisted, just slightly, toward Emma. His hand still rested atop hers where it lay on his bicep—possessive without pressure.

“As you must have read in the papers, for the past months, your daughter has held my heart in her keeping. Today, I am pleased to announce, I intend to finally take her as my wife.” 

Keep an eye out for the full release on the 24th of April