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Authors: Ruth Axtell Morren

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BOOK: Dawn in My Heart
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Gillian smoothed down her hair and gown and adjusted her veil and cone hat, then slowed her steps to a stately walk as she neared the table.

When Tertius returned to the party, he looked serious.

“Where were you?” Delaney asked with a smile. “Leaving Lady Gillian all alone?”

“Oh, some foolish prank.” He looked at Gillian as he explained, taking his seat across from her. “There was no one at the carriage when I finally got there. Were you all right? I'm sorry to have left you like that.”

“I was fine. Think nothing of it,” she answered hurriedly, glad Templeton's attention was engaged at the moment by Mr. Scott.

Later, when the two found themselves alone once again, Gillian turned to Lord Skylar. “You told me earlier that the decision to marry was up to me.”

“Yes, I did. Have you come to a decision?” He was looking at her so intently it made her nervous and she lowered her eyes.

Licking dry lips, she finally replied, “I will marry you.”

“Are you sure?”

She nodded, knowing there was no other way left for her. She wouldn't waste any more years waiting for something that was not to be.

 

Tertius spent at least three afternoons a week at Gentleman Jackson's boxing saloon or at Henry Angelo's fencing academy. He hoped the exercise would build up his strength. He realized he had lost a lot of his stamina since the last fever, and he had a long way to go to regain any measure of it back.

He was removing his coat and waistcoat at the academy, when a young gentleman approached him. He recognized him as the officer at the Regent's fete.

He nodded curtly at the black-haired man.

“Lord Skylar,” the man said with a smile that had something insolent about it, “might I challenge you to a match?” He raised his foil in question.

Sky considered. He was accustomed to using one of the trainers. But an officer lately returned from Spain? The exercise would certainly be a rigorous test.

“Very well, Captain,” he replied, handing his garments to Nigel and bending to remove his boots.

The two positioned themselves in their stocking feet and shirtsleeves on the long space reserved for fencing matches.

“En garde!”

They began their silent match, stepping forward and back with the rapidity of sandpipers on the sand. Thrust and parry, back and forth. For a time Sky was heartened, seeing he hadn't lost all his skill. He was even able to manage a riposte or two. But then he began to tire.

The young captain showed no signs of fatigue. He was like a barrage of artillery, strong and relentless. The slight smile that played along his sensual lips and around his deep blue eyes never wavered. Tertius had to fight to keep them from unnerving him.

The man seemed to be playing a game, and Sky couldn't fathom what it was. He didn't know him, hadn't ever seen him until that night at the Regent's—

Sky parried but was a split-second too late. Captain Hawkes's foil touched his breast. Sky recovered but had lost ground, his concentration distracted by his puzzlement.

He focused once more on the match. His muscles didn't respond as he wanted them to. They ached with the strain.

Finally the captain had him pinned against the wall.

“Touché, my lord,” the captain said softly, that smile still hovering around his mouth.

How Sky would love to wipe it off his handsome face, but it was not to be this day, he admitted, giving the man a nod.

“What is it they say? A man's skill with the foil matches his skill as a lover?”

Sky narrowed his eyes at the man. What did he intend with the remark?

“My congratulations on your nuptials. You are a lucky man. Lady Gillian is exquisite.”

The familiarity with which he said her name made Sky want to call the captain out.

“You know Lady Gillian?” he asked coldly.

Captain Hawkes held his foil upright and plucked at its tip. “We were thrown together as youngsters to learn the quadrille.”

A group had gathered to watch the match and now they congratulated the captain.

“You must have gained a lot of practice over on the Peninsula against the Frogs,” they told him, slapping him on the back.

“I relied more on Brown Bess,” he answered, referring to his musket. “We seldom engage the enemy with bayonets. They usually run before then,” he joked. As their laughter died down, he added more seriously, “It's a good thing, since they give us flank company officers nothing but sabers. Those curved blades make it dashedly difficult to kill a man. First you must slash his face to ribbons before any damage is done.”

As they continued plying him with questions about the action he had seen, Sky took the towel Nigel handed him and wiped the sweat from his face.

He slipped back into the waistcoat and coat his valet handed him and combed his hair.

He barely glanced at himself in the glass, loathing the haggard man that looked back at him. His attention was caught by the captain's reflection in the glass. His head was thrown back in laughter at someone's jest, his shirt was open halfway to his waist, and his virility mocked Sky's own wasted frame.

“What I need is a drink,” he told Nigel as he turned to leave the fencing academy.

 

Gillian was lying on her bed, stroking Sophie's glossy fur, when a maid knocked on her door.

“This parcel was delivered to you, miss,” the girl told her with a curtsey.

Gillian sat up and took it from her. “Thank you.”

She looked at it curiously. More jewels from Lord Skylar? She still felt uncomfortable since her evening at Vauxhall. When he'd returned, he had not seemed suspicious at all, only annoyed at being led on a wild-goose chase. She had promptly assured him that she had been well occupied; after all there was so much to see at the gardens.

Now she stared a moment at the parcel before opening it. Would another jewel add to her guilt? Finally she ripped the paper open and opened the box.

She gasped. Inside the tissue paper lay a tooled, red Moroccan leather dog collar. A folded piece of paper was tucked beneath it. She unfolded it and read:

I hope this collar finds more favor with Sophie than the emeralds did with you. Sky

No “Dear Gillian” no “Your servant,” or “Fondly” or any other sign of endearment. And he'd remembered her dog's new name.

She dropped the note and picked up the collar. It was beautiful. “Look at this, Sophie.” She held it up against the dog's fur. “Aren't you going to look elegant? Better than any other dog around the square.”

She undid the small buckle and put the collar around Sophie's neck. “Oh, Sophie, if you could see yourself.” Gillian gave her dog a hug. “What a good girl you are.”

She had been right about the dog's character. She was gentle and obedient. “I'm so glad you're mine now. Lord Skylar promised you could live with me wherever I go.” Giving Sophie a hug, Gillian felt touched by Lord Skylar's gift, more so than by the jewels he'd given her.

The thought of them filled Gillian with a surge of remorse as she remembered her careless attitude toward his gifts. She would wear the necklace and earrings at the next opportunity, she decided.

Yesterday, the first of her new wardrobe had been delivered. Gillian walked over to her dressing room and pulled open her wardrobe. She fingered the satins and woolens, furs, sarcenet, and lawn of the new gowns, riding habits, cloaks and pelisses….

She stood there many moments, thinking of her future. She was sure she'd made the right decision in deciding to marry Lord Skylar. Any other girl would be overjoyed, but all she felt was fear and guilt. Sophie came and stood beside Gillian, and she petted the dog absently.

What did Lord Skylar offer her? Perhaps no grand passion or romantic fantasy, but he'd always treated her re
spectfully and kindly. Perhaps an affection would grow between them over the years and through their children. And in time, Gillian's feelings for Gerrit would disappear. Or, hopefully, be transferred to Lord Skylar, however unlikely that possibility seemed.

Yet, was it fair of her to give Lord Skylar nothing more than a mild affection, and an heir?

But he had never asked for anything more. He didn't strike her as a passionate man like Gerrit. All Lord Skylar seemed to require was fidelity and an heir.

Were these things enough for her?

She longed for warmth and affection and love.

Gerrit made clear he offered her none of these things.

He'd told her he had ruined her for any other man. Her conscience reminded her how true that was. She turned away from her wardrobe, too scared to dwell on the consequences of the reckless decision she had taken three years ago. In scarcely more than a fortnight she would be wed, and it remained to be seen if her new husband would have an inkling of what she had done three years ago.

She would make Lord Skylar a good wife, she promised her image in the mirror. The thought made her feel better, but would her future conduct be enough to erase her past?

Chapter Seven

A
week later, Tertius attended a ball given by the duchess in honor of the nuptials. More than a hundred people crowded into the Burnham mansion.

His foreboding about the wedding had grown. He sensed all was not right with Gillian no matter how much she tried to convince him she was agreeable to the marriage.

He bowed over the duchess's hand then turned to Lady Gillian. His eyes focused immediately on the emeralds around her neck. “Good evening, my lady,” he murmured as he bowed over her hand. “You look beautiful.”

“Thank you, my lord.”

He made no remark about the jewelry, but looked at her sharply before taking his place in the receiving line to greet the other guests. What had made her decide to finally wear
his gift? Was it to mark the occasion of their first public appearance as a couple?

Later, after the two had danced a few sets, he asked her if she cared to take a turn about the gardens to cool off. She accepted and the two walked onto the quiet stone balcony.

When they stopped at the far end, away from other promenading couples, she fingered the emerald pendant hanging from her necklace. “Thank you for the necklace. It truly is beautiful.”

“You didn't think so when I first sent it to you. What happened since then?”

She looked away. “Nothing. I always thought it beautiful.”

“You were angry at me, then?”

“No—yes. It was because you didn't come riding that day, and I heard nothing from you afterward.”

“I am sorry.”

“Why didn't you keep your appointment with me that day? My mother said you were ill.”

He didn't answer right away, not relishing the thought of getting into the whole sordid business of his fever. With a sigh, he said, “Let us say there was a breakdown in communication. I had instructed that a note be sent to you, but it seems it was never delivered. I take full responsibility for that lapse and have dealt with the matter so it should never occur again.”

“You haven't answered my question. Were you ill?”

“No, I haven't, have I? I was indisposed. A few lingering effects of the long sea voyage taken so soon after the fever. Just a trifling thing.”

“I would have understood if I'd known. But so many days of nothing but silence…I didn't know what to think.”

“As I said, I'm sorry the note never reached you. As for the illness—” he shrugged, dismissing the topic “—a tedious subject.”

Before she could contradict him, he said, “I have been thinking we could start our honeymoon journey at Bishop's Green in Hertfordshire.”

“That is your family seat?”

“Yes, my dear.” It was the first time he'd used a term of endearment to her and he did it deliberately to gauge her reaction. She made no acknowledgment of it that he could see.

“Who is its present mistress?” she asked.

“It has none. So you shall have that honor.”

“What about your father?”

“Oh, he's rarely there. He prefers to spend his time in town or as a guest of the Regent in Brighton, playing the aging dandy.”

She smiled. “I find him a sweet old man.”

“Sweet? I wouldn't call him that.” A vain, lecherous old scoundrel, he thought to himself. “At any rate, we can tour the estate at Bishop's Green. It is the closest of our estates to London—an easy journey for the first day.” When she made no comment, he asked, “How is Sophie?”

“Wonderful. I'm sure she must have lived with a family at some time. She has adapted beautifully.”

“No overturned furniture? Broken vases?”

She laughed. “Not a teacup.”

They fell silent again.

His gaze wandered over her features, seeking something…some key to her thoughts. They had almost achieved their former camaraderie, yet he felt she still shied away from him. Her eyes had barely met his the entire evening.

“You've never called me by my given name,” he said lightly.

She turned startled eyes to him before looking away again. “I don't feel I've known you very long.”

“Are you waiting until we are wed?” he asked, amused.

Despite the semidarkness, he detected the color that rose in her cheeks.

“My name is Tertius, Gillian.” Why was it so important all of a sudden that she say it? It was as if his name on her lips would mark her unequivocally as his.

“Ter-shus,” she pronounced. Then she giggled nervously. “It sounds like a monk's name.”

He chuckled in reply.

“Is this like a monk's kiss?” he asked.

Before he could question the wisdom of the move, he leaned his face toward hers.

“What—what are you going to do?” she asked, one hand going involuntarily to clutch her necklace.

“I'm going to kiss you,” he whispered against her lips.

“You are?” she asked faintly. Her hand fell against his chest as if to stop him.

His gloved fingertips touched her chin lightly, guiding her face upward. He breathed in the scent of her perfume, soft and sweet like lily of the valley, suggesting femininity and innocence.

His lips touched hers, lightly, coolly, and he drew back after a few seconds, observing her once again from his height.

She hadn't moved. She looked a little stunned. Then she pressed her lips together as she looked off into the garden, and he had the impression that if she were alone she'd take
out a lace handkerchief from her beaded reticule and discreetly wipe her lips.

He rocked back on his heels. His unplanned experiment had yielded no great surprises. Not a hint of desire had stirred her. He had no inclination to press her further at this time. In short, she was as interesting to kiss as a sponge.

He didn't understand how a person who showed such enthusiasm and spirit at other times could be so timorous when it came to the physical aspects of courtship.

What would his married life be like? he wondered dismally as he left the ball in the wee hours. Could he teach Gillian to enjoy the pleasures between a man and a woman, or would she stiffen every time he chose to come near?

 

Gillian's wedding trousseau kept growing. Her wedding gown now hung apart from all the other dresses, like a wedding cake towering above the other confections surrounding it. It was a magical creation of silk and satin and tulle edged in yards and yards of Belgian lace.

Her trunks were full of new things from underclothes and lacy nightgowns to slippers and half boots and bonnets for every sort of outing.

The excitement of so many new things helped keep any misgivings at bay. Now, on the eve of her wedding, she told herself sternly that she would survive it. She reassured herself as she remembered Lord Skylar's kiss. It hadn't felt at all unpleasant. Maybe she could grow to like it.

Her wedding night wouldn't be so very different. All she'd have to do was close her eyes and it would be over almost as quickly.

It couldn't be any worse than that last time.

Unfortunately, there was always that niggling worry. Would Lord Skylar be able to tell anything? She had no one to consult. She didn't dare ask her mother. In the old days she would have asked her maid, but her mother had long since dismissed Sally and replaced her with the dour-faced Martha. The two names said it all. Martha always looked disapproving, just like Templeton. Martha reminded Gillian of those schoolgirls who never misbehaved and would go running to the teacher the moment another girl did.

So who could advise her? No one. Where was her dear papa when she needed him most? A wave of despair swept through her. None of this would be happening if Papa had still been alive when she'd first met Gerrit. If her father had seen how much she loved Gerrit, he would have arranged for the two of them to be married. He'd never denied her anything.

But now she had no one to confide her terrible secret to. She'd have to pray and hope for the best.
Dear God, Don't let Lord Skylar find out. Don't let him know.

She knew what she'd do, she determined after pacing her carpet. Act the way she'd acted the first time. Frightened, a little scream of pain—would it still hurt? Undoubtedly. So, that wouldn't be difficult, she thought with a grimace.

For truth be told, she was terrified of her wedding night. Lord Skylar—she couldn't bring herself to think of him by his Christian name—just standing there observing her, let alone—

No! She wouldn't even think of what awaited her.

 

On their wedding day, Tertius stood before his bride in the crowded cathedral. Despite the precipitate date, the church was packed with both families' many friends and relations.
When Gillian lifted her veil, her wide, frightened eyes swallowed up her whole face. She looked ready to faint. Tertius wondered if such had been the pallor of those aristos being led to the guillotine.

Her hand was cold when he placed the gold band on her finger.

He bent to kiss her for the second time in their acquaintance, and it was like kissing a marble statue, cold and lifeless. He replaced her veil, the fleeting image of covering a corpse's face flitting through his mind.

He took her arm and led her from the church, to begin their new life as one.

 

Tertius rested his head against the edge of the tub. For some inexplicable reason he was loathe to leave its warm cocoon. He should be counting the minutes impatiently before he could be with his new bride. Instead he was filled with an inexplicable sense of dread.

“Shall I bring you your towel?” Nigel's noiseless approach no longer startled him. Tertius merely opened his eyes and said, “I suppose so.”

“Your bride be waiting, all prettied for you.”

Tertius made no comment, submerging his head one last time in the warm water before standing and taking the soft towel handed to him by his valet.

As he was wrapping the towel around his waist, he caught sight of himself in the mirror opposite him and immediately averted his gaze. He'd always been thin but now he looked positively emaciated. He hadn't managed to gain back any of the weight lost during his fever in the Indies, and the latest bout had taken even more.

What was the matter with him? The frustrated question revolved for the hundredth time around his mind as he rubbed himself vigorously with the additional towel Nigel gave him. When it wasn't a fever, it was excruciating migraines like a vise at his temples, behind his eyes. Even the blandest foods disagreed with him. He was no doubt becoming dyspeptic, like his great-uncle Harry, who was forever popping peppermints into his mouth, a habit Tertius was beginning to develop of late.

It must be the wretched English climate with its fog and coal smoke, he told himself in reply—ignoring the glorious summer weather the city had enjoyed.

The wedding banquet had been rich and sumptuous, but he hadn't dared overindulge in either food or drink. Even so, he still felt a nervous flutter in his stomach.

He donned a silk nightshirt and dressing gown. At least they'd both be fully gowned. Just as well, he thought, though the thought gave him no pleasure. It wasn't what he was accustomed to. As he belted the dressing gown, again forced to notice the spareness of his waist, the sudden question popped into his head,
what would Edmund have done?

He looked at himself in the mirror, startled for a second. It had been a long time since he'd stopped asking himself that. It was a question that had plagued him many times during those first few years out in the Indies as he struggled to prove himself on the failing plantation.

He felt the gooseflesh rise along his arms. Why the question now, on the eve of his wedding night? Edmund was dead, and he, Tertius, was alive. So, what did it matter what Edmund would have done?

As Nigel handed him his tortoiseshell comb, Tertius asked
him abruptly, “Do you believe the dead come back to haunt us or help us?” He tried to smile, as if the question were asked in jest.

“The dead be all around us,” he answered seriously, his muddy green eyes as always shockingly light against his smooth brown skin.

“But it's not the dead to fear as much as the living,” Nigel continued as he hung up the used towels.

“I agree with you there,” he replied grimly. “Right now, the thought of bedding an innocent virgin stops me cold.”

Nigel didn't smile in reply. “I wouldn't fear the new Lady Skylar as much as the old Angelique.”

“Angelique and I parted on very good terms. I know you are used to females throwing hysterical fits when you break things off, but Angelique was a mature, intelligent woman who knew the conditions of our…friendship.”

Nigel shook his head, pity in his eyes. “Angelique be not so sweet at your goodbye as you think. She put a curse on you, as sure as I'm the son of Rose. Everything you touch start to go against you—family, riches, gaming, health. You'll see.” He looked at him significantly. “It's the voodoo. It make everything turn against you. You might think you're free of Angelique, but she have you.”

Tertius gave a grunt of laughter though he didn't feel at all like laughing. “I'm miles from her.”

“It doesn't matter how far you go from her. She has you like this.” Nigel clamped his large brown hand around Tertius's wrist, his nails pink with the pressure. “She can make you dance as if you right dar with her.”

Tertius shook him off with another laugh. “You're a fine one to talk to on the eve of one's wedding night.”

Nigel stared into Tertius's eyes, his expression serious. “I don't speak like this to spoil your evening but to warn you. You must have someone with more power than she to ward off dis curse.”

Tertius turned away from him. “Thanks for your warnings, but I think they are unnecessary. I shall bid you good-evening before your mumbo jumbo begins to make sense. I'm off to produce an heir. Wish me luck,” he quipped, eyeing his man from the doorway of the dressing room. “You go on to bed. I shan't need you any further tonight.”

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