Price of Desire (11 page)

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Authors: Lavinia Kent

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The important thing was to keep him away from Anna
.
Although they’d never actually discussed the details of her daughter’s birth, his insinuations had made it clear that he suspected – no, knew – the truth
,
and that he wanted his . . . legacy
.
Didn’t soldiers always want a legacy?

He could not have her
.
Rose would deny him until her dying breath
.
He had no claim that she did not g
rant
him.

She rubbed harder at her face, causing the skin to redden
.
She tried to put from her mind that moment when she’d seen him watching Anna, seen the proprietary power of his survey
.
Anna was hers. It didn’t matter who had sired her, what had happe
ned on that sun-drenched afternoon
.
Damn
,
she was doing it again.

Why did he have this effect on her
?
Why did one glance cause fires to flicker in her belly and tingles to spread between her legs
, overr
iding
her every sensible thought
?
He was dangerous, a complication she could not afford
.
She would keep him separate from her
d
aughter, separate from herself
.

She’d given in to lust and passion once
.
She would not do it again
.
Her plan was to find a pliable, easygoing husband, something M
ajor
Beowulf Huntington most decidedly was not
.
She dropped the cloth into the bowl of cool water with a de
finite
splash
.
If she wanted to proceed with her well-ordered life
,
avoiding
Major
Huntington
would
have to
be the first
item
on her list.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter F
our

 

“Well, what do you think of your suitors?

Marguerite slipped in the open door of Rose’s chamber
.
She hadn’t yet dressed for dinner and held a needlework hoop in her hand.

“I believe you mean my guests
.
A
nd
,
I haven’t really had a chance to
form an opinion
.
They have only just
arrived
.
Mr.
Williams, who has recently taken up holdings across the
village
,
has not even arrived
.
I do look forward to furthering my acquaintance with him
.
I hear good things of his character.

Rose looked up from the list on her desk
.
Beside each gentleman’s name was a list of desirable characteristics
.
Sober
.
Companionable
.
Pleasant of countenance
.
Should she
merely place a
check
mark next to each criterion a
gentlemen
satisfied, or perhaps actually score them
in
each category
?
Scor
ing them seemed
rather indelicate
, but how else was she to remember the differences
among
them
?
She flipped the paper over
to avoid betraying her list
to Marguerite.

“You’ve already admitted the purpose for the party
.
Why not be candid and admit they are suitors?

Marguerite settled herself on the settee and plucked at her embroidery.

“If you want me to be candid,” Rose quipped, “I should call them
commodities
.
At this point
, for all practical purposes,
I am inspecting their wares
, not
searching for romance
.

Suitor

implies romance
.
That
is not what I am seeking.”

Marguerite turned, flustered
.

That
makes you sound so cold
.
Every woman wants romance
.
Next you will be telling
m
e that
you do not even care about your husband

s
appearance
.
Surely you would prefer a tall, handsome man like
Lord
Sommerton to someone
un
attractive.

“I am practical.

Rose
chose her words carefully
.
“I
would prefer
to cho
o
se a man of adequate countena
nce
.

Marguerite pursed her lips
.
“I am not sure that sounds very appetizing.”

Rose flashed a grin at her sister
.
“I am not planning to eat the man, just manage him.”

Marguerite’s gaze dropped
.
She fidgeted with her hoop
, pulling the
muslin
even tighter
.

“Still, you will have relations with him
.
Surely, you want somebody you
find
attractive
.
How could you kiss him otherwise?”

Rose swallowed a further laugh
.
Marguerite was so young and innocent; she just didn’t understand the practicalities of marriage
.
What happened in the bedroom was of little consequence in making a satisfactory marriage
.
Yet f
or a moment she saw Wulf’s
emerald eyes melting with desire
,
and felt phantom hands whisper over her body
.
S
he mentally swatted them away
.

No, passion was not important
.
She would not let it be
.
Wulf
’s presence could be ignored
.
Her marriage to John had been just as hap
py after they stopped . . . n
o, she sought only contentment
.
But the desire to laugh at Marguerite’s innocence vanished
.
Rose had once
prized
such dreams, too.

“I seek to replace
the companionship of marriage, not the passion.

It was time for them both to be realistic
.

“Rose, you know that is why I am here
.
Why I finally persuaded Mama that I needed to come.”

“Yes, I do know
.
And I do appreciate the effort you’ve made
.
But it’s not quite the same
.
Life with a husband is so much easier in so many ways
.
I’ve already mentioned Anna, she’s well over four now, and I am not sure she even remembers John
.
She never speaks of him
.
If I don’t remarry, she’ll never experience what it is to have a father
.
If I remarry soon, she’ll probably never remember a time before her new papa
.


It’s n
ot that I want her to forget John
.
I’ll always make sure
Anna
knows what a wonderful man he was, but it would be so much easier for her to accept somebody new into her life now than it will be in a couple of years.”

“I suppose that does make sense
.
Practical, again.”

“Practical
?
Yes, that’s right
.
Having a husband is practical
.
Do you know I’ve manage
d the estates for well over five years now
?
For the first four
years it was simple
.
Everybody just assumed that I was
carrying out
John’s plans
.
I never had a question about what I wanted to do
.
Now, since John’s death, that’s all changed
.
Even when the steward doesn’t actually question me, he shoots me a look that makes me question myself
.
I can give exactly the same order now that I did two
years ago, but now – only now –
it’s very questionable and risky
.
Nobody likes having a woman in charge.”

“Well, clearly not
.
It is well known that the female mind is not suited to such tasks
.
We are made for daintier things than managing estates and worrying about numbers.

Marguerite spoke without lifting her eyes from her needlework.

Rose swallowed back her reply
.
Even so, she found herself stuttering, “But . . . but . . . how can you say such a thing
?
I’ve run this house and managed this estate for years
.
Why should it matter whether I have a husband or not?”

“Oh, my poor Rose.

Marguerite thrust her needle into the stretched fabric and took her sister’s hands in her own
.
“I know you have had a difficult time since Burberry’s death
.
If only Mama would have let me come immediately
.
No wonder you want another husband, somebody to help lift the burden from your shoulders
.
You should not have been left to manage on your own
.
Burberry should have appointed a guardian to manage things for you.”

“No, that’s not what I wanted at all.

Rose separated her hands from her sister’s and stood up
.
She resisted the urge to pace
.
“I am perfectly happy managing the estates
.
I don’t want a husband who will come and take it over
.
That’s my biggest problem in choosing a man
.
I need one who doesn’t want to interfere, one who will appreciate my taking care of him.”

Marguerite chewed on her lower lip, her eyes troubled
.
“I just do not understand you sometimes
.
You want a husband, but one who will not bother you?”

“Yes
.
Well, no
.
I want a companion, but one who will leave me to run my own life, my own properties.”

“That does not sound like a companion to me
.
It sounds like a


“A what?”

“It doesn’t matter.”

Planting her feet, Rose glared down at her sister
.
“You’ve fairly begun
.
Now you must say it, Marguerite.”

Marguerite stared down at her hands
.

Well, i
t sounds like a  . . . pet.

She
flushed deep as she whispered the last word.

Rose drew air deep into her lungs
.
She wanted to protest her sister’s choice of similes, but could not bear to see Marguerite quiver any more
.
Besides, she knew there was some truth to what her sister said
.
She probably would be happy with a faithful hound, if only he could talk to her on stormy nights, play a good game of chess, and be a father to Anna
.
She grinned at the thought
.

She flipped over her list and considered additions.

 

 

“That went well
.
You are a charming hostess
.
So organized.

Lady Smythe-Burke sat sipping her after
-
dinner tea as they waited for the gentlemen to join them
.
Or at least she would have sipped if she ever stopped talking
.
“And your staff, far better than one would expect in the country
.
I could give you a few hints, of course
.
When one’s been running a house for as long as I have
,
naturally one learns a few secrets
.
For instance, I must say you may be a touch too familiar with your butler, Watson . . .

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