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BOOK: Teresa Medeiros
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Nicky’s hysterical wail rose above it all. “For God’s sake, you savages. Not the suit. Don’t tear the bloody suit!”

Justin lifted his face from Emily’s trembling throat. A writhing mass of natives had Nicky by the arms and legs. Justin stared mesmerized as they dragged him howling and bucking into the forest, leaving only his panama hat flattened in the sand.

The screams and howls slowly died. For a wavering moment the silence was broken only by the whisper of the waves and the shrill cry of a kiwi.

Someone was watching them. The hair on Justin’s nape stood erect. He turned his head to find a lean figure squatting beneath the shadow of a punga tree. Their gazes met across the moonlit stretch of beach, man to man, friend to friend. Then the native lifted his hand and melted into the arms of the brush without so much as a rustle of his flaxen skirt.

Chapter 36
 

Eternity will find me still watching over you.…

“N
ever underestimate the resourcefulness of an English valet left to his own devices,” Justin murmured into Emily’s hair.

She nuzzled against his chest, loath to surrender the comfort of his strong arms around her. He tasted so good—salty and gritty and real, as a man should taste. Her convulsive shivers slowly abated. She tilted her face to his, laughing and crying at the same time.

“Oh, Justin!” she exclaimed, throwing her arms around his neck.

It took her a moment to realize something was wrong. He knelt rigid in her embrace. She drew back fearfully. “You didn’t really think I was going to shoot you, did you?”

“The thought did occur to me.”

“But you were so wonderful, so gallant about it.” She gazed up at him through a puddle of besotted tears. “Why, you smiled at me like an angel.”

He pried her arms off his neck and stood, brushing the sand from his knees. “My manners at gunpoint have always been impeccable.”

He walked to the edge of the waves and stared out to sea.

Emily trailed after him. “I had to do it, you know.” She waded out in front of him, heedless of the foam washing over her skirt. “It was your face.” Reaching up, she cupped his cheeks in her hands. “Your beautiful face. It’s so expressive. I had no choice. You could have never maintained the charade. Nicky would have seen right through you. To make him believe I hated you, I had to make you believe it, too.”

The planes of his face were cold and stony now. Only his eyes revealed the depths of his stormy thoughts. “You did an admirable job.”

Emily dropped her hands. She paced back and forth through the waves, frantic to make him understand. “Saleri started harping about this land grant he claimed you altered to cheat him and Daddy out of their shares of the mine. He was going to use it to have you put away for life. I was afraid if he came here alone and got his hands on it, he would destroy it, or, even worse, doctor it himself to have you brought to trial for my father’s murder.”

Justin’s voice was chillingly devoid of emotion. “Are you sure that’s why you came with him?”

She wheeled to face him. “What do you mean?”

His eyes narrowed. “Maybe somewhere in your mind was just the tiniest smidgen of doubt. Maybe you wanted to see that land grant for yourself and find out if I really did murder your father.”

“No!” She lifted her sodden hem and stumbled toward him. “I believed in you. I swear it. You’re all I ever believed in.”

Snorting in disbelief, Justin scooped up a shell, then drew back his arm to toss it into the sea. “What were you
going to do after he took you to the land grant? Shoot him in cold blood?”

She grabbed his arm, not even realizing herself the full import of her words. “I didn’t even think about what would happen next. I knew you’d come for me.”

The shell slipped from his fingers. He slowly swung around to face her. “And if I hadn’t come?” he asked brutally. “If I had decided a woman like you was hardly worth chasing halfway across the world?”

She bowed her head, wondering if he would ever understand or be able to forgive her for her own dark passions. She lifted her head, her heart in her eyes. “I would have done what I had to do. He killed my father.”

A strange expression passed over Justin’s face, then was gone, leaving it as impassive as before.

He ran his thumb over her cheek to flick away a tear. “Then you’ll understand when I do what I have to do.” With those words he gently disengaged her hand, turned, and walked away.

Emily’s hands hung limply at her sides. “Where are you going?”

His stride did not slow. Desolation overwhelmed her with abandonment nipping close at its heels. All she could see was Justin Connor walking away from her one more time.

She trotted after him, pausing to hop up and down on one foot to peel off her sodden slipper. “Go on, you coward!” she yelled. “Run away from me. It’s what you do best, isn’t it?”

She hurled the slipper. It struck him solidly between the shoulder blades. He hesitated for a heartbeat, then kept going.

Her voice rose. “I don’t need you. I never needed you. The day Emily Claire Scarborough needs anybody will be the day they grow tulips in hell!” She took a few more stumbling steps, then sank to her knees in the sand. “I
don’t need you, you bastard.” Tears blinded her. Her voice faded to a mumble. “I don’t need anyone.”

Emily sat on the bluff where her father was buried, hugging her knees to her chest. She watched as Justin’s clipper unfurled its sails and set for open sea. The same warm wind that tossed her curls around her face filled its billowing sails, sending it slicing for the horizon. It was a magnificent sight, silhouetted against the pagan moon like a ghost of days long gone. Its beauty would have broken her heart if it hadn’t already been broken.

The lights of the ship slowly faded over the horizon, leaving her alone with the brilliant glitter of the stars. She tangled her bare toes in the tussock grass and laid her damp cheek against her knee.

An unearthly sound filled the night. Emily lifted her head, stiffening. She was afraid to turn around, afraid she might have imagined the hymn brightening the darkness, afraid it might be only the stars rubbing points or the melodic wanderings of a lost choir of angels. The music rose on magical wings, drifting through the wind to her ears.

Her hands clenched into fists. She stood and dared to turn, only to find a shimmering line of torches winding their way down the beach toward the bluff. Her breath caught in her throat.

The procession topped the bluff. Among their well-loved faces stood Trini in full ceremonial garb, running his hands down the lapels of a rumpled coat of the finest Egyptian linen; Dani and Kawiri, their lithe naked bodies draped with shells and fragments of polished amber; the stern
ariki
, his mouth folded in what might have been a smile on a more expressive face.

But Emily had eyes only for the man at the head of their procession. A barefoot king in a pair of ragged dungarees.

The silence rustled expectantly around them.

“You’re late again,” she said, swallowing around the knot in her throat.

“Not too late, I hope,” Justin replied. “It’s bad form to be late for your own wedding.”

Emily pressed her fingers to her trembling lips. She understood that he was offering her his life as bravely and as gallantly as he had on the beach. Not to end it in a flash of smoking gunpowder, but to cup its fragile moments in her palm, to nourish it and protect it as she would her own through all the sweet years to come.

She opened her mouth to give him her answer.

A silver tray popped into her vision, crowned by a conch shell brimming with amber liquid. Penfeld bowed. “A spot of tea, perhaps, my dear? To celebrate this momentous occasion.”

He didn’t utter a protest when she shoved the tray aside and flew across the bluff into Justin’s waiting arms. Trini’s deep-throated laughter pealed out as Justin rocked her in his hard embrace.

He swept out an arm toward the wind-battered cross. “I wanted David to share the moment with us.”

“Oh, he is,” Emily breathed in wonder. “Look.”

They both stared at the base of the cross to discover a single fragile pohutukawa bloom had pushed its way up through the sandy soil, its tender petals unfurling in a fresh promise of new life.

Their lips met in a melting caress, making promises and vows they would gladly spend their lifetimes keeping. As the natives danced around them, Justin stroked her hair and pressed his lips to her ear, whispering the words she’d once thought never to hear again except on the distant wings of the wind—

“Stay with me always, my sweet, my love … my Claire.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

USA Today
and
Publishers Weekly
bestselling author Teresa Medeiros was recently chosen one of the Top Ten Favorite Romance Authors by
Affaire de Coeur
magazine and won the
Romantic Times
Reviewer’s Choice Award for Best Historical Love and Laughter. A former Army brat and registered nurse, she wrote her first novel at the age of twenty-one and has since gone on to win the hearts of critics and readers alike. The author of thirteen novels, Teresa makes her home in Kentucky with her husband and two cats. Readers can visit her website at
www.teresamedeiros.com
.

If you loved ONCE AN ANGEL,
don’t miss

A Kiss to Remember

a bewitching romance
from the superb
Teresa Medeiros.
Available from
Bantam Books.

Read on for a preview.…

My darling son, my hands are shaking as I pen this letter.…

The devil had come to Devonbrooke Hall.

He hadn’t come in a coach drawn by four black horses, nor in a blast of brimstone, but in the honey-gold hair and angelic countenance of Sterling Harlow, the seventh duke of Devonbrooke. He strode through the marble corridors of the palatial mansion he had called home for the past twenty-one years, two brindle mastiffs padding at his heels with a leonine grace that matched his own.

He stayed the dogs with a negligent flick of one hand, then pushed open the study door and leaned against the frame, wondering just how long his cousin would pretend not to notice that he was there.

Her pen continued to scratch its way across the ledger for several minutes until a particularly violent t-crossing left an ugly splotch of ink on the page. Sighing with defeat, she glared at him over the top of her wire-rimmed spectacles. “I can see that Napoleon failed to teach you any manners at all.”

“On the contrary,” Sterling replied with a lazy smile. “I taught him a thing or two. They’re saying that he abdicated after Waterloo just to get away from me.”

“Now that you’re back in London, I might consider joining him in exile.”

As Sterling crossed the room, his cousin held herself as rigid as a dressmaker’s dummy. Oddly enough, Diana was probably the only woman in London who did not seem out of place behind the leather-and-mahogany-appointed splendor of the desk. As always, she eschewed the pale pastels and virginal whites favored by the current crop of belles for the stately hues of forest green and wine. Her dark hair was drawn back in a simple chignon that accentuated the elegance of her widow’s peak.

“Please don’t sulk, cousin dear,” he murmured, leaning down to kiss her cheek. “I can bear the world’s censure, but yours cuts me to the heart.”

“It might if you had one.” She tilted her face to receive his kiss, her stern mouth softening. “I heard you came back over a week ago. I suppose you’ve been staying with that rascal Thane again.”

Ignoring the leather wing chair in front of the desk, Sterling came around and propped one hip on the corner nearest his cousin. “He’s never quite forgiven you for swearing off your engagement, you know. He claims you broke his heart and cast cruel aspersions upon his character.”

Although Diana took care to keep her voice carefully neutral, a hint of color rose in her cheeks. “My problem wasn’t with your friend’s character. It was his lack of it.”

“Yet in all these years, neither one of you has ever married. I’ve always found that rather … curious.”

Diana drew off her spectacles, leveling a frosty gaze at him. “I’d rather live without a man than marry a boy.” As if realizing she’d revealed too much, she slipped her spectacles back on and busied herself with wiping the excess ink from the nib of her pen. “I’m certain that even Thane’s escapades must pale in comparison with your own. I hear you’ve been back in London long enough to have fought four duels, added the family fortunes of three unfortunate young bucks to your winnings, and broken an assortment of hearts.”

Sterling gave her a reproachful look. “When will you learn not to listen to unkind gossip? I only winged two fellows, won the ancestral home of another, and bruised a single heart, which turned out to be far less innocent than I’d been led to believe.”

Diana shook her head. “Any woman foolish enough to entrust her heart into your hands gets no more than she deserves.”

“You may mock me if you like, but now that the war is over, I’ve every intention of beginning my search for a bride in earnest.”

BOOK: Teresa Medeiros
12.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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