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Authors: Julie Anne Long

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BOOK: The Legend of Lyon Redmond
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He was conscious that he was speaking in a rush and perhaps too adamantly.

“A gift for a lady in your life, eh, Mr. Redmond?”

Clearly Postlethwaite was familiar with the syndrome.

Lyon said nothing. His nerves were wound too tightly and he needed this transaction to happen very quickly indeed.

Postlethwaite was pulling them from the window and reaching out to hand them to Lyon to inspect when the bell of the shop jingled again.

Lyon pivoted.

And froze.

There stood his brother Jonathan, just as frozen as Lyon.

Jonathan's gaze darted from Lyon. To the gloves. To Postlethwaite. Back to Lyon.

A damning little silence ensued.

“I saw Benedict tethered outside,” Jonathan ventured, quietly.

Lyon found he couldn't speak. He could only imagine what his expression was, given the three hundred things he was feeling at once. He couldn't seem to arrange mild disinterest over his features.

“I won't say anything,” Jonathan said quietly and surprisingly gently.

Lyon couldn't even nod.

“I'll just wrap those gloves for you, shall I, Mr. Redmond?” Mr. Postlethwaite said discreetly.

“Thank you,” Lyon said stiffly. Still looking at his brother.

Neither he nor Jonathan had yet blinked.

“Now, young Mr. Redmond,” Postlethwaite said brightly. “Are you looking for something, too?”

“Thank you, Mr. Postlethwaite, but I was looking for my brother. Father wants a word with you immediately. Something about London?”

S
HE LOVED HOW
he spoke of his family: the warmth in his voice when he spoke of his sister, Violet, who
was about Olivia's age and was
quite
a handful. His admiration for his clever, quiet brother Miles and his affection for Jonathan, who was rather like a puppy but who looked so like Lyon that Olivia knew he would someday be devastating. She knew his horse was named Benedict, that he had once rescued and raised a baby sparrow, that his favorite color was blue, like her eyes and his, that he'd won the Sussex Marksmanship Trophy three years running and a half-dozen fencing competitions at school. He was left-handed. He had two middle names, Arthur and James, which she'd discovered when he'd handed her a handkerchief one day to clean off a bit of jam, and she'd rubbed her thumb over his embroidered initials. As if she could imprint them on her soul that way.

She learned that he loved scones, very strong unsugared coffee just like she did, and reading while stretched out in chair farthest from the fire in their main room, because he could tip his head back and see, on clear nights, the Starry Plough, and she knew that he had accidentally shot the foot off the statue of Mercury in his father's garden when he was a boy. He read and read and reread
Marcus Aurelius
, and sometimes he read to her from it as they walked, when she asked. His favorite quote was “Accept the things to which fate binds you, and love the people with whom fate brings you together, but do so with all your heart.”

How she loved that sentence.
Love the people with whom fate brings you together, but do so with all your heart.
And she loved the little silence that followed when he'd read it to her, because she knew he was thinking about her, and wanted her to know it.

He was relentlessly, fiercely intelligent, and willing to rousingly argue in a way she found exhilarat
ing, since she was so accustomed to being cleverer than nearly everyone, and he would not simply
let
her win. Not even when her temper flared.

Though he was delighted when she did win.

Every new thing she learned about him was like being handed a jewel, which she would turn round and round in her hands, studying its every facet.

She wanted to trace with a finger the lines of his face, his lips, his jaw. To slide her arms around his waist and tilt her head up and touch her lips to his. To
breathe
him in. Sometimes he would say something, or the light would catch him just so, and just like that her throat would knot and she would lose her ability to speak, as if everything she felt had rushed her senses all at once.

And then he would fall silent, too.

She knew his reciprocal silence was recognition. And if
she
burned, she could only imagine how he burned. For of course he knew much more about such matters than she did. Her pillow was probably shocked at the attention she lavished upon it at night.

She occasionally regretted he was a gentleman. The fact that he was meant she was safer, and luckier, than she deserved to be.

But it all meant she felt faintly feverish much of the time. It was a pleasant sort of sick that apparently left her looking even more beautiful, or at least more interesting.

“You look as though you're in the throes of an opium dream, Olivia,” her brother Ian accused over breakfast, four weeks after Lyon had first joined her on her walk to the Duffys. Her parents had breakfasted hours ago. Olivia, who had tossed and turned and scarcely slept for weeks, was late to the table lately, so she usually breakfasted with whatever brother happened to be home and slowly recover
ing from a night of doing too much of everything, primarily drinking.

“How on earth would you know
that
? And what's wrong with it, if I do?”

“Interesting,” Ian mused. Studying her curiously.

“What is?” she said irritably.

“You just responded to me in full sentences. I haven't heard one of those from you in a while. And you're so
very
fond of sentences.”

He was teasing her, but Olivia was startled. She was vaguely aware her conversation had become somewhat drifty and monosyllabic lately. It was just that conversation that wasn't with Lyon suddenly seemed a waste of time. She'd talked to these people her entire life. She was only able to talk to him for about two hours every week.

All her senses seemed forever occupied with him, but she had gone so long unable to talk
about
him that a hair-fine fissure of something she couldn't quite identify—it felt a bit like anger but might also be fear, or frustration, or some blend thereof—had opened up in her joy. She was swept up in a current and forever adjusting her sails.

But both she and Lyon knew this could not go on forever.

Olivia, who never could bear to be told what to do, knew he would need to dictate whatever happened next. And Lyon was so much more comfortable treating the future like a plaything, for speculation was how men like him and his father grew wealthier.

“How on earth would you know about opium dreams, Ian?” she countered swiftly.

“Er, just a guess,” Ian said hurriedly. “Reached for a metaphor. You forgot to correct my grammar a moment ago, so I wondered if something was
amiss. You seem a bit distracted lately.” He pushed the coffee over to her. “This ought to help.”

Olivia poured some coffee and closed her eyes and inhaled its heavenly vapors.

When she opened them again Ian was frowning at her. “If I didn't know better I'd say you were nursing a
brute
of a whisky headache.”

She snorted. “Naught is amiss. Perhaps I've simply given up on correcting your grammar, exhausted from the fruitless effort.”

“Ah, Olivia,” her brother teased. “Never give up on me.”

She smiled at him then and he pushed the marmalade over to her so she could set about painting her bread with it.

Suddenly Genevieve darted into the chair opposite her, startling both her and her brother. “Olivia, will you come with me to Tingle's today?”

“Er . . . Oh. Um. I cannot. I must to go to the meeting of the Society for the Protection of the Sussex Poor, and then to the Duffys. It's Tuesday.”

A little furrow appeared between Genevieve's eyes. “But that's not until one,” she pointed out gently.

“I've things to do until then,” she said swiftly.

An interesting silence ensued, and Olivia realized that Genevieve and Ian had gone still and were studying her unblinkingly.

“Like . . . gazing dreamily off into space?” Genevieve exchanged a swift speaking glance with Ian, who ducked his head. Perhaps suppressing a smile.

Olivia scowled. “Correspondence,” she said loftily. “Regarding my pamphlet.”

She had, in fact, started a letter to Mrs. More some time ago, so this wasn't entirely a lie. She
might
even finish it this afternoon.

“Very well,” Genevieve said at last, still frowning
a little. Less daunted by the word “pamphlet” than Olivia would have preferred.

Another funny little silence ensued.

“What's that in your hand, Genevieve?” Ian gestured with his chin.

“Oh, it's a broadsheet from London.” She brandished it. “I thought I'd read it whilst I had a cup of coffee.”

Ian tipped the pot and a sad brown trickle dribbled into Genevieve's extended cup. Genevieve eyed it disconsolately.

“We can always get more,” Ian said complacently, and the housekeeper was moving to bring in another pot as he said it. “What's the latest gossip?”

“Why, are
you
wondering whether you're in here?” Genevieve fanned the broadsheet open.

“I shouldn't be,” he said vaguely. “This month anyway.”

Olivia cast her eyes heavenward in mock dismay. In truth, she enjoyed all her siblings thoroughly, though of a certainty her household
was
more anarchic than the Redmonds. She also knew instinctively it was a happier one. How fortunate they were to sit here together and laugh and talk and know they “could always get more,” more coffee and marmalade and conversation that would amuse and irritate, such a contrast from the terrifying squalor in which the Duffys lived.

All at once it seemed freshly inconceivable that she couldn't tell her siblings about Lyon, because sharing the things she loved with people she loved was not only of the chief pleasures of her life, it was fundamental to who she was.

How odd that Lyon could make her world feel so infinite and simultaneously shrink it.

This paradox had begun to feel just a little bit like a vise.

Genevieve cleared her throat and crackled the paper as if preparing to orate.

“Let's see . . . Lord Ice—that's what they call the Marquess Dryden, isn't that funny?—is said to be searching for four black horses with white stockings. How very dramatic of him. The Silverton sisters have returned after a season abroad and are cutting quite the social swath . . . And Lady Arabella, Hexford's daughter is supposedly about to become engaged, and she's been in London for a round of social engagements. We saw her once, do you remember, Olivia? She's blond and so pretty.”

“Better a Redmond leg-shackled than one of us,” Chase said with near-religious fervor, around a bite of fried bread.

Olivia slowly lowered her coffee cup to the table. As if she were suddenly falling and falling and afraid it might shatter when she landed.

“Does it say to whom Lady Arabella will wed?” She could scarcely feel her lips form the words. They sounded bright and brittle in ears.

“All I can tell you is that the betting book at White's has it that it's Lyon Redmond,” Ian said, on a yawn.

Accept the things to which fate binds you, and love the people with whom fate brings you together, but do so with all your heart.

How could she have missed it? She was besotted, that's why. The word “bind” was synonymous with “chained.” Which, coincidentally, suddenly seemed to be wrapped around her heart and squeezing the breath from her.

Did “fate” indeed bind Lyon to a duke's daughter and a life the duplicate of his father's?

His future had been stamped upon him since birth, for all the world as if he was a minted coin.

There was no rule that said love would supersede his sense of duty.

Then again, there was no rule that said it wouldn't.

“It's just a stupid broadsheet,” she said so vehemently that both Genevieve and Ian gave a start.

She pushed herself blindly away from the table without saying another word.

L
YON LEANED BACK
against the elm tree; his heart was pounding so absurdly hard it was a wonder it didn't rustle the tissue-wrapped gloves he'd tucked into his coat. He had never before really given a gift to a woman who wasn't his mother, and this gift seemed perfect and yet woefully inadequate all at once. Because he wanted to give her the world.

He did
not
, however, want to give her the news he needed to deliver.

As usual, when she appeared, the world seemed to flare into double its usual brightness, and he stepped out to greet her, to bask in the light he usually saw in her face.

She kept walking right on past him as if he was the elm tree. Or invisible.

Well, then. Something was clearly amiss.

He fell into step beside her, and reached for her basket. She pulled her arm away abruptly. And
still
didn't look at him.

His second rather profound clue that something was definitely wrong.

“Olivia,” he tried.

She sped up just a little, as if the sound of his voice were instead the whine of a mosquito she was attempting to outrace.

He kept pace with her. “Olivia, I can't stay today. I need to go to London for about a month. I leave tomorrow.”

And that's when she finally stopped. She looked
at him. Her face blanked in shock and disbelief, for all the world as if he'd shot her.

Scarlet flooded into her cheeks.

And then her mouth set in a thin line, and she whipped around so quickly her skirts nearly knocked her down.

But she kept walking.

Much, much faster now.

“Olivia, please
talk
to me.” He felt ridiculous scurrying alongside her.

She ignored him. Her jaw was as hard as an axe blade, and her nose, while not necessarily pointed skyward, was definitely elevated. For the first time in his life he understood the term “high dudgeon.”

BOOK: The Legend of Lyon Redmond
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