He was as uncertain as a young lad, desperately longing for her affection even as he feared it might be withheld.
“Very well.” Framing his face in her hands, she met his gaze with a slow, breathtaking smile. “I love you, Gabriel. With all my heart.”
His heart slammed against his ribs. “You are certain?”
She lifted onto her tiptoes, lightly brushing a kiss over his mouth.
“I was fascinated by you from the moment I first caught sight of you across the ballroom,” she admitted. “You were so astonishingly handsome.”
Joy bubbled through him as he offered a smug smile. “Yes, well, I cannot argue.”
She snorted. “Of course, you were also aloof, and cold and so impossibly arrogant that I was relieved you never glanced in my direction. You were terrifying.”
“No, not terrifying,” he murmured. “It was the only means I knew to keep others at a distance.”
“Well, it was certainly effective,” she ruefully assured him. “I assumed that you were destined to be a mere fantasy I could only admire from a distance. And then you arrived in my private chambers demanding that we be wed.”
“Please.” With a groan he pressed his forehead against hers, dreading the memory of how he had injured her. “I cannot bear to speak of that day.”
Her fingers tenderly caressed his cheek. “I was hurt by your cutting manner, and even more by your insistence that I leave London. But in some ways the opportunity to be away from my father’s constant criticism, and even your intimidating presence, allowed me to discover a strength that I never dreamed that I possessed.”
He kissed the tip of her nose. “You are the strongest, most courageous woman I have ever known.”
“And then Jacques kidnapped me…”
“The bastard.”
She chuckled at his low growl. “And you charged to the rescue.”
He lifted his head with a wry grimace. “That was my intent, but in the end you had to rescue me. Twice.”
Her fingers trailed down his jaw, her eyes soft with devotion that warmed Gabriel to the tips of his toes.
“You risked your life for me, and I knew that even if you could never return my feelings, that I would love you for all eternity.”
The words seared through him with overwhelming force. Driven by a need to show his emotions in a far more tangible method, he scooped her off her feet. He moaned at the feel of her warm body cradled against his chest, her skirts spilling over his arm and her unruly curls tickling his chin.
He had barely managed to take a step toward the door, however, when she touched her fingers to his cheek to capture his attention.
“A moment.”
He tilted back his head to glance toward the heavens. “Lord, no.”
“I have one last question.”
“You are deliberately attempting to punish me,” he muttered.
“Why did you not just admit why you wished me to remain at Carrick Park?” she demanded. “You made me believe that you were embarrassed to have me as your wife.”#p#分页标题#e#
He heaved a sigh, lowering his head to stab her with an impatient glare.
“Because I had no notion you could be so foolish.”
Her lips flattened in warning. “Gabriel.”
“I did not wish you to believe I was troubled by what society thinks of you, because I am not,” he said in a tight voice. “So far as I am concerned, they can all rot in the deepest pits of hell. But I knew eventually you would want to return to London, and I wished to make certain they could no longer hurt you with their vile tongues. But I did it for you and your comfort. Never because I cared what they might say.”
“Oh.” Her fingers drifted to his lips. “I love you.”
“Thank God.” He cast her a pleading gaze. “Now can we please retire to our chambers?”
Her soft chuckle filled the air. “Whatever are you waiting for?”
Eight months later
THE BALLROOM on the top floor of the Ashcombe’s London townhouse was a long, ivory room with a parquet floor that had been polished until it glowed. There were a dozen gilded half columns that framed the numerous double doors leading into the attached rooms that had been set up for dinner as well as card rooms for those who preferred to avoid the crowded dance floor. And overhead there was a vaulted ceiling with three massive chandeliers that were reflected in the soaring mirrors at each end of the room.
Talia stood on a dais beneath the balcony where the orchestra played a rousing country tune, dancers spinning about her in a dizzying array of brilliant satins and glittering jewels. Talia allowed a smile of pure contentment to curve her lips.