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To Woo a Widow (The Heart of a Duke Book 10)(24)

By:Christi Caldwell


Wordlessly, he turned her about once more, removed the butterfly combs  from her hair, and reworked the tresses. Everything he did was done with  such infinite gentleness and tenderness that the remaining parts of her  heart that hadn't already been claimed fell into his hands. "Until  tomorrow," he promised.

With a shaky nod, Philippa rushed to the front of the room and left. Her  heart thundered hard; the rapid beat filling her ears and as she fled, a  panicky desperation filled her. She'd no doubt he would offer her his  name and as she wanted him-all of him-she'd not force him to abandon  what he required as a marquess.

She bit her lip hard and rushed around the corridor nearly to the  entrance of the ballroom and collided with a hard, thick wall. Philippa  grunted and reeled back, but a pair of large, strong hands shot out and  righted her.

"Lady Philippa, how unexpected but utterly delightful meeting you here  on the way to your assignation." By the slight emphasis, they were two  ships sailing in the night.

Lord Montfort smiled. And this was not the easy, affable, sincere grin  worn by Miles but rather a cold, empty expression of mirth. Her own  existence had proven life indelibly shaped a person; marked you with  pain. What was to account for this man's steely edge? Seeing it,  recognizing it, however, made him more man than the beast she'd taken  him for at Hyde Park. "My lord," she said quietly, glancing about. If  she were discovered, there would be even more questions she didn't wish  to answer. "If you'll excuse me?" She made to step around him when he  called out, staying her.

"May I offer you a word of advice?"

What advice could a man with his hard eyes have for her? She eyed him warily.

"If you're prepared to sneak away for your pleasures, then do not make  apologies for it. Take your pleasures where you would and be damned with  anyone for their opinions."

Surprise filled her. From her first sighting of him in the park, she'd believed him capable of nothing but malice.

His wicked grin deepened. "If you are, however …  amiable?" he whispered lowering his head closer.

Philippa leaned back and offered a wry smile. "I assure you, I am n-"

Footsteps sounded down the hall and they looked as one. "You bastard,"  Miles hissed, rushing forward. Philippa gasped as, in one quick  movement, he hefted the earl away and leveled him with a single blow.

"Miles, no," she cried, reaching for his arm. For the earl's wicked offer, nothing untoward otherwise had happened.

With a grunt, the other man went down hard on his knees. "By God,  Guilford, I didn't-" Coming over the earl's form, Miles punched him  again.

"Oh, my goodness!"

That shocked exclamation filled the corridor and froze Miles mid-blow.

And then, with a sinking wave of horror, Philippa turned to the small  audience that had gathered-Lady Jersey, Philippa's mother, Gabriel and  his wife. Her brother narrowed a lethal stare on the two battling men.

She clenched her toes so hard, her arches ached.

"Lord Guilford," Gabriel drawled, his tone dripping ice.

His chest heaving from his exertions, Miles stood, mouth agape, staring at their audience.

Taking advantage of that distraction, the Earl of Montfort punched him  in the face and Philippa cried out. "Only fair to return the favor," he  said with the same humor of one discussing a Drury Lane comedy.

Several additional guests converged on the hallway and Philippa covered her face with her hands.

This was bad, indeed.





Chapter 15


It had happened.

For the first time in his nearly thirty years, Miles had found himself  on the front page of the scandal sheets. All of them, to be precise. The  stack at the corner of his desk glared mockingly back. With a growl, he  shifted his attention from the papers in front of him to those useless  scraps. He swiped the top copy and skimmed.                       
       
           



       

The Wanton Widow of Winston finds herself fought over by the Marquess of G and the Earl of M …

The muscles of his stomach clenched into tight, painful knots and his  fingers curled about the pages of the hated sheet. They would print her  name for all to see, while providing him and that bastard Montfort at  least the slight anonymity of a given initial. He crumpled the page into  a ball and hurled it into the rubbish bin beside his desk. By God, he'd  done this. With his carelessness yesterday and in Hyde Park, he'd  subjected her to the whispers and stares and the advances of cads like  Montfort.

Miles picked up his pen and tapped it distractedly on his papers. If she  would trust in him, he would marry her, not just to do right by  her … which he did want that, too, but because he loved her. He loved her  spirit and strength. He loved her devotion to her daughters. And he  wanted to be a family with her and Faith and Violet. A pressure weighted  his chest. Yet, with the life she'd lived, the misery of her own  marriage, and the details she'd only alluded to of her childhood, she  had no grounds to want to marry him. Never more had he wished to be one  of those charming lords with all the right words.

The door flew open and he looked up. His mother stormed into his office  and slammed the door behind him. "I've allowed you to shut yourself away  in your office. Did you think I'd not expect you to speak on it?"

He swallowed a curse. "Mother," he drawled and tossed down his pen. No,  he rather thought a woman who so wholly survived and thrived on gossip  would not allow him to escape talk. "Actually I did," he said, rolling  his shoulders. The last thing he cared to discuss was the scandal of  being discovered alone with Philippa and bloodying Montfort for daring  to put his hands on her. Another primal surge of bloodlust went through  him at the memory of that bastard's mouth on hers.

"Are you listening to me, Miles?" she snapped.

"No, I am not," he said, eliciting another gasp. For the whole of his  life, he'd been a dutiful son; seeing to the obligations and  responsibilities that went with the Guilford title. He'd done so  unflinchingly since his father had died ten years earlier. Where other  lords had reveled in the freedom that came with being a bachelor in  possession of great wealth, he'd dedicated himself to growing that  wealth and never becoming one of those indolent lords. He'd not make  apologies for any of his actions. And most especially, not for the  feelings he had for Philippa.

"Do you know the scandal you've caused?" she implored. "What you've done to Sybil?"

"I have already spoken with Sybil. She understands my heart is otherwise engaged."

Silence fell over the room. A very short-lived silence. "What?" she barked, a seal-like quality to that one word.

He tamped down a sigh, taking some mercy on his mother. There had been  the expectation and lifelong hope on her part that he would marry her  goddaughter and cement their families. In time, she'd come to appreciate  the manner of honorable, strong, woman Philippa was. "I am in love,  Mother," he said quietly as silence resounded in the room. His body went  still. I love her. He loved Philippa with everything he was. He loved  her as a woman of strength. He loved her for being a devoted mother. And  he'd spend every day filling her days with joy if she'd but have him.

His mother opened and closed her mouth. "But … but … "

Miles flexed his jaw, tired of her disparagement of Philippa. "I intend  to marry her." Regardless of the expectations his mother had of or for  Miles.

"You needn't marry her." His mother threw her hands up. "She is a widow."

A black curtain of rage descended over his vision, momentarily blinding  him, and he quelled her with a glare. "Have a care. That woman will be  your daughter-in-law." If she'll have me.

The marchioness sputtered. "Sh-she said she would not marry you. A liar  and a wanton." She muttered that last part under her breath.

He froze. "What?"

"I said a liar and a … " At his black glare, her words trailed off. Color  rushed his mother's cheeks and she slapped one palm against the other.  "I paid Lady Philippa a visit a few days ago in order to ascertain the  state of your affairs."

He choked. "You paid her a visit?" Fury and outrage gripped him. He  thought of Philippa receiving his mother as a visitor and dealing with  the woman's vitriol. "What did you say to her?" he demanded. "What did  you say?" he boomed, when she remained unyielding.

She jumped. "I explained you required an heir. I sought to determine if she could give you that heir."