Well that bit doesn’t sound too terrible.
“In the Name of the Father,” he continued solemnly, “and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.”
A shiver raced down Caroline’s spine when he slowly slid the ring on to her finger, pushing it all the way back until it touched her third knuckle. It was a bit too large, which was fitting, as everything about this marriage felt a bit too large from the man holding her hand in a grip so tight it was almost painful to the title she now wore like a yoke around her neck.
In only a matter of minutes she had gone from Lady Caroline Danvers, daughter of a simple earl, to the Duchess of Readington, wife to one of the most powerful men in all of England. It felt so surreal that had her fingers not ached from the force of the duke’s grip she might have thought she was in a dream.
“You are hurting me,” she whispered.
He glanced down at their joined hands and immediately loosened his grip, but did not offer an apology, nor did she expect one. Her fingers tingled as blood rushed back into her hand and she was so distracted by the sensation that she did not realize the ceremony had ended until her new husband stepped down off the dais and held up his arm.
Like a doll whose appendages were being expertly manipulated by a child, she walked with careful precision down the aisle, taking two small steps for every one of the duke’s larger ones. No one clapped as they passed between the pews, but a few did incline their heads in a gesture of respect. Not towards her, of course. She was no one. A failed debutante plucked from the shadows of obscurity for reasons she’d yet to fully understand. But they did respect her husband. Or, perhaps more accurately, they feared him.
There were more people waiting for them outside of the church. Men and women dressed in their Sunday best, all hoping to catch a glimpse of the duke and his new duchess.
“Smile and wave,” Eric ordered between clenched teeth. “You look like a frightened field mouse.”
Caroline felt like a frightened field mouse. One that had just fallen into the jaws of a surly, ill-tempered cat who hadn’t yet decided if he wanted to play with her or eat her in one satisfying gulp. But she was nothing in not obedient, and so she lifted her arm and swayed it back and forth in a motion that, if not exactly a wave, was close enough to satisfy the duke.
Women and children threw rice and flower petals at them as they descended into the crowd. Taking hold of her elbow, Eric steered her towards the gleaming black landau that would ferry them away to her new home.
The team of matching grays stood quietly while she mounted the steps and climbed inside. Struggling with the train of her dress she gave it a hard yank and nearly tumbled top over teakettle onto the floor. The duke caught her before she could fall, his withering stare telling her precisely what he thought of her clumsiness.
“Sit over there,” he said, pointing to the opposite seat, “and make yourself comfortable. It is going to be a two hour journey.”
“So long?” she whispered, paling at the thought of being trapped alone in a carriage with her husband for more than two minutes, let alone two hours.
“Speak up,” Eric said irritably. “I cannot understand you when you mumble like that. Didn’t your governess teach you how to properly enunciate?”
Her governess had, in fact, taught her how to enunciate. An adept student with a quick mind and a thirst for knowledge, Caroline could enunciate in five different languages. What her governess had failed to teach her was how to deal with a monster for a husband.
If Eric had shown her even an ounce of compassion or understanding she might have been able to keep her tears at bay. She was, by nature, a sensitive woman, but she’d never been an overly dramatic one. She usually reserved her tears for her pillow, but as the reality of her new life began to sink in there was no holding them back any longer.
“Are you – are you crying?” he asked incredulously, dark brows sweeping up towards the sharp brim of his hat when she let out a soft, sad little sniffle.
“No,” she lied miserably.
His eyes narrowed. “It certainly appears as though you are.”
“I – I’m not.”
Sniffle. Sniffle.
“Stop it at once,” he commanded, as though tears were something that could be turned off as easily as a leaky tap or a faulty spigot.
“I am trying.” And she was. Truly. But unlike her husband, she could not hide her emotions behind an icy façade of indifference. When she was happy she smiled. When she found something amusing she laughed. And when she was miserable and tired and frightened, she cried. Grabbing for her reticule, she pulled out a white handkerchief and tried to dry her cheeks, but for every tear that she managed to whisk away two more fell.
The duke’s sigh of exasperation filled the carriage. “Well at least turn your head so I do not have to look at you.”
Crumpling her handkerchief into a tiny damp ball, Caroline sniffled and looked out the window. For a little while everything was blurry, but when she finally stopped crying she found herself gazing at gently rolling fields that stretched as far as the eye could see. Fluffy white sheep dozed in the sun, soaking up what was left of a summer that had all but reached its end, and the sight of the contented livestock brought a tremulous smile to her lips despite the heaviness in her heart.
She had always loved animals. Unfortunately, Lady Wentworth despised anything with fur. Or quills or feathers, for that matter. She’d tried countless times to convince her mother to allow her just one single pet. Even a goldfish would have sufficed. But the answer had always been a firm and unyielding no.
“Who do they belong to?” she asked softly, watching as a lamb jumped to its feet and went bouncing across the field. It must have been born late to have still been so very small, and she hoped it would be brought into the barn before winter struck. Without a thick coat for protection the poor little dear would surely freeze to death in the snow and the ice.
“To what are you referring?” Eric said brusquely without bothering to glance up from the newspaper he’d unfolded across his lap. Since entering the carriage he had loosened his cravat and removed his hat, but the informal state of his attire did little to dull his hard edges.
“The – the sheep.” Caroline bit her bottom lip. She hated the nervous tightness that arose in her belly every time she spoke to the duke, and could only hope the uncomfortable sensation would fade with time. After all, she couldn’t be afraid of her husband forever.
Could she?
“They’re mine.” The newspaper rustled softly as he turned to the next page. “We entered Litchfield Park while you were blubbering into your hanky. All of these fields, and the animals within them, belong to me. If you have any further questions you may direct them to the butler, Mr. Newgate, when we reach the estate.” And with that he returned to reading, leaving Caroline to stare at him in stunned disbelief.
She had known the duke was wealthy. But she’d had no idea he owned hundreds - no, hundreds of thousands - of acres. And this was only one of his estates! Rumor had it there were at least four more, along with two houses in Grosvenor Square, a hunting lodge in Scotland, and a collection of private residences scattered throughout Europe. The magnitude of it all was overwhelming, to say the least. How could she possibly be expected to manage one household, let alone dozens? Surely there had been some mistake. She wasn’t supposed to be here, sitting across from one of the most powerful men in all of England. And yet here she was.
Giving a small, bemused shake of her head, Caroline turned back to the window. As the countryside continued to roll past she contented herself by counting the sheep and it wasn’t long before she fell into an exhausted, dreamless slumber.
Chapter Two
Eric Charles Edmund Hargrave, sixth Duke of Readington and Earl of Baylor (among other less significant titles), watched his new bride sleeping with a clenched jaw and narrowed eyes. He’d suspected the journey was not going to be a pleasant one, but had he known she was going to start bawling befo
re they’d even left the churchyard he would have demanded she travel in her own coach.
Having grown up with a manipulative mother who had constantly used her tears to bring his father to heel, he could not abide crying in any form. A fact his last mistress, a beautiful widow with a penchant for naughty antics between the sheets, had learned the hard way.
Eric felt no guilt for ending the seven-month arrangement. He had been more than generous to Melody during their time together, and he’d settled a handsome sum on her when they parted ways. Truth be told he’d quite enjoyed her. Out of all of his mistresses, she had been one of his favorites. But when she’d begun pressing for more than he was willing to give - and dissolving into tears like a petulant child when he refused her demands - he knew the relationship had run its course.
Fortunately, the Melody’s of the world were quite easy to replace. Once he’d settled a few matters at Litchfield Park he would return to London and find another mistress. Preferably one who wasn’t so bloody dramatic.
Eric’s dark brow furrowed as he continued to stare at his sleeping bride. One of the matters he needed to resolve before departing was the matter of an heir. At nine and twenty he was beginning to feel the pressure that plagued all titled men when they began to reach a certain age without having yet procured a son.
His pressure was intensified all the more by his dissolute scoundrel of a younger brother. A brother who stood to inherit - and lose - everything he had spent most of his adult life rebuilding after the late Duke of Readington bled the Hargrave fortune dry at the gambling hells. It had taken him nearly a decade to regain what his father had lost, and he’d be damned if he allowed all of his hard work to go to naught.
The money did not mean anything to him. Money could be lost and gained and lost again. But the land - the land where his ancestors had lived and died for nearly three hundred years - meant something. And he refused to let the estates, specifically Litchfield Park, go to someone who did not understand their significance. Which was where Caroline came in.
With her pink lips slightly parted and a loose tendril of white blonde hair clinging to the curve of her cheek, she looked like a sleeping angel. It was the first time he had ever seen her at peace. Whenever he’d happened to glance upon her countenance before now she’d always appeared frightened, as if she were one second away from jumping into the nearest broom closet.
She was a meek little thing he mused, rubbing his chin. Not that he minded. One of the reasons he’d selected her was because of her shyness and timidity. He certainly hadn’t picked her to be his bride because he desired her. A snort bubbled in the back of his throat at the very idea. Caroline was one of the least desirable women he had ever encountered. Which was precisely why she was going to be such an excellent wife.
When a man wanted passion, he found himself a mistress. When he wanted a rightful heir, he found himself a wife. And only a very foolish, very stupid man ever attempted to have both with the same woman.
The late Duke of Readington had been such a man and he’d paid a dear price for his stupidity. A dear, dear price. One that had made him the laughingstock of the entire ton and had ushered him into an early grave.
Having seen firsthand the pain and the heartache that unrequited love could cause, Eric had no intention of repeating his father’s mistakes. Once he was assured Caroline was carrying his child, he would be returning to London with all haste. She, of course, would remain at Litchfield. If the mood struck he would return time to time to see how she and the babe were faring. Or, at the very least, send a proxy in his place. After all, he wasn’t a complete monster. Just a very matter-of-fact one who knew precisely what he wanted.
And it wasn’t love.
Caroline began to stir as the carriage left the main road and started up the long, winding drive that led to a sprawling country house built of white washed stone. It was not the largest estate in his possession, nor even the grandest, but the thirty-seven room manor and its surrounding fields and meadows would be more than sufficient for one woman and her child.
His shy new bride would want for absolutely nothing at Litchfield Park. If she desired a pink flamingo it would be brought to her with a gold ribbon tied around its skinny neck. But his generosity did not come without certain stipulations.
“You’re awake,” he said when she lifted her head and blinked drowsily at him. “Good. Before we disembark, I should like to take the opportunity to make a few things clear.” She blinked again, and he could tell the moment she became acutely aware of her surroundings because her gaze suddenly dropped to her lap and her slender shoulders caved inwards beneath her dark gray cloak as if she were a tiny bird seeking shelter from an impending storm.
Eric gritted his teeth. He’d wanted a wife who wouldn’t dare challenge him, not one so frightened of her own shadow that she quivered with fear whenever he tried to talk to her. It wasn’t as if he had yelled at the girl or raised his hand in anger. Yet she was terrified of him just the same.
What had he called her at the church? A frightened field mouse? Yes, that was it. Although looking at her now he wasn’t reminded of a rodent, but rather of a fawn. A shy, spindly legged fawn with soft gray eyes framed by thick lashes and a full bottom lip that trembled ever-so-slightly when she peeked up at him before quickly glancing back down.
Absently he wondered what that quivering mouth would taste like. Soft and sweet, he imagined. Like the sugar sprinkled on top of a biscuit or a bit of honey drizzled into a cup of warm tea...
Eric scowled, annoyed that he’d allowed his thoughts to drift in such a fanciful direction. Kissing his wife was not something to be looked upon with great anticipation. It was a responsibility. A duty. A task he would carry out not because he wanted to, but because he had to if he wanted to keep his brother from destroying everything he’d so painstakingly rebuilt.
“Have I done something to upset you?” Caroline whispered, her cheeks draining of what little color remained as she noted the heavy furrow in his brow. “Because I’ve stopped crying-”
“You’ve done nothing,” he said shortly. “But perhaps we should have this discussion at a later date. When you’ve had time to settle in to your new surroundings and rest.”
They drew to a halt at the end of the circular drive and the door was promptly opened by a young footman neatly attired in black livery. He stood at attention with his gaze politely averted while Eric stepped out of the carriage and then turned back to reach for Caroline’s hand.
Enclosed in white lace, her fingers were as small and delicate as the rest of her and stood out in sharp contrast against the deep black of his coat sleeve. He felt her tremble as she lifted her head and looked up at her new home with wide, unblinking eyes, taking everything in from the solarium comprised entirely of glass to the outdoor terraces that wrapped around the third and fourth stories. There was even a tower jutting up from the east wing. It had been closed off years ago, but was still an impressive sight to behold with its stained glass windows and circular roof.
“Litchfield Park was part of my mother’s dowry,” he explained in the flat, mildly disgusted monotone he always used whenever he spoke of the woman who had given birth to him. “It was completely renovated just last year. You should be very comfortable here.”
“It’s enormous,” Caroline said softly.
He shrugged. “It is not nearly as large as Readington Crossing, but I believe it will be more than suitable for raising children.” He saw no point in telling her that the real reason she was here was because of the estate’s remote location. Tucked away in the middle of the Surrey countryside, it was a four day ride to Readington and another two to London, effectively ensuring his wife would not be bothering him with any surprise visits.
“The stables are that way-” lifting his arm, he pointed off to the left where a stretch of white fence line was just visible through a row of towering shrubbery “-and the orchards and greenhouses are behind the house. There is more, of course, but Mr. Newg
ate will be able to give you a full tour.”
“Couldn’t you do it?” she asked, tearing her gaze away from the tower to peer up at him out of soft gray eyes brimming with uncertainty and just a touch of wistful hope. Her grip on his forearm tightened and Eric frowned when he felt his loins stir in response to such a small, innocent touch.
“Couldn’t I do what?” he said suspiciously. When had her eyes gotten a hint of green in them? And why the bloody hell was he looking at her mouth again and imagining what her lips would taste like? A trick of the light, he decided, and a touch of exhaustion. God only knew he hadn’t slept much the night before.
Thoughts of his impending marriage had kept him tossing between the sheets well into the cold, dark hours of early morning. When he’d finally risen it had been with the grim determination that no matter what came, he would not repeat the sins of his father. He would not give his wife control of his heart and stand idly by while she gleefully tore it to shreds. He would not become a broken shell of his former self, spending money like water and drinking himself into oblivion.
And he would not, under any circumstances, fall in love.
“Give me a tour of the grounds. I - I just think,” she added hastily when his brow creased, “it would behoove us to spend more - more time together now that we are married. Don’t...don’t you agree?”
“No,” he said flatly. “I do not agree. In fact, I could not disagree more strongly.”
The corners of her mouth tightened in distress. “But-”
“Mr. Newgate will show you to your private quarters. I have more important things to attend.” With that icy remark he turned on his heel and strode briskly away, the heels of his boots stomping the ground with so much force that small stones flew up in his wake.
Chapter Three
Caroline watched her husband walk away with an aching in her chest that bordered on despair.
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