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The Shy Duchess

Page 23

by Amanda McCabe


  “She taught me to be careful with the ones we love, to never take a moment with them for granted. To never put them in any danger. Yet I fear I forget that last lesson all too often.”

  “What do you mean? I have never seen anyone take such care with the people around them as you do,” Emily protested. “You take such care of me and of all your brothers and sisters…”

  Nicholas gave her a sad smile. “I fear I did not take care of Valentina. She died in childbirth, you see, and the poor baby with her.”

  “Oh. Oh, Nicholas, I am so very sorry,” Emily whispered. How he must have suffered, losing the woman he loved so much and their child, too. Being suddenly alone in the world after knowing that love for such a short time. Her heart ached for him. She wrapped her arms around him and rested her head on his shoulder, wishing she could take that pain away from him.

  “My darling Emily,” he said, kissing her on her brow. “I am sorry I forgot that lesson, that I put you in danger.”

  “That is nonsense! You saved me from danger, you went after Mr Rayburn. What do you even mean, you put me in danger?” Then she realised what he must truly mean. She drew back, staring at him in shock. “Nicholas. You think I will die in childbirth, too.”

  He just looked back at her, all that pain written starkly on his face. She felt tears prickle at her eyes and she dashed them away. He feared to lose the same things she did—their marriage, and the happiness they had somehow found against all the odds. She had never thought this could happen, not to her. It was all too glorious, and she was going to fight for it with everything she had.

  “I can’t lose you, my sweetest Emily,” he said. “I’ve only just found you. I never thought I could love anyone again after Valentina, not until you came into my life. You are the kindest, dearest woman I have ever known, and I—need you. That’s all. I need you.”

  Tears spilled from her eyes at his words. “You can’t possibly need me half as much as I need you, my Galahad,” she said. She rested her head on his shoulder again, closing her eyes to listen to his heartbeat, his breath, to revel in the heat and strength of him. She wanted nothing but to stay there close to him for ever, revelling in the joyous knowledge that he loved her. He was hers—they belonged to each other.

  “I only felt half-alive until I found you,” she said. “Now I see everything so much more vividly, I see the colour in everything, the whole world. I want to dance and laugh all the time, and I am a terrible dancer! Most of all, I want everyone to feel just as I do, just as happy.”

  Nicholas laughed and kissed her temple. “Everyone?”

  “Well—maybe not Mr Rayburn.” Emily drew back to look up at him. She felt so urgently that she had to make him understand all he had done with her. All she felt for him. “You are the one who has given me that joy, Nicholas. I’m so proud and happy to be your wife. I could not bear it if being with me has taken away your joy. I only want you to be happy.”

  “I am happy with you.” He gently took her face in his hands, as if she was a most precious jewel. He kissed her forehead, the tip of her nose, her lips. “I want to protect you, to keep you safe.”

  “And you do. Who else would have thrashed a man like that, simply for trying to get a little money from me?” She covered his hands with hers, holding him to her. “But none of us can be completely safe in life. I want to have children—your children. You would be the most wonderful father, and this house needs some life in it. It scares me, too. But I am stronger than I look, I’m ridiculously healthy, and I have you to help me.”

  “I will always help you, Emily, in anything you want.”

  “And do you want a family with me?”

  His jaw tightened, but he nodded. “I do. I want us to have everything life can give us, together.”

  “And we will.” Emily smiled up at him, her wonderful, handsome, strong-hearted husband, full of wild joy and bright hope. “Oh, Nicholas. With you by me, I feel I can do anything at all!”

  “With you, I know I can.” Nicholas kissed her, warm and lingering, all his heart in that embrace, all their burning hope for a glorious future together. “I love you, Emily. My wife, my perfect duchess.”

  “And I love you,” she whispered. She gathered all her courage around her for what she had to say now. “With all my heart. But there is something I must tell you now.”

  Nicholas laughed. “More revelations, my dear? I’m not sure I can take it.”

  Emily watched him steadily. He wouldn’t like what she had to say, at least not at first. She had to persuade him all would be well. “You are not the only one to carry secrets, I fear. And now I must tell you mine.”

  She took his hand and pressed it flat over her stomach. For a moment, he looked puzzled—but then his eyes widened and she could see that he knew.

  “Truly, Em?” he whispered, his voice thick with emotion. Was he happy—or angry?

  “I have not yet seen the doctor, but I believe it is true,” she said. “It must have happened the morning after our wedding.”

  He didn’t answer, but his arms came around her very tightly, pulling her close against him. “We’re going to have a baby?”

  “Yes. And you needn’t worry, my darling. I am very strong, much stronger than I look, and I will have you to help me. All will be well, I am very sure,” she said quickly, trying her hardest to reassure him—and herself.

  He stopped her words with a fierce kiss. She felt all his emotions in that kiss, all the feelings she shared with him, all the joy, hope and fear.

  “You will have all the best doctors in the country, nurses, midwives, everything,” he said, kissing her again.

  Emily laughed. “All I need is good fresh air, one midwife—and you. All will be well, with me and the baby, too, I promise.”

  “That is a promise I insist you keep. I can’t do without you, Em. You are everything to me.”

  “As you are to me.” Emily rested her head on his chest, closing her eyes as she listened to his heartbeat. “We have everything together, Nicholas. I won’t lose it.”

  And she would not be parted from him ever again. They were her family now, Nicholas and the new baby, her whole wonderful world. She would protect them with all her strength, for ever.

  Epilogue

  Eight months later

  Nicholas paced the length of the library at Scarnlea Abbey, all the way from the carved marble fireplace to the windows, open to the warm spring day. The painted eyes of his ancestors in their portraits along the panelled walls watched him with faint disapproval, but he didn’t notice them at all. Nor did he notice the soft, flower-scented breeze from the gardens, or hear the happy shrieks of his nieces as they toddled along the pathways.

  He could only think of that bedchamber high above his head, where Emily laboured to bring their child into the world. He could hear nothing from up there, no screams or shouts, but his imagination conjured all sorts of terrible scenes. All sorts of mysterious things that could be happening to his darling wife in that room of women.

  “Nick, do sit down,” Stephen said from his seat by the bookshelf. He held up his decanter of brandy. “You’re going to wear a hole in that carpet with your infernal pacing. Have a drink.”

  Nicholas shook his head. “I can’t sit down.”

  “Well, you won’t help Emily that way. She has Justine and Charlotte and her sister-in-law with her, as well as the midwife and who knows how many servants. She would have her mother, too, if the lady hadn’t fainted and been carried out of the room. She will be quite well.”

  “Surely it should be over now,” Nicholas muttered. He paused by the window to watch Katherine and little Anna stumble past on their tiny toddler legs, their nursemaids running behind them. Their golden hair and white dresses gleamed in the sunlight, their laughter ringing out like music.

  The sight of his sister’s children, so robust and healthy, did reassure him. But still—why was there no word?

  “You said she felt the first pains this morning. Jus
tine said it could be hours yet,” Stephen said, infuriatingly reasonable. He held up the brandy again. “A drink will help, Brother, I am sure.”

  Nicholas finally gave in. He sank heavily into the chair across from Stephen and accepted a large snifter of the amber liquid. He took a long, bracing gulp. “This is the best bottle in my cellar, I think.”

  “Only the best for such a momentous occasion!” Stephen said cheerfully, draining his own glass. “Besides, I have nothing so fine at Fincote. I have to take every advantage of a visit to Scarnlea.”

  Just then, Emily’s maid Mary hurried past the open door with a basin full of bloodied rags in her hands. Nicholas leaped up and ran to the doorway, but she was already gone. The house was still quiet.

  “Damn it all,” he muttered. “Why will no one tell me what is happening with my own wife?”

  “Probably because nothing is happening yet, Nick,” Stephen said. “You need to sit down and forget about this for a while.”

  “That is easy for you to say now. Wait until it is your child being born, your wife in danger. You will not be so sanguine then.”

  “You sound like our sisters, always pestering me to marry since they have you safely paired off.” Stephen poured himself another brandy. “If this is what marriage does to a person, then I am better without it.”

  Nicholas leaned against the doorjamb, his arms crossed over his chest. “Well, what is this I hear from Charlotte about her friend Mae Halford? She tells me that you—”

  But he was interrupted when Justine appeared in the corridor. Her hair was tousled, falling from its pins, her gown spotted with water and what looked horribly like blood. But she was smiling.

  “Oh, Nicholas,” she said softly. “You have a son!”

  “I have a…” A son? A child who lived? “And Emily? Is she safe?”

  “Yes, perfectly. Tired, of course, but quite well. The birth was very easy, especially for a first child.”

  “I must go to her,” he said, already running down the corridor and taking the stairs two at a time. Emily was safe. But he had to see her for himself, to be absolutely sure.

  “Nick, you can’t go yet!” Justine called after him. “She is still abed.”

  “There is no stopping a man so desperately in love, Jussy,” Stephen said. “Come, have a drink with me. We have a new heir to celebrate, God bless him. I’m saved from heirdom!”

  Nicholas burst into Emily’s chamber. It was crowded with women: his sister Charlotte, Amy Carroll, the plump, efficient midwife Emily insisted on over the London doctor, and Lady Moreby, who was recovered from her faint and beaming. The windows were closed and a fire blazed in the grate, making the palatial room warm and stuffy, thick with smoke and blood and lavender water.

  Yet he could see only the bed, with its curtains and blankets pushed back, pillows piled high. Emily lay there, but unlike in the nightmares he had since she told him she was pregnant, she was not pale and still. Her cheeks were bright red and damp, her hair clinging to her damp brow. A tender, tired smile curved her lips as she stared down at the bundle in her arms.

  A bundle that was shrieking like a tiny banshee.

  Emily glanced up to find him standing there, and she held out her hand to him. Her green eyes glowed. “Oh, Nick, my darling. Come and look at him.”

  He went to her, his heart bursting with relief and hope, with a fierce happiness he had never known before. He clasped her hand in his, her blessedly warm hand, and kissed it before he looked down at the baby nestled in the crook of her arm.

  He was red and wrinkled, his tiny face creased with terrible discontent at finding himself suddenly in this bright world. A tuft of blond hair covered the very top of his head, and when he looked up at them Nicholas could swear he saw a hint of emerald green in his eyes, just like his mother. He waved his fists furiously, a true Manning spirit.

  “Isn’t he beautiful?” Emily whispered.

  “He looks a bit like an angry radish now,” Nicholas said. “But I can see he is going to be heartbreakingly beautiful, like his mother.”

  “No, he looks like you, especially when you get angry about something.” She smoothed her finger over the soft baby cheek and he immediately ceased his wailing. He went still and stared up at his parents with wide eyes. “See, he knows us. Probably from all those hours we spent talking and singing to him these last months.”

  “So he does,” Nicholas said, fascinated by his son’s face, his little fingers and the tiny button of his nose. He was alive, this baby, alive and well.

  “I think we could name him Stephen,” she said. “Your brother’s gift to me of that horseshoe was a very thoughtful one. See what luck it has brought us? We have each other, and a child. We have so much love.”

  “Oh, Em. That wasn’t luck. It was you, my beautiful wife. Only you.” He gently kissed her lips, his heart bursting with all he had now. His wife and family, a life full of joy and love ahead. “You are all the luck I need.”

  Emily smiled up at him radiantly. “I hope so, Nick. Because we’re going to need lots of luck indeed if we’re going to have what I hope for now.”

  “And what is that?” he said, knowing that, whatever it was, he would go to the ends of the earth to get it for her.

  “A daughter next year.”

  ISBN: 978-1-4268-8821-2

  THE SHY DUCHESS

  Copyright © 2010 by Ammanda McCabe

  First North American Publication 2011

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher, Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

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