A Heart for the Taking

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by Shirlee Busbee


  Fancy nodded, but when she experienced another one, harder and stronger, her eyes widened. “I do not think so,” she muttered, hurriedly passing the baby to Chance. A third wave of pain clawed through her, making her body arch.

  The next minutes were confused and frantic as Fancy strained and pushed, the pain washing savagely through her.

  “Bless the Lord,” Letty suddenly exclaimed. “There is another one. ’Tis twins.”

  And indeed it was. Less than twenty minutes after his brother had been born, Fancy brought forth her second child, a boy as strong and perfect as the first—and just as loud, his indignant wails ringing through the room.

  When the excitement had died down and her two sons were lying in her arms, Fancy stared in complete bemusement at the two bundles. “Twins,” she said slowly, her disbelief evident in her tone. “Who could have imagined it?”

  “Well, dear,” Letty said proudly, “twins do run in Chance’s family. I suppose we should have considered the possibility.”

  That Sam and Letty were overjoyed with having not one but two healthy grandsons was evident, and watching the way they hovered over them, Fancy suspected it was a good thing that there were two of them; one would have been impossibly spoiled, while two just might manage to be merely spoiled. Her eyes met Chance’s, and seeing the twinkle in those dark blue depths, she knew he was thinking much the same thing.

  “What are you going to name them?” Letty asked.

  A wicked smile on his lips, Chance murmured, “Considering my name, and my skill at gambling, I think that something on the order of ‘Lucky’ and ‘Ace’ or”—and the wicked sparkle in his gaze grew more pronounced—“ ‘Ace’ and ‘Deuce.’ ”

  The ladies looked scandalized, and hugging her children tighter to her, Fancy said firmly, “Absolutely not. They shall have normal, sensible names.” Fixing her grinning husband with a stern glance, she said, “We had already decided upon ‘Andrew’ if a boy, and that is what our firstborn shall be called.” She dropped a kiss on the newly named Andrew’s downy head. Smiling at her second son, she thought a moment and then said, “And you, sweetheart, shall be named Samuel.” She looked challengingly over at her husband. “Do you object?”

  Chance shook his head. “No. Those are fine names, I just think that Luck—” He stopped, the expression on his wife’s face making him laugh. “Duchess, if you could see yourself! You look like an enraged tigress defending her young.”

  “I am defending my young,” Fancy replied spiritedly. “From their father. Lucky and Ace! What sorts of names are those?”

  Three weeks later, on a fine May day in the rose garden at Walker Ridge, Andrew and Samuel were duly baptized by a traveling preacher. Watching as her two sons were carried away to the house by their doting grandparents, Fancy knew that while she may have won the battle, she had lost the war. Both Sam and Chance continually referred to the boys as Lucky and Ace, and she had even caught herself occasionally thinking of them with those names. She sighed. Chance could be very determined about some things. At least, she consoled herself, their legal names were respectable.

  Hearing her sigh, Chance, who had been walking beside her, looked down at her and asked, “Something the matter, sweetheart?”

  She smiled ruefully up at him. “I have decided that you are a determined man. Devious, too.”

  “Where you are concerned I am indeed determined, very determined,” he admitted, his mouth a little grim.

  She pinched him lightly on the arm. “I was not referring to me, you wretched creature. I was referring to the underhanded manner in which you have gotten your own way in the matter of our children’s names.”

  “I had much rather talk about you,” he murmured, pulling her into his arms, “and how much I adore you.”

  At his words and the touch of his mouth at the corner of her lips, Fancy promptly forgot about her sons and their vexing names. Melting into Chance’s possessive arms, she gave herself up to the joy of loving and being loved by him.

  It was several minutes later before Fancy emerged flushed and breathless from her husband’s passionate embrace. “Oh, Chance,” she said softly, “I do love you—even when you are being utterly impossible.”

  His face suddenly very serious, he stared down at her. Huskily he said, “I love you, Fancy. More than life itself. I have loved and wanted you since the moment I first laid eyes on you, but I have never given you much choice in what happened between us, have I?”

  She shook her head, but there was a tender smile on her lips. “No. You simply decided you wanted me, and my fate was sealed, no matter my opinion of the situation.” She kissed him lightly on the mouth. “You are fortunate that I had the good sense to fall in love with you.”

  “No regrets?” he asked, a faint question in his gaze.

  Staring at his dark, intent features, aware of the hint of uncertainty about this always most certain man, she felt her heart swell with love for him. Flinging herself into his arms, she said earnestly, “My heart is yours. It has always been yours. Yours for the taking.”

  With infinite tenderness, Chance enveloped her in his embrace, his mouth warm and worshiping on hers. And then, arm in arm, they turned and walked toward the house and the love-filled future that awaited them there.

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  Chapter One

  “Mercy! What do you mean, he is moving here! Surely you have misread the letter, maman?”

  Lisette Dupree frowned at her daughter. “I assure you, petite, that I did not make a mistake. Hugh Lancaster states quite clearly that he is moving to the New Orleans area just as soon as he is able to put his business affairs in Natchez in order. Here, read the letter yourself.”

  Somewhat gingerly, almost as if she expected it to bite her, Micaela Dupree took the letter from her mother. There was silence as she read the offending document. She sighed heavily. “It is true,” she said in a voice of deep gloom. “He is moving here.”

  The two women, who appeared more like sisters than mother and daughter, were seated side by side on a delicate settee covered in worn blue velvet in a small room at the rear of the Duprees’ New Orleans townhouse. It was midmorning on a cool, wet Monday in late February 1804, and the two ladies had been enjoying a cup of chicory-laden coffee when the letter from Hugh Lancaster had been delivered.

  The arrival of a letter had been unusual enough to add some excitement to a dull day, but the news it brought had totally destroyed the pleasant mood they had been enjoying.

  Micaela’s lovely but troubled dark eyes looked at her mother. “Francois,” she said slowly, referring to her brother, a year younger than herself, “is going to be most disturbed by this news.”

  Lisette nodded. “And your uncle Jean, too.”

  The two women sighed almost simultaneously, their resemblance to each other even more obvious. Only a few weeks away from her twenty-first birthday, Micaela was in the full bloom of her undeniable beauty, while Lisette, having turned thirty-eight just the previous month, was a fetchingly mature version of her only daughter. They did not look precisely alike; Micaela’s nose was longer than her mother’s charmingly retroussé affair, her brows thicker and more noticeably arched, and her mouth more lavishly formed, with a decidedly saucy curve to it. Both women were small boned; Micaela, however, much to her chagrin, stood three inches taller than her petite mother. The shapes under their simple muslin gowns were curvaceous with full bosoms, narrow waists and generously rounded hips. The celebrated creamy matte complexion which each possessed contrasted enchantingly with their gleaming blue-black hair and longlashed midnight black eyes. With lips as red as cherries, pale lovely skin and flashing ebony glances, their proud Creole blood was very evident.

  “What are we going to do?” Micaela asked eventually, as she handed the letter back to Lisette.
r />   Lisette shrugged. “There is nothing that we can do. The American is coming to live in New Orleans—whether we like it or not.”

  Micaela stood up and took agitated steps around the pleasantly shabby little room. Stopping to look out at the rain-splattered courtyard at the rear of the house, she said moodily, “If only that arrogant creature Napoleon had not seen fit to sell us to the Americans like a cartload of old fish! I still cannot believe that it is done—that we are now to call ourselves Americans! Unthinkable! We are French! Creoles!”

  Though it had been over seven months since the inhabitants of New Orleans had heard of the sale of the entire Louisiana Territory to the fledgling United States, the actual exchange had taken place barely two months ago in the waning days of 1803. It had been raining that day, too, Micaela thought unhappily. It was not fair! To be sold to those rude, overbearing Americans on the whim of an upstart Corsican general who now had plans to name himself Emperor of the French!

  The Americans had been jubilant at the sale; they had long desired free use of the mighty Mississippi River and the Port of New Orleans, the gateway to the ocean and European ports. The Creoles had been stunned, despising the Americans on principle, thinking them loud, vulgar and brash.

  The Creole population almost unanimously resented the presence of the new owners of the Territory, many unwilling to even speak to one of those cursed Americains, their wives refusing to have them in their homes. Of course, the Americans reciprocated the feeling in full measure, convinced that the Creoles were lazy, vain, and frivolous. Each faction regarded the other with loathing, suspicion, and mistrust.

  Micaela’s mouth twisted. And the arrival of Hugh Lancaster, one of those despised Americains, was going to make the Dupree family painfully aware of just how much had changed since the Territory had become American. Her brother and her uncle were going to be livid.

  “I wonder,” Micaela said softly, “why Monsieur Lancaster wrote to you and not Uncle Jean? Should not mon oncle have been notified first?”

  Lisette looked uncomfortable. “Your uncle has not been very, er, pleasant to Monsieur Lancaster when he has come to the city on business. I assume he thought that I would view his intentions more kindly.”

  Micaela glanced at her mother in astonishment. “Do you?”

  Lisette became extremely interested in the fabric of her gown. “Not exactly . . .” Arosy hue blooming in her cheeks, she murmured, “I—I—I have never held the Americans in quite the aversion that everyone else does.” Meeting her daughter’s stunned gaze, she added firmly, “I actually liked young Hugh the few times I have met him—he ... he seems a personable young man.”

  “But maman! He will ruin us! You know that he believes that someone is stealing from the partnership. You know that the last time he was here, he almost as good as accused mon oncle of outright thievery—Francois, too—do not forget that!”

  “I have not forgotten; I think that Hugh is simply mistaken, but I do not blame him for being concerned. Something is obviously amiss. The profits of Galland, Lancaster and Dupree have been falling for the past eighteen months, and the report that we received in September, when Hugh was last here, makes it clear that someone has been very careless in making proper records of our various sales and expenditures. In all the years that we have been in partnership with Hugh’s stepfather, John, we have never suffered a decline in profits like we have recently.”

  “You mean since papa and grandpere died and Jean and Francois have been overseeing the firm, do you not?” Micaela demanded tightly.

  “Your grandfather died over two years ago,” Lisette gently reminded Micaela. “Your father has been dead for five and Jean has been handling Renault’s share of the business for you and Francois since that time. Do you suspect your uncle of doing something to harm his own fortune as well as yours and Francois’?” She arched a brow and then went on calmly. “As for your brother . . .” An indulgent smile crossed her face. “I know he is young and spoiled, but he will grow up into a fine man; he only needs time. Do you really think that Francois would do anything to harm the firm his own father and grandfather founded? He will, as you will, eventually own fifteen percent of the business. Do you truly think that he would steal from himself?”

  Micaela made a face, trying to think of a tactful way to tell her mother that Francois was more than just spoiled. He was, Micaela thought unhappily, extremely spoiled. His father’s only son and heir, and presently his uncle’s heir, too, from birth Francois had been pampered and doted upon by everyone. Her charming, handsome brother was not selfish by nature, Micaela admitted fairly. He could be quite generous and thoughtful—when the whim struck him. But ... She sighed. Unfortunately, in Creole society, the males were the light of their fathers’ eyes, the joy of their mothers’; gods to their wives and indulgent, generous fathers to their children. Was she merely being jealous that Francois had been born a male while she was only a lowly female? Not liking to think she could be that petty, she wrinkled her nose and tried to think more charitably of her sometimes infuriating younger brother. Perhaps maman was right—he was simply young and in time would be more responsible than he appeared to be now.

  As if her thoughts had conjured him up, Francois, a merry smile upon his delicately handsome features, strolled into the room. He was a slim, elegant young man, not more than an inch taller than his sister and fashionably garbed in a form-fitting jacket of Spanish blue cloth with a striped marseilles waistcoat above his nankeen breeches and boots. His black hair gleamed in the light of the candles that had been lit because of the gray day, and his dark, speaking eyes were warm as they fell upon the two women. Approaching Lisette with his quick light stride, he bent down and exuberantly kissed her on both cheeks. “Ah, maman! You grow lovelier every day. I am a fortunate son, to have such a beautiful and charming maman!”

  Lisette smiled with pleasure and caressed his cheek. “Such gallantry, so early in the morning, mon amour! I suspect that there is a fine new horse that you simply must have—or is it a new carriage?” The fondness of her expression took any sting out of the words.

  Francois laughed without embarrassment. “Ah, maman—you know me too well! Which does not mean that I do not truly think you beautiful and charming.”

  Glancing across to Micaela, he said, “Bonjour, Caela, you are also looking extremely becoming today.”

  Micaela cocked a brow at his fulsome manner and wasn’t the least surprised at the hint of color that leaped into his cheeks at her expression. Turning hurriedly back to Lisette, he sat down gracefully beside her and, taking one of her hands in his, he said in a coaxing voice, “Maman, there is a horse, a most handsome animal I assure you, and the cost will not be too dear.”

  Involuntarily Micaela made a vexed sound. “Have you run through this quarter’s allowance already—gambled it away?” she asked quietly.

  “It is none of your affair,” he said grandly, then spoiled the effect by demanding, “What difference is it to you? I am a man now and my money is mine to spend as I see fit.”

  “Perhaps if you would spend it more wisely, you wouldn’t have to come begging to maman to buy you a new horse just halfway into the new quarter,” Micaela snapped before she could stop herself.

  A scowl marred Francois’ handsome features and a hot retort hovered on his lips.

  “Children!” Lisette said hastily. “That is enough! The day is unpleasant enough without the two of you squabbling.”

  Micaela made a face and turned away to stare out the window once more. It was senseless to try to convince Francois that the Duprees were not as wealthy as they once had been. They were not poor, merci, non! but they no longer commanded a fortune that was so large that it seemed endless. Her father’s and her grandfather’s gambling habits had seen to that! It was because of her grandfather Christophe’s gaming losses that a pair of outsiders, Jasper De Marco and Alain Husson, now possessed an interest in the family firm. It appeared that Francois had also inherited the fatal trait.
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  The once great wealth of the Galland and Dupree families had been reduced to a comfortable size rather than the impressive amount it had been just a decade or two ago. In fact the major source of their income came these days from Galland, Lancaster, and Dupree, although the plantations that remained did contribute a small amount to their wealth. Micaela sighed. Regrettably, Francois could not seem to be brought to understand that he could not game away a small fortune night after night and still be able to live in the grand manner in which they had in the past. And maman, she thought half-annoyed, half-tenderly, cannot seem to understand that it is doing Francois no good for her to continue to buy him whatever strikes his fancy as has been done since he was a child! Another horse! Why, there must be a dozen or so eating their heads off in the Dupree stables at this very moment—and those were only the horses in the city!

  Closing her ears to Francois’ wheedling voice, Micaela stared unseeing down at the wet courtyard. She already knew how this little tête-à-tête was going to end—Francois would get his horse. A rueful smile suddenly curved her mouth. She didn’t know why she resented Francois’ actions so very much; maman would do the same for her if she expressed a yearning for a new gown, or even a new horse, no matter how outrageously expensive. Perhaps it was because Francois did it so regularly and took maman’s generosity as his right?

  Telling herself that there was nothing she could do about Francois’ spendthrift habits, she turned her thoughts to the disturbing letter announcing Hugh Lancaster’s imminent arrival in the city. Lisette had met him a few times over the years, but Micaela had only met him this past September, when Jean had reluctantly invited Lancaster to dine and stay the night at the Dupree plantation, some miles below New Orleans. Even now, several months later, she could still feel the powerful jolt of awareness that had gone through her when Hugh Lancaster, a tall, powerfully built young man of thirty, had politely bent over her hand and brushed his lips across her suddenly sensitized flesh, his cool gray-eyed glance moving indifferently over her.

 

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