Page 66 of Fearless Duke


Font Size:

Benedict crossed the threshold of his chamber, closing the door at his back. The lights were low in anticipation of his return. He stripped off his coat and waistcoat, deciding to forego ringing for his valet to assist him. After the day he had just endured, going from the bliss of making love to Isabella, straight to the fires of Hades as he scrambled to chase down leads and witnesses along with the team of London’s finest, he wanted to be alone.

He was unbuttoning his shirt when he took note of a letter laid on the table in his dressing room. He snatched it up, his eyes scanning the typeface. Of course she would have typed the damned thing.

Snippets of the letter, impersonal in nature and yet just personal enough, worked their way through the haze of self-loathing clouding his mind. When he reached the final sentence, rage chased away all other emotions.

You will find all the reports in your study prepared… I cannot help but feel it would be in the best interest of all that I should leave tomorrow, returning to my home.

His blood boiled.

He crumpled the letter.

Over his dead, mangled corpse. She was not returning to her house, not with the men responsible for the Westminster bombings still out there somewhere. Perhaps looking for her. After all, she had seen their faces as they approached her. Only one man was in custody, and two had taken her. Even if the man arrested for the Tower bombing had been one of her captors, the other remained out there somewhere.

Without a thought for the consequences of his actions or a fear that he would be seen, he stalked from his chamber. In a dozen angry strides, he was at her door, and in another eight, he was standing over her bed, still clenching the letter in his fist.

“You are not going anywhere, madam,” he announced to the silent darkness. “You are going to remain here, where you are safe, and that is final.”

She said nothing.

The absence of electricity humming in the air whenever he was in her presence filled him with initial suspicion. He patted the bedclothes, finding them carefully drawn. Perfectly flat.

Isabella was gone.

Fear clambered up his throat. Surely she had not returned already? Or what if, worse, she had been taken again?Dear God, what if those villains had come for her? He stalked from her chamber, dread tangling around his heart like ivy, squeezing tight.

He would spend all night searching for her if he had to. He would stop at nothing.

Determined, he strode from her chamber, descending to the next floor. And that was when he noted the faint glow beneath the door of the library. He did not know how he had failed to see it when he had first entered, but he could only suppose he had been too caught up in the heaviness of his thoughts.

Hoping and praying she would be within, he jogged to the other end of the hall and threw open the library door. The hint of a small, flaxen-haired head was visible above one of the overstuffed wingbacks positioned near the hearth. As the door bounced off the shelving lining the wall, she jumped and stood, spinning about to face him.

She was clad in a dressing gown, the hem of a long, virginal night rail peeping from beneath. It was high-necked and prim, much as he would have expected. When she was his duchess, he was going to have her dressed in nothing but the most seductive silks and lace. No more buttons to her bloody chin, he vowed it. She was too beautiful to hide herself away beneath all those layers.

“Your Grace,” she said, her eyes wide.

This was not the response he expected from a woman he had made love to just that morning. The woman he wanted to make his wife.

“Benedict,” he growled, his ire getting the best of him. He closed the library door at his back with more force than necessary and stalked toward her, the offensive letter still crumpled in his hand. “What is the meaning of this, madam?”

“Forgive me.” Her voice was hesitant, quite bereft of her ordinary sangfroid. “I hope you do not mind my trespassing here in the library. I could not sleep.”

“I am not speaking of your presence in this chamber, Isabella.” He did not stop until he was close enough to haul her into his arms where she belonged. He resisted. Just barely. “I am speaking of this.”

He held up the crumpled remnant of the letter she had left him.

“An explanation.”

“No,” he bit out.

Her brows rose. “Yes, it is.”

“Perhaps, but not one I accept.” He strode past her, toward the fire crackling low in the grate, and pitched the letter into the flames. “You are not leaving Westmorland House tomorrow.”

Of course, there was still the matter of where she would be staying, after they were betrothed. Unless they married within the next few days. Yes, sooner would be better. Tomorrow, if possible.

He could have her in his bed instead of on a bloody desk.

“What happened earlier cannot be repeated, of course,” she said coolly. “It is improper for me to remain here after this morning’s folly.”