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Chapter One

1st October 1815

‘No,’ Lady Thea Campion said.‘Absolutely, definitely, no.I will not marry the Duke of Leamington.’

Her parents regarded her with blank astonishment written all over their usually impassive faces.

‘Foolish girl,’ her mother said, producing a faint laugh as though humouring a stubborn child.‘This is no time for funning.You know perfectly well that you have been betrothed to Avery Vernier since you were in the cradle.’

‘I know no such thing,’ Thea retorted.‘It was a family joke, the kind of thing the old aunts chuckle about: “Dear child, won’t she make a wonderful duchess?”I cannot be betrothed to him, I do not know him.’

‘You have met, surely you remember,’ her mother said.There was no amusement in her voice now.

‘When I was, how old?Ten?Yes, I remember him—a nasty, bullying lout of a boy, all ears and big feet and big opinions of himself to match.I did not like him then.I do notknowhim now.’

He called me Twig.

That had rankled ever since.Yes, she had been a tall, skinny child, all angles and elbows, topped with a mop ofred hair that had now matured into the much-admired colour of well-polished mahogany.

But that horrible boy had said she looked like a twig with one autumn leaf left on the end of it.‘I’ll call you Twig,’he’d said with a laugh that cracked in the middle because his voice had not yet finished breaking.

‘But surely you understood,’ her mother tried again.

Her father simply looked thunderous.Earls were not used to being thwarted and certainly not by their daughters.Daughters were raised to be dutiful.

‘It was agreed between us and the late Duke and Duchess soon after you were born,’ Mama said.‘It was spoken of as you were growing up, I am sure of it,’ she added vaguely.

‘Yes, as ajoke.Why did I have a Season if you had already as good as married me off?Why are we making plans for my second Season now?’

‘Naturally you had to learn how to get along in society, to acquire some town bronze.His Grace could hardly marry a girl straight out of the schoolroom.And your first Season was delayed because of dear Mama’s death, and then you had measles.’She broke off as if to contemplate the wilfulness of her daughter in catching such a juvenile complaint.‘So naturally it is important that you have as much exposure to good company as possible.’

‘I fail to understand what this is about.’Her father finally spoke.‘You sent all those young men along to me to have their suits refused without giving them any encouragement—and there must have been at least six of them.Why was that if you did not already know yourself to be promised, eh?’

‘Because I did not want to encourage any of them.I did notwantto marry any of them.They were perfectly pleasantyoung men, but that was all.But they were persistent, so I told each of them to apply to you.’

Thea stared at her parents in exasperation.This was so typical of them.They never expected to have to explain anything to anyone, and their word was law in the household.

Their children, of whom Thea, at just past twenty-one, was the eldest, spent a decorous half hour with their parents every day before dinner when they were growing up, attended church with them twice on Sundays and were occasionally summoned for disciplinary interviews when they transgressed.Then, when they reached an age when they could be trusted to behave with decorum, they dined with them with all due formality.

Exchanges consisted of social conversation or directives.Questions and opinions were not encouraged.This, Thea knew from exchanges with her friends, was perfectly normal in aristocratic households, and she did not expect anything else.But not to have informed her that she had been betrothed for all of her twenty-one years, to have just assumed that she had absorbed the fact as anything but a family joke…

For a moment Thea was speechless, then she told herself that, unless she resisted, she would simply be swept along on the relentless tide of her parents’ will.

‘No,’ she said again, firmly.‘I do not wish to marry the Duke and therefore I am not going to marry the Duke.’Her father was turning a worrying shade of crimson, so she asked hastily, ‘Where is he, anyway?If he does want to marry me, which I very much doubt, why isn’t he here asking me himself?’

‘Of course he wants to marry you, foolish girl.’

‘I am quite sure he wishes to marry the daughter of theEarl of Wiveton.Our ancestry is ancient, our connections unrivalled and my dowry is impressive—but I have trouble believing that he wants to marryme, Thea Campion, someone he met once when she was ten and he was, what?Fourteen?Sixteen?If he wants me, why hasn’t he called before now?’

‘The Duke, who is now twenty-six years of age, has spent a year at the Congress of Vienna with our diplomatic corps,’ her father said.‘With the death of his father on the ninth of June—the same day as the Final Act of the Congress was signed—he was about to return to England.Then the Battle of Waterloo threw the entire area into disarray,’

‘That terrible man Bonaparte,’ her mother interjected.

‘When he finally returned to England, there were all the issues of the succession to deal with and he was in mourning, of course.Now he has set out on a tour of all his estates and is expected back in London by the end of the month.’

Her father’s colour had subsided a little as he concentrated on this account, but her mother clearly felt she should continue.‘He has written to inform us of his intention to call upon your father in three weeks’ time to formalise matters.He is still in mourning, of course, but the wedding can be arranged for next summer.’

‘And was he intending at any point to actually askmeif I wish to marry him?’Thea enquired.