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“Ah, but this won’t be a duel,” Edwin said coldly. “It will be justice. For your tormenting my wife, trying to force her into marrying you. For frightening her and plaguing her, for nearly assaulting her, and daring to cast slurs upon her character.”

“Edwin,no,” Clarissa said.

Durand ignored her to stare Edwin down. “Does that mean you accept my challenge?”

“It does. Choose your seconds, and I shall see you at dawn at Green Park. Pistols are my weapon of choice.” He turned to Clarissa. “Come, my dear, we’re leaving now.”

By tomorrow, he meant to be rid of Durand once and for all.

Twenty-Three

Clarissa managed to hold her tongue until their carriage pulled away. Only then did she face him, shoulders set. “You can’t do this.”

“I can and I will. It’s the only way to stop him.”

The hard edge to his voice made her despair. “I don’t want to lose you.”

“You won’t. I happen to be very good with a pistol.”

“I’ve no doubt of that. But if you kill him, you will end up accused of murder, forced to flee.”

“Unlike your brother, I need only say that the bastard impugned your honor. No jury will convict an Englishman for defending his wife from a Frenchman.”

“Not just a Frenchman. A Frenchdiplomat. With high connections in both governments.”

He dragged in a heavy breath. “It will be difficult for us socially for a while, but . . .”

“. . . not nearly as bad as if your father is revealed to be a traitor. Is that what you’re thinking?”

Edwin released a coarse oath. “I never wanted you to know about that.”

Her heart sank. “So it’s true, then. Your father really was a traitor.”

“It appears he was.” Edwin rubbed the back of his neck. “Durand showed me the reports written in Father’s hand, which were apparently made on Father’s jaunts to a certain private opium-smoking club in London.”

“Opium! Your father smoked opium?”

“I’m not sure. For years, I’d assumed so.” His breathing grew labored. “When Mother died, I went looking for Father, so the servants were forced to send me to that club. That’s how I learned of his association with it. He wouldn’t speak of it at all, so I deduced he went there to indulge. But apparently he was going there to speak to soldiers and sailors and glean information for the French.”

She sat back against the seat. “I can’t believe it. I know your father had his weaknesses, but to be atraitorto his country . . .”

“It came as a shock to me, too.”

“And you’re sure these ‘reports’ aren’t forged?”

“They certainly looked genuine. And clandestine activities would help to explain why Father was always running off to London and abandoning us.”

Mulling that over a moment, she wondered what to say, what to do to help him. This duel clearly wasn’t just about her. It was about saving his family—all of them—from scandal. It was about eliminating Durand as a threat.

She folded her arms over her waist. “How do you know that if you kill Durand, he won’t have already instructed someone, in the event of his death, to expose your father’s activities?”

“I don’t. But it’s better than waiting around for whenever hedoeschoose to do it. And it will be a great deal more difficult for him to fan the flames of a scandal if he’s dead.”

“Not ifyou’rethe one who’s dead.”

He turned his head to the window, and the streetlamps caught the consternation on his face. “I won’t let him kill me.”

“You are not God, Edwin! You’re fallible. And the thought of something happening to you—”