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“You haven’t told me your name.” His voice roughed his chest.

“Miss Amaranthe Illingworth of St. Cleer, Cornwall. My father was very fond of classical antiquity, so he chose a Greek name for me. He gave my mother the honor of naming my brother.”

“Joseph,” Mal said. “A Hebrew name. Very different tradition.”

“My mother’s family were Portuguese conversos.” She withdrew her hand. “Jews who converted to Christianity so they might escape the Inquisition with their businesses and their lives. They practiced in secret for centuries, or so I’ve been told, but in the end my mother converted in truth and married a man bound for the Anglican church.” She held the housekeeper’s volume close to her chest, like a shield.

He sat back. The confidence stunned him. She’d learned he was a bastard, the status he wore like a brand on his forehead, marking him as deficient. But if her family had been Jewish, then she knew something as well about being set apart.

She rose, and he scrambled to his feet. Very neatly she placed her glass on the shelf beneath the decanter. Her eyes traced the figurines above, all of them representing mythological half-women with breasts prominently displayed.

“They’re not mine,” Mal said.

That small, maddening smile quirked her lips again. “No, they are young Hunsdon’s now, I imagine. I’ve seen this and worse among some of the medieval marginalia I’ve copied, Mr. Grey. You wouldn’t believe some of the grotesques those monks could dream up. I suppose it comes from being locked away day after day with no company but other men.”

That was his problem as well, Mal decided. Too much time in the company of other men. That was why she’d riled his senses so potently. He needed a woman now and again to relieve the pressure.

Mal moved around the table toward her as she stepped away. “I can drive you tomorrow. To the orphan place with the distressed women.”

Again the dance of those interesting brows. “You sound terrified at the very thought of confronting those in distress. Yet as a barrister, I imagine you frequently encounter persons in unfortunate circumstances.”

“Prospective barrister. I am waiting to be called to the bar.” He hated appearing so helpless, so insufficient around her. A woman could not desire a man she pitied. “What time shall I bring the carriage round?”

She hesitated, and her face went studiously blank. A slither across the back of his neck told him this was the expression she assumed when she was withholding something. He was beginning to recognize it.

“Eyde made up a room for me here,” she said. “Do you mind?”

“Of course not. There are dozens of rooms.” Or so he thought. Hunsdon House was not his, as nothing about the Hunsdon estate was to be his—not even the family name—and so he’d never let much of it occupy his attention.

He wondered which room Miss Amaranthe Illingworth would select for her own. Did she see her silk-smooth skin as best set off by the draperies in the Blue Room? Would she choose the Oriental patterns of the Jade Room? Or would she, like an empress of old, demand the royal purple? He imagined her nearby in the house going about her nightly routine, taking down her hair, drawing off her prim robe, perhaps splashing water onto her face that would run down that softly stern neck to the collarbones hidden beneath her gown and?—

He’d best stop imagining Miss Illingworth at her ablutions. He was about to embarrass himself.

“Till tomorrow then, Miss Illingworth.” Had she said he could call her Amaranthe? He wanted to roll the name over his tongue. It was exotic, yet robust. A name with command and presence, much like the woman.

Good Lord!That brandy had turned his wits. He was behaving like a moonstruck calf. No, worse.

“Till tomorrow,” she said softly, and her gaze held his. The flickering candlelight brought out violet shadows in her eyes,and all the air left Mal’s body. He wanted to be found worthy of that calm, assessing gaze.

There was no way she would ever find him worthy.

The door shut behind her, and Mal smacked a hand to his head to clear it. He’d best bring himself in order. They had business to conduct. Problems to solve.

She had secrets he wanted very much to discover.

He had gotten his first good look at Miss Amaranthe Illingworth. He wanted a second. And a third.

In fact, he wanted her in his bed, without a stitch of clothing, where he could study her at leisure and finally form a full picture of this alluring but very mysterious woman.

CHAPTER SEVEN

Holding her chamber candlestick steady in one hand, Amaranthe pressed lightly on the paneled door to the library. The polished wood swung inward, revealing a long, narrow room that appeared much more frequently inhabited than the rather bare study in which she’d found Malden Grey. She guessed the study had been the duke’s private retreat, while the library was considered a more social space. The halo of light, as she moved it about, glanced on books heaped about chairs, piled on side tables, and lying open upon the great table that dominated the room.

This would be where Joseph spent his time with his charges, or so she guessed from the hastily erased slates, stacks of parchment, and tightly stoppered jars of ink that entered the soft circle of light as she approached.

Joseph tended to forget everything else when he was working. Mrs. Blackthorn made it a point of pride to concoct treats that could lure him to raise his head from a book when he was lost in thought. It was not beyond the realm of belief that he would simply fail to notice that his charges were not being supplied with luncheon, he being more accustomed to a hearty breakfast and substantial early dinner to tide him through theday. But he dismissed them for a reprieve and a light meal at some point, didn’t he? How had he not seen that they returned to him as hungry as before?

Scouting out Joseph’s error was not her purpose here; she would take the matter up with him tomorrow. Rather, the silent house, with everyone else abed, gave Amaranthe the perfect opportunity to walk through the library at her leisure and see what she could find.