Authors: Amanda Quick
A loud knock on the front door interrupted Jared.
“Perhaps you had better answer that, Graves.”
“I’ll get it,” Olympia said quickly. “Graves is obviously not up to performing his duties tonight.” She lit a second candle and went out into the hall.
Protesting vehemently, Graves followed her to the door.
Jared touched Felix’s wounded shoulder.
“Damn.” Felix sucked in his breath and passed out.
“Demetria. Constance,” Olympia exclaimed out in the hall. “What are you two doing here? And why have you come at this hour, Mr. Seaton? Now see here, if it is to discuss the duel, I may as well tell you that it is not going to take place. Is that quite clear?”
“You may set Chillhurst free,” Constance said dryly. “Demetria has told her brother everything. Gifford wishes to make his apologies and call off the duel. Is that not correct, Gifford?”
“Yes.” Gifford’s voice was very subdued. “Please tell your husband that I wish to speak with him.”
Jared glanced toward the door. “I’m in here, Seaton. Before you make your apologies, would you mind very much summoning a doctor?”
Gifford came to stand in the doorway. “Why in God’s name do you want a doctor?” Then his eyes went to Felix. “Damnation. Who is he? Why is there so much blood about?”
Olympia stood on tiptoe to peer over Gifford’s
shoulder. “That is Mr. Hartwell. He tried to rob me of my emerald earrings just now. That’s his pistol over there on the floor. He threatened to shoot Jared with it.”
“But what happened to him?” Gifford stared at the fallen man with sick fascination.
“Chillhurst used his dagger to save us.” Olympia’s eyes glowed with wifely pride. “He threw it at Mr. Hartwell just as Mr. Hartwell fired his pistol.”
“Chillhurst downed him with a dagger?” Gifford asked weakly.
“Oh, yes. Chillhurst always carries it with him, you see. It was the most amazing thing because it all took place in the dark. I had just snuffed the candle and—”
Gifford made an odd sound as Jared took hold of the dagger and pulled it quickly out of Felix’s arm. Blood flowed in the few seconds that it took Jared to bind Felix’s cravat snugly around the wound.
“My God,” Gifford looked distinctly ill now. “Never saw a man with a dagger stuck in him.”
“If you think this is unpleasant,” Jared said easily, “You should see a man with a bullet in his chest. That’s why I sent you a note reminding you to make certain there would be a doctor present at our meeting.”
“You’re a bloody pirate after all, aren’t you?” Gifford’s face turned an ashen color. He sank gracefully to the floor in a dead faint.
“I must say, it was very clever of you to escape from the storage room.” Olympia snuggled into Jared’s warmth. “But, then, you never cease to amaze me, my lord.”
“I’m glad you continue to be impressed with my humble skills.” Jared threaded his fingers through her hair.
It was nearly three in the morning. The household was quiet once more and everyone was abed at long last. But although she was exhausted, Olympia was finding it impossible to sleep. The events of the evening were still too fresh.
“I have always been impressed by your many abilities, sir.” Olympia pressed her lips to his shoulder. “I am very glad
that you are not angry with me for locking you in the storage room.”
“My lovely siren,” Jared whispered. “I could not possibly be angry with you. When you turned the key in the lock, I realized that you loved me.”
Olympia went very still. “How on earth did you reason that out?”
“No one else has ever tried to rescue me.” He searched her face in the shadows. “I’m not wrong, am I? You do love me?”
“Jared, I have loved you since the day you walked into my library and rescued me from Mr. Draycott.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because I did not want you to feel obliged to have to love me in return,” Olympia said. “You had already given me so much. I hoped you loved me, but I did not want to press you. In truth, it was difficult not to long for more. I wanted your love more than anything else in the world.”
“You have had it since the day I met you.” Jared brushed his mouth lightly, reverently, across hers. “I will admit that I did not realize at first that I was in love. I was too occupied with trying to deal with the strong passion that you aroused in me.”
“Ah, yes, the passion.” Olympia smiled. “There is that, is there not, sir?”
“There is definitely that.” He kissed the tip of her nose. “But the love was there, too. I have never felt like this about anyone else, Olympia.”
“I am glad, sir.”
“I sought you out in order to find a missing fortune,” Jared said against her lips. “But I realized soon enough that you were the only treasure I wanted.”
“My lord, you take my breath away.” She twined her arms around his neck and drew him toward her. “Come close and tell me more traveler’s tales. I would
hear of strange, far-off islands where lovers meet to make love on beaches scattered with priceless pearls.”
Jared needed no further urging. He came down on top of her, his mouth seeking hers.
Olympia shivered beneath his exciting, demanding weight. Jared was already hard and heavy with his arousal. The passion in him drew the familiar, answering response from her. She sank her nails into his shoulders.
And when the time was right and she was ready and the world outside the bedroom door no longer mattered, Jared sheathed himself in her warmth and whispered thickly in her ear.
“Sing for me, my sweet siren.”
“Only for you,” Olympia vowed.
“I wasn’t planning to kill Seaton, you know,” Jared said a long while later.
“Of course not. You would never intentionally kill anyone. But in the heat of a duel, anything can happen.” Olympia’s hand tightened around Jared’s arm. “You could have been killed.”
“I do not believe it would have come to that.” Jared smiled into the shadows. “I had decided that it was time someone taught Seaton a lesson. He was becoming something of a nuisance.”
“What did you plan to do?”
“I knew Seaton was so convinced of my cowardice that he thought I would not show for the dawn appointment. I also suspected that when I did turn up at Chalk Farm, he was going to be very worried.”
“What did you think would happen?” Olympia asked.
“It was to be his first duel,” Jared said. “His first experience with real violence. It was almost a certainty
that his hand would have been shaking so badly, his shot would have gone wide. I planned to let him fire first. Then I intended to give him a minute or two to contemplate the situation before I fired my pistol into the air.”
“Honor would have been satisfied and Gifford would have been taught a lesson,” Olympia said slowly.
“Precisely. So you see, my dear, there was no need to go to all the trouble of locking me away in the storage chamber.” Jared gathered her close to his heart. “But I am rather pleased that you did.”
“How was I to know of your scheme?” Olympia’s voice was muffled against Jared’s throat. “And what if something had gone wrong? You really must consult with me in the future on such matters, Mr. Chillhurst.”
Jared’s laughter filled the bedchamber.
The scene in the library two days later was one of noisy chaos. Everyone was present except Jared, who was interviewing his new man of affairs behind the closed doors of Olympia’s study.
The dull roar of conversation in the library was the result of a number of people attempting to speak at the same time. In one corner of the room Magnus and Thaddeus exclaimed over Gifford’s half of the map. Gifford was full of questions about the half that had been in the possession of the Flamecrest family.
Robert, Hugh, and Ethan were caught up in the excitement. They hovered over the maps and made endless suggestions about how to go about digging up the treasure.
Minotaur bounded from one person to the next, wagging his tail and sniffing inquiringly at everyone’s boots and shoes.
At the other end of the room Demetria explained to
Olympia how she had come to the realization that it was time to tell her brother the full truth about what had happened three years ago.
“I have spent my whole life protecting him since Mother died. I could not allow him to get himself killed because of me,” she said.
“I understand,” Olympia said. “He is fortunate to have you as his sister.”
“Chillhurst was right, however,” Constance said. “It was time for Demetria to stop trying to protect her brother. She has done far too much for him already.”
“Gifford nursed his ill-will toward your husband’s family all these years because it was all he had to cling to,” Demetria said. “And I allowed the rage in him to fester and grow because it seemed to give him a purpose, a sense of pride. I did not know what would become of him if he ceased to be obsessed with finding the treasure. I feared he would wind up in the gaming hells.”
“We never expected him to locate the missing half of the map, of course,” Constance said. “But three years ago when he told Demetria that he had a plan to search for it, she did not know what else to do but go along with his scheme.”
“One thing led to another,” Demetria confided. “The next thing I knew Chillhurst had actually asked me to marry him. It came as a shock, but it occurred to me that marrying him was not such a bad notion, after all.”
“She thought that he could provide the financial security and position that Gifford desperately wanted,” Constance said.
Demetria smiled wryly. “And Chillhurst did not seem the type to demand too much of a wife. I did not think him possessed of a passionate nature, you see. There was only one occasion when he startled me with
his advances. When I could not respond, he did not appear to take offense. I thought him completely unmoved by the entire affair.”
“It was I who realized the marriage would never do,” Constance murmured. “It was clear that Chillhurst did not intend to spend much time in London. He had no interest in town life. I dreaded being separated from my dear friend for months at a time.”
“And then he found us together one afternoon and that was the end of the matter,” Demetria said quietly.
A pleasant, sensual tingle of awareness made Olympia realize that Jared was nearby. She turned around and saw him standing in the doorway of the library. Her heart soared, as it always did at the sight of him.
He looked exactly as he had that first time she had seen him in her library, she thought, dangerous and exciting, a man who had walked straight out of a legend.
Jared’s gaze met hers and his mouth curved knowingly. Then he spoke to the room at large.
“Good day to you all.” He did not raise his voice but the small crowd in the library instantly fell silent. Expectant faces glanced toward him.
When he had everyone’s attention, Jared strode across the room and took up a position behind his desk. He opened his engagement journal and consulted it. The excitement in the room was palpable.
“Well, son?” Magnus demanded eagerly. “Did ye make the arrangements?”
“I have made a decision which I believe will be of interest to all of you.” Jared turned a page in the journal. “I have arranged to have one of the Flamecrest ships sail to the West Indies in a fortnight.”
“I say.” Thaddeus grinned in anticipation.
“The vessel will be under the command of one of my most trusted and experienced men, Captain Richards. All those who wish to search for the treasure may
sail on board,” Jared said. “I assume that will include Seaton, my cousins, and very likely my father and uncle.”
“It will, indeed.” Magnus chortled with satisfaction.
“I shall certainly be on board,” Thaddeus assured him. “What, ho, for the sight of the open sea, eh, Magnus?”
Gifford grinned broadly. Olympia noticed that the simmering resentment had vanished from his eyes sometime during the past two days.
“Thank you, Chillhurst,” Gifford said sincerely. “This is really very good of you.”
“There is no need to thank me,” Jared said. “I am only too happy to send the lot of you off to the West Indies. I look forward to restoring some semblance of order and routine to my life.”
“Does that mean that you will not be sailing off to the islands to search for the lost treasure, yourself, sir?” Robert asked quickly.
“It means precisely that, Robert. I’m going to stay home and attend to my business affairs and see to my duties as a husband and tutor.”
Robert looked relieved.
Hugh and Ethan exchanged grins.
“Now, then.” Jared closed his appointment journal. “I believe that concludes my announcements for this morning. My new man of affairs is waiting out in the hall. He will provide the details of the sailing arrangements.”
Magnus, Thaddeus, and Gifford rushed toward the door.
When they were out of the room, Demetria looked at Jared. “Thank you, Chillhurst.”
“You’re welcome.” Jared glanced at the tall clock. “Now, if you do not mind, I have several appointments which must be kept this morning.”
“Of course.” Demetria smiled wryly and rose to her feet. “We would not wish to impose further on your busy schedule, my lord.”
“No, indeed.” Constance looked amused. She inclined her head gracefully at Olympia. “Good day to you, madam.”
“Good day,” Olympia said. She waited until Demetria and Constance had taken their leave and then she nodded to Robert.
Robert flushed and looked at Jared. “Sir, if you do not mind, my brothers and I have a gift we would like to present to you.”
“A gift?” Jared’s brows rose in surprise. “What is it?”
Robert removed a small box from his pocket, took two steps toward the desk, and handed it to Jared. “It is not nearly as beautiful as the one you used to ransom me, sir, but we hope you will like it.”
“There’s an inscription on the inside,” Hugh volunteered eagerly. “Aunt Olympia had the jeweler put it there.”
Ethan elbowed him in the ribs. “Shut your mouth, you bloody idiot. He ain’t even opened the box yet.”
Jared slowly opened the box and studied the contents. A suspenseful silence filled the room.
Jared stood gazing down at the new watch for a long time.