would make a great deal of difference anyway. He had married Lily in good faith. He had made vows to her that he had had every intention of keeping. He had consummated the marriage with her.

And he had loved her.

But he could not rid his mind of the image of Lauren, swinging gently back and forth on the tree swing in her wedding gown, listless and quietly accepting of her disappointment—and surely about to explode with the anger she had told him was pointless. A bride rejected and humiliated.

This was the devil of a coil, he thought. He felt weighed down by guilt even though common sense told him that he could not possibly have foreseen the day's events.

***

Lily was thankful to be out of doors again—away from that great daunting mansion and the bewildering crowds of people.

Elizabeth had suggested a stroll to the rock garden, which was strangely named as it had far more flowers and ornamental trees than rocks. Graveled walkways meandered through it and a few well-placed wrought-iron seats allowed the stroller to sit and appreciate the cultivated beauty. Lily was more accustomed to wild beauty, but a garden lovingly created and tended by gardeners had its charm, she decided.

Elizabeth walked with her arm drawn through the Duke of Portfrey's. Lily had to be told his name again, but she had noticed him in the drawing room, partly because he was a very distinguished-looking gentleman. She guessed his age to be about forty, but he was still handsome. He was not very tall, but his slim, proud bearing made him appear taller than he was. He had prominent, aristocratic features and dark hair, which had turned silver at the temples. Mainly, though, she had noticed him because he had watched her more intently than anyone else had. He had scarcely taken his eyes off her, in fact. There had been a strange expression on his face—almost of puzzlement.

He asked some pointed questions as they walked.

'Who was your father, Lily?' he asked.

'Sergeant Thomas Doyle of the Ninety-fifth, sir,' she told him.

'And where did he live before he took the king's shilling?' he asked.

'I think Leicestershire, sir.'

'Ah,' he said. 'And where exactly in Leicestershire?'

'I do not know, sir.' Papa had never talked a great deal about his past. Something he had once said, though, had led Lily to believe that he had left home and joined the army because he had been unhappy.

'And his family?' the duke asked. 'What do you know of them?'

'Very little, sir,' she replied. 'Papa had a father and a brother, I believe.'

'But you never visited them?'

'No, sir.' She shook her head.

'And your mother,' he asked her. 'Who was she?'

'Her name was Beatrice, sir,' she said. 'She died in India when I was seven years old. She had a fever.'

'And her maiden name, Lily?'

Elizabeth laughed. 'Are you planning to write a biography, Lyndon?' she asked. 'Pray do not feel obliged to answer, Lily. We are all curious about you because you have suddenly been presented to us as Neville's wife and your life has been so fascinatingly different from our own. You must forgive us if we seem almost ill-bred in our inquisitiveness.'

The duke asked no more questions, Lily was relieved to discover. She found his blue eyes rather disconcerting. He gave the impression of being able to see right into another person's mind.

'Do you know the names of all these flowers?' she asked Elizabeth. 'They are very lovely. But they are different from flowers I know.'

They sat on one of the seats while Elizabeth named every flower and tree and Lily set herself to memorizing their names—lupins, hollyhocks, wallflowers, lilies, irises, sweet briar, lilacs, cherry trees, pear trees. Would she ever remember them all? The Duke of Portfrey strolled along the paths while they talked, though he did pause for a while at the lower end of the rock garden to gaze back at Lily.

***

Lady Elizabeth stood beside the fountain watching Lily return to the house. She looked small and rather lost, but she had declined Elizabeth's offer to accompany her to her room. She thought she could remember the way, she had said.

'She has courage,' Elizabeth said more to herself than to the Duke of Portfrey, who was standing behind her.

'I must thank you, Elizabeth,' he said stiffly. 'for pointing out how ill-bred and excessively inquisitive my questions were.'

She swung around to face him. 'Oh, dear,' she said, smiling ruefully, 'I have offended you.'

'Not at all.' He made her a slight bow. 'I am sure you were quite right.'

'Poor child,' she said. 'One feels she is a child, though if Neville married her well over a year ago she cannot be so very young, can she? She is so small and looks so fragile, yet she has lived in India and Portugal and Spain with the armies. That cannot have been easy. And she was a captive of the French for almost a year. What is your particular interest in her?'

The duke lifted his brows. 'Have you not just stated it?' he asked her. 'She is a curiosity. And she has appeared at a moment that could not have been better chosen if it had been done for deliberate effect.'

'But you surely do not believe that it was?' she said, laughing.

'Not at all.' He was gazing broodingly at the door through which Lily had disappeared. 'She is very beautiful. Even now. When Kilbourne has spent money on clothes and jewels for her and has brought her into fashion…' He did not complete the thought—he did not need to do so.

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