offered Millicent his arm. Surrendering, she took it and allowed him to lead her up the other path.

Jacqueline stood watching, frowning.

Gerrard waited for a moment, then touched her arm. “Shall we?”

She didn’t jump, but when she turned her head and her eyes met his, they were a fraction wide. “Yes, of course.”

She sounded a touch breathless. Side by side, they walked down the sloping path. His latest questions burned in his brain, but he decided to ask someone else-possibly Millicent-about Jacqueline’s mother rather than put his foot wrong with her. As for her reaction to the Garden of Venus, he wasn’t yet sure what that was, but she’d said they would pass it on their way back-time enough to probe then.

They rounded the last bend in the path; the breeze off the waves hit them, and snatched at her parasol. She quickly furled it; he waited while she secured it, then offered his arm. “It’ll be safer if you hold on to me.”

She drew in a breath, then slid her hand around his elbow, laying her fingers on his sleeve. Sensing her uncertainty, he didn’t draw her close, but now they were in the open, the breeze shrieked about them, plastering her dress to her figure, tugging at her skirts. She really would be safer clinging to him, taking refuge in his windshadow.

He wished she would. Most young ladies would unhesitatingly seize the opportunity; instead, she struggled to walk by his side and keep a decorous distance between them. Despite his unwanted sexual awareness of her, still notably high, her caution rankled.

They reached the line of rocks above the sloping shore. At the southern end of the cove, the massive bulk of Cyclops rose from the waves, its seaward faces cloaked in spume and spray.

Gerrard squinted. “Is that a ledge running around it?”

“Yes.” Jacqueline raised her voice over the crash of the waves. “It’s terribly dangerous, as you can see. At neap tide, you can follow the ledge all the way around and into the blowhole chamber itself, but at most times, the waves are too high, and the footing far too treacherous.”

He stepped off the edge of the path to get a better view. Bracing one booted leg against a large rock, he studied the outcrop, noting the proportions. “I’ll have to come down at sunset. Or sunrise. Or perhaps we’ll have a storm?” He wanted to see more variations of light on Cyclops, and more movement about it, too.

Pushing back from the rock, he straightened and turned.

Only to discover Jacqueline had leaned toward him, fighting to hold back her hair with one hand.

They were suddenly very close, their faces only inches apart. Her eyes widened. Her lips were parted; she’d leaned close to say something.

Their eyes locked. Looking into hers, into the moss-agatey depths, he realized she’d forgotten what she’d been about to say.

Beyond his control, his gaze dropped to her lips. Soft, intensely feminine, shaped for passion, and mere inches away.

As was her body, those delectable breasts and elementally female curves. All he had to do to bring her against him was tip her to him, or take half a step more.

The impulse to do so was nearly overpowering; only the thought that she might panic held him back. Yet the allure of those lips, the desire to taste them, to raise his hands, frame her face and angle it up so his lips could cover hers and he could learn…

His gaze lowered to where the pulse beat wildly at the base of her throat, then lowered further, to her breasts, high, full…frozen. She wasn’t breathing.

Forcing his gaze up, he met her eyes, and read in them how shocked, stunned and uncertain she was-how out of her depth she was.

He couldn’t take advantage of such innocence, such clear and open naivete. She might be twenty-three, but she had no idea what this was.

She’d clearly had no experience with desire, much less lust.

Taking a firm grip on his own, he grasped her arm, and gently moved her back so he could step up onto the path.

“Ah…” Jacqueline blinked and looked around; she fixed on Cyclops. “I was going to ask…”

She dragged in a huge breath, and grabbed hold of her wayward wits. Keeping her gaze on the huge rock, she battled to steady her giddy head and ignore the man by her side. “I was about to ask about Mr. Adair. He wouldn’t be so reckless as to try to explore Cyclops, would he?”

When her companion didn’t immediately reply, she glanced briefly at him, ready to be mortified if he said anything about that fraught moment an instant ago.

Instead, he was looking, not at her, but at Cyclops. Retaking her arm, he urged her on; hesitantly, trying not to notice the sensations his touch evoked, she fell into step once more beside him.

“Barnaby’s insatiably curious, but not rashly so-not to the point of endangering himself. He might be many things, incorrigible and impossible to restrain at times, but he’s not stupid.”

“I didn’t mean to imply he is,” she hurried to say. “But…well, you know.” She gestured. “Young men and their follies and reckless ways.”

He looked at her then. She met his eyes-and realized they were warm, that his lips had eased, fractionally curving-that he was genuinely amused, not trying to be charming.

His natural smile was more potent than he knew.

“Young men,” he repeated, then quietly said, “Neither Barnaby nor I are that young.”

His eyes held hers for an instant, then his gaze lowered to her lips, then dropped away as he looked ahead.

They walked five paces before she remembered how to breathe.

Foolish, foolish, foolish! She had to overcome this ridiculous sensitivity that he, somehow, triggered. She might have led a quiet country life, but she’d attended country assemblies aplenty and she’d never-not ever-responded to a gentleman-to the man, to his presence-as she did to Gerrard Debbington.

It was nonsense-her reaction made no sense at all.

She had to, was determined to, overcome it, and if she couldn’t do that, then she’d ignore it, certainly hide it so he got no inkling of her witless sensibility.

After that moment on the shore, ignoring all he made her feel seemed eminently wise.

The path led them around the edge of Cyclops, some distance back from the blowhole itself. Gerrard paused at the point where the path rose; looking down on the rock, they could see the hole clearly. A muffled rumbling reached them, then a small spout of water gushed up through the hole.

“The tide’s turning,” she said, and moved on.

He followed, his long fingers still wrapped about her elbow; she didn’t shake free, didn’t want to call attention to her awareness of his touch.

Yet she was aware-to her bones aware-of the latent strength not just in his fingers but in the lean, hard body keeping pace so close beside her.

Once they’d left Cyclops, the delights of the Garden of Vulcan, with its fiery red and orange flowers and bronze foliage, followed in turn by the Gardens of Hermes and Diana, the former dotted with ornamental stone cairns, the latter incorporating a small wood that was home to a herd of deer, gave her fodder enough to distract him. And herself.

By the time they reached the upper viewing stage, a delicate wrought-iron pergola, and rejoined Barnaby and Millicent, she’d managed to press that moment on the shore to the back of her mind.

She indicated the path that left the pergola to wind up the incline of the south ridge. “That leads to the Garden of Atlas, which is a rare example of a rock garden created with nothing but spherical boulders, rocks and stones.”

“Reflecting the globe Atlas shouldered?” Shading his eyes, Barnaby looked up at the ridge.

“Indeed. From the upper end of that garden, steps give access to the south end of the terrace.” Beckoning, she stepped onto the other path leading toward the house. “This will take us into the Garden of Athena. We could go straight through to the terrace-there’s another set of steps-but if we take the fork that goes through the Garden of Artemis, we’ll pass by the Garden of Night, too, before climbing the main terrace stairs.”

“Lead on.” Gerrard smiled easily as he came to pace beside her.

He looked ahead; she grasped the moment to surreptitiously study his profile. He’d asked numerous questions

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