stared coldly at his guest.
“You are vastly improved in health, Lord Burke.” It was more?a statement than a question. “I expect you will soon, leave jus.”
Niall nodded. “Soon, my lord, and when I go there is something?I would take with me from Mallorca.”
“A souvenir of sorts, Lord Burke?”
Niall could not resist a chuckle. “Of sorts,” he said. “I wish to?marry Constanza. I am formally applying to you for her hand.”
The Conde’s facial expression never wavered. “It is impossible,?Lord Burke.”
“She is previously contracted?”
“No.”
“She is ill with some fatal sickness?”
“No.”
“Then why do you refuse me? I am the only son and heir of a?wealthy and noble man. In my country, my lineage is equal to your?own. You would have grandchildren. And, as my wife, your daugh-?ter would lack for nothing.”
“I do not have to explain myself to you, Lord Burke. I am Con-?stanza’s father, and I have refused your suit. My word is all that?counts.”
Niall drew a deep breath. “Is the reason for your refusal the fact?that you doubt your daughter’s paternity?”
Francisco Cuidadela grew white. “You are impertinent, Lord?Burke. Leave me! I do not choose to discuss it.”
Niall’s silvery eyes narrowed. “Let me tell you how I spent my?afternoon, Conde. I spent it enjoying your daughter’s favors. She?gave herself to me quite willingly, and I am pleased to say that she?was a virgin. At this very moment my seed could be rooting in her?fertile womb. You deliberately destroyed her chances of marriage? here on Mallorca. Now not even a convent will have her. How will?you face your friends when she grows big with my child? You are the last of your line, Conde, and your late wife’s family is also long?gone. There is no place you can send Constanza to hide her shame.?Already I hear the laughter of your friends. And if King Philip should?hear of this scandal you might find yourself rapidly replaced as?governor here.
“On the other hand, if you accept my suit you will be envied your?cleverness for catching such a fine prize as myself. But, of course,?the decision is yours.”
Francisco Cuidadela had gone from white to red and back to white?again as Niall talked. Now the Conde made a strangled sound.
“Does that mean you accept, my lord?” asked Niall politely.
The older man nodded weakly, and Niall smiled, satisfied. “Tomorrow,” he said, “we shall see the bishop and arrange for the first?of the banns to be posted. Have your secretary bring me a copy of?the marriage contract in the morning. I trust that Constanza’s dowry?will be quite ample, as she is your only child. Not that I care,” he?said, “but my father will expect it.”
The Conde sent him a black look. Chuckling softly, Niall left the?library. It was done. Once again he was betrothed, and he hoped?mat, this time, the union would produce children.
Constanza was not Skye, nor would she ever take Skye’s place?in his heart. He laughed ruefully. He had never loved anyone but?Skye. Why had fate been so cruel as to separate them just when they?were so near to marriage? “Skye,” he whispered her name softly.?”Skye O’Malley, my love.” He tasted the words on his tongue. No,?she couldn’t be dead! Would not her spirit have come to him, and?wouldn’t he have felt it if she were? Must he accept that she was?dead when he truly could not believe it was so?
No, he would never love Constanza as he had loved Skye, but?Constanza was sweet and good and deserved, his full attention. She?would have it too, he vowed; but when he closed his eyes to conjure?up her oval face with its violet eyes and halo of golden curls he?instead saw a cloud of black hair framing a heart-shaped face with?laughing blue eyes and a soft red mouth.
“Dammit, Skye O’Malley,” he swore. “I cannot help it that I am?alive, and you are… are… Leave me in peace, my darling, to find?some kind of happiness!”
He found Constanza and announced, “Your father has consented?to our marriage, lovey. Tomorrow we shall have the bishop read the?first banns at mass, and the contracts shall be signed.”
“I cannot believe it,” she breathed, her eyes shining. “How did?you convince him?”
“I told him how we spent the afternoon,” said Niall drily.
Constanza swayed. “Oh! He will beat me!”
Seeing her white face left no doubt in his mind that she did not?exaggerate. “Has he beaten you before, lovey?”
“Of course. He is my papa. He is never an easy man, Niall, but?knowing that I gave myself to you willingly will infuriate him. I am?truly afraid.”
“Don’t be frightened, Constanzita. I will not allow anyone, even?your father, to harm you.”
With a contented sigh she nestled into his arms, and he felt better?than he had in a long time. She loved him, she needed him, and it?would be good between them.
The marriage contracts were signed the following morning and?the first banns were read at the Palma cathedral’s noon mass. By?nightfall felicitations were pouring into the governor’s villa from all?the best families on the island. The Conde was particularly pleased?when one of his friends who had spent time in London and Dublin? congratulated him on obtaining such a fine catch for Constanza.
“Lord Burke’s father is quite wealthy, my dear Francisco, and?dotes on his only son as you have doted on Constanza. What a fine?match! But then, you were always a shrewd devil, eh?” The two?men chuckled conspiratorially, and the Conde began to feel that?perhaps he had the upper hand after all. This tempered his unfriendly?feelings toward Niall.
The banns were read twice again within the month and then on?a bright winter’s morning several days after the Twelfth Night feast?had ended, Constanza Maria Theresa Floreal Alcudia Cuidadela was?joined in holy matrimony to Lord Niall Sean Burke. The bishop of?Mallorca performed the ceremony.
The sun streamed through the stained-glass windows of the ca-?thedral, making beautiful wavy patterns on the pale-gray stone floors.?The bride was preceded by six little girls in pale-pink silk dresses?over miniature farthingales with short puffed sleeves, wreaths of?rosebuds in their unbound hair. The children carried gilt baskets of?flower petals which they strewed about lavishly.
Constanza clung to her father’s arm, a vision so exquisitely ethe-?real that an audible sigh rose collectively from the guests. Her gown?was a heavy white silk brocade overskirt on a cloth-of-silver un-?derskirt. The upper sleeves of the gown were large puffs of white?brocade, slashed to show the silver interior. The sleeves were edged?in lace just below the elbow. The lower sleeves were thin white silk?that clung tightly to the arm and ended in cuffs of lace. The white?brocade bodice was tight, and began just above the swell of the?bride’s ample bosom. Modesty was preserved by a transparent silk?chiffon insert that had a dainty, virginal, round lace collar.
Constanza’s golden hair was unbound and topped by a wreath of white rosebuds attached by small pearl pins to a sheer cloud of lace?that floated about her. In one hand she carried a bouquet of gardenias?and about her slender neck was a single strand of pearls.
The groom, awaiting her at the altar, was equally elegant. His?silk hose were red-and-gold-striped, his upper legs covered by puffed?and slashed breeches of claret-red velvet. His short, high-collared?doublet was of matching silk and open at the front to show an?embroidered white silk undershirt ruffled at the wrists. Covering his?doublet was an embroidered overjerkin of claret-red velvet, studded?with freshwater pearls and gold beads. His rakish velvet cap was?tilted to show its heavily jeweled underside, and a pink plume?drooped from it. His shoes, tanned from the hide of an unborn calf,?were gilded a pale gold.
Sword and dagger were
The women eyed his broad chest and well-turned legs and sighed?behind their fans. How on earth, they wondered, did that meek little?milksop catch such a man? It was said that the couple would remain?on Mallorca for several months before journeying to London and the?court of the young new English queen, Elizabeth. Perhaps in