Sea.

“Your ladyship,” the pugilist said, and he gestured for her to precede him back through the crowd.

A second pugilist footman stood like a rock at the carriage door, anchoring the way. Hart watched Eleanor come, eyes on her all the way. When she reached him, he stepped in front of his footman, caught Eleanor by the elbows, and boosted her up and into the open carriage.

Eleanor’s breath went out of her at his touch. But it didn’t last long, and she landed on the seat as Hart followed her in. He took the seat opposite, thank heavens, and the second footman slammed the door.

She grabbed at her hat as the carriage jerked forward, trying to keep her grip on her parasol and the seat at the same time. Hart sat across from her, neat and tidy, his hat firmly on his head. She resisted the urge to reach over and knock it off.

The gentlemen of the press shouted and swore as their prey got away, the carriage heading up St. James’s Street toward Mayfair. Eleanor looked back at them over the carriage’s open top.

“You’ve made Fleet Street very unhappy today,” she said.

“Damn Fleet Street.”

“What, all of it?” Eleanor turned around again to find Hart’s eyes on her, sharp gold in his hard face.

“What the devil possessed you to hang about a street corner with a pack of journalists?” Hart demanded. “If you wanted to speak to me, you should have come to the house.”

“I did go to your house,” she said. “But you’ve changed your majordomo, and he didn’t know me. Nor was he by any means impressed by the card you gave me on that train in Edinburgh. Apparently ladies make a habit of trying to gain entrance to your house by false pretenses, and your guard dog of a majordomo assumed me one of those. I can’t really blame him. I could have stolen the card, for all he knew, and you seem to be quite popular.”

“I’ll speak to him,” Hart said when her breath ran out.

“Oh, dear, don’t swat the poor man too much. Not on my account. He wasn’t to know.”

Damn her, how did she manage to turn every chastisement around on him? All the while smiling that little smile, her eyes so blue under her out-of-date hat?

Watching Eleanor bludgeon her way through those journalists with her parasol and bustle had awakened something light in him, something he hadn’t felt since . . .

One hell of a long time.

“I’ll instruct my majordomo,” Hart said. “You can set an appointment with him when we reach the house.”

“No time like the present. I really do need to speak to you, Hart.”

The thought of Eleanor following him into his small private study, breathing the same air as he did, made his chest constrict. “Eleanor . . .”

“Goodness, you can spare me a few minutes, can’t you? Consider it my reward for distracting those rabid journalists from you. You’re making yourself quite controversial, you know, what with declaring Scotland should be a separate country and that the Germans are dangerous.”

“If you already know so much, write your story about that. I’ll not deny any of it.”

“Oh, very generous of you. But I am not writing a newspaper story. And if I were, I wouldn’t write about anything so boring as politics. No, I’d write about the personal life of the Duke of Kilmorgan. The most delicious and private gossip I could dig up, confirmed or unconfirmed. I’m certain any newspaper would froth at the mouth to buy it.”

Again the smile, accompanied by a little nod of her head. Again the constriction in Hart’s chest. Hart had verbally fenced with Otto von Bismarck, one of the most brilliant political minds of the century. Eleanor Ramsay in her flat hat trimmed with faded flowers could run rings around him.

“What is the appointment about, then?” he asked.

“Do you know that your face looks like granite when you scowl? No wonder everyone in the House of Lords is terrified of you. What I want to speak to you about is a business proposition.”

“A business proposition.” With Eleanor Ramsay. God help him.

“Yes.” She sat back and smiled.

Soft flesh beneath his, her blue eyes half-closed in sultry pleasure, Scottish sunshine on her bare skin. The feeling of moving inside her, her smile as she said, “I love you, Hart.”

Did she remember? Did she regret, hate, or was it all gone?

Her smile was still as sweet, but Hart had learned the difficult way that Eleanor Ramsay was not a naive, biddable young woman. Eleanor had the Queen of England eating out of her hand. When Her Majesty had wanted to make Eleanor one of her ladies of the bedchamber, Eleanor had refused, citing the need to stay home and look after her father. The queen, a woman famous for getting her own way, had meekly let her go.

“What business?” Hart asked. If they could take care of it in the carriage, no need for Eleanor to even enter his house.

“Business better discussed in private.” Eleanor glanced about as the carriage turned down Grosvenor Street, heading toward Grosvenor Square. “Isn’t that Lady Mountgrove? Of course it is. Hello, Margaret!” Eleanor waved heartily to a plump woman who’d descended from a carriage and was preparing to enter a house.

Lady Mountgrove, one of the most gossipy women in the country, looked up in surprise. Her mouth fixed in a round O when she saw Lady Eleanor Ramsay in the Duke of Kilmorgan’s carriage, before she lifted her hand in a return acknowledgment.

“Haven’t seen her in donkey’s years,” Eleanor said as they rolled on. “Her daughters must be, oh, quite young ladies now. Have they made their come-outs yet?”

Her mouth was still so damned kissable, closing in a little pucker while she awaited his answer.

“I haven’t the faintest bloody idea,” Hart said.

“Really, Hart, you must at least glance at the society pages. You are the most eligible bachelor in all of Britain. Probably in the entire British Empire. Mamas in India are grooming their girls to sail back to you, telling them, ‘You never know. He’s not married yet.’ ”

“I’m a widower. Not a bachelor.”

“You’re a duke, unmarried, and poised to become the most powerful man in the country. In the world, really. Of course, such a man will need a wife.”

Breathing was becoming difficult. “Does this business proposition have anything to do with matchmaking? If so, I’ll ask you to go. I might even tell the coachman to slow down.” Hart didn’t want to discuss his matrimonial contemplations with Eleanor—not yet.

“Very amusing. No, it doesn’t. You’ll learn about it in good time. I can converse about more than one topic, you know. I had very good governesses, and they taught me well.”

Her tongue, her lips, moved in such a sultry way as she talked. A man who walked away from that had to be insane. Hart remembered the day he’d done so, still felt the tiny smack of the ring on his chest when she threw it at him, and the rage and heartbreak in her eyes.

He should have refused to let her jilt him, should have run off with her that very afternoon and bound her to him and never let her go. But he’d been young, angry, proud, and . . . embarrassed. The lofty Lord Hart Mackenzie, so sure he could do whatever he damn well pleased with anyone he damn well pleased, had learned differently with Eleanor.

That had been a long time ago.

“How are you, Eleanor?” Hart asked quietly.

The smile faltered. “Oh, about the same. Father is still writing his books, which are brilliant, but he can’t tell you how much a farthing is worth. I left him to amuse himself at the British Museum, where he is pouring over the Egyptian collection. I do hope he doesn’t start pulling apart the mummies.”

He might. Lord Ramsay had an inquisitive mind, and neither God nor museum authorities could stop him when he wanted to find the answer to something.

“Ah, here we are.” Eleanor craned to look up at Hart’s house as the carriage pulled to a halt. “As elegant as ever. I see your majordomo peering out the door with a look of dismay.” She put her fingers lightly on the hand of the footman who’d hurried from Hart’s front door to help her down. “It’s Franklin, isn’t it?” she said to the footman. “Gracious, you’ve become quite tall, haven’t you? And married, I hear. With a son?”

Franklin, who prided himself on his forbidding countenance while guarding the door of the most famous

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