Robert
Stanton, the ninth Duke of Riverton, swept his gaze over the beautiful
woman standing in his drawing room and searched his mind for a
memory that could have involved meeting such an intriguing creature.
"Have we met?" he asked with a grin.
The
woman's full lips parted into a smile that caused his heart to
skip a beat. Soft brown eyes fringed with long black lashes stared
back at him in a face of the creamiest skin he'd ever laid eyes
on. He resisted the urge to sweep his fingers through the chestnut
curls that framed her face like spun silk. She was enchanting.
"I
am Miss Hope Edwards."
He
frowned and shook his head. He did not know this woman.
She
rolled her eyes. "I've traveled from Boston to accept your proposal
of marriage. You sent for
me."
Robert
tensed. The muscles in his body tightened until he thought they
would snap with the slightest movement. He'd been called a lot
of things in his lifetime but "husband" would never be one of
them.
He
considered hurrying the woman on her way, but knew he would only
succeed in offending her by doing so. Why he should care was beyond
him, but he did. "I am afraid you have the wrong man, Miss Edwards."
The
light in the woman's eyes turned to stone. She squared her shoulders.
"If my clothing isn't what you expected, I apologize, my lord.
I understand it isn't what you are accustomed to in London, but
I had nothing else to wear."
Robert
offered her a smile. Her gown certainly suited the country far
more than London, but it wasn't horrid. "Your gown is quite stunning,
but I'm not the gentleman you're looking for."
Miss
Edwards stamped the heel of her boot into the carpet. "I do not
find this amusing. Am I not what you envisioned? Is my hair too
dark, my eyes too large? What?"
Astonished
by Miss Edwards' spirit, Robert could do nothing but stare at
her. She was far more than intriguing. She exuded both seduction
and innocence in the tilt of her head, the fire in her gaze. If
he'd met her in any other situation, he would have pursued her
relentlessly until she agreed to be his mistress. As far as he
was concerned, such a prospect was still not out of the question.
He
eyed her appreciatively. "I think you are stunning, Miss Edwards.
If I have offended you, you must accept my apology."
She
shook her head as though she were speaking to a disobedient three-year-old.
"Never in all my life did I expect this
reaction to my arrival. A peck on the cheek, a warm welcome..."
Her eyes widened. She snapped her head in his direction. "What
did you say?"
"I
think you're striking. Your hair is the shade of walnuts roasting
over the fire, your skin like cream, your feet so small they could
fit in the palm of my hand." He narrowed his eyes as he slid his
gaze down the curve of her breasts, the line of her hips. "I doubt
there is a man in all of London who could resist your womanly
charms."
"Then
you are--"
"But
I'm not the gentleman you're looking for. I am the Duke of Riverton...not
Lord Ripley."
And
truthfully, he was thankful for it because he pitied the man.
If the many merchants that visited the house each week were any
indication, Ripley had been riddled with debt, which made the
man's betrothal to an American heiress all the more clever. No
father in London would give his daughter to a poor man, no matter
his title. The only other option would be to marry someone who
would not suspect that the fine clothing and immaculately decorated
houses masked an overwhelming debt. An unsuspecting American family
would think a viscount was a fine catch.
Robert
smiled. He'd never met Ripley but at that moment, he'd wished
he had merely to congratulate him on such a splendid scheme. Obviously,
it had succeeded.
With
a frustrated sigh, Miss Edwards glanced at her surroundings. "This
is his house."
He
nodded. "It was."
Her
gaze snapped back to his. "Was?"