Penfeld peeped between his round little fingers. "If I've come at an inopportune moment, sir…?"


Justin blinked as if coming awake after a long sleep. The sleep of a lifetime. He reluctantly untangled his fingers from the skein of curls. "No, no. You've come at the perfect time. Give me your coat."


Justin had to admire his valet's aplomb. Penfeld turned his back and peeled off his coat as if finding his master cuddled on the beach with a nude, insensible woman were a normal occurrence. He started to

fold it. Justin tugged it out of his hand. If he hadn't stopped him, Justin knew he would have washed

and pressed it before handing it over.


Penfeld rubbed his arms, shivering in his crisp linen shirt as if he were the one naked. "I do say, is it

a mermaid, sir?"


"Do you see any gills?"


Penfeld chanced a tentative glance over his shoulder. What he did see was a voluptuous young woman being tenderly enveloped in the folds of his coat.


Justin stood, gathering her like a child in his arms. Her head lolled warm and damp against his shoulder. His gaze traced her features-the elfin tilt of her nose, the pout that made no apology for its sensual promise.


Penfeld dared to turn around. "Wherever did she come from, sir? Could she be the victim of a shipwreck perhaps? Or a stowaway?"


Grinning, Justin lifted his head. "No stowaway, Penfeld, but a gift. A gift from the sea."


Penfeld couldn't remember the last time he'd seen his master truly smile. Justin was already striding

down the beach, his steps no longer weighted, but as light as if he carried not a woman, but a blithe

spirit fashioned of sea foam and Stardust. As Penfeld watched, Justin did the most extraordinary thing.

He lowered his head and pressed a kiss to the tip of the woman's nose.


Penfeld mopped his forehead, wondering if they'd both been struck with the moon madness so coveted and feared by the natives.


* * *

Emily burrowed into the thin mattress, her mind tugging greedily at the blurred edges of sleep. She despised waking up. Despised the sleet tapping at the tiny attic window, the wash water frozen in her basin, the prospect of crawling down the steep stairs to teach French to wealthy little brats who didn't know their demitasses from their derrieres and who teased her mercilessly because her dress was two years too small. Groaning, she fumbled for a pillow to pull over her head. Perhaps if she hid long enough, Tansy would come tapping on the door with a mug of steaming black coffee smuggled out from under Cook's bulbous nose.


Her groping search yielded no pillow. A new sensation crept over her, a feeling utterly delicious and so foreign to her gloomy attic that she wanted to weep at its beauty.


Warmth.


She slowly opened her eyes. The sun fanned tingling fingers across her face. She lay there, stunned, basking in its heat, enveloped in its healing rays. She closed her eyes against the dazzling shaft of light. When she opened them again, a twisted green face hung only an inch above her own, its pointed teeth bared in a ferocious grimace.


She shrieked and scrambled backward, groping for a weapon. Her fingers curled around the first blunt object they could find. As her back slammed into a wall, dust exploded, setting her off on a quaking

chain of sneezes.


"Now look what you've done, Trini. You've frightened the poor girl. I dare say she's never seen a

savage before."


Emily wiped her streaming eyes. Now two faces were peering at her. One was still green, but the other was round and decidedly English. It was clicking its tongue and shaking its side-whiskers like a great overgrown hamster.


The fierce green face loomed nearer. "How do you do, miss? The sheer luminosity of your countenance beguiles me. I take extreme delight in welcoming you, our most charming breast."


The round face pinkened. Emily gaped. The savage's words had come rolling out in deep, resonant tones as if he'd just strolled from the hallowed corridors of Cambridge, his feathered cloak swinging around his shoulders. Emily realized his teeth were bared not in a snarl, but in a beaming smile. Nor was he entirely green. Deep furrows of jade had been tattooed in his honey-colored skin in elaborate curls and soaring wings.


A soft groan came out of the shadows. "Not breast, Trini. Guest."


She squinted into the corner, but the sunlight had blinded her. She could make out only a vague shape.


The tattooed man stretched out a hand. She recoiled and smacked it away. "I'll keep my breast to

myself, thank you. I'm not a simpering ninny for some native Lothario to ravish."


The savage threw back his head. His musical laughter rocked the small hut.


"Did I say something amusing?" she asked the hamster. Her head was starting to pound and she was wishing even more desperately for that coffee.


"Oh, dear, I'm afraid so. You see-the Maori don't ravish their victims." He leaned forward and whispered, "They eat them."


Emily felt herself go the same color as the snorting native. She pressed herself to the wall. "Stay away from me. I'm warning the both of you. I wasn't kicked out of every girls' school in England for nothing." Emily disliked lying. She much preferred to embellish the truth.


She attacked the air with her makeshift weapon. The native danced backward. Narrowing her eyes in what she hoped was a menacing fashion, she said, "That's right. I know how to use this thing."


"What a comfort," came a dry voice from the corner. "If Penfeld ever decides to stop serving tea long enough to dust, you'll be of great service."


Emily glanced down to discover she was threatening a cannibal with a feather duster. Her cheeks burned.


A man unfolded himself from the shadows with lanky grace. He stepped into a beam of sunlight, tilting back a battered panama hat with one finger.


Their eyes met and Emily remembered everything. She remembered swimming until her arms and legs had turned leaden and her head bobbed under the water with each stroke. She remembered crawling

onto the beach and collapsing in the warm sand. Then her memories hazed-a man's mouth melted tenderly into hers, his dark-lashed eyes the color of sunlight on honey.


Emily gazed up into those eyes. Their depths were a little sad, a trifle mocking. She couldn't tell if they mocked her or himself. She forced her gaze down from his, then wished she hadn't.


Her throat constricted. His physical presence was as daunting as a blow. She had never seen quite so much man. The sheer volume of his sun-bronzed skin both shocked and fascinated her. In London the men swathed themselves in layers of clothing from the points of their high starched collars to the tips of their polished shoes. Shaggy whiskers shielded any patch of skin that risked exposure.


But this man wore nothing but sheared-off dungarees that clung low on his narrow hips. The chiseled muscles of his chest and calves drank in the sunlight. To Emily's shocked eyes, he might as well have been naked.


Another unwelcome memory returned-damp sand clinging to her own bare skin. The pulse in her throat throbbed to mortified life. She glanced down to find herself wrapped in the voluminous folds of a man's frock coat. The sleeves hung far below her hands, nearly enveloping the duster.


"My man Penfeld was kind enough to lend you his coat."


The husky scratch of the stranger's voice sent shivers down her spine. An endearing lilt had been layered over his clipped English, flavoring it with an exotic cadence. She had heard similar accents in Melbourne.


Disconcerted to find her thoughts read so neatly, she shot him a nasty look. A dazzling smile split the somber black of his stubbled chin. Dear Lord, the amiable wretch had kissed her! What other liberties

had he taken while she lay in his embrace? Dropping the offensive duster, Emily buried her fists in the coat and hugged herself, fighting a sudden chill.


Penfeld-the-Hamster leaned forward in his shirtsleeves and suspenders and peered into her face with concern. "You look a trifle pale, miss. Would you care for some tea?"


"Coffee, please. Very strong and very black."


Penfeld looked as dismayed as if she'd asked for a straight shot of arsenic. His whiskers quivered.


"You'll have to forgive him," said the man. "He's been waiting years for the opportunity to serve a lady tea."


"He'll have to wait a bit longer, then, won't he?" she snapped.


She couldn't tell if it was laughter or reproach that kinked the corner of the stranger's well-shaped mouth. While Penfeld retreated to the cast-iron stove, shaking his head sadly, the native squatted and grinned at her. To Emily he still looked hungry.


"Fix some for him, too," she commanded. "Or does he prefer blood?"


The stranger crossed his muscular arms over his chest. "Only the blood of virgins."


Emily pasted on her cockiest smile, determined to boast her way past these half-naked rogues.