could never be.


She broke away from his compelling gaze, forcing herself to remain cool, knowing there was only one way to earn any peace for either of the men she had loved.


She slipped an airy note into her voice. "If you must know, Nicholas has asked me to marry him."


The wild look in Justin's eyes deepened. "What a tidy way to wrap up your inheritance! He marries you, takes you back to his mansion in New Zealand. And how long do you think it will be before the new

Mrs. Saleri suffers a tragic accident? A week? A month? I know Nicky. Once he has your money, he'll have no further need for you. You'll only be an encumbrance to him. He'll dispose of you just as he did David and me." Justin crossed to her. "Have you forgotten what a monster he is? My God, he plotted your own father's death."


She lowered her lashes before he could see his own agony mirrored in her eyes. She had to use all of

her wiles and passion to convince this man she hated him. She closed her eyes, summoning back all

those feelings of anger and abandonment she'd fought so hard to vanquish.


When she opened them, she knew they sparkled with furious contempt. "He wasn't the one who pulled the trigger though, was he? Or the one who lied about it for seven years."


Justin ran a hand through his hair. A cynical laugh escaped him. "Nicky always was a randy little bastard. He'll probably let you live for a little while. At least until he tires of your skills in bed." He lifted a

mocking eyebrow. "And we both know how considerable those are."


Emily drew back her hand and slapped him. He stared at her, giving her a harrowing glimpse of his

utter helplessness before his eyes hardened to polished amber.


With one smooth motion he shoved her back against the wall. His powerful hands cupped her throat and his voice lowered to a husky growl. "If you think I'm capable of murder, you're bloody right. Because as God is my witness, I'll kill you myself before I'll let him have you."


He ground his lips against hers in a brief, raging kiss, then he was gone, leaving her heart as splintered

as her door.


She slid down the wall to a sitting position and pressed her mouth to her knee to muffle her anguished sobs.


"Sir, sir! Please! You must wake up."


Someone was shaking him. Groaning, Justin batted the persistent hands away and rolled to his side. His fingers struck something cool. He pried his bleary eyes open to discover it was the taloned foot of the settee. He vaguely remembered collapsing in the study in the wild hope of silencing the torment in his head long enough to let him sleep. But it was stupor, not sleep, that had finally claimed him.


David's face had danced through his restless slumber. In his dreams he had reached for him, but David had vanished, just like Emily.


"Sir, please! You don't understand. You have to get up!"


The genteel hands lost their patience. They fastened on Justin's lapels and jerked him up, shaking him

like a rag doll. The round moon of Penfeld's face finally penetrated the shrouded gloom of the library. The valet looked dangerously near tears and that fact, more than any other, stirred Justin to consciousness.


"Penfeld? My God, what is it, man? What's wrong?"


The valet's plump lip quivered. "She's gone, sir. For good this time, I fear."


* * *

Emily stood on the deck of the steamer and watched the coast of England melt into the dawn mist.

Every rhythmic chug of the engine's pistons, every wave riding against the iron hull, carried her farther away from Justin. She pulled up her hood, drawing it like a cool veil over her seething emotions. As Nicky rested his hands on her shoulders, her gloved hands clenched on the rail.


"It's only a matter of time now, cara mia. Once we find that land grant he tampered with, we'll have

the evidence we need. We can take it to the authorities and, with your testimony, have him put away for life. He'll never harm either of us again." He gave her shoulders a reassuring squeeze. Emily shuddered. "Don't be afraid, love. I'll take care of you now. Once we've put this ugly business of the past behind us, we can discuss our future. But first we must bring your father's murderer to justice."


Emily faced him. "Yes, Nicky," she said, standing on her tiptoes to kiss his cheek. "That's really all I

ever wanted. Justice."


* * *


As her bedroom door flew open, Olivia Connor, the Duchess of Winthrop, rolled over and sat up in her modest tent bed.


"Opening the door instead of going through it? How dreadfully conventional. You disappoint me, son."


Justin strode across the room and flung himself to his knees beside the bed. He wrung her hands in his desperate grasp. "Please, Mother. I need your help."


Her rag-wrapped curls bobbed knowingly. "It's the girl, isn't it?"


"Isn't it always?" His beseeching eyes searched her face. "Father's fastest ship. I have to know. What is it? Is it a steamer? A sailing ship? Think hard, Mother. Emily's very life may depend on it."


She absently twirled a ringlet around her finger. A slow smile dawned on her face. "I should have thought of that sooner." She beamed up at him. "Why, the fastest ship would be the Olivia, of course!"


* * *


Sailors scurried like ants over the polished deck of the graceful clipper known as the Olivia. They scrambled up and down ramps, staggering beneath the crates and barrels of supplies for the long journey ahead. They shimmied up the towering masts to secure the sails, all the while casting their new master some very uneasy looks. Even the most grizzled and salt-beaten of them was aware that London gossip reputed him to be a madman. Should they bid a tearful farewell to their mistresses and wives? Was he about to send them all on a dark voyage of destruction?


They found it even more perplexing that their young captain stood straddle-legged on the deck,

bellowing instructions as if he'd been born to command.


Justin was well aware of their trepidation, but there was damn little he could do about it now. He was determined to have the ship outfitted and asail by nightfall if it took every sailor in London to do it. The sea had brought him Emily, and he was more than willing to harness the sea to keep her.


As he stalked to the prow of the ship, the cool moist air filled his lungs. A blanket of fog had hung over the harbor all day. The slender spars rose like ghostly fingers into the darkening sky. The massive bosom of the clipper's figurehead jutted over the water.


Justin reached up and ran his fingers over her carved cheek. "Wish me luck, Duchess," he whispered. "I'm going to need it."


"Sir?"


Justin swung around to see a figure emerging from the fog. A carpeted satchel swung from his hand. A heavy woolen pea coat had replaced his frock coat, and a parrot-green bandanna hung at a jaunty angle around his neck. But even those things did not shock Justin as much as the dangerous-looking rifle slung across his back.


"Penfeld?"


The valet clicked his heels and gave him a snappy salute. "Aye, Cap'n, reporting for duty."


A rush of helpless affection blurred Justin's vision. God seemed to have dedicated himself to making amends for giving him Frank Connor for a father.


"Ah, Penfeld, I can't ask you to follow me halfway across the world, searching for a woman who may

not even want me to find her."


"Pish posh, sir, if I may be so bold as to say so. I've discovered civilization isn't to my taste. I've come

to believe a bit of adventure, like a cup of hot tea, warms the blood and keeps a man's heart thumping." He reached into the deep pocket of his coat. "Forgive my presumption, but I stopped at a shop on my way to the harbor. I thought you might have need of this."


Justin almost ducked as a long-barreled pistol came sailing at his head. He caught it between two fingers and ran his hands over the sleek metal. It was the first time he had held a pistol in his hands since he

had killed his best friend with one.


The valet's eyes sparkled with a determination to match his own. Justin gave him a roguish grin and tucked the pistol into his waistband.


He strode down the deck and threw an arm around Penfeld's shoulders. "Come on, you old tar, there'll

be no slackers among this crew. There's work to be done and bonnie fair maidens to be rescued."


* * *

Emily sat in a chair on the deck of the small steamer they had booked in Melbourne, watching Nicholas shave. He insisted on shaving outdoors, where the light was better. A white towel was slung around his neck and his shirt was half unbuttoned to reveal the smooth muscles of his chest. He leaned over the round mirror clipped to the railing and puckered his sensual lips.


Nicholas was talking. He was always talking. He talked incessantly, always about himself. She wondered why he'd bothered to rid himself of her father and Justin in such a clumsy manner. If they had remained his partners, it would have taken him only a few years to bore them to death. At least she'd been spared fending off any romantic advances. She understood now why he was satisfied with only chaste pecks on the cheek. No man that much in love with himself could have any desire for another. He seemed content to satisfy his own selfish pleasures with the mirror.