He clasped her by the shoulders. "Samantha, I cannot abandon you here."

"Yes, you can. You have my full blessing to do so."

"Then allow me to rephrase that. I will not abandon you here."

Desperation washed over her and she clutched at his jacket. "You must. Please. I can face anything-a scandal, ridicule, scorn. But I cannot face you being captured." Hot tears spilled onto her cheeks. "I cannot bear to see you die."

"Then marry me. And we'll leave together. All the arrangements are in place for us to do so." He cradled her face between his hands, his dark eyes serious and intense. "I don't want to live without you, Samantha. I want to share my life-my new law-abiding life-with you. We can continue to offer women a choice, but we'll do it together, legally, through financial channels. Set up a trust of some sort-whatever we decide upon. Together."

Her ability to speak, indeed her ability to breathe, abandoned her, and she simply stared at him, trying to absorb his words. I don't want to live without you.

Lowering his head, he rested his forehead on hers. "I love you, Samantha. So much I ache with it." He raised his head and pinned her with a deep gaze. "All those things I believed I never wanted… marriage, a family… things I thought I could never have… love changed all that. You changed all that. I want you for my wife. My lover. The mother of my children. I cannot deny there's a risk of me being arrested for the rescues I've performed, but we can leave England immediately following the ceremony."

She attempted to moisten her dust-dry lips with her equally dust-dry tongue, and failed miserably. "Say that again," she croaked.

"We can leave England-"

She laid a finger on his lips. "Not that. The 'I love you, Samantha' part."

Grasping the hand that had silenced his words, he pressed a kiss into her palm, his gaze boring into hers. "I love you." He lowered her hand to his chest, and his heartbeat thumped hard against her palm. "Feel that. It beats for you. If you want me, you'll make me the happiest man in the world. If you don't…" He pressed her palm tighter against him. "Then there will simply be a hole here. My heart is yours to take… or to break. Every woman deserves to choose. The choice is yours."

Sammie stared at him, her own heart pounding so hard she could feel the drumming in her temples. He loved her. Plain, odd, eccentric Sammie. Impossible. He must be daft. Or inebriated. She discreetly sniffed, but there was no odor of spirits about him. Only his clean, warm, masculine scent. And there was no doubting the sincerity in his gaze. Or the love burning from his dark eyes.

Still, just in case the poor man's wits were addled, she felt compelled to point out, "You realize I would make a frightful countess."

"No. You'd be a charming countess. Captivating. Caring. Clever and considerate. Courageous." He brushed gentle fingertips over her cheeks. "So many 'c' words to describe my extraordinary Samantha."

She locked her knees to remain upright and tried to gather her thoughts, but him loving her simply defied logic. Before she could even begin to corral her scattered emotions, a knock sounded.

They both turned toward the door. "Come in," Eric said.

The vicar entered, his questioning gaze bouncing between them. "Are we ready to begin?" he asked.

Eric turned back to her and their eyes met. He said nothing, merely watched her, waiting for her, allowing her to choose, praying she would want him.

With her gaze locked with his, she spoke to the vicar.

"Yes, we're ready to begin."

Exhilaration and joy swelled in Eric. He and Samantha would be together-as husband and wife.

Everything was going to work out perfectly.


Farnsworth, the magistrate's most trusted man, slipped into the Earl of Wesley's bedchamber, closing the door softly behind him. Looking about the spacious, luxurious room, he quickly made his way to the cherry-wood desk near the window. Hopefully he would find something here. His search of the earl's private study and the library had yielded nothing, and time was running short.

He checked through the drawers, but found nothing. Crouching down, he ran his hands lightly over the glossy wood. Underneath one of the legs, his fingers encountered a round knob. Scarcely daring to breathe, he twisted it. A faint click sounded and he was able to push aside a panel on the bottom. Something soft fell into his palm.

Sliding out his hand, he gazed at a black silk mask.

Triumph pulsed through him. This was just the evidence the magistrate needed. All Farnsworth had to do was deliver it to him.

Chapter Twenty-five

Eric stood at the altar and watched Samantha walk slowly down the aisle, her hand resting on her beaming father's sleeve. While the quiet hum of the crowd filled the church, her gaze remained steady on his, her spectacles magnifying the love shining from her eyes.

Love hit him like a punch in the heart, radiating warmth through his entire system. She joined him at the altar, a shy smile trembling on her lush lips, her gaze brimming with the same emotions swarming through him.

Fifteen minutes later, after they repeated the vows that joined them for life, the vicar blessed them, his rotund face wreathed with pride. Eric turned to his wife-his-wife-and a surge of happiness nearly knocked him off his feet. He brushed a chaste kiss against her upturned lips, and need overwhelmed his senses. He had to touch her, kiss her deeply. Now. Away from prying eyes. Tucking her hand through his elbow, he propelled her down the aisle. He practically ran through the vestibule, then outside, pulling her around the corner, into the shadows.

"Good heavens, Eric," she said in a breathless voice.

He yanked her into his arms and covered her mouth with his. A tiny sound of pleasure rumbled in her throat, and she parted her lips. His tongue slid into her welcoming honey-flavored warmth, his entire body humming with satisfaction. And nearly inconceivable happiness.

Sammie slid her arms around his waist, eagerly accepting the onslaught of his kiss… a kiss rilled with love and promise and deep passion. When he finally lifted his head, she clung to him limply and vaguely wondered where she'd placed her missing knees. She slowly opened her eyes and saw nothing but white. As she blinked rapidly to clear her vision, she felt her spectacles being removed. As soon as he'd slid them off, she saw him. Her husband. And the heat blazing from her husband's loving gaze seared through her like an inferno. Several seconds of silence passed, then a wry smile touched one corner of his mouth.

"I'm afraid we fogged up your spectacles."

"I thought I was seeing clouds. As if I'd died and gone to heaven."

"Heaven. Yes, that's what you feel like." He traced her bottom lip with his fingertip, the tickling sensation curling her toes inside her slippers. The sound of voices reached them as guests exited the church. He smiled down at her, warming her like the sun. "Come, my charming countess. Let us accept the best wishes and congratulations of our guests."

"Indeed, before they discover us kissing behind the bushes." Inclining her head in what she hoped was a countess-like fashion, she slipped her hand through his arm. Laughter rumbled in his throat, and they rounded the corner, prepared to face their guests.


Adam exited the church, squinting against the sun's sudden glare. He looked at the crowd gathering around the bride and groom, and he craned his neck higher, hoping for a glimpse of Margaret. As if the mere thought of Margaret conjured her up, he noticed her standing beneath the shade of the huge oak in the churchyard. She stood alone, head bent, hands clasped in front of her. Drawn to her like iron to a magnet, he veered away from the throng and approached her.

"Good morning, Lady Darvin," he said, stepping beneath the oak's umbrella of shade.

She turned toward him, and he stilled at her utterly bleak expression and the tortured look in her eyes.

Driven by deep concern, he dismissed propriety. Reaching out, he gently grasped her upper arm, then maneuvered himself so his back blocked her from any curious glances that might be cast their way. "What is wrong?"

She seemed to look right through him, her thoughts clearly far away. "The wedding ceremony… I was just remembering. I tried so hard not to, but sitting in that church…" A shudder ran through her. "I have not been inside it since my own wedding day."

He instantly recalled that day in vivid detail. He'd sat on his bed, sick with loss, staring at the clock, knowing with each passing minute the woman he loved was exchanging vows with another man. When the church bells had chimed in the distance, signifying the end of the ceremony, he'd opened a bottle of whiskey and proceeded for the first time in his life to get deliberately, blindly drunk. He'd stayed drunk for two days, then spent another two days suffering the worst hangover in the history of hangovers. After that, he'd simply… lived, believing she was happy.

One look at her stricken face disabused him of that notion. She looked so… haunted. So distraught. Her eyes shimmered with tears, but there was no mistaking them as the happy sort women often shed at weddings.

Was there something more to her unhappiness than he'd previously thought? Was there more involved than missing her home and her brother? More than the fact that she hadn't had children? Releasing her arm, he pulled his handkerchief from his pocket and pressed it into her hand.

Dabbing her wet eyes, she said, "Thank you. And forgive me. This is a happy day, yet here I am sniffling. I'm afraid I allowed my memories to distress me."