She touched the mottled calf binding with her fingertips. Tears burned in her eyes. “I don’t know what to say.”

“Say that you will marry me, my love. I predict that all of the difficulties you perceive concerning my family will cease to exist.”

She felt a great tightness inside, squeezing her heart. The tears escaped and trickled down her cheeks. She jerked off her spectacles, grabbed a handkerchief, and began blotting madly. She had known this moment was coming, she reminded herself. It was just that she had hoped for more time.

“This is the thing with an illicit affair.” She lowered the handkerchief and looked at him through her tears. “It cannot end happily.”

“There are exceptions to every rule.”

“This is not one of the occasions when the rule may be broken.”

“Why not?”

“There is a secret in my past that is so dreadful that, if you knew it, you would be horrified. I cannot allow you to bring me into your family. It would not be right.”

He looked amused. “I cannot imagine you having a secret of that magnitude.”

She should not say a word, she thought. If she had any common sense, any sense of self-preservation, she would keep her mouth closed and send him away. But she loved him. She could not let him leave on a lie.

“Anthony, I am the woman who murdered Lord Gavin.”

“Yes, I know,” he said very casually. “Now, about my proposal—”

She stared at him, her mouth open. Perhaps she had not heard him correctly, she thought.

“You know?” she managed.

“I reasoned it out a few days ago.” His eyes gleamed with amused impatience. “Now if we might return to the subject of my proposal?”

“You don’t understand.” She retreated behind her chair, clutching the back so fiercely that her fingernails bit into the wood. “Anthony, I bashed his head in with a poker. He was a very important gentleman.”

“No one seems to miss him very much. I have the impression that, although they have never met you, Gavin’s widow and the other members of his family are privately grateful to you. To say nothing of the female shopkeepers who were saved by your action. Gavin was an evil man.”

“That is beside the p–point. I am wanted for murder. If the police ever find me I will be hanged. Think of the scandal.”

“You are not wanted for murder. As far as the police are concerned, you are a suicide, remember.”

“But—”

“The case is closed. No one is searching for you, my love.”

“What if someday someone recognizes me?”

“Highly unlikely, but in the event that were to happen, my family and I would gladly perjure ourselves on the matter of your identity. When you marry me, you will become a Stalbridge. We protect our own.” He smiled his slow, knowing smile. “Trust me when I tell you that no one will even think of contradicting us.”

“Quite correct,” Emma declared from the doorway. “Louisa, dear, I believe I told you back at the start of this affair that the Stalbridges might choose to ignore Society for the most part, but Society cannot ignore them. The family has the sort of money and connections that make people invulnerable. You will be safe with them.”

Louisa looked at her. The tiny, smoldering spark of hope that she had kept locked tightly away deep inside suddenly flared into a bright flame.

“Oh, Emma,” she said, “do you really think so?”

Emma chuckled. “I trust that after you are a married lady, you will find time to help me finish my memoirs, of course. We were just getting to the thrilling bits, if you will recall.”

“Of course,” Louisa said, smiling mistily.

Smiling, Emma winked and disappeared down the hall.

Louisa turned back to Anthony. “Are you certain this is what you want?”

“It is not merely a question of wanting.” He gathered her close. “I need you, my love. You and I are two halves of a whole. I believe we were made for each other.”

Joy flooded through her. She wrapped her arms very tightly around his neck.

“Yes,” she said simply.

“Welcome to the family.”

His mouth closed over hers. She abandoned herself to a love that she knew would carry them both safely into the future.