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Lord of Scoundrels - Loretta Chase [114]

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guessed that you need not leave empty-handed."

"Gracious me, if you aren't the quick one." The smile she bent upon Jessica was perfectly amiable. Charity, clearly, was a businesswoman, and she was delighting in the challenge of a tough customer. "Being so quick, I guess you'll figure out what to do with my little lovey if I give him up easy-like, with no fuss. Just like I'll figure out what to do with him in London if you decide he isn't worth the trouble.

"I do not wish to hurry you, but I am obliged to be at the church when services end," Jessica said. "Perhaps you would be good enough to describe my 'trouble' in simple pounds, shillings, and pence."

"Oh, it's much simpler than that," said Charity. "All you have to do is give me the picture."

Chapter 17

At two o'clock that afternoon, Dain stood with his wife at the top of a rise overlooking the moors.

She had asked him to take her to the Haytor Rocks after luncheon. Her pallor and the lines of fatigue about her eyes and mouth had told him she was not up to the climb— or the climate, for even in mid-June, the moors could be bone-numbingly cold and wet. Along Devon's south coast, subtropical flowers and trees flourished as though in a hothouse. Dartmoor was another matter altogether. It made its own weather, and what went on in the highlands had little to do even with the conditions in a valley not two miles away.

Dain had kept his concern to himself, though. If Jessica wanted to climb one of the peaks of the great ridge bounding the moors, she had a good reason. If he hoped to mend the damage between them, he must show some evidence of trusting her judgment.

She had said, hadn't she, that she was tired of his mistrust…among a great many other things.

And so he held his tongue now as well, instead of telling her she'd be warmer in the shelter of the immense rock than on the edge of the ridge, facing the arctic blasts.

The brutal wind had sprung up when they'd reached the massive granite outcropping that crowned the hill. The clouds were churning into a sinister grey mass, promising a Dartmoor storm— while a few miles west, at Athcourt, the sun was no doubt shining brightly at this moment.

"I thought it would be like the Yorkshire moors," she said. Her gaze swept the rock-strewn landscape below them. "But it seems altogether different. Rockier. More…volcanic."

"Dartmoor is basically a heap of granite," he said. "According to my tutor, it is part of a broken chain extending to the Scilly Islands. A good part of it utterly defies cultivation, as the flora, I was told, amply demonstrates. Not much else besides gorse and heather is stubborn enough to obtain a roothold. The only plush patches of greenery— " He pointed to a lush green spot in the distance. "There, for instance. Looks like an oasis in a very rocky desert, doesn't it? But at its best, it's a bit of marsh. At the worst, it's quicksand. That's only a small patch. A few miles northwestward is the Grimspound Bog, just one of many that have swallowed sheep, cows, and men whole."

"Tell me how you'd feel, Dain," she said, never taking her eyes from the rugged vista stretching out below them, "if you'd learned a child had been left to wander these moors, unattended, for days, even weeks."

A dark, sullen child's face rose in his mind's eye.

A chill sweat broke out over his flesh and an immense weight filled his insides, as though he'd just swallowed lead.

"Christ, Jess."

She turned and looked up at him. Under the wide bonnet brim, her eyes were as dark as the lowering clouds overhead. "You know what child I mean, don't you?"

He couldn't keep himself upright under the weight within. His limbs were trembling. He forced himself to move away, to the mountainous rock. He set his clenched fist against the blessedly ungiving granite and pressed his throbbing forehead to his fist.

She came to him. "I misunderstood," she said. "I thought your hostility was toward the boy's mother. Consequently, I was sure you'd understand soon enough that the child was more important than an old grudge. Other men seem to deal

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