one, too. Indeed, his words, when he spoke them, hit her like a dash of icy water.
“Do not mistake me, ma’am. Your willingness is very tempting, and I have half a mind to encourage it, but my reputation is black enough already without perpetrating such a ruse. Besides, I flatter myself that I have no need to pretend to be another man in order to seduce a pretty girl.” His lip curled into a faintly mocking smile. “This Nicholas of yours was a fortunate fellow to have inspired so much devotion, but alas, I am not him.”
“Yes, you are.” Her temper sparked to life. “Do you take me for a fool? Did you think I wouldn’t know you? I recognized you from the moment we met. Why in heaven do you suppose I swooned?”
“Because you’re unwell,” he said.
Maggie flinched, and then, in typical fashion, bristled with outrage. How dared he? Using her illness as a means to win an argument! It was a tactic often employed by Fred, and one she deemed wholly unworthy of the man standing before her now. She opened her mouth to tell him so.
Just then, her attention was arrested by the sight of St. Clare’s tiger. The boy was watching the two of them with undisguised interest as he walked the horses.
Maggie felt a rush of mortification. Had he heard her call his master Nicholas? Had he seen them kissing? Her cheeks flamed. She turned abruptly away from St. Clare and walked briskly across the grass.
St. Clare was at her side in an instant, silently offering his arm. She took it grudgingly. “Enzo understands only enough English to mind my cattle,” he said as if reading her mind.
“Oh? Is he blind as well?”
“I’m afraid not. But you needn’t worry that he’ll tell tales. Even if he could come up with enough English to gossip amongst the servants, he wouldn’t lower himself to do so. He’s loyal to a fault.”
“That’s comforting.”
“Miss Honeywell—”
“I recognized your handwriting, you know.” She felt him tense slightly against her as they walked. “How could I not? I was the one who taught you how to read and write. Did you imagine for even one second that I’d forgotten?”
“You are mistaken,” St. Clare said quietly.
“And how did you know that I wasn’t the one who responded to your note? No, you needn’t answer. It’s plain enough. After all those hours spent writing out words and phrases for you to copy in your copybooks, my particular style of handwriting must be emblazoned on your brain.”
Her chest was beginning to feel heavy, her heart pounding harder as her lungs worked to accommodate the strain of walking and talking.
“I’d begun to convince myself that you couldn’t be him,” she said, hearing the first traces of breathlessness in her voice. “That it was merely a strong resemblance. I told myself that the real Nicholas would have come to find me. That the moment he set foot back on English shores, he’d have made for Somerset. He wouldn’t have spent a month in London gambling and engaging in duels.” She shot him an accusing glance. “But it wasn’t just any duel, was it? It was a duel with Frederick Burton-Smythe. Apparently, your hatred for him has outlived your love for me.”
St. Clare’s expression hardened. “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Then explain it to me! Tell me which parts I’ve got wrong!”
“Everything. That’s what you’ve got wrong. Everything.”
“I don’t pretend to understand how you came to be here, or why it is you’re pretending to be a viscount—”
“I am a viscount.”
He said it with such conviction that Maggie almost believed him. Almost. “If you didn’t trust me enough to tell me the truth, why did you seek me out? You must have known that I’d recognize you.”
“You sought me out,” he reminded her. “To beg for Burton-Smythe’s life, if you’ll recall.”
“Not then. After that. At the theater and today and…” Maggie faltered. “If I’m a stranger to you, then…why did you kiss me?”
“If you must ask me that, I can only assume that you’ve vastly underrated your charms.” St. Clare looked down at her with studied nonchalance. “Consult your glass. You’re an uncommonly beautiful girl. What gentleman wouldn’t kiss you if given encouragement?”
“And I encouraged you, did I?”
“Didn’t you?”
Her brows knit together. “No… Perhaps… I don’t know! Are you trying to provoke a quarrel? Or is it simply that you wish to hurt me?”
A shadow of some unidentifiable emotion passed over his face. “I wouldn’t hurt you.