The Earl's Mistaken Bride - By Abby Gaines Page 0,19

told you he can

fire a bullet through an ace at sixty paces—”

“Not in polite society,” Marcus interjected.

“—and that he’s never lost a curricle race,” Lucinda

said triumphantly.

“Most impressive,” Constance murmured.

She fooled no one.

Lucinda set her teacup down with a rattle. “It seems

none of the things our society holds dear matter to you,”

she said with uncharacteristic uncertainty.

In a different conversation, Marcus would have

laughed to see her so confused.

“Would it be too vulgar of me to mention Spenford’s

fortune?” Lucinda asked.

“Yes!” Marcus snapped.

“But, Marcus, Jonathan says no one manages

financial affairs as well as you. His skill has made all

the difference to the family fortunes,” she told

Constance. “One more reason why he’s deemed such a

catch.”

“I don’t calculate the worth of my husband in pounds

and guineas,” Constance said apologetically.

Marcus felt as if he’d stumbled into a back-to-front

world, sense turned to nonsense. He had lived half his

years as heir and then Earl of Spenford. Lived them

right, and well, and properly. And now his wife was

attempting to shred the very fabric of those years?

“Ah, my dear, I begin to understand.” Lucinda

recovered her self-possession and shifted to the edge of

her seat, eyes gleaming in a way that Marcus knew

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meant she’d just sniffed out a new piece of gossip and

was about to pounce. “You chose to marry my cousin—

but not for his looks, his manner, his sporting prowess

or his fortune. Which can only mean—”

“Which can only mean you’ve badgered my wife

more than enough,” Marcus forestalled her.

“You’re right, Lucinda,” Constance said. “I married

my husband for his kindness.” What?

Constance’s chin—every bit as pointy as it had been

yesterday—went up in the air, as if she was ready to

defend her own. The way she’d defended her father to

Marcus yesterday. She gave him a reassuring smile,

which only worried him. From what, exactly, did she

plan on defending him?

“To be sure, a man who is kind to his mama will also

be kind to his wife,” Lucinda agreed knowledgeably,

giving Marcus a twinge of guilt that he didn’t

appreciate. “But that can’t be—”

“I don’t mean his kindness to the dowager countess,”

Constance said. “Though that’s admirable.”

“You actually admire me for something?” Marcus

asked drily.

“I’m referring to an incident in Piper’s Mead—the

village where I grew up—some three years ago,”

Constance said.

Lucinda leaned forward eagerly. Marcus had no idea

what Constance was about to say. Instinct told him to

be wary, but short of clamping a hand over his wife’s

mouth, he couldn’t stop her.

“I was walking to the village to buy thread when I

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THE EARL’S MISTAKEN BRIDE

encountered a group of youths who were—” Constance

swallowed “—abusing a puppy. They were kicking it as

if it were a—a ball.”

Lucinda gave a squeal of revulsion.

“This is hardly fodder for polite conversation,”

Marcus said. He recalled the event, but hadn’t

recognized Constance as the young woman he’d found

sitting in the roadway, the pathetic animal cradled in her

lap.

“I dispatched the boys without much bother,”

Constance said. Marcus found himself wondering how

she had achieved that. “But the puppy was near dead.”

Lucinda moaned.

Marcus half expected to have to ring for smelling

salts; this story wasn’t fit for the drawing room.

Constance would do better to extol his legendary

largesse toward his tenants at Christmas. Generosity on

an earlworthy scale.

“Spenford came along in his curricle,” Constance

said.

“I took up the dog and had my groom look after it,”

Marcus said quickly. “Anyone would have helped that

wretched animal.”

He remembered now that the girl—Constance—had

bitten her lip fiercely, saying in the shakiest of voices

that she didn’t dare cry, or the dog might feel its pain

more keenly.

Which made no more sense now than it did then. Nor

did it make sense that she had taken his assistance so

much to heart that she still remembered it with such

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clarity.

“Many men would have decided the creature was

beyond help and would have put it out of its misery,”

Constance countered with surprising firmness.

“Better indeed to have ended its suffering.” Lucinda

cast Marcus a reproachful look.

Marcus couldn’t remember why he hadn’t.

“I was surprised he didn’t,” Constance admitted.

“This was no treasured pet, Mrs. Quayle—Lucinda—

escaped from Palfont or another estate. This was a

mongrel of distinctly unattractive appearance and surly

manner. But Lord Spenford used his handkerchief to

clean the blood from its body—” Marcus was oddly

reminded of handing her his handkerchief in the coach

yesterday and her refusal to accept it “—and gave it

water from his own flask.”

Lucinda shuddered. Marcus shrugged apologetically.

“He took the puppy home and gave it to his stable-lad

to look after.”

“Kind indeed,” said his cousin.

“And there ends the tale,” he said heartily.

“Not quite,” Constance contradicted him. What a

surprise. “Your mother’s stable-lad is the son of our

gardener. I learned from John that the puppy didn’t at

first fare well. That unless you personally

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