Chapter One

Boston, Massachusetts, May 1871

Dorothea Sinclair gazed out at the far-reaching sweep of the broad Atlantic, hoping the inshore wind might chase the heat from her flushed cheeks. A roiling mass of embarrassment, anger, and indignation filled her heart to overflowing, each emotion warring for dominance. Even worse, the devil known as self-doubt gnawed at her with small, insistent teeth.

Curse it all, but she couldn’t allow herself to fail in the course she’d set. She had worked, hoped, and planned far too long for this opportunity, and she’d be darned if she’d creep back home with her tail between her legs.

Home. The very word sapped some of her rage and allowed longing to take its place. The last thing she’d expected after finally springing herself from the small town in Maine where she’d been born and raised was homesickness. But as an honest woman she had to admit she missed it all: the noise of the little house on the shore, filled to overflowing with her younger brothers and her parents’ dog, Chieftain. Her mother’s cooking; her steady patience in the face of all things, and the feeling of safety that accompanied her father when he came home from work in the forge at the end of the day.

She ached for it all, sharp and real as a barb to her heart.

Nothing about Boston felt safe: not the rooming house where she lived or the crowded streets. Not even the newspaper office where she worked.

Especially after today.

How could she ever go back there again? Yet she’d worked so hard for this chance—and talked it up at length back home. She couldn’t give up, either.

The wind blew harder and rocked her on the balls of her feet. To think she’d expected to become a successful newspaper woman within three months, with a byline and a credible reputation. Instead she found herself a dogsbody with even less clout than the boys who carried the papers, subjected to any humiliation.

Including advances from the chief editor’s son.

Dorothea chewed her lower lip and asked herself what she meant to do about it. A resourceful woman, she’d met many a challenge in the past with a combination of forthrightness and determination. Was she about to let a toad-faced, weedy, evil-minded snob like Jeremy Winton derail her future?

She had no doubt Jeremy Winton was a snob of the first water—and worse. Supposed to be assisting his father, Montgomery Winton, in running the Guardian, Dorothea hadn’t seen him do a lick of actual work in all the weeks she’d been there. When he did show up—rarely enough—he stood around braying, boasting about the social events he’d attended and bragging about the regatta team he captained, lately all while keeping an eye cocked in Dorothea’s direction. Though he’d made her uncomfortable from the start, today had been the first time he’d sneaked past her defenses and caught her alone. And what he’d said then…

Dorothea’s face burned anew, defying the cool wind off the ocean. She should have slapped him right then and there, she really should. But one couldn’t slap Montgomery Winton’s son and expect to keep one’s job. That would have been it, and she’d be crawling off home before she knew it.

She blinked furiously against the sting of the wind—she wouldn’t allow it as anything more—and tried desperately to garner some peace from the broad Atlantic. The sea was the sea—here or at home. And that meant she really wasn’t so far from her parents, her brothers, and her best friend, Jo Grier.

But by heaven, something had to happen that would turn things around for her.

Upon that thought, the wind gusted harder and lifted the hat she wore straight off her head. Before Dorothea could react, the bonnet turned three somersaults and scuttled away along the waterfront where she stood, heading westward.

She spoke a word no gently raised young woman should know and set off in pursuit. She loved that hat; before coming to Boston, she’d saved her money for weeks to afford it and had helped Jo Grier—a talented seamstress—trim it up with blue ribbons and clusters of forget-me-nots that matched the color of Dorothea’s eyes. It had a sweet little half-veil in the front and, Dorothea felt, made her look older than her twenty years. When it came to sophistication, she needed all the help she could get.

She might have had one of the worst days of her career, but curse it all, she wouldn’t lose that hat!

The waterfront here in south Boston, as she rather belatedly realized, lay nearly deserted, and the sun rapidly sank to the west behind the crowded buildings. She’d stood here far too long trying to gather up her courage, and now most of the workers and other folk had gone home to supper.

At Mrs. Bennett’s boarding house, the food would already be laid on the long, scarred table. And not enough of it. Agnes Bennett ran her house with a miserly attention to cost. A boarder had to be on time and quick with a serving spoon to get her fill.

Dorothea nearly groaned as her hat, the little veil fluttering, came to a halt on a round cobblestone and then, just as she bent to snag it, took off again, tumbling still faster toward the barrier that fronted the road.

She would likely lose her hat and miss her supper.

Plus she’d have to walk all the way back to Mrs. Bennett’s in the half-darkness, never a safe bet for a woman alone.

The hat caught on the barrier and teased her by stopping just long enough for her to stoop and brush it with her fingers. This time when she bent down, her hair loosened and blew around her face in a black curtain that obscured her vision.

The blue hat sailed up and over the barrier, and Dorothea, determined now beyond all reason, scrambled after it in a tangle of bombazine skirt.

Somehow, in her mind, the hat had come to represent everything—her future here in Boston, her success, her ability to fulfill her dreams.

The hat blew into the road, where a carriage barely missed it. The horse reared and faltered; the driver shook his fist at Dorothea. The hat tumbled across and reached the other side.

There…Dorothea didn’t know from whence the man appeared, but he did so just in time to swoop and snatch up her hat before it moved onward.

Half grateful and wholly exasperated, she studied him, and her eyes and her heart fell. Oh, no, a ruffian.

She’d been well-advised since arriving in Boston to avoid men just like this. Mrs. Bennett had warned her, as had Molly, the female typesetter at the Guardian and, initially, Montgomery Winton himself. Riffraff, folks tended to call such men, and endemic in Boston, where a wide gulf existed between the established community and the Irish incomers.

And, if she was Dorothea Sinclair, this man must be Irish. His heritage lay upon him like a brand, visible even in the fading light. From his clothing, he must be a working man—or worse.

He sported a long leather coat, well-scuffed and worn open to show a pair of rough trousers and a workman’s shirt, unbuttoned at the throat.

Nothing wrong in that. Dorothea’s own father was a workman, if a skilled one—the blacksmith back home. This man had no blacksmith’s build. Instead he looked light on his feet, square-shouldered, and graceful as quicksilver. Brash confidence rolled off him in waves.

As she stood staring across the road in consternation, he held up her hat and grinned before casting a look both ways and jogging over to her side.

He brought a presence with him that backed Dorothea up a step or two. She might credit it to the set of those fine shoulders or the grin that still occupied his face or the swagger he displayed that made the most of his height, which, surely, didn’t top six feet.

He reached her, spent an instant examining her closely, and presented her hat with a sweeping bow worthy of a practiced thespian.

“Lovely miss, I’m thinking this belongs to you.”

“Yes. Yes, it does, thank you.”

Dorothea reached for the hat, but like the rascal he undoubtedly was, he kept it from her grasp, pretending to examine it closely. He brushed off a bit of grit from the brim and fingered the now-tattered veil.

“A mite worse for its adventure, but no doubt you can mend it, women having a certain magical talent for such things.”

Again Dorothea reached for her hat; again he kept it from her only to take a step closer and set it on her head.

“There you go, beautiful lady. You will be sure and hold on to it more closely next time.”

Dorothea, assaulted by the full force of his masculinity, said nothing, though she reached up one hand and clamped the hat to her head. She looked into his face, and all the breath fled her lungs.

He wore no cap and had a headful of copper curls well-tossed by the wind. His face screamed Ireland, with a broad forehead and slightly squared jaw, all sprinkled with freckles visible even beneath his worker’s tan. His eyes—but no. Dorothea met them once before her gaze skittered away much as the hat had, only to return again on a rush of fascination.

Tawny gold as those of a tomcat, his eyes held a world of emotions: amusement first of all, that flaming confidence, an uncanny wisdom, and a hint of daring. Dorothea responded to the last first—seldom did she fail to accept a dare.

He examined her in turn, just as curiously. The tawny eyes, fringed by copper lashes and set beneath brows as mobile as runaway commas, moved to her hair, then to her mouth, where they lingered before returning to her eyes.

“Lovely, indeed,” he said in a voice like warm honey. “But surely you know you shouldn’t be here on your own, not with night coming on.”

“Night wasn’t coming on when I arrived.”

“Aye, well, time has marched along.” His accent, not overtly Irish after all, owed more to phrasing than inflection. But its timbre sounded seductive as a promise. “It’s not safe for you to be alone here. Where were you bound?”

A good question. She should make for the rooming house like a frightened mouse; she wanted, with surprising intensity, to go home to Maine.

Her only reply, though, came in the form of a loud rumble from her stomach.

His face filled with laughter and warmth. “Well, now, and you should be bound home for your dinner.”

The laughter breeched Dorothea’s defenses as nothing else could. She relaxed marginally.

“I fear I am too late. The board will already be laid at the house where I’m staying, and all the food—of meager proportion as it is—disappearing even now down half a score of gullets.”

“You are not from Boston. You cannot have been here long—such a flower could not bloom here and I not knowing.”

“I’m from Maine, actually,” Dorothea admitted, the color flooding her cheeks again.

“Maine, eh?” Did some of the light in his extraordinary eyes dim? “And what might you be doing in this great, wicked city?”

“Working. There aren’t a lot of good opportunities back home.”

He took a half step back and eyed her up and down. “Let me guess—you’re working at the university, one of the girls who take the tea cart round.”

“I am not! And, if I may say so, that’s quite insulting.” Though she’d been asked to run and fetch tea more than once, at the newspaper office. “Is that what I look like to you?”

“You look like the bonniest thing I’ve ever seen, if you want the truth. And me, I never lie to a beautiful woman.”

Dorothea rolled her eyes, and he grinned again.

“I gather, Miss Lovely, you are not beguiled by my silver tongue.”

Oh, she was beguiled, all right. But she said tartly, “On the contrary, sir, you remind me of my younger brothers, who will say anything to win their way. Well,” she amended swiftly, “Andrew doesn’t say much yet, him still being an infant.” Andrew had been a surprise to her parents last Christmas, albeit a welcome one. “But Alastair and Archie could give you a run for your money.”

“Ah, then. I’m thinking your name will also start with an A. Angela, perhaps, as befits such a heavenly vision.”

Oh, he was quick! “I assure you, I am no angel. And neither does my name start with an A.”

He cocked his head as if awaiting further enlightenment. When she buttoned her lip and failed to elucidate, he said, “To be sure, the true sin is that your parents produced only one daughter, and you pretty enough to rival the moon.”

“Blarney,” Dorothea pronounced, but couldn’t defeat the smile that tugged at her lips.

He laid his hand on his heart and bowed again. “Perhaps you will do me the honor of letting me see you home.”

“Well, I don’t know.”

“Or better yet, since you fear the vultures at your rooming house will have eaten all the grub, you’ll let me buy you some supper.”

“Oh, I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

He ignored her protest as if it didn’t exist. “I know a fine little place—not in the best neighborhood, perhaps, but the grub makes up for it.” He drew himself up and offered his arm. “Come now, Miss Angel; you can’t expect me to abandon you here on your own, and me a gentleman.”