Olivia paced the bright scarlet carpeting of Lady Abethnot’s pristine drawing room, fingers laced behind her, staring at the tiny green-stemmed red apples that dotted the wallpaper, waiting impatiently for Edmund to arrive as he said he would in his note to her this morning.
It had been three days since the ball. Three days for her to consider their rather heated conversation, their uncomfortable dance, that unconventional…kiss. If one could call it a kiss. She shivered at the memory of his warm touch, her boldness that, up until the moment of contact, had been totally unplanned.
He had most definitely changed in the last few months, and not just physically. True, his hair was quite short now, his skin not as deeply tanned, no doubt because he’d moved from sunny France to chilly London, and he’d dispensed of the jewelry and cologne, which surprised her most. But it was more than that. He acted different from the Edmund she remembered, and it had been just his unusual behavior of three days ago that confused her now, made her pause, forced her to think rationally about him for the first time since she left Paris two months ago.
Truthfully, she hadn’t known Edmund very long before they’d married. But they seemed to take to each other easily, with an almost reckless abandonment, at least on her part, and she told herself at the time that getting to know each other better would be one of the joys of their married life. How naive she’d been! Edmund had never really loved her, he’d loved her money, as she had discovered upon visiting her bank shortly after he had abandoned her, her social prestige, her unique ability to run a challenging business from which he could profit by theft. And for all her smarts, she had been blinded by his appearance, his smooth and gracious behavior, his words of undying affection.
But never again. Never again would she allow herself to be taken by a man’s good charm. Never again would she allow her intelligence, and especially her skills as a woman of industry, to be stolen and used by a professional liar. Her mother had instilled more common sense in her than that.
All of this had been in her thoughts constantly since he’d left her on their wedding night—until three nights ago at the ball when she’d met her husband again.
The moment she’d laid eyes on him she felt more than the intense pain of betrayal and humiliation she fully expected. She also recognized instantly that she was still very much attracted to him physically, something she thought would have passed naturally by this time. She knew she didn’t love him anymore, but she certainly, to her irritation, felt drawn to him as a woman to a man. That was probably the greatest betrayal of all.
Still, the changes in him, though subtle, as she considered it carefully, confounded her the most. He’d become far more aloof, diffident even, as witnessed by his standing next to a pillar all evening instead of mingling. The Edmund she knew would have danced with every woman in attendance, from beginning to end, laughing his beautiful laugh, charming them into submission—as he’d done to her.
Olivia abruptly stopped pacing and stared at the large, velvet-draped window, now rain-splattered so that she could see nothing beyond the glass but the murky grayness of late afternoon. Lifting a square satin pillow off the sofa at her right, she began twirling it absentmindedly with her fingers, engaged in deep, confusing contemplation.
He wasn’t her husband.
But that was nonsense. Of course he was.
Yet in some manner he…wasn’t. Not entirely. Not like she remembered him, at the very least. Could a person change so much in a matter of months? Or had it all been an act? And he’d never mentioned that he was a duke. Good God, she’d married a man of such noble blood, and he never told her? Instead he resorted to stealing her inheritance?
He’s not the Edmund I married…
A knock on the drawing room door startled her. Before she summoned a reply, Lady Abethnot entered in a flurry of pale pink skirts and plump cheeks.
“Olivia,” she remarked, a pleasant smile on her lips, “you have a guest. His grace, the Duke of Durham.”
Lady Abethnot gestured with her arm, and he stepped around the woman to enter the room, tall and stately, dressed all too handsomely in a dark brown frock coat and trousers, expressionless save for his eyes, which glared at her like one who was ready to do battle with the devil.
“Madam,” he murmured.
She curtsied. “Your grace.”
“Well, then,” Lady Abethnot cut in through a loud sigh. “I’ll leave you to talk alone for a bit.”
“Thank you,” Olivia said with a smile to her hostess.
The lady smiled at her in return. “I’ll only be in the next room should you choose to partake of refreshments. Call if you need me.” With that she scurried out, leaving the door open a respectable crack as propriety demanded.
He didn’t seem to notice Lady Abethnot’s departure at all. He just stared hard at her. Her husband who was not her husband. In every way.
Olivia quashed a sudden burst of inappropriate laughter that threatened to escape from the absurdity of it all. For at that second she realized definitively that this man, identical to Edmund in every physical way, was not the man she married.
Instinctively, she threw the pillow at him before he could speak. He caught it in one hand, then tossed it onto the leather chaise beside him.
“Who are you?” she asked bitterly, breaking the silence between them.
Without pause or prevarication he replied, “I am Samson Carlisle, Duke of Durham. Edmund is my brother.”
She managed to hide her surprise, clasping her hands behind her back. “Your twin.”
“Yes.”
That explained everything.
His gaze traveled slowly up and down the length of her body, for no reason she could think of, and his scrutiny made her shiver inside. He was certainly more arrogant than Edmund, and for a split second she also thought perhaps a bit more devastating in appearance.
“But you’re obviously older,” she said, watching him carefully.
He raised an eyebrow at that. “Only by three minutes, to be precise.”
She chuckled from his distinct display of defensiveness, tipping her head to the side a fraction. “I meant no offense, your grace. However identical the two of you appear, you are the man with the title.”
One corner of his mouth turned up snidely. “So I’ve been told by my brother, repeatedly.”
“Ahh…I see.” Now she understood. Jealousy on Edmund’s part lay at the core. For all she knew of her husband, she didn’t doubt it in the least.
Silence reigned for a moment or two, and she shifted uncomfortably from one foot to the other. To a great degree, this man surprised her. He didn’t flirt, he didn’t sit, he didn’t even look around the well-decorated drawing room. He just stared at her, expressionless. Olivia wasn’t sure what to do.
“I suppose I’m now your sister by marriage,” she remarked, attempting to break the ice.
“So you say,” he returned at once.
That insult took her aback. “So I say?” It was her turn to look him up and down. “Are you always so dour, sir?”
Clearly caught off guard by her audaciousness, he jerked his head back a little. Then he answered simply, “Usually. I’m nothing like Edmund.”
“That’s an understatement,” she agreed with a grunt.
His eyes narrowed and he clasped his hands behind his back. “Knowing I’m nothing like Edmund, madam,” he said gravely, “is the only reason I’m here today.”
In some very strange manner, that remark, no doubt posed to be intimidating, warmed her instead, though she would never let such a weakness to his rather mundane comment show in expression or voice.
Smiling satisfactorily, she glanced down briefly to the sofa, running her fingertips gently along the cushioned back. “You look very much like him,” she admitted pleasantly, “though it only took me ten minutes or so to realize how different you are in personality.”
At long last he began to take a few steps into the drawing room. “I wouldn’t know. I haven’t seen or spoken to Edmund in nearly a decade.”
She almost gasped. Her head shot up abruptly as she looked back into his eyes. “I suppose that’s why he never mentioned he had a twin. I can only guess the two of you had some sort of falling out.”
He didn’t answer her immediately, though he did drop his gaze from her for the first time since entering Lady Abethnot’s home, continuing to walk slowly toward her as he grumbled, “When did you meet him?”
His redirection of the path of their conversation didn’t slip by her. Of course she wanted—needed—to know what actually happened to split them into warring enemies all those years ago. But she reined in her curiosity for now. With this turn of events she had more important things to consider. This man wasn’t her husband, and Edmund had been the one to steal her money. Yesterday she thought she had answers; this afternoon she realized she could be as far as ever from getting her funds returned to her, or at least getting some sort of justice. And above everything else, she now had this man to contend with. What a nightmare.
Olivia felt a sudden jolt of nervousness as he neared her. Instead of answering his question, she asked instead, “Why did you lie to me about your identity at the ball?”
He snickered, the first sign from him of anything remotely resembling humor. “Because it was far too entertaining to watch you treat me, and think of me, as Edmund.”
Incensed, Olivia couldn’t think of a reasonable thing to say to that. She took a step away from him as he took one nearer. He moved fairly next to her now, so close that the hem of her rose-colored skirts brushed his dark, polished shoes. She stood her ground this time, though, determined not to let him see how confused he made her just by his presence. She had the distinct feeling the man used intimidation on purpose because of his incredible height and very masculine build. Edmund had never done that, but then Edmund got his way by flirting, not intimidating. She suddenly had to wonder if this man had ever flirted with a woman in his life.
“When did you meet my brother?” he asked again, more pointedly this time.
She blinked, then ran her palms down her tightly corseted waist. “Wouldn’t you rather sit to discuss this?”
His brows drew together fractionally, indicating to her that he hadn’t even thought about sitting.
“Very well,” he said abruptly, turning and moving to the settee, “but my time is valuable, Lady Olivia.”
“As is mine, your grace,” she replied at once, her tone conveying a growing impatience. “I’m quite certain you won’t stay a minute longer than is necessary.”
Her twist of words amused him. She could tell by the droll look he tossed in her direction as he sat heavily on the bright red cushion, though he didn’t comment. She gracefully lowered her body into a small parlor chair near the window, facing him directly across a tea table.
He waited for her to begin, and she didn’t waste his time. “I met your brother at a soiree celebrating the birthday of our gracious Empress Eugenie. Of course she wasn’t in attendance, but it was in her honor, and everyone who is anyone was there.”
“Naturally,” he drawled.
Olivia realized she was in danger of rambling, her nerves making her resemble a typical capricious miss rather than the intelligent lady she was raised to embody. She shifted her bottom in her chair so that she sat ever more regally, then clasped her palms together loosely in her lap, concentrating on keeping to the point. “Edmund is quite a charming man and he flattered me, your grace. I’m certain you’re aware of his skills and his reputation as a rake. I was not entirely ignorant of his spurious adoration, you understand, but he also seemed quite fascinated by my work for the empress, and that impressed me—”
“Fascinated by your work for the empress?” he cut in as he crossed one leg over the other and stretched his arms wide across the back of the settee.
She tried very hard not to stare at the muscles of his chest as they instantly pressed against the whiteness of his tailored shirt, pulling the buttons taut. The man had a…healthy physique. Or so she suspected. She refused to look him over brazenly to be sure.
“Yes,” she replied after clearing her throat. “I think it was the central reason I quickly became…enamored of him.”
“What type of work do you do, Lady Olivia?” he asked, his amusement now coupled with a bit of genuine intrigue.
He didn’t know. Which meant he hadn’t checked what he could of her background after her appearance at the ball. For a few seconds she felt a tad insulted that he didn’t seem concerned about her veiled threats of three days ago, but then not that many in London knew her now that she was grown and living in France. It did, however, give her an odd sense of satisfaction to inform him that “her work” had nothing to do with menial labor, nor was she talking about volunteering for one of Eugenie’s good causes. In truth, she adored watching gentlemen squirm when she told them she ran a business for profit, and that she was quite successful at it.
“I’m the proprietor of my late stepfather’s manufacturing company. In essence, I am the sole manager of the House of Nivan in Paris.”
It took only seconds for her to realize he had no idea on earth what she was talking about. She’d wondered about that the night of the ball as well, when she’d mentioned Nivan and he’d given her a blank stare. She now understood why.
Sighing, she eased lightly into her stays and expounded. “The House of Nivan is a company that produces perfume, your grace, and is considered one of the best in all of France. We also make fragranced soaps, scents, and smelling salts, and ship our product all over the civilized world, as we’ve done for more than forty years.”
If she’d surprised him with that announcement, he seemed as staid about it as she was proud. His brows drew together slightly and he glanced up and down her sitting form again, this time with calculation. That made her warm beneath her silk gown, her face flush with heat, but Olivia ignored it, hoping her cheeks weren’t overly pink.
Finally he drew in a long, slow breath. “So, I’m assuming you—or rather your business—makes a perfume for the Empress Eugenie?”
“Exactly,” she replied. “We serve the French elite along with three or four other good quality fragrance houses in France. However, the one the empress frequents is always considered the finest, even if it isn’t actually so. Until just recently, her choice for her fragrance purchases was the House of Nivan; she’d been with us for nearly a decade. And when she patronized us exclusively, she brought with her other fashionable clientele. Of course she is free to choose a different house at any time, if any one of them creates a scent she prefers, and so we try very hard to remain competitive. Because of your brother, your grace, my business has lost that competitive edge.” She leaned forward a little, staring into his eyes intently. “I want that edge returned to me.”
The duke adjusted his large body on the settee a bit, relaxing as he more or less analyzed her. “I’m impressed,” he said at last.
Olivia blinked, unsure whether he meant that truthfully or sarcastically, or what it might be, exactly, that impressed him. He didn’t seem at all interested in the art of creating fragrances, but he continued to watch her closely, as if expecting her to get to whatever it might be that she considered the point.
He began to drum his fingertips along the top of the settee. “I’m guessing Edmund stole funds from you that you insist are for keeping the princess adorned in fragrance?”
She crossed her arms over her breasts. “That’s a bit simplistic. But yes, he stole much of the money I had saved to invest in the business after my mother’s death two years ago. If I don’t repay the debts I owe to keep running it, I will be forced to close the House of Nivan.” She paused, then with a gentle lift of her chin added bitterly, “I believe Edmund used me for this purpose, and planned it from the day he met me.”
The Duke of Durham remained silent for a long time it seemed, watching her, his dark eyes narrowed in speculation. Then he leaned forward, elbows on knees, his hands clasped together in front of him. “How, exactly, did my brother manage to steal from you?”
She gazed at him as if he were daft. “He married me.”
He snickered. “Yes, apparently, but I can’t imagine a woman of your obvious intelligence and…business sense just giving him the money should he simply ask for it. I’m curious as to how he planned this.”
His words and tone conveyed sincerity, and Olivia felt warm to her bones from such a compliment, though she was careful not to beam. She didn’t think a man, aside from perhaps her father, had ever called her intelligent before. “Edmund took copies of our marriage documents and withdrew money from my bank as only a husband can, with the help of my banker, of course.”
“I see,” he replied, expressionless. “How awfully convenient.”
Olivia wasn’t sure if that comment annoyed her or not. “Is there some reason you don’t believe me?”
He inhaled deeply again and sat back a little. “I have no reason not to believe you, Lady Olivia, because I know Edmund. I would never steal funds from my wife and then leave her, but he—the brother I remember—very well might. As I said before, Edmund and I are very different. Our personalities are as opposite as our appearance is similar.”
She couldn’t argue that. Standing side by side she wasn’t certain she would be able to tell them apart.
“You don’t wear a fragrance,” she said aloud without thought, studying him.
He did look genuinely surprised by that unexpected comment. “I’d rather bathe. I loathe cologne.”
Smiling, she countered, “In our modern society a person no longer wears a scent simply to hide offensive human odor, your grace. A man’s choice of cologne tells much about his personality, his style, and he wears it to express that part of him.”
He grunted at that. “You’re saying I lack personality and style, madam?”
“Of course not,” she scoffed. “You just haven’t found the fragrance to match yours yet.”
For the first time the Duke of Durham actually grinned at her, and the look, so magnificently handsome and balanced with charm, nearly melted her in her chair.
“As you have found yours?”
Olivia felt perspiration break out on the back of her neck, her upper lip, and she fought the urge to pat it. Why on earth did he seem so…cool? “I wear many fragrances,” she replied neutrally. “I usually choose one to fit my mood.”
“Ah. So I noticed.”
“You noticed?” was all she could think of to say in response.
He shrugged as if his comment had meant nothing. “You smell different today.” His expression turning grave once more, he added, “I’m very perceptive when I need to be, Lady Olivia.”
That warning struck home, and with it an uncomfortable silence grew. For a moment or two he continued to watch her with keen eyes, and to her credit, she remained composed, forthright in her bearing, though certainly blushing terribly from the fact that he thought about how she smelled. She just prayed he wouldn’t notice her embarrassment—even if he was as perceptive as he claimed to be.
Then at last he rubbed his chin with long fingers and stood again. She did the same, as gracefully as she could under the circumstances.
“I’ll need to see the copies of your marriage documents,” he said.
“Of course; I’ll get them.”
He pulled a face of surprise, and Olivia reined in a smile of satisfaction as she lifted her skirts and walked past him toward the small oak secretary near the window.
“I’ve had copies made. Edmund certainly has one. But this is the original document that I do need returned to me.”
She glanced up to him and he smiled dryly. “You seem to have thought of everything, Lady Olivia.”
“Yes,” she replied at once, handing him a quilled pen. “I also need your signature, should you decide not to return this.”
He walked up to stand very close beside her. She couldn’t help it this time, she refused to drop her gaze from his, but she instinctively took a step back from his amazing height and overbearing stance.
“Of course, Lady Olivia,” he consented, looking down to her flushed face, his tone deep and sincerely amused.
She forced herself not to fidget as she handed him the pen. “You’ll note that the top paper states that I’m giving you my marriage certificate, to be returned to me after you’ve had adequate time to evaluate it.”
He finally glanced down to the paper. Then taking the pen from her fingertips, he dipped it in ink and scribbled his signature on it.
“Thank you, your grace,” she said after he slipped the pen back into the inkwell.
“It’s been my pleasure to accommodate you, madam,” he drawled, standing tall again and staring down at her.
Olivia couldn’t take any more of the oppressive heat in Lady Abethnot’s drawing room, or maybe it was just his oppressive closeness. It didn’t matter; she was done with him for today.
Quickly, she gathered up the paperwork and handed him the appropriate certificate.
“Thank you, sir, for your promptness in this matter,” she offered pleasantly.
“Of course,” he replied without extrapolating.
For a discomfiting moment neither of them moved. Then he tilted his head to the side a fraction and asked, “What do you consider yourself, Lady Olivia, French or English?”
She pulled back in surprise, lacing her fingers together behind her. “I am both.”
He continued to gaze into her eyes for several long seconds, then nodded vaguely. “Of course you are.”
She had no idea how to take that, and he supplied no other explanation.
Another awkward moment passed. Then he took a small step away from her and bowed his head once.
“I shall be in touch with you within a matter of days, madam, at which time we will discuss what we’re going to do about my wayward brother.”
“Thank you, your grace.”
He lowered his gaze down her form one final time and, she thought, paused far too long at her breasts. She didn’t move.
“Good day, Lady Olivia,” he said flatly before he turned on his heel and walked out of the drawing room.
Her heartbeat raced for a long time, it seemed, after she’d heard Lady Abethnot’s front door close behind him. Then she collapsed into the settee without thought to wrinkling her billowing skirts, staring out the window at the sprinkling rain, only one thought in her mind:
He might prove more dangerous than Edmund…