Today he was taking her to the house she often visited in Buford Street, to see Helen and Annie and the other women and children who had become her friends.
Earlier that morning, he had left to run a couple of errands. Sometime just before dawn, he had started thinking again about the traitor passing secrets to the French, and though he was officially off the assignment, a couple of things needed checking into.
Foremost among them, Lucas's recent discovery that Andrew Mondale was spending money as if suddenly he had buckets of it. Coupled with the fact the man had made mention to Lee of recent troop movements on the Continent, Caleb hoped it might turn into some sort of a lead.
He hadn't voiced his suspicions to Lee. He had told her he was off the case and had been granted a couple weeks of leave. He knew he should tell her that at the end of that leave he would be returning to Spain, and vowed that soon he would do so. In the meantime, he intended they should enjoy themselves, spend as much time together as he could manage.
Caleb knocked on her door and Lee pulled it open. He reached for her, swept her into his arms, and very soundly kissed her. "Did you miss me?"
She looked up at him and the smile in her eyes made his chest feel tight. "Miss you? You've only been gone a couple of hours—of course I missed you." She kissed him, drew him farther into the room.
"Guess what?" He didn't let her go, just closed the door with the toe of his boot. "I remembered where I saw a birthmark like the one on your shoulder."
She released her hold on his neck and eased away. "Oh?"
"It was a fellow I knew at Oxford. Bronson Montague. He's heir to the Marquess of Kinleigh."
"That's interesting."
There was something guarded in her manner that put him on alert. "You don't seem that surprised."
She shrugged her shoulders. "I don't imagine a birthmark is all that uncommon."
Caleb reached out and caught her chin, forcing her to look at him. "It is when it is exactly the same shape as yours and in the very same location."
She turned her face away, walked over to the mullioned windows, gazed down into the street. "Those things happen, I guess."
Caleb followed. In the street below the window, a young boy hawked newspapers on the corner. A donkey with a floppy felt hat over its ears pulled a cartload of coal over the cobbles.
Caleb rested his hand on her shoulder and gently turned her to face him. "You've never mentioned your father, Lee. I presumed you didn't know who he was. But you do know, don't you? You've known all along. Is your father the Marquess of Kinleigh?"
Beneath his hand, he felt her stiffen. "Don't be ridiculous."
"Don't lie to me, Lee. Not about something this important."
"Important?" Her eyes locked with his. "Why would it be important? It wasn't important when Kinleigh told my mother he was in love with her. When he asked her to marry him then got her with child. It wasn't important when he broke his promise and married someone else."
Caleb said nothing. He couldn't think of a single thing to say.
"You know why I've never been interested in marriage? Because I know how faithless men are. I know what happened to my mother. I know how the marquess treated her. Every day men just like him come to Parklands. They treat their wives little better than their livestock. Kinleigh is exactly the same. My mother died when I was four and she was still foolishly in love with him. The last word she spoke was his name."
Caleb wasn't certain what to say. Through his father and horse racing, he knew Robert Montague fairly well, had always respected him as a man of honor. He couldn't imagine the marquess seducing an innocent young girl, then abandoning her, but that was obviously what the marquess had done.
A sudden thought occurred. "Does Kinleigh know?"
"About me? I couldn't say." She nervously smoothed a lock of her hair. "I assume he does."
But maybe he didn't. Maybe he never knew his seduction had led to the birth of a child. Caleb couldn't help wondering what would happen if he found out. He gently drew Lee into his arms.
"I'm sorry about your mother. Sometimes things like that happen. But all men aren't that way. My father and mother loved each other very much. Father was devoted to Mother from the day they wed until the day she died. He misses her terribly now that she is gone. My brother Christian is madly in love with his wife. I don't believe he will ever be unfaithful."
Lee slid her arms around his neck and he tightened his hold. "Please, Caleb," she said softly. "I don't want to talk about this anymore."
Caleb eased her back enough to look into her face. "All right. But I want you to know I am nothing at all like your father—or the men who come to Parklands. I want you to promise me you will tell me if a child should result from the time we've spent together."
She pulled away from him, returned to her vigil at the window. "That's right—you would accept your responsibilities. I haven't forgotten, Caleb."
"I would marry you, Lee." The words were out of his mouth before he could stop them. What surprised him was how much he meant them. His family would probably disown him. His brothers would think he was the worst sort of fool, but marrying Lee, raising a family with her, wouldn't be a hardship for him at all.
Her gaze swung to his face and he had never seen such turbulence in her expression. "You're a soldier, Caleb. War is what you do. You'd be gone most of the time. You wouldn't be much of a father."
She was right and both of them knew it. Not much of a father—or a husband. "Better than no father at all."
Lee made no reply. Perhaps she was thinking of Robert Montague, the father she had never known.
"The day is slipping away," she finally said. "If I'm going to have time to visit with my friends, I think we had better leave."
Caleb didn't argue. He needed time to evaluate the importance of what he'd just learned. But all the way to the house in Buford Street, a single thought continued to nag him. What would Kinleigh do if he knew about Lee?
20
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In a velvet-draped bed in his mistress's extravagant suite at Parklands, the Earl of Claymont settled his head more deeply into the feather pillows. The room was a confection of pink and white, with ornate ivory and gilt furnishings, white and pink floral carpets, and pink velvet draperies.
Dylan had always felt ridiculously out of place in the overly feminine room. He wished instead they were comfortably ensconced in the big carved mahogany bed that had been in the master's suite at Claymont Hall for more than a hundred years.
Perhaps one day they would be, but he knew better than to pin his hopes on it.
"What are you thinking, darling?" Gabriella curled beside him, naked now, no longer wearing the sheer lace nightgown she had been wearing when she welcomed him into her bed. "You're a million miles away."
"What am I thinking?" He cocked a black, silver-touched eyebrow. "Aside from you and how much I enjoy making love to you? I was thinking of your niece… wondering if she is happy with her decision." It was true. He had been thinking of Vermillion off and on since the night she had journeyed from Parklands.
"Why, of course she is happy. How could she not be? Captain Tanner is obviously infatuated with her. He is bound to treat her very well."
"I suppose he will… as long as he is in London."
Gabriella rolled onto her side to face him, silvery blond hair spilling over a slender shoulder. "You don't think he'll be leaving anytime soon?"
"According to Oliver Wingate, Captain Tanner will be shipping out for Spain in less than two weeks."
"Oh, dear heavens."
"Wingate has made no secret of the matter and Lee's former suitors are all in a dither about it. You would think they would be discouraged, knowing she has obviously placed her affections somewhere else. Wingate is still furious, of course. Tanner is his subordinate, after all. As far as I'm concerned, the colonel is a pompous ass and I don't believe Vermillion ever seriously considered him."