All four of them. As he glanced at their faces, already unmasked, and saw their eyes widen, he inwardly cursed. He was unmasked—and Helena was, too.
“St. Ives.” The merman recovered first; shock held the others silent. “We . . . ah . . .” He suddenly seemed to realize the full magnitude of the situation. “We’ll leave . . .” He tried to urge his mermaid to the door, but the woman didn’t move, her saucerlike eyes trained disbelievingly on Sebastian.
“St. Ives,” she said. Then her gaze shifted past him. “And mademoiselle la comtesse . . .”
Mademoiselle la comtesse was muttering French curses he hadn’t imagined she would know. Luckily, only he could hear. Reaching blindly, he found her arm, slid his fingers down to lock about her wrist, holding her, anchoring her, where she couldn’t be seen.
With his other hand, he waved languidly. “Mademoiselle la comtesse has just done me the honor of consenting to be my duchess.” Beneath his fingers he felt Helena’s pulse leap, then race wildly. “We were . . . celebrating.”
“You’re tomarry ?” The Dresden milkmaid, until then struck dumb, recovered her voice. Her avid expression stated she had an excellent grasp of the social implications. She clapped her hands. “Oh,wonderful ! And we’ve learned it first!”
“Felicitations,” murmured the Tyrolean shepherd, one of the young lordlings who had at one time joined Helena’s court. He grasped the milkmaid’s arm. “Come on, Vicky.”
Eyes still huge, the milkmaid turned with alacrity. “Oh, yes. Do let’s hurry back . . .”
The four piled out of the room faster than they’d entered it. Their whispers hung in the air even after the door shut behind them.
As Sebastian released her and turned to her, Helena hit him on the arm. “Nowwhat are we going to do?” She lapsed into French as she hitched her gown up, dragging the shoulder back into place. Shaking out the skirts, she looked down.“Sacre dieu!”
Sebastian looked and saw her chemise tangled in her high-heeled shoes.
She swore some more, bent and swiped up the telltale garment, scrunching the silk in her hand—then realized she had nowhere to hide it.
“Give it to me.” He held out a hand.
She slapped the chemise into it. He shook out the garment, then folded it and tucked it into his breeches pocket, taking the opportunity to rearrange a few other things at the same time. Glancing at Helena, he noted that her nipples, no longer screened by the chemise, stood proudly erect under the silk sheath of her toga. Looking at her face, he decided not to mention it.
She already looked . . . distraught.
“My apologies,mignonne. That is not how I planned to ask you to be my wife.”
Her head rose. She blinked at him, her expression blanked. “Wh-what?”
“I had, strangely enough, imagined making some reasonable attempt at a proposal.” When she simply stared at him, clearly stunned, Sebastian frowned. “It’s customary, you know.”
“No! I mean . . .” Helena clapped a hand to her forehead in a vain attempt to halt her whirling wits. “We were not discussingmarriage ! We were discussing me accepting your protection.”
It was his turn to blink, then his features hardened. “And precisely what sort of protection did you imagine I would extend to anunmarried noblewoman ?”
She knew the answer to that. “You—we—were talking of me marrying some complaisant gentleman andthen —”
“No. That was not what I was talking about.I was talking of marrying you.”
She narrowed her eyes. “Not until those foolish people came in—I have told you before I am more than eight.”
“Seven.”
She frowned.“Comment?”
He shook his head. “Never mind. But contrary to your misguided notions, I wasalways thinking of marrying you.”
“Pull my other arm, Your Grace.” Putting her nose in the air, she went to sweep past him.
He caught her arm and swung her back to face him. “No. We are settling this here and now.”
The look in his face, in his eyes—the tension that emanated from him—warned her not even to attempt to gainsay him.
“I had already decided that I would have to marry before I met you again. Years ago I made it plain that I would not—I have three brothers who were quite willing to see to the succession, and I did not, in my estimation, possess the most amenable temperament for marriage. However . . .” He hesitated, then said, “You have met my sister-in-law.”
Helena nodded. “Lady Almira.”
“Indeed. If I tell you that she does not improve on further acquaintance, you will understand that the thought of her as the next Duchess of St. Ives has been seriously agitating many members of the family.”
She frowned. “I do not understand. Was her marriage to your brother not . . .” She gestured. “Vetted and approved?”
“No, it was not. Arthur, who’s next in line for the title, is the mildest of the four of us. Almira trapped him into marriage with the oldest trick known.”
“She claimed she was pregnant?”
Sebastian nodded. “She wasn’t, as it turned out, but by the time Arthur realized, the wedding had been announced.” He sighed. “What’s done cannot be undone.” He refocused on her. “Which brings me to my point. You understand what it is to be the holder of a title, what responsibilities—whether one wishes them or not—lie on one’s shoulders. I waited to see how Almira would develop, whether she had it in her to become more . . . gracious, more tolerant. But she has not. And now she has a son who would ultimately inherit and whom she is clearly intent on ruling—ultimately ruling through.”
He shook his head. “I cannot in all conscience permit that. And so I decided I must marry and sire a son of my own.”
His gaze rested on her. “I had never forgotten you. I recognized you the instant I set eyes on you in Lady Morpleth’s salon. I’d been looking for a suitable wife and had found none—then, suddenly, you were there.”
She narrowed her eyes at him. “You seem very certain I am suitable.”
He smiled, a sincere and, for him, oddly gentle smile. “You will never bore me to tears. Your temper is as bad as mine, and you are not, to my annoyance, the least in awe of me.”
She fought against a smile, frowned instead. “I am not in awe of you, yet I am not fool enough to underestimate you. You are very adept at twisting the truth to suit yourself. You havenot been thinking of marriage.”
“Acquit me,mignonne —I assure you, in regard to you, I have thought of nothing else. I did not make my intentions plain for a very good reason.”
“Which was?”
“That any hint of my change of heart would have caused a sensation—any suggestion I had decided on you as my duchess would have turned the ton rabid. Every single lady with a marriageable daughter would have stood in line to attempt to change my mind. I saw no reason to invite such interest. Instead, I thought to bide my time until now. Tomorrow I will leave London, and so will you. We will not be subjected to the full glare of society’s interest.”
“How do you know I will be leaving London?”
“Because I have issued an invitation to the Thierrys and to you to visit at Somersham Place—hence my interest in Thierry’s return.” He raised a hand, touched her cheek. “I thought that there, I could . . . persuade you that marriage to me would be your wisest choice.”
She arched a brow at him. “Persuade?” Sweeping around, she gestured to the door through which the four others had gone. “You havedeclared we are to wed!” The recollection sparked her temper; she let her eyes flash as she swung back to face him. “And now you are going to behave as if the matter is signed and sealed.” She folded her arms and glared at him. “When it is not!”
He studied her, his features impassive. Then he said, his tone even, low—and steely, “Am I to understand,mignonne, that you were at the point of accepting me as your lover but that you are now balking at becoming my duchess?”