Heiress in Red Silk by Hunter, Madeline (read aloud books txt) ๐
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Read book online ยซHeiress in Red Silk by Hunter, Madeline (read aloud books txt) ๐ยป. Author - Hunter, Madeline
โThere is a stone bench in the back,โ he said. โIf you could wait there.โ
She strode the path to the back and found the bench. She sat and waited. She could not see the house well from here. After a few moments, she saw the crown of a dark head coming toward her. Slowly, the rest of that head came into view. The dark curls. The gray eyes. The face she adored.
Charles.
She smiled and her eyes misted. She did not bother to wipe them. There was no shame in happiness.
He smiled back. She just looked at him, allowing his presence to fill in her memories. His face had grown firmer. Harder. Well, five years made a difference in a young man. Heโd only been eighteen when she last saw him. She probably looked very different too. His dark hair had been dressed as fashionably unruly, and his long frock coat showed the fitted sleeves and broad lapels popular in Paris. His eyesโShe remembered them full of joy and impish humor. Now their pale color looked opaque and . . . older.
โRosamund.โ
It was only when he said her name that she realized he had been standing silently in front of her for some time.
โI expect you are surprised.โ She had to battle the urge to dance over to him.
โStunned. What are you doing here?โ
A slight misgiving wormed its way into her excitement. โI am visiting Paris and decided to call. It has been so long since I saw you.โ
He took a few steps towards her. โA very long time. I almost did not recognize you.โ
โSurely I havenโt changed so much.โ
โNot very much. Still lovely.โ His gaze drifted down. โYou have done well for yourself.โ
โI have, much to my surprise.โ
Again that long gaze, as if he calculated the cost of her ensemble. She could no longer ignore that he remained very reserved. Distant. Hardly delirious with joy.
He looked down, and she realized he held her card and was looking at the address.
โIs this your home now?โ
โYes, I have a house in London.โ
โDo you now.โ Not a question.
โIs this your house?โ she asked, looking through the garden to the high-pitched roof.
โOnly some chambers. They suit me, however.โ
โMore than your parentsโ home in London?โ
โMuch more than that. We get on quite well now, with them there and me here.โ
โYou plan to remain here? Forever?โ
โUntil my father passes, at least. I like Paris. Whether I will enjoy it as much when I am olderโโ He shrugged. โWhat did you do after they threw you out? I always felt guilty about that.โ
โI found service in another house.โ
โWith no references?โ
โThere are always those willing to take on a girl if the pay is low enough.โ
He frowned at that. Once more, he assessed her. โAnd here I worried that you would fall victim to men who prey on pretty servant girls.โ
Something in his tone quelled her enthusiasm in a blink. A judgmental inflection suggested he had not worried at all, but now wondered. โYou mean men like you, Charles?โ
That took him aback. โI suppose I deserved that. But you were hardly unwilling.โ
โWe were in love. That makes it different.โ
โYoung men are always in love if the girl is pretty. You know that by now, I expect.โ
Her heart thickened. It was all she could do to hide how his words devastated her. How cruel she found them.
โAre you here with your sister?โ he asked.
โNo. Lily is in a school.โ
โYou canโt be traveling alone.โ
โActually, I am.โ
โI doubt that.โ
She paced a bit closer to him. He had not moved much. He remained close to the end of the path, as if he needed to have the means of a quick escape. What had he worried about when he saw that card? That she had brought him a love child? That she wanted to demand payment of some kind? He certainly had not shouted with joy, if his manner now was any indication.
This was not the welcome she had expected. Not the man she thought she knew. While she stood there, watching him, seeing his caution and indifference, the dream disappeared.
It did not shatter or burst. It simply ceased to exist, and she was an old, forgotten lover who had intruded into a manโs new life.
Young men are always in love if the girl is pretty.
Dear heaven, she had been a fool to come here. And a bigger one to have thought what they shared was love. She had merely been the convenient servant girl who was pretty enough.
Her heart hurt so much that it left her breathless. She wanted to crumble and fall to her knees and weep to relieve the pain. Instead, she held her composure. Somehow, her voice was clear when she spoke.
โI am traveling independently. However, my journey has been aided by a friend who is familiar with France and Paris, so I am not left completely adrift in a foreign country.โ
โA friend in Paris? Perhaps I know this friend.โ
โNot an inhabitant of the city. A friend from London.โ She hesitated, but wanted to let Charles know just how well she had done recently. โMr. Kevin Radnor. He visits Paris often enough that perhaps you have met him all the same.โ
โRadnor?โ
She took some solace in his surprise. His shock. It did nothing to ease the pain, but it helped her pride.
โThat is Hollinburghโs family.โ
โHis cousin. I have had the pleasure of meeting the duke. I know the family quite well.โ
He smiled broadly, and for one exquisitely painful moment looked just like the Charles she remembered. โYou have done very well for yourself, Rosamund. Paris trips. Your sister in a school.โ He lifted the card. โA fine address. I thought perhaps you had come to castigate me for my indiscretions with you. Now I think you made this call to thank me.โ
โIt is not what you think.โ I made this call because I loved you and held the memories close for five
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