To Love and Protect (32 page)

Read To Love and Protect Online

Authors: Tammy Jo Burns

Tags: #regency romance, #Historical Romance, #Scottish romance, #Lords romance, #mystery romance

“Damn him,” Clarissa said to the empty room.
 
He made her feel such exquisiteness, then had ripped her to shreds with callous words spoken to another woman.
 
Oh, how she despised the male race at this moment.
 
She began to make her way downstairs when her father stopped her and beckoned her into his room.
 
He motioned for her to sit on the empty chair across from him.
 
The duke spent many minutes carefully studying her.

“There is something different about you today.
 
Is all well?”

“Of course.
 
I’m engaged just like you wished me to be.
 
What could possibly be wrong?”

“Clarissa, I know you don’t understand why I have put certain stipulations on you, but know that I did it because I love you.”

“Love?
 
Forcing me to marry when I am not ready is what you call love?”

“I believe young Southerby will be a good mate for you.
 
He will be a good father for my grandchildren.”

“Is that all I am to you?
 
A broodmare to supply you with grandchildren so that the lineage may be carried on?”

“Clarissa, enough.”

“No, it is not enough.
 
Did you ever truly care for me, Papa, or has it all been an act all these years?”

“Clarissa, you are my daughter.
 
I love you more than life itself.
 
That is why I put those stipulations in my will.”

“Why?
 
Explain it to me.”

“I wanted you to have what your mother and I had.
 
We loved each other deeply and then when you came along, princess, perfection was somehow improved upon.”
 
Clarissa watched as a tear escaped the corner of her father’s eye.
 
“Then when your mother and the babe died, I did us both an injustice.
 
I should have allowed the proper mourning period pass and then searched for a new wife.
 
Instead, I let it be just us for too long.”

“And Lorraine?” She questioned, fighting against the emotion of the moment.

“A moment of senility perhaps?”

“Why couldn’t you have just sat down and told me all this months ago?
 
Why put the demands in a will?
 
Do you realize how cold and calculating those terms sound when put to paper?
 
Do you understand how it makes me feel?”

“I will not take them back,” he muttered stubbornly.

“Regardless of what you have done, I cannot help but love you because you are my father.
 
Part of the stipulation in your will may be met with my marriage, but I will tell you now that I will do everything in my power to keep a grandchild from being born by my twenty-first birthday.
 
I will not have my life commandeered like a puppet on a string.”
 
And with those parting words she stood and left the room.

***

Clarissa needed a place where she could be alone, and no one would bother her.
 
She remembered a seldom-used balcony off of the gallery, so she began to walk in that direction her strides revealing her determination.
 
She passed an open door and heard the whispered words of two of the maids.

“Young Miss Megan’s in the family way.”

“No!”

“Aye!
 
I imagine it is that handsome Liam, the Laird McTavish’s nephew.”

“Oh, he is a handsome one.”

“That he is.
 
When do you think they’ll marry?”

“Better be soon, or she’ll have a hard time passin’ the babe off as a an early one.”

Clarissa heard them come closer to where she stood and quickly looked for somewhere to hide.
 
She slipped behind some heavy drapes that were pulled closed, covering an alcove.
 

The women continued their conversation.
 
“Did Edith tell you what she ‘eard master Justin and the duke discussin’?”

“Aye.
 
Poor man to be stuck in a marriage like that.
 
I didna’ think master Justin was one to dance to another’s tune.”

“Men are all the same.
 
Amazin’ what they’ll do for a little extra blunt and an heir or two.”

“Accordin’ to Edith, it’ll be more than a lil’ blunt.”

“And more to be paid if the babe comes before Lady Clarissa’s next birthday.
 
If a man did that to me and I found out ‘bout it, I’d kill him.”

“Or somethin’ worse,” the other maid said, and they giggled as they walked down the hall.
 
Clarissa didn’t realize she held her breath until she heard the muted clicking of the women’s shoes on the runner fade down the hallway.
 
Anger and embarrassment suffused her entire being.
 
Her face became an alarming shade of red and her entire body grew hot.
 
Her muscles shook from the tension.
 
Clarissa peeked out of the drapes, saw that they were gone and continued towards the balcony in a state of shock.

Making certain the door was unlocked so that she could get back in, she stepped out onto the balcony and shut the door behind her.
 
She definitely did not want any company.
 
So Justin and her father had planned this marriage.
 
Did Justin seduce her with marriage in mind?
 
Thank goodness there would be no child, for now there would be no wedding.
 
She would see to that one way or another.

Her father and his stipulations, and he had twisted Justin up in them so easily.
 
She was now betrothed.
 
Everything had moved so quickly.
 
She felt as if she were being catapulted over a wall, only the wall moved towards her, and she was not high enough in the air to clear it.
 
A shivering set in her bones that had nothing to do with the brisk afternoon air.
 
Perhaps it was stress, or fear of the unknown.
 
It could be knowing that she would be moving from the control of one man to the other.
 

Clarissa slowly sank to the floor and pulled her knees up to her chest.
 
Her cheek sank to rest on her knees.
 
This is when she missed having a mother.
 
Oh, she had Aunt Gertie, but as much as she loved her, she tended to flutter.
 
Never had she had the opportunity to have a mother to run to when times were difficult.
 
Her father had been her everything, until recently.
 
People thought she had the perfect life, that she was a diamond of the first water.
 
Even she had thought her life perfect until she had her first Season.
 
All the mothers wanted their sons to marry her because she was of excellent
ton
.
 
All the other girls hated her because the men flocked around her.

Yet no one understood how much she hated all of it.
 
She felt like a piece of livestock being poked and prodded.
 
How much value would she bring to the family?
 
Look at how her bloodlines will add to ours.
 
She will make an excellent hostess for social engagements.
 
She is of the right temperament for a lord of your standing.
 
She is beautiful.
 
She will look the other way when you take a mistress.
 
She had overheard all these conversations in reference to her and a future husband.

 
Clarissa could feel the tension creeping into her muscles.
 
Her betrothed thought her a trollop, nay a harlot.
 
He must if he thought that of his own sister after finding her kissing a man.
 
Her father had turned on her at some point in their relationship.
 
A depraved man in London wanted her despite being married.
 
The man’s wife had caused her father into bigamy without knowing it.
 
She could no longer hold back all the things that had happened to her in the past year.
 
What had she done to deserve this kind of fallout?

Clarissa’s head began to pound.
 
She pulled pins out of her hair allowing her golden tresses to fall about her shoulders.
 
The pounding dulled some, but odd twinges shot through her right temple every so often.
 
It reminded her of a debilitating headache she had had during her teens.
 
It had left her lying in a dark room for days unable to eat or move with its severity.
 
Clarissa stared at the landscape and watched as a doe and yearling ambled across the grounds, grazing.
 
A stag came up beside them, his head lifted as if searching the area for intruders.
 
Clarissa let the peacefulness of the scene wash over her.

A glint of something shiny in the trees caught her eye.
 
A hunter took aim at the big stag.
 
Unaware of what she was doing, Clarissa stood and screamed at the top of her lungs.
 
The echo of gunfire bounced off the stone of the house, and stone and mortar sprinkled down on her.
 
The deer ran in the opposite direction of the hunter, unharmed, disappearing down the hill and into a thickly wooded area beyond.
 
Clarissa knew that hunting was necessary at times, but the moment had been too perfect to ruin.
 
It never crossed her mind that they were too close to town for hunting to be safe.

Justin stepped out of the stables when he heard the scream punctuated by gunfire.
 
He quickly scanned the area and saw Clarissa standing on a balcony.

“Get inside!” he yelled before running back into the stable and demanding someone bring him a gun.
 
Justin ran back outside, armed and saw Clarissa still standing on the balcony, her hands covering her mouth.
 
“Get inside!” he roared and this time she turned around, fighting to open the doors that would lead her back into the gallery.
 
They gave way, and she practically fell through them before slamming them closed.
 
She moved away from the windows and took a step into the hallway before sinking to the floor, her legs unable to hold her as she realized someone had tried to kill her.

***

Justin stood at the edge of the woods that bordered the back of his parents’ property, a gun in hand.
 
He followed the footsteps as far as they led before they turned into horse hooves and vanished among the rocky terrain.

“Dammit!” Justin growled before hearing footsteps behind him.
 
He whirled, pulling back the hammer on the pistol, his finger lying lightly on the trigger.
 
He saw his father and quickly pointed his forearm to the sky, releasing the hammer.

“What’s going on?”

“Someone took a shot at Clare.
 
They got away.”

“It looks like trouble followed you.”

“It would seem so.
 
I need to go and check on her.”
 
He skirted past his father, not making eye contact with him.
 
He had been in the stables working off excess energy.
 
He had received a note from Liam today, and it had unsettled him.
 
The two had once been friends, almost like brothers, but that seemed a lifetime ago.
 
Now the man begged him to talk to his Da to give him permission to marry Meg, as Liam called her.
 
In the missive, he said there were things he needed to explain about Jonathan, but it should be done in person.

Now he shook for an entirely different reason.
 
He realized that his life would be empty if anything had happened to her.
 
His heart still pounded and would not settle until he held her in his arms.
 
Why had she even been out on that balcony?
He wondered harshly.
 
And then he saw the look of horror on her face, even from this distance.
 
Had she realized that bullet had been meant for her?
 
He shook his head as he began walking up to the house, wishing that he were in London and could go to Gentleman Jackson’s for a few hours.
 

Clarissa knew when he entered the house because he bellowed her name.
 
She managed to get to her feet and unsteadily made it to railing of the staircase and looked below.
 
“Here,” the word came out weakly.
 
She cleared her throat before trying once more.
 
“Justin, I’m here.”

“Thank God,” he sounded relieved, and she watched as he took the stairs two at a time.
 
When he stood in front of her he pulled her into his arms, and she felt a tremor run through him.
 
“Don’t ever scare me like that again.”
 
In a moment of weakness she let her arms wrap around him, and she held on tightly.
 

***

Clarissa, feeling less shaky, but still fighting the pounding in her head, checked on Megan before the evening meal.
 
The girl truly did have a headache after all the crying and declined even food.
 
Clarissa called for lavender water and wet a washcloth to place over Megan’s eyes and forehead.
 
Tears still leaked from her eyes.

“Megan, I know you’re hurting right now, but you have to stop crying at some point.”

“I know,” she moaned, the back of her right arm flung across her face.

“Megan, you must remember the babe.”

“I know,” she mumbled.

“People in this house do not quite consider you grown up.
 
You are to be a mother, and you want to be a wife. You are going to have to prove to them that you are capable of both.”

Other books

She Walks in Darkness by Evangeline Walton
Arrested Love by Jean Baker
The Sudden Star by Pamela Sargent
The Crime of Huey Dunstan by James Mcneish
The Sorceress of Karres by Eric Flint, Dave Freer