Once Upon a Wedding Night
“It is not silliness to me,” Havernautt replied in haughty tones, eyes still on Nick, waiting.
“But of course he approves,” she sighed, and gave Nick a quelling look. When he still said nothing, she cut her gaze to Havernautt. “He is no doubt ecstatic you offered. He has encouraged our courtship from the start. Is that not so, my lord?”
To put it mildly.
Nick found himself speaking, but the words seemed to come from somewhere buried deep inside because his brain marveled to hear himself say, “Sorry, Havernautt, but I cannot give my blessing.” As he delivered this announcement, he could swear he saw a flash of relief cross her face before indignation took over.
“What?” she demanded in affronted tones.
Havernautt shrugged past her and advanced on Nick, hands lifted in supplication. “I don’t understand, my lord. Have I done something to offend you?”
Before he had a chance, Meredith answered for him. “You have done nothing wrong, Teddy.” She shot an angry, bewildered glare at Nick, hissing none too discreetly, “What are you doing? This is what you wanted.”
“I thought so.” He nodded in agreement, tension surging through him. “But I find I cannot let you go through with this.”
She stepped past an astonished Havernautt, disregarding him to jab Nick in the chest with her index finger. “Well, I find that I’m tired of living my life at your whim.”
“Pardon me for saying so, my lord,” Havernautt interjected with a surprising degree of spirit, “but if you cannot give me a single valid reason for protesting this match, then I am afraid your lack of blessing won’t matter.”
“Is that so?” Nick asked, feeling his mood take a sudden, dangerous shift.
Meredith’s eyes widened at his menacing tone and she stumbled back a step.
Nick continued in that lethal voice, “Would the fact that I have compromised the lady be a valid enough reason?”
She covered her face with her hands and would have fled the room if Nick had not grabbed her hand and forced her to his side. Satisfaction swelled inside him at Havernautt’s stunned expression. A deep, primal satisfaction.
Until the bastard turned his shock and contempt on Meredith.
“Whore,” he hissed, face twisting into ugly loathing.
Nick left her side in a flash, sending his fist flying into Havernautt’s face with a resounding smack of bone against bone. Havernautt crumpled to the carpet. Nick flung his arm back for another go, but Meredith grabbed hold of it. “Nick! No!”
He tried to shrug her off, but she clung tenaciously. “Nick, can you blame him? After what you just said? Leave him be.”
He turned to look at her flushed face, his arm lowering a bit, the wild desire to finish Havernautt off thrumming in his blood.
“Get up.” Nick kicked Havernautt’s boot.
Glaring balefully from his bloodied face, Havernautt shook his head and scuttled farther away.
“I’m marrying her,” Nick ground out before he had time to consider what he was saying. “Understand? One word, one slur against my wife, and I’ll finish this.”
Meredith still clung to his arm. Nick followed the sight of her pale, slender fingers up to her equally pale face.
It was done. She was his. He had seen to that.
“Pack your things and meet me downstairs in five minutes.”
Chapter 22
Nothing will change. His life would go on as before. He glanced across him at the woman he had claimed for himself only a short while ago. Nothing will change, he repeated. Nothing except that Meredith would now occupy a permanent place in his life, in his bed.
Several hours had passed since she met him in the foyer, and still she had not uttered a word. Her silence unnerved him. She had come along willingly enough, but her mutinous silence made Nick feel as though he were kidnapping her. He was not a kidnapper. And she didn’t have to sit there wringing her hands and biting her lip like a bloody hostage.
“Did you really intend to marry that worthless fool?”
Color flooded her face at his ruthless words. Perhaps not the best way to broach a conversation, but her acceptance of Havernautt’s proposal—ridiculous as it seemed, given his ultimatum that she find a husband—rubbed him the wrong way. He simply could not let her go through with it. Perhaps if she had chosen someone else…someone with a measure of backbone. Nick shook his head. No. The bloody king himself could have proposed and he would have stopped her.
“Do you stop every woman you’ve bedded from marrying another?” she countered.
“No,” he answered drolly. “Quite a few are married with a brood of children by now.”
“Then why me?”
An excellent question. And one he was unprepared to answer. At least not without delving into emotions he had no wish to examine.
“Answer me, Nick. Why couldn’t you let me marry Teddy?”
Rather than answer her question, he looked out the window at the countryside and asked mildly, “Aren’t you interested in where we’re going?”
Crossing her arms over her chest, she grudgingly said, “Very well. Where are we going?”
“Gretna Green.”
“Scotland?” Her eyes narrowed to wary slits. “Whatever for?”
He thought the reason clear enough but obliged her by explaining anyway. “Despite what you may think, I didn’t intend to propose to you when I entered that study.”
She leaned forward, her eyes conveying a decided lack of delight as she said bitterly, “Was that a proposal? I could not tell. You were addressing Teddy when you declared that you were going to marry me. Of course, you can’t have been sincere.”
He frowned. “Men never lie about such subjects. Trust me.”
Her eyes flared wide, as vivid a green as the hills rolling past them. “I certainly won’t hold you to your…proposal.” She uttered the word proposal like it was obscene.
“I would not have confessed to compromising you unless I was prepared to marry you,” he explained with a sigh.
“Yes, while we are on the subject, how dare you blurt out that we…we…how dare you humiliate me! I won’t ever forgive you for that.”
He shrugged. “Whatever the case, I did tell him. It’s done, and since we don’t have a wedding license, to Gretna we go.”
Her chin jutted out at an obstinate angle. “I don’t see the wisdom behind compounding this debacle by rushing into marriage. Rest assured, you need feel no obligation to marry me.”
“I told Havernautt I bedded you. Then whisked you away before a house full of London elite. We are getting married.” His voice rang flat with finality. “There’s no other choice.”
“I disagree.” She glared at him in defiance.
“Look,” he began, “unless you want to become a social pariah, we must.”
Her green eyes blazed brighter. “The only reason I face becoming a social pariah is because you told Teddy—”
“Yes. We’ve already gone over that,” he snapped. “Move on. It’s done. The point is that you are ruined unless we wed.”
Arms crossed tightly over her chest, she quivered with suppressed fury, snarling like an angry cat, “You might as well instruct the driver to turn this coach around. You can’t force me. I’ll take being ruined over marrying you.” That said, she averted her face to look out the window, signaling the conversation’s end.
He steadied his own rising temper with a deep breath. The little minx could resist all she liked, but she would marry him. He could never release her to another man’s bed. That much he knew. Perhaps no more than that. He could never love her. Never love anyone. His mother had taught him that. Taught him that love made one weak and pathetic. Even in death his mother had called for his father, the very man who brought her low. His father—love—had heaped only pain and degradation upon her.
Still, there was no denying he wanted Meredith. And it might be selfish, but he was keeping her. His blood warmed as he studied her, from the elegant line of he
r nose with its charming spattering of freckles, to the generous curve of her bosom. He had been deluding himself. One night with her would never be enough. At least their marriage would have those rewards. Because physical attraction aside, it would be less than idyllic. She was grasping and untrustworthy, but then, his unsavory past made him unfit for any gently bred woman. Perhaps that made them a good match after all.
“In fact, I can.”
She faced him, one brow lifted in haughty regard. “Can what?”
“Force you to marry me,” he clarified.
The chilly, denigrating smile she bestowed upon him grated. “You forget, my father was a vicar. I know full well a clergyman cannot marry a couple without their mutual consent. You cannot make me do anything.”
“The right amount of coin should convince some less than ethical priest to ignore your protests.” He watched smugly as her superior smile slipped, adding, “It is really a simple matter. Especially in Gretna Green where blacksmiths perform nuptial rites.”
“You wouldn’t dare.”
“If you fail to see reason, yes, I will.” At her bleak expression, he explained carefully, “I won’t be responsible for your social ostracism. And that is exactly what you face if I don’t marry you. I know you think you can cope, but that’s only because you don’t know. You can’t imagine the loss of your good name. It will touch every facet of your life. I won’t let it happen to you.”
Some of the fire slipped from her gaze and he sensed her temper waning as she searched his face, asking softly, “Your mother?”
After a pause he nodded, unwilling to elaborate further.
She sighed and looked out the window again. A moment later she relented with a small jerk of her head. It was all the agreement he needed.
A misty Scottish dusk lingered on the air as their coach rolled into Gretna Green, the first village on the Scottish side of the border, thereby making it the most natural destination for English couples requiring a hasty wedding. The village was notorious for rushed and often dubious nuptial ceremonies that took place in public meeting rooms and inns seconds before outraged papas stormed onto the scene.
Their coach stopped at a five-road junction where several such inns littered the quiet crossroad. Meredith waited while Nick exchanged words with the driver before escorting her across the road to a blacksmith’s. She lifted her gown, careful not to soil the hem as they stopped beneath a large jutting portico extending from the barnlike building.
The clanging of metal to anvil reverberated from within the barn’s shadowy interior. She looked to Nick expectantly, wondering if something was wrong with the horses that required the services of a blacksmith.
He ignored her and called out loud enough to be heard over the racket. “Robert Elliot?” The noise stopped. A tall, dour-faced man in a leather blacksmith apron appeared, wiping the sweat from his brow with the back of his hand.
“Yes. How can I be of help?” The man took in the finery of their clothes. “You’ll be needing the services of a priest, sir?”
“Yes,” Nick answered.
“How soon?” Robert Elliot jerked his thumb behind him. “I’d like to finish forging a couple shoes, but if you’ve an angry da on your heels, I can ferret up two witnesses and we’ll wed you in the blink.”
She gasped, glaring at Nick with the indignation that only a vicar’s daughter could feel. “In a blacksmith shop? With a blacksmith officiating? You weren’t jesting?”
Robert Elliot grinned as he used his leather apron to wipe the grime from his hands. “I do it all the time, miss. Married thousands right proper and legal.”
“Well, do not rush to add me to that impressive number, Mr. Elliot.” She spun around to leave, her earlier anger not so forgotten that it couldn’t be revived at this indignity. Nick halted her with a firm hold on her arm.
He addressed the blacksmith. “We’re in no rush. Can you meet us at your convenience?”
“Aye. Just give me an hour to finish up here. The Heart’s Cross be the best inn,” the blacksmith advised, pointing to one of the coaching inns.
“Thank you,” Nick said before pulling her toward it.
Her feet flew to keep pace with his longer strides. “Did you not hear me? I will not be wed by a blacksmith. I don’t know what you can be thinking.” Nick continued to ignore her, the only indication he had even heard the slight twitching of his lips. “Did you take leave of your hearing along with your senses?” she demanded.
He skirted the ruts in the road left by carriage wheels, clasping her close when she stumbled, still not answering her as they entered the inn. Greeting the innkeeper, he arranged for a room to be prepared for the night. “Is there someplace we may conduct our nuptials away from the rest of your patrons?”
“Of course, my lord. I can set the back parlor aside for your privacy.” The red-cheeked innkeeper bobbed his head obligingly.
“Mr. Elliot should be joining us within the hour, if you would be so good as to escort him to the parlor.”
“Yes, of course.”
“Is he really a priest?” Meredith interjected, voice thick with doubt.
The innkeeper’s eyes widened. “Robert? Oh yes, miss. Have you never heard of an anvil priest before?”
She shook her head, wondering if she had entered another world when they crossed the border into Scotland. Next she would learn that elves prepared their food in the kitchen.
“Would you like to wait in the parlor until Robert arrives?” the innkeeper asked. “I can have the missus bring you and your young lady refreshments.”
“That would be fine, thank you,” Nick replied, ushering her along as they were led into a shabby yet comfortable parlor.
Her lips thinned in silence while they waited for refreshments. A mantel clock ticked in the still air as she struggled with the notion that a blacksmith would bind her in holy matrimony to the man sitting across from her. The innkeeper’s wife rolled in a tea service loaded with all kinds of appetizing fare, and departed quickly when her lively chatter could not lure Meredith into conversation. Meredith nibbled a dry biscuit. Nick appeared content with her self-imposed silence and picked up a newspaper to read, as if it were any other day and not minutes until they were bound for life.
Unable to stand it anymore, she exclaimed, “You really mean for us to be wed by a blacksmith?”
He lowered his paper with a beleaguered sigh. “I assure you that this marriage will be real in every sense. Our wedding may not meet the standards of a vicar’s daughter, or compare to the grandness of a wedding at St. Paul’s, but our marriage will be no less legitimate in the eyes of God and the law.”
“God?” She tilted her head, voice ringing as she demanded, “Since when do you recognize God’s law?”
His lips flattened into a line of displeasure. “I don’t, but you do. That British law will recognize our union is sufficient enough for me.”
She found herself asking the question that had been burning in her mind since she accepted their marrying. “And after we’re married? What then?”
He looked back to his paper and answered carelessly, “I have not given much consideration beyond today.”
Not good enough. She wanted to know. She had to know. Never again could she tolerate the ground being ripped out from under her. This time around she would arm herself with knowledge rather than risk disappointment later. Matters needed to be discussed and settled before the final vows were uttered. Before tonight.
Leaning back in her chair, she regarded him through narrowed eyes. “I would prefer to return to Oak Run. You, I assume, wish to remain in London where your business keeps you.”
He dropped his paper again, but this time his voice was anything but careless. “Let me inform you exactly what kind of marriage awaits us.”
She straightened in her chair.
“Have no misapprehensions about love,” Nick began, his voice reminiscent of her father’s when he had orated from the pulpit. “Love is not part of the arrang
ement. My parents’ marriage began as a love match and ended with misery. Hear me now—I won’t ever love you. Sorry if I offend you, but I shall be blunt to avoid potential confusion.”
It was a long moment before Meredith recovered her voice enough to lie through her teeth. “And I won’t love you.”
As if she hadn’t spoken, he continued, “I will endeavor to forget your penchant for dishonesty and treat you with respect. Mutual respect is better than what most marriages possess. I’ll lead my own life. You may lead yours. But I see no reason why we can’t share each other’s bed on occasion.” He paused to let his eyes rake her. “We found it pleasurable the last time.”
“You arrogant—” She struggled for a word foul enough. “Peacock!”
He made a clucking noise. “Meredith, I don’t believe I have ever heard such language from you. I would think you pleased. You’re getting more out of this union than the last time. At least now you have the benefit of a man in your bed.”
That barb hurt more than she would ever let on. And it shocked her too. She didn’t think him callous enough to fling Edmund’s rejection in her face. “It would be a benefit if the man was anyone other than you.”
“Still have that nasty lying habit, I see. Would you care for me to prove our attraction?” He pushed himself up.
She held up a hand to ward him off, grasping desperately for words to distract him. “Why must we be intimate? You said we are not to love—”
“Don’t be like so many tiresome females who mistake intimacy for love. Sex is not love.” He grinned in a mocking manner, flashing her his wolf’s smile. “It’s purely a physical need, and one that annoyingly surfaces whenever you’re around. I don’t quite understand it myself.”
His eyes bored into her with the relentlessness of a hammer. “I am sure this desire will grow cold with time. It always does. But for now sex is a stipulation I insist upon.”
She shook her head. “No. Edmund did not require that from me and—”