Aunt Joanna entered amidst a flurry of bobbing feathers and rustling purple silk. "My dear child," she said, her plump face wreathed in smiles. She enveloped Elizabeth in a plume-filled hug. "Did I not tell you?"

"Tell me what?"

Her aunt stepped back and regarded her with wide eyes. "Why, that it was only a matter of time until some nice young man took notice of you." She snapped open her fan and waved it vigorously, setting her feathers in motion. "I knew that we would find you a husband, but even I could not have predicted that we would land a duke! La, when Bradford told me that he wished to marry you, I nearly swooned. Not that he shouldn't want to marry you, of course. Any man would be blessed to have a lovely girl like you. But a duke! And such a young, handsome duke." She leaned forward and confided "Most of them are quite old and decrepit, you know."

Before Elizabeth could reply, her aunt plunged on, "Your parents would be so proud of you, as I am, my dear. So proud and happy for you." A dreamy expression entered her eyes and she heaved a rapturous sigh. "Why, I believe this is even more romantic than when your mother eloped with your father. They were so much in love…" She looked at Elizabeth, then frowned. "Whatever is wrong, child? You look quite stricken."

Elizabeth blinked back the tears suddenly stinging her eyes. "I was just thinking about Papa and Mother… how much they loved each other. How much they wanted me to have a happy marriage like theirs."

"And you will! Look who you are marrying! Can you doubt for a moment that you will be deliriously happy?" Her aunt studied her for several heartbeats. Elizabeth tried her best to look deliriously happy, but clearly she failed because her aunt said "Yes, I can see that you do doubt it." Snapping her fan closed she led Elizabeth to the brocade settee near the fire. After they were seated Aunt Joanna said "Tell me what is troubling you, Elizabeth."

Elizabeth looked into her aunt's concerned blue eyes, eyes that reminded her so much of her beloved mother's. She had no wish to dampen Aunt Joanna's enthusiasm, but she could not pretend that her upcoming marriage was a love match. "Surely you realize, Aunt Joanna, that the only reason the duke is marrying me is because he believes he has to."

Aunt Joanna harrumphed loudly. "And surely you realize that no one could force Bradford to do anything he didn't wish to do."

"He is honorable and wishes to save my reputation-"

"Pish posh. If he were truly opposed to marrying you, he would simply refuse to do so, and because of who he is, he could get away with it. Clearly you do not understand his exalted position in Society… a position that you will share as his wife." She squeezed Elizabeth's hand. "Be happy, my dear. You will never want for anything."

Sadness tugged at Elizabeth's heart. "Except perhaps my husband's love."

Aunt Joanna wagged a gloved ringer. "Darling, don't doubt for an instant that Bradford is well and truly besotted. If he weren't, wild horses could not have dragged a proposal from him. And once a man is besotted he is nothing more than a fish on a hook."

"I beg your pardon?"

"You've hooked the largest fish in England rny dear. He's already infatuated with you. Now all you need to do is pull your line into shore."

Elizabeth suppressed a giggle at the impossible comparison of Austin to a fish. "And how do I do that?"

"By being your wonderfully unique self. And by engaging his interest you-know-where." Her aunt's eyebrows bobbed up and down several times.

Good heavens, surely Aunt Joanna wasn't going to embark on a discussion of Austin's anatomy. "Um, I afraid I don't know exactly where you-know-where is."

Aunt Joanna leaned forward, forcing Elizabeth to dodge a peacock feather. "The bedchamber," she intoned in a low voice, and Elizabeth sagged with relief. "If you keep your husband happy in the bedchamber, his infatuation will grow into love. It worked for me with my darling Penbroke. Your uncle was faithful to me until the day he died. A husband who has a warm marriage bed will not seek out a mistress."

Fire burned in Elizabeth's cheeks, but her aunt went on, "As your mother is not here, God rest her soul, I shall instruct you as I believe she would want. Now, tell me, dear, do you know where babies come from?"

Elizabeth fought a sudden urge to laugh. Her aunt looked so earnest and fiercely determined to do her duty. "Aunt Joanna, I am a physician's daughter and was raised around animals. I am well acquainted with the workings of the body."

"Excellent. Then you know everything you need to know."

"I do?"

"Yes." Reaching out, she patted Elizabeth's cheek. "Just remember everything I've just told you and you'll do splendidly."

Elizabeth stared trying to recall anything her aunt had just told her.

"And if you have any other questions," Aunt Joanna said "don't hesitate to ask. I'm delighted to help." With that, she rose and tossed her boa over her shoulder. "Come, dear. It's time to go downstairs. I want to make sure I have a clear view of Lady Digby and her horse-faced brood when Bradford announces your betrothal. Small and petty of me, I know, but it isn't every day that one's niece captures 'England's Most Eligible Bachelor.'"


Elizabeth decided that the betrothal announcement in the drawing room before dinner produced the greatest range of facial expressions she'd ever seen. Caroline and Aunt Joanna beamed. Austin's mother smiled regally while Robert simultaneously grinned and winked. Most of the other guests looked anywhere from surprised to stunned while Lady Digby looked as if she'd swallowed an insect. The Digby daughters looked as if they'd all bitten into the same sour lemon. After the initial surprise, however, the guests gathered around her and Austin, offering their congratulations.

Dinner was a gala affair, with everyone raising their glasses to toast the future bride and groom. Several guests who had planned to depart first thing in the morning hastily changed their itineraries to remain at Bradford Hall for the whirlwind wedding ceremony.

Elizabeth noticed that the Digby daughters were already turning their attention toward the other available gentlemen guests. She smothered a grin when she saw Robert seated between two Digby girls, both of them vying for his attention with cold-eyed determination. Robert caught her looking at him from across the table and rolled his eyes toward the ceiling. She had to cough into her hand to cover her laughter.

Her merriment faded however, as the meal progressed. She realized with growing discomfort that everyone at the food-laden mahogany table was looking at her. Some of the guests were not as obvious as others, but she felt the weight of two dozen stares flicking over her. Assessing her.

Whereas before she'd been the object of sneers, now she observed speculation. Curiosity. And while she clearly felt skepticism veiled behind many of the smiles, as Austin had predicted no one uttered an unkind word to her. Indeed the gentleman seated next to her, instead of talking around her, hung on her every word as if gems of brilliance dripped from her lips. Penelope and Prudence, neither of whom had deigned to exchange more than a dozen words with her before, now made it a point to engage her in a conversation regarding fashion. Luckily they did most of the talking.

While the gentleman next to her droned on about a recent fox hunt, she glanced toward the head of the table at Austin. He was about to drink from his wineglass when their eyes met. And held.

Elizabeth gazed at him, his hand arrested halfway to his lips, his eyes intent on hers. Heat rushed through her and she fought a sudden urge to fan herself with her linen napkin. The way he looked at her, with that dark intensity that seemed to see inside her, unnerved her. And excited her in a way she could not put a name to.

With great difficulty, she returned her attention to her dinner companions, but her skin continued to tingle from the heat of Austin's gaze.

When the meal ended the ladies retired to the drawing room for coffee. Elizabeth immediately found herself surrounded by half a dozen chattering women.

"Of course you must call upon us at your earliest convenience, my dear," Lady Dibgy said elbowing her way to Elizabeth's side.

Before Elizabeth could open her mouth to reply, Lady Digby went on, "In fact, I should like to host a dinner party in your honor." She turned to her daughters. "Wouldn't that be lovely, girls?"

"Lovely, Mother," the Digby daughters chorused.

With a determined and proprietary air, Lady Digby linked her arm through Elizabeth's elbow. "Come, my dear. Let us sit down and discuss the plans."

A deep, masculine voice halted Lady Digby. "If you don't mind Lady Digby," Austin said smoothly, "I need to have a word with my fiancée."

Lady Digby relinquished her hold on Elizabeth with obvious reluctance. "We were just about to discuss my plans for hosting a party in her honor."

"Indeed? Perhaps you should discuss the arrangements with my mother and Lady Penbroke. They will be helping Elizabeth organize her social engagements for the next several months, until she is settled with her new duties."

"Of course. Come along, girls." Lady Digby strode across the room like a ship under full sail, her fleet of offspring bobbing along in her wake.

Austin smiled at her. "You looked like you needed rescuing."

"I believe I did, although I'm not sure your mother or my aunt will thank you for it."

He waved his hand in a dismissive fashion. "Mother is very adept at these matters. She'll maneuver Lady Digby with an ease that I'd find downright frightening if I didn't admire it so much." His gaze roamed her face. "You look disturbed. Has anyone said something to upset you?"