The Earl's Mistaken Bride - By Abby Gaines Page 0,3

a chambermaid might feel for a groom. Love

had almost destroyed the Spenford earldom in the past;

it would not be given the chance to do so again.

Affection seemed a proper objective for his marriage.

“I know your mother to be a lady of great faith,”

Somerton said. “Do you share her faith, my lord?”

Marcus tensed, but he said lightly, “Indeed I should,

sir, having listened to your sermons for so many years.

However, I believe a man’s faith to be his own

business.”

“And God’s,” Reverend Somerton added with a slight

smile. Not before time, he rose to his feet. He came

around his desk, stepping out of the sunshine that made

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him look so dashed holy. “You are right, my lord. It’s

not for me to judge a man in his faith. However, I

wouldn’t like any of my daughters to marry an

unbeliever.”

“Then I’m happy to assure you, you need not fear,”

Marcus said. This was the worst interview of his life—

he thanked heaven a man must only be interrogated by

his father-in-law once. An irritating urge to prove

himself worthy of Somerton’s paternal devotion, the

kind of urge he should have outgrown, made him add,

“It may comfort you to know I prayed before the outset

of this journey.”

Perhaps not a conventional prayer of the kind a

reverend might favor…but Marcus had spoken to God,

had he not?

“Thank you, it does indeed comfort me.” The

reverend moved to open the study door. This awkward

encounter was finished.

“I wish you Godspeed.” Reverend Somerton shook

Marcus’s hand. “I will discuss your offer with

Constance this evening. If she does not wish to accept, I

will send word immediately.”

Living in a house filled with women must have

addled Somerton’s brain. The parson’s daughter— any

parson’s daughter—would be honored to marry the Earl

of Spenford.

Marcus didn’t waste time pointing that out. He’d

come here for a wife; he’d found one. Nothing else

mattered.

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THE EARL’S MISTAKEN BRIDE

THE CURRICLE PULLED out of the rectory gate right

in front of Constance, so close that one more step would

take her smack into the side of a very large gray horse.

She gave a yelp of surprise, and the driver, who’d

been looking to his left for traffic, somehow heard her

over the clatter of hooves and the rattle of bridles. He

immediately reined in the horses, coming to a stop.

“My apologies,” he called.

Lord Spenford! It had been an age since she’d seen

him. Why was he here? She wanted to call out an

assurance that no apology was needed, though in fact it

was: he should have been looking. But as usual, the

sight of him reduced her vocabulary to a few nonsense

words and made her feel as if it had been days since her

last meal. She steadied herself by reaching a hand to the

brick wall that ran along the front of the rectory

grounds.

Lord Spenford jumped down, still holding the reins of

his grays. “Are you all right?”

His voice was exactly as Constance remembered—

deep, beautifully modulated. It sent a delightful shiver

through her.

He glanced behind him at the rectory. “Miss

Somerton? You’ve had a shock. Should I drive you

inside?”

Such consideration! Such— She realized that by now

he must be wondering if she’d been struck mute since

the last time they met. “I’m quite well,” she said.

“Thank you, Lord Spenford.”

It sounded as if she was thanking him for almost

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running her over.

“I was going too fast,” he said ruefully. “In a hurry to

get back to London. No excuse for such poor driving.”

“Don’t think about it,” she said. “I know you must be

worried about your—about the dowager countess.”

He gave her a surprised look, then his face closed

over. “Indeed,” he said briefly. “If you truly are unhurt,

Miss Somerton, I will resume my journey.” He sprang

back up onto the curricle. About to drive off, he

checked the horses. “We will meet again soon,” he said,

and smiled.

Then he was gone, and all that was left to show he’d

been there was a cloud of dust and what Constance

knew must be a sappy expression on her face at the

memory of that smile.

“HE WISHES TO marry me?” Constance sat stunned

on the sofa in the rear drawing room, closed off from

the front room except when the family had company.

“Me? Not Isabel or Amanda?”

It was the answer to a prayer she’d never dared utter.

A dream come true, an absurd fantasy…now about to

become reality?

“He can’t have meant me, ” she said faintly. Hoping

against hope that he had. “I saw him outside. He didn’t

say a word.” He almost killed me! Although, he had

said, We will meet again soon. How could she have

guessed he meant in church, at our wedding?

“Nor should he, before your father spoke to you,” her

mother said. “Besides, Lord Spenford was in a hurry