that he had a reputation for breaking hearts, although he wasnât solely to blame for the fact that any number of women had fallen in love with him while heâd kept his heart whole. Although he loved the fair sex in general and delighted in their attentions, heâd never met the woman who could tame him and cause him to willingly relinquish his cherished freedom to settle down in staid matrimony.
But he had never encountered any woman like Lily, either.
âI am not suggesting that I propose this evening,â Heath said slowly, testing the prospect in his mind, âbut if I were courting her officially, there would be little gossip or risk of scandal.â
âI suppose not. But you cannot honestly be thinking of marrying Lily.â
âShe might make me a good marchioness.â
Fannyâs laugh was uncertain. âShe has the birth and the breeding, true, but you are forgetting one crucial detail. There is no possible way Lily would ever allow you close enough to court her. Not considering her fervent opinions about men and marriage.â
Heath couldnât help but smile as he remembered Lilyâs adamant declaration about her aversion to matrimony. âHer notions
are
rather prickly. I discovered that just on our brief acquaintance.â
âIndeed.â Fanny shook her head firmly. âNo, my lord. You should just abandon the whole absurd idea.â Her gaze measured him. âI doubt you will mourn the loss, however. You have countless love-smitten females to pick from. You should choose one of them.â
A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. âBut regrettably, I am not interested in any of them.â
Fannyâs gaze narrowed. âI hope you are not planning to pursue Lily simply because you relish a challenge.â
He couldnât deny that the challenge greatly appealed to him. Among his boyhood friends, Heath had been the most adventurous and daring, the most willing to court danger. His need for thrills and excitement had led the three of them into escapades and scrapes more times than he could count. But the challenge Lily presented was not her major allure.
âThat is only part of it,â he replied honestly to Fanny. âMy interest in her is due much more to her uniqueness. I find her novelty refreshing.â
âI can see why someone so unconventional as Lily would intrigue you,â Fanny said after a moment. âShe has no compunction about thumbing her nose at societyâs strictures regarding the proper behavior of genteel young ladies. Indeed, she often behaves more like a manâshe excels at any kind of physical activity such as riding and driving and archery. Compared to her sisters, Lily is the most passionate and expressive. Howeverâ¦ââFannyâs voice dropped and became earnestâââ¦she is also the most sensitive. Of the three of them, Lily feels the most deeply. She was terribly hurt when her mother abandoned them to follow her heart, heedless of the scandal that ruined their futures. And Lilyâs bitterness toward men is deeply rooted in the past, in the way her father treated her mother.â
He had sensed that vulnerability in her, Heath realized, feeling an odd tug at his heart. The emotion that stirred in him was not one he usually felt for young ladies. It wasnât pity, exactly. It was more tenderness. Along with an undeniable lust that he hadnât experienced in a very long time.
Fanny broke into his thoughts again. âI would imagine Lily is far more to your tastes than the typical debutanteâpossibly enough to consider wooing. But are you truly serious about matrimony, my lord?â
âA woman like that might induce me to marry,â he said slowly.
Fanny regarded him with worry. âPerhaps so, but I pray youâ¦donât even think about pursuing her unless you are completely sincere about following through.â
âThat much I can assure
Guillermo Orsi, Nick Caistor