chapter 14
The minister was already dressed in a dark sack coat with elbows polished by wear. His cravat wasn't quite correctly tied when he opened the door, but he didn't seem to be aware of that as his eyes opened wide at the sight of his employer on his doorstep. As he retreated to allow Peter in, his gaze fell on the two miscreants with him.
Georgina offered him a blinding smile. "We wanted to elope, but Peter has gallantly offered to stand up for us. I hope we're not disturbing you."
Daniel was quite proud of her. For a light-headed, frivolous pearl of society, Georgina was remarkably courageous. Another woman might have been hysterical by now. Of course, another woman would never have got herself into this situation.
He felt no remorse at what he was about to do. Georgina had brought it down upon her own head. Actually, Daniel found the better part of this episode mildly amusing. The hand-picked bride for the handsome heir to the Mulloney kingdom was about to be thrown away on the damaged son who had already been disowned. Daniel really hoped Artemis Mulloney enjoyed the irony of it when he discovered the situation.
And he very much feared his father would learn the whole truth of the situation much sooner than Daniel had contemplated. Marriage entailed a certain amount of honesty he hadn't anticipated revealing so soon. And he was more than certain his two companions were even less prepared for it. Well, he'd learned a long time ago to let the chips fall where they may. He just hoped those chips weren't bigger than he was.
Georgina handed him his coat, and Daniel shrugged it on. There was a grim edge to her smile that he didn't like, but he couldn't particularly blame her. Peter was at his officious worst, giving orders and instructions that had the minister and his wife running in circles. Daniel offered her a grin and tucked a straying wisp of hair behind Georgina's ear. She hadn't even taken the time to tidy it. He would have thought a socialite would have been a little more vain than that.
But he suspected this socialite was hiding one whopping load of anger behind her demure expression and sugary sweetness. He wasn't exactly certain that he wanted to be on the receiving end of all that pent-up fury when it was finally unleashed. The way Georgina was looking at Peter now, Daniel figured the other man would bear the brunt of it, but for one minor problem—the matter of Daniel's real name.
He could take the coward's way out and let the minister use the name Peter was currently instructing him to use. The marriage would probably be fraudulent and null and void, and they wouldn't have to go through the scandalous legal processes of annulment. But Daniel had seen the chaos that created when his adopted sister had tried it, and he wasn't prepared to deal with those kind of complications. He liked things done straightforwardly and honestly.
So he smiled and took Georgina's hand when the minister gestured for them to step forward. He couldn't think of any particularly good objections to marrying Georgina Hanover. She was good-humored and well-intentioned and not a half-bad photographer. She wasn't the quiet intellectual he had always imagined marrying, but a cheerful smile could go a long way toward alleviating that lack. And though she was short and blond and not the willowy brunette of his dreams, Daniel had no difficulty whatsoever in imagining her in his bed.
And if he was being completely truthful with himself, that was probably the major reason he was standing here listening to the minister mouth the hypocrisies of this marriage service: Georgina Hanover would make a round handful in his bed, and he was a starving man.
Of course, the degree of shock and incredulity he was about to unleash was also stimulating.
To Daniel's surprise the minister didn't use their full names when asking for their vows. As just "Daniel," he vowed to love and protect "Georgina" until death parted them. That shook him a trifle as he looked down at the woman beside him. She repeated the vows as calmly as he had, but Daniel noticed her fingers were trembling. He took them in his own and marvelled at how small and soft they were against his hand. It had been a long time since he had really paid attention to any woman. He was beginning to realize that was about to change.
He didn't have a ring to give her, but she took the one off her right hand and gave it to him, and he slid it on the ring finger of her left hand. Nervously, she tried to pull away from his grasp, but Daniel held on to her as the final prayers were said over their heads. He had the oddest sensation in his middle as he held this woman's hand and heard the minister droning the words of the marriage ceremony. He had never tried to imagine what it would be like to be married. He didn't think even his imagination would have been able to quite grasp it. He was feeling nervous and scared and oddly protective and definitely very hungry.
Daniel concentrated on the hunger. There was no mention of kissing the bride at the end of the service, and he wondered what religious denomination was so hopelessly unromantic. Without waiting for permission, he tucked his arm around his new wife's waist and hauled her closer.
Georgina's eyes widened as she realized his intent, but it was far too late to resist. Daniel's lips closed over hers, and she shivered with the thrill of this unexpected intimacy. Her eyes closed instinctively, allowing her to absorb the sensation of her husband's strong embrace, the rasp of his unshaven beard, the oddly pungent flavor of his mouth. She was aware of other things, too, things she couldn't rightly name but which involved the nearness of Daniel's broad chest to her breasts and the closeness of their legs and some odd electricity that emanated from them as a result. She was sadly shaken when he stepped back at the minister's embarrassed cough.
Georgina had difficulty tearing her gaze away from her new husband, but she forced herself to calmly turn and meet Peter's eyes. He was furious. There was a muscle jumping in his jaw that she had never noticed before. His eyes glowed with an unholy emerald green that made her wish she had never crossed his path. She had never thought of Peter as a villain, but she thought he would make a very good one right now.
"Where's the license and the register, Reverend?" Peter's voice was harsh as he turned away from the newly married couple. "We want this all tight and legal."
The minister hurriedly produced the book and a blank certificate and began to fill in the names of the parties involved. He held out the pen to Daniel. "If you'll just sign your name, then your wife can sign hers, and the witnesses will go on the lines after that."
Daniel scrawled his name boldly across the book and the paper with what looked to Georgina like a measure of satisfaction. He shouldn't be satisfied with this arrangement. He ought to be angry, or at least irritated. But he handed the pen to her with a smile that Georgina would have given money for had it been on Peter's face. As it wasn't, she sighed and took the pen and turned to the piece of paper, signing her life away.
She only glanced at Daniel's scrawl to see if he had used his full name. She blinked as her mind registered the discrepancy between what she had expected and what was there. She turned and looked at Daniel, waiting for some wink of conspiracy to tell her this was just a joke or some means of getting them out of this trap. But he had told her how he meant to get them out of this trap, and it had nothing to do with his signing Peter's name as his own.
Her hesitation made Peter suspicious. He grabbed the paper, read the signature "Daniel Ewan Mulloney," and flung it to the floor.
Raising his rifle, he thundered, "Get another one, Reverend. The gentleman doesn't seem to remember his name."
Daniel calmly picked up the paper and handed it to Georgina. Looking at her and not the man with the rifle, he said, "That is my name. You'll find it on file at the courthouse. I have the birth certificate to prove it. If you despise the name, Miss Merry, I might consider changing it. I don't take much pride in it."
Georgina's fingers crumpled the paper at the edges as she stared at it. She had just sworn not many hours ago that she would starve rather than marry into the Mulloney family. But maybe it wasn't the same family. She had never seen Daniel in town before these last weeks. He couldn't be one of them.
She glanced up hopefully at Daniel's sincere expression. "If there's no relation, there shouldn't be room for complaint." She picked up the pen to sign her name below his.
"There's no damned relation!" Peter roared at the same time as Daniel murmured, "I'm afraid there is."
Georgina's hand halted in the midst of the first G. She stared at the paper as if the answer to this dilemma were written there. If she didn't sign, would the marriage still be valid? And if it wasn't valid, what would she do now? She couldn't go home. She couldn't marry a man mad enough to hold her at rifle point. She would end up walking the streets. But if she signed, Daniel was telling her she would be Georgina Mulloney. Why had he lied? Had he lied? Was he lying now? Her fingers trembled.
"Sign it, Georgie." Daniel's voice was soothing and reassuring at the same time. "I have no intention of claiming any connection with a family that lets people starve and live in deprivation so as to have expensive carriages and fancy balls. I put my real name on there only to protect you."
Against her better judgment, Georgina began to sign, but again, Peter's roar intervened. She swung around just in time to see him drop his weapon and reach for Daniel's shirt front. There wasn't time for Daniel to dodge the blow. He took it square on the jaw, staggering backward while the minister's wife wailed in dismay as he slammed into her shelf of china ornaments.
But Daniel was up and off the shelf and grabbing for the dropped rifle before Peter could reach out to repeat his earlier blow. Not using the firing end of the rifle, he slammed the stock into Peter's stomach, crumpling the other man in two. Then flinging the rifle down, he grabbed Peter's collar and jerked him up.
They stood face-to-face, and Georgina held back a gasp of recognition. It was the same sloping aristocratic nose on both men, only Daniel's was slightly bent from some earlier brawl. Their lips were pressed tight in the same straight lines of fury, and there was even a certain similarity in the jut of their jaws. Why hadn't she seen the resemblance sooner?
Because the force of their highly incompatible personalities made it impossible to see similarities where there were only differences. Daniel was easygoing, mild-mannered, and amiable, always willing to listen and eager to act. Peter was wired tighter than any rope, explosive in his manner when thwarted, stiffer than the celluloid collar at his throat and as difficult to bend. There could be no comparison, except at moments like this.
Daniel was shaking his captive and shoving him toward the desk and the still unsigned license. "Witness it, dear brother. Let us make this perfectly legal, just as you asked. Then go home to Papa and explain what you've done. I doubt that he will be amused, but he probably won't banish you to St. Louis as he did me. He'll start running out of sons after a while if he did that."
Peter turned so violently that he ripped from Daniel's grasp, but Daniel blocked the blow this time, shoving Peter's fist away. Then he stepped back and stood by Georgina's side.
"Sign it, Peter. You don't have to tell the old man anything. Let's just try to get out of here like civilized human beings before the good reverend and his wife think we've lost our minds."
Peter grabbed the paper and scrawled his name vividly across the bottom, then handed it to Georgina to finish signing. He scowled at Daniel as he walked toward the door. "I wish you well of her, but don't think I'm forgetting this. That name on that piece of paper had better be real or I'll see that you're hanged. Georgina deserves better than scum like you."
Peter stalked out, slamming the door, to the sigh of a soft "Oh, my" from Mrs. Herron. Her husband merely handed her the license to finish witnessing.
Georgina discovered she was trembling. She wasn't accustomed to scenes like this. She had always lived a staid and respectable life. Only the humbler, uneducated elements of society shouted and fought and behaved like animals. Just what was she letting herself in for?
Daniel folded the paper, put it into his pocket, and handed the terrified minister some coins for his trouble. Peter should have been the one to do that. Peter had always been her model of respectable behavior. She had only begun to realize how poor her judgment had been all these years. How wrong could she be about a man she had known only a few weeks?
Pure terror washed through Georgina as Daniel reached for her hand to lead her away. She didn't know this man at all. She hadn't even known his real name. A man who could hide his identity while attempting to destroy his real family wasn't the kind of man she wanted for a husband. She jerked her hand away and started out the door without him.
Daniel caught up with her in a few strides. She was halfway down the unpaved street before she realized Peter had taken the carriage, leaving them stranded in an unfamiliar neighborhood.
"Keep going straight. We'll be downtown in a few minutes," Daniel advised as he walked beside her, adjusting his gait to hers.
"Go away," she whispered harshly.
"Since we're going in the same direction, that isn't reasonable."
He was loping along with his limping, humble act, being the amiable journalist again, but now she knew better. Daniel might look tame, but he had a vicious streak to match Peter's any day. Anyone who could take a blow like Peter had dealt him and still strike back with fierceness was not a gentle man. She hurried faster.
Daniel kept pace without complaint. He didn't even seem to be limping much. Maybe that was just a pretense, too. Scowling, she lifted her skirts and almost ran toward town.
"Merry, you can't run away. You did that last night and look where it's got you."
He was right beside her, not even breathing heavily as they entered Main Street. Street sweepers were stirring the dust on the macadam, and a few of them looked up with interest as they hurried by.
Georgina skirted around the lamp man dousing the gaslights. "I'm not running away."
"Then what are you doing? Early morning walks may be beneficial to our health, but I don't think this pace is required."
"Why don't you just shut up and go away? I have to think."
"Fine. I'll be quiet. But I'm not letting you out of my sight. In that gown you'd have every male in town on your heels within minutes."
She hadn't thought of that. She glanced down at the folds of silk blowing in the breeze created by her brisk walk. She wasn't wearing enough under it to disguise her legs beneath the thin fabric, and the neckline was shockingly low for this time and place. Even as she realized that the shadow between her breasts could be seen, she felt Daniel's gaze follow hers. He was staring at her breasts.
And he had every right to. He was her husband.
Gulping at the enormity of the foolishness she had committed, Georgina stalked on.
What if he had lied about leaving her untouched, too?
Texas Tiger
Patricia Rice's books
- Castillo's Fiery Texas Rose
- Hotter than Texas (Pecan Creek)
- One Texas Night
- Texas Blue
- Texas Rose
- Undercover Texas
- The Texas Renegade Returns
- Collide
- Blue Dahlia
- A Man for Amanda
- All the Possibilities
- Bed of Roses
- Best Laid Plans
- Black Rose
- Blood Brothers
- Carnal Innocence
- Dance Upon the Air
- Face the Fire
- High Noon
- Holding the Dream
- Lawless
- Sacred Sins
- The Hollow
- The Pagan Stone
- Tribute
- Vampire Games(Vampire Destiny Book 6)
- Moon Island(Vampire Destiny Book 7)
- Illusion(The Vampire Destiny Book 2)
- Fated(The Vampire Destiny Book 1)
- Upon A Midnight Clear
- Burn
- The way Home
- Son Of The Morning
- Sarah's child(Spencer-Nyle Co. series #1)
- Overload
- White lies(Rescues (Kell Sabin) series #4)
- Heartbreaker(Rescues (Kell Sabin) series #3)
- Diamond Bay(Rescues (Kell Sabin) series #2)
- Midnight rainbow(Rescues (Kell Sabin) series #1)
- A game of chance(MacKenzie Family Saga series #5)
- MacKenzie's magic(MacKenzie Family Saga series #4)
- MacKenzie's mission(MacKenzie Family Saga #2)
- Cover Of Night
- Death Angel
- Loving Evangeline(Patterson-Cannon Family series #1)
- A Billionaire's Redemption
- A Beautiful Forever
- A Bad Boy is Good to Find
- A Calculated Seduction
- A Changing Land
- A Christmas Night to Remember
- A Clandestine Corporate Affair
- A Convenient Proposal
- A Cowboy in Manhattan
- A Cowgirl's Secret
- A Daddy for Jacoby
- A Daring Liaison
- A Dark Sicilian Secret
- A Dash of Scandal
- A Different Kind of Forever
- A Facade to Shatter
- A Family of Their Own
- A Father's Name
- A Forever Christmas
- A Dishonorable Knight
- A Gentleman Never Tells
- A Greek Escape
- A Headstrong Woman
- A Hunger for the Forbidden
- A Knight in Central Park
- A Knight of Passion
- A Lady Under Siege
- A Legacy of Secrets
- A Life More Complete
- A Lily Among Thorns
- A Masquerade in the Moonlight
- At Last (The Idle Point, Maine Stories)
- A Little Bit Sinful
- A Rich Man's Whim
- A Price Worth Paying
- An Inheritance of Shame
- A Shadow of Guilt
- After Hours (InterMix)
- A Whisper of Disgrace
- A Scandal in the Headlines
- All the Right Moves
- A Summer to Remember
- A Wedding In Springtime
- Affairs of State
- A Midsummer Night's Demon
- A Passion for Pleasure
- A Touch of Notoriety
- A Profiler's Case for Seduction
- A Very Exclusive Engagement
- After the Fall
- Along Came Trouble
- And the Miss Ran Away With the Rake
- And Then She Fell
- Anything but Vanilla
- Anything for Her