“You hadn’t accepted it?” she prodded.
He chuckled wryly. “No, I had definitely accepted it. I just think I hadn’t let myself…” He looked up, straight into her lovely brown eyes and paused for a moment as he realized what he wanted to say. “I hadn’t let myself like it.”
“And now you do?”
His nod was quick and firm. “I do. If I don’t —” He stopped, corrected himself. “If we don’t care for the land and its people, what are Edward and Andrew even fighting for?”
“If they are going to risk their lives for King and Country,” she said softly, “we should make it a good King and Country.”
Their eyes met, and Billie smiled. Just a little. And they didn’t speak. Because they didn’t need to. Until finally she said, “They’re going to be up with your food soon,” she said.
He quirked a brow. “Are you trying to be rid of me?”
“I’m trying to protect my reputation,” she retorted. “And yours.”
“If you recall, I did ask you to marry me.”
“No, you didn’t,” she scoffed. “You said, ‘of course I’ll marry you’,” – this she said in a remarkable impression of a distempered crone – “which is not the same thing at all.”
He eyed her thoughtfully. “I could get down on one knee.”
“Stop teasing me, George. It’s very unkind of you.” Her voice wobbled, and he felt something tight, squeezing in his chest. His lips parted, but she pushed herself off the edge of her bed and walked over to her window, crossing her arms as she stared out into the night.
“It’s not something you joke about,” she said, but her words were oddly formed, round and wide, almost as if they were coming from somewhere deep in her throat.
He came quickly to his feet. “Billie, I’m sorry. You must know I would never —”
“You should go.”
He paused.
“You should go,” she said, more forcefully this time. “They’ll be here with your dinner at any moment.”
It was a dismissal, clear and sensible. It was a kindness, really. She was stopping him from making a fool of himself. If she wanted him to propose, wouldn’t she have taken the bait he’d so casually dangled?
“As you wish,” he said, executing a polite bow even though she was not facing him. He saw her nod, and then he left the room.
Oh, dear God, what had she done?
He could have proposed to her. Right then and there. George.
And she had stopped him. Stopped him because – bloody hell, she didn’t know why. Hadn’t she spent the entire day in a blue haze, wondering why he was avoiding her and how she might get him to kiss her again?
Wouldn’t marriage ensure future kisses? Wasn’t it precisely what she needed to achieve her (admittedly unladylike) goals?
But he’d been sitting there, sprawled out in the desk chair like he owned the place (which she supposed he did, or rather, would), and she couldn’t tell if he meant it. Was he teasing her? Having a spot of fun? George had never been cruel; he wouldn’t purposefully hurt her feelings, but if he thought she regarded the whole thing as a joke, then he might feel permitted to treat it as such…
It was what Andrew would have done. Not that Andrew would ever have kissed her, or that she’d have wanted him to, but if for some reason they’d been joking about marriage, absolutely he’d have said something ridiculous about getting down on one knee.
But with George… she just hadn’t known if he’d meant it. And then what if she’d said yes? What if she’d said that she’d love for him to get down on one knee and pledge his eternal devotion…
And then found out he was joking?
Her face flamed just thinking of it.
She didn’t think he would tease about such a thing. But then again, this was George. He was the eldest son of the Earl of Manston, the noble and honorable Lord Kennard. If he were going to propose to a lady, he would never do it slapdash. He’d have the ring, and he’d have the poetic words, and he certainly wouldn’t leave it up to her to decide if he ought to do it on bended knee.
Which meant he couldn’t have meant it, right? George would never be so unsure of himself.
She flopped on her bed, pressing both hands against her chest, trying to quell her racing heart. She used to hate that about George – his unshakable confidence. When they were children he always knew better than the rest of them. About everything. It had been the most annoying thing, even if now she realized that at five years their senior, he probably had known better about everything. There was no way the rest of them were going to catch up until they reached adulthood.
And now… Now she loved his quiet confidence. He was never brash, never boastful. He was just… George.
And she loved him.
She loved him, and – OH DEAR GOD, SHE HAD JUST STOPPED HIM FROM ASKING HER TO MARRY HIM.
What had she done?
And more importantly, how could she undo it?
Chapter 20
G