She knew what she had to do.”
“Did she? How odd for a pampered lady. Though I’m sure she complained constantly about the lack of heat and food and furnishings.”
Hell and blazes, he could see where this was going. “She did not. But it was only one night, and we were hiding from killers.”
“Trust me, Jackson, killers or no, if you’d hauled me about the woods and put me through such deprivation, I would have been complaining. Loudly. Repeatedly. “
He pushed back from the table to eye her with abject skepticism. “No, you wouldn’t. You’d make the best of things.”
“And she didn’t?”
With a hard glare, he crossed his arms over his chest. “One night in a cottage is hardly a good test of how well she’d endure a lifetime in Cheapside?”
“So last night was a test, was it? And even so, she passed it. In response, you talked about duty and honor and such. Made her feel as if marrying her would be your concession to propriety. Have I judged the situation aright?”
It was getting harder to pretend that he’d behaved like anything but an arse this morning. “She has a bloody duke chomping at the bit to marry her, and you think she could be happy with me? Here?”
Aunt Ada planted her hands on her hips. “You know, I’m beginning to be insulted. I thought I’d made this quite a comfortable home, and now I find that you think it comparable to some hovel in the woods.”
“That’s not what I-“
“If you showed the same lack of feeling with her as you are with me right now, it’s a wonder she didn’t slap the tar out of you.” She shook her head. “You decided her future without even considering her feelings. Don’t you find that presumptuous?

Author: Sabrina Jeffries

She knew what she had to do.”<br />“Did she? How odd for a pampered lady. Though I’m sure she complained constantly about the lack of heat and food and furnishings.”<br />Hell and blazes, he could see where this was going. “She did not. But it was only one night, and we were hiding from killers.”<br />“Trust me, Jackson, killers or no, if you’d hauled me about the woods and put me through such deprivation, I would have been complaining. Loudly. Repeatedly. “<br />He pushed back from the table to eye her with abject skepticism. “No, you wouldn’t. You’d make the best of things.”<br />“And she didn’t?”<br />With a hard glare, he crossed his arms over his chest. “One night in a cottage is hardly a good test of how well she’d endure a lifetime in Cheapside?”<br />“So last night was a test, was it? And even so, she passed it. In response, you talked about duty and honor and such. Made her feel as if marrying her would be your concession to propriety. Have I judged the situation aright?”<br />It was getting harder to pretend that he’d behaved like anything but an arse this morning. “She has a bloody duke chomping at the bit to marry her, and you think she could be happy with <i>me</i>? Here?”<br />Aunt Ada planted her hands on her hips. “You know, I’m beginning to be insulted. I thought I’d made this quite a comfortable home, and now I find that you think it comparable to some hovel in the woods.”<br />“That’s not what I-“<br />“If you showed the same lack of feeling with her as you are with me right now, it’s a wonder she didn’t slap the tar out of you.” She shook her head. “You decided her future without even considering her feelings. Don’t you find that presumptuous? - Sabrina Jeffries




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