Ravishing the Heiress

Ravishing the Heiress Read Online Free PDF

Book: Ravishing the Heiress Read Online Free PDF
Author: Sherry Thomas
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Historical
“It’s the only one I have of you.”
    He set down the photograph and carefully, slowly, turned toward her.
    Isabelle.
    She was both taller and leaner than he remembered—and not eighteen anymore. Her face had settled into a somewhat harsher shape. There was tension to the contour of her jaw. Her skin seemed to require a greater effort to stretch over her features.
    But those features were as chiseled and proud as ever. Her hair was the same blue black. The fire in her eyes remained undiminished. And in the intensity of her gaze he recognized the Isabelle Pelham of yesteryear.
    And at the sight of her, long-lost memories, recollections that had become as faded as pages in an ancient manuscript, suddenly reacquired color, brightness, and focus. Isabelle in spring, holding an armful of hyacinths. Isabelle in her white tennis dress, waving her racquet at him, her smile brighter than the sun shining on the deep green lawn. Isabelle crunching fallen leaves underfoot, turning occasionally to say something to her governess, who trailed several steps behind them, and whom he barely noticed, because he had eyes only for his girl.
    “Mrs. Englewood,” he said. “How do you do?”
    “Fitz, my goodness,” she murmured. “You are exactly as I remember you.
Exactly.

    He smiled. “I still look nineteen?”
    “No, of course not. You are a man full grown. But the essence of you has not changed at all.” She shook her headslightly, as if in wonder. “Come, we can’t hold a conversation in a passage. Let’s sit down.”
    The tea things had already been laid out in readiness. Isabelle poured for them both.
    “Tell me everything,” she said.
    “Tell me about India,” he said at the same time.
    They both smiled. He insisted that she regale him first with her stories, so she did. Delhi was unbearably hot in the month of April. Kashmir was very likely the most beautiful place on earth, especially Srinagar on the shores of Dal Lake. And she enjoyed the food of Hyderabad the best. He, in turn, gave her the latest on their mutual friends and acquaintances: courtships, marriages, children, and scandals minor and major.
    An hour flew by.
    Eventually she lifted her teacup and looked at him. “You haven’t said a thing about yourself, Fitz. How have you been?”
    How
had
he been? “I can’t complain,” he said.
    Isabelle’s gaze was fluid and just slight mocking. A smile played at the corners of her lips. How well he recalled this particular expression on her—she was about to say something naughty. “I hear you have been very successful with the ladies.”
    He lowered his gaze. Between the two of them, he’d always been the shyer one. “It’s a way to pass time.”
    A way to cope—and to forget.
    “Lady Fitzhugh is very understanding, then.”
    “She’s always been very sensible.”
    “When I was still in India I’d heard it said that the two of you got on very well. I hadn’t quite believed it—but I guess it’s true.”
    At last they came to it, the subject of his marriage. Her face turned somber, her gaze that of one regarding a friend’s tombstone.
    “For someone who had no say in the matter,” he said, “I’ve been fortunate in the wife I’ve been allotted.”
    “So…you are glad you married her?”
    He did not look away this time. “I didn’t say that. You know I’d have crawled over broken glass to marry you, had the circumstances been different.”
    “Yes,” she said, her voice unsteady. “Yes, I know that.”
    The front door of the house opened and in wafted the sounds of children at lively chatter, followed by a quick “shhh” from their minder.
    “Excuse me a moment,” said Isabelle. She left the parlor and came back with a boy and a girl. “May I present Hyacinth and Alexander Englewood. Children, this is Lord Fitzhugh, an old friend of Uncle Pelly’s and Mama’s.”
    Hyacinth was six, Alexander a year younger, both beautiful, both with their mother’s coloring. Suddenly, Fitz
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