Part 41 (1/2)

Love could happen.

She decided today that Lady Fennimore was delivering a message of hope.

She didn't feel uplifted by it. But the momentum of her decision would carry her through, she supposed.

She glanced up toward the vicarage, and she shaded her eyes, and went still.

And then her heart gave a little glad lurch.

Her cousin Adam, the vicar, was in front of the vicarage, in s.h.i.+rtsleeves. He'd been out cutting wood, from the looks of things. And he was speaking to the bandaged beggar from Madame Marceau's! He ushered the beggar swiftly into the vicarage, but it was unmistakably him: the same shabby, tattered clothing, the bandages. The poor soul appeared to be bent, too, and he dragged a foot, which was likely why he'd spent so much time sitting.

And she was glad she could send him to Adam, who seemed to have endless reserves of time and goodness to give to those who needed it. And if she'd been the means by which that man found help and comfort, well then, that was the only wedding present she needed.

It seemed like a sign.

Though she would have preferred to have one of the beggar's blessings, just to be certain of it.

AN EXHAUSTED, ANTIc.i.p.aTORY hush had finally fallen over Eversea house.

Olivia's wedding dress was laid out on a bed in a miraculously unoccupied Eversea bedroom. Her relatives had all visited it in a hush, in turn, as if it were a loved one lying in state, and p.r.o.nounced it exquisite.

Tomorrow everyone would troop down to the church-Landsdowne and his party of mother, sisters, and an old friend who had agreed to stand up with him would meet the Eversea family there-and the last of all the Eversea siblings to get married (as more than one aunt had reminded Olivia) was finally going to do just that. Though it was worth it, everyone conceded. It seemed Clever Olivia had clearly been holding out for a viscount all along. It wasn't quite the same as a duke, but dukes were hardly thick on the ground and Landsdowne was indisputably a catch, and thankfully she could now put all that Lyon Redmond nonsense behind her once and for all.

And after that, there would be a great party and dancing, with Seamus Duggan and his merry band of players providing the music, and the doors of Eversea House would be open to the whole of the town to celebrate the event of a decade, an event no one had truly thought would ever occur.

”JOHN EDGAR, WILT thou have this woman to thy wedded wife, to live together after G.o.d's ordinance in the holy estate of matrimony? Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honor, and keep her in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto her, so long as ye both shall live?”

Landsdowne's response was instant.

”I will.”

The words filled the corners of the church like the triumphant notes of an organ.

The church was crammed full of bodies-everybody who had ever lived in Pennyroyal Green seemed to be in attendance, including all of the Redmonds, who never missed a church service if it could be helped, and perhaps had ulterior motives for being present at this one-and it was warmer than she could ever remember it being. But still Olivia s.h.i.+vered in her wedding dress.

She could scarcely remember how she'd gotten here.

She'd awakened at dawn, and her mother and her sister and aunts, in a reverent, understanding hush, had slid the beautiful, much-discussed, flawlessly lovely dress over her head.

She remembered answering questions in monosyllables. She remembered trembling; she still was. And as Mademoiselle Lilette-Digby had said, only two things were required of her today: that she look beautiful, and that she repeat the right words at the vicar's prompting.

She'd accomplished the first.

”Wilt thou, Olivia Katherine, have this man to thy wedded husband, to live together after G.o.d's ordinance in the holy estate of matrimony? Wilt thou obey him, and serve him, love, honor, and keep him in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto him, so long as ye both shall live?”

So long as ye both shall live.

The words seemed to knell.

It was a simple question. Asked millions of times, likely, since the ancient, binding words were first written.

It required a simple two-word answer.

It suddenly seemed perilous that only two words could lie between a person and the rest of her life.

Two words.

And yet she'd forgotten how to speak.

She glanced over her shoulder.

The congregation was almost comically motionless. They knew something was awry. Her senses were suddenly exquisitely acute. The very silence seemed to ring a high clear note, and everyone she'd known her entire life suddenly seemed as distinct as a woodcut.

Her mother's face, so like her own. Her eyes s.h.i.+ning with tears, a complexity of emotion, love and grief.

But strangely, not surprise.

Her father, leaning ever so slightly forward, as if to make it easier for him to run to her if she needed him.

Isaiah Redmond's face cold and drawn, his green eyes brilliant as stained gla.s.s.

A face so like Lyon's.

A man who had lost to Jacob Eversea. She wondered if he loved her mother, still.

And if her mother loved Isaiah.

And suddenly she felt a wayward tenderness toward Isaiah, for Olivia thought she now understood what could happen to a person who had endured a lifetime without his love.

His beautiful blond wife, Fanchette, motionless. Waiting. Her lips seemed to be moving in a silent prayer. And Olivia wondered if it was for the sudden reappearance of her son.

Violet Redmond, who had killed a pirate for the man she loved.

And the Earl of Ardmay, for whom she'd killed, and who had let Lyon go free for the love of Violet.

Lord Lavay and his new wife, Elise, and her little boy, Jack, who could not be counted on to remain still for long, but who seemed aware that something of moment was happening, judging from his wide eyes.

Ian, whom no one thought would ever marry, and who had plans to sail around the world. And beautiful American Tansy, who became his world. Who had upended all of Suss.e.x, primarily because she was lonely and needed to be loved, and Ian, of all people, was the only one who'd seen her with love's eyes.

Colin, who had thought he was in love with Louisa Porter, but had returned from his infamous gallows escape to marry Madeline, a wife who seemed to know him right down to his soul and who had made a more peaceful, tender man of him.

Marcus and Louisa. Who were so very right together that merely being in their presence made everyone happy.

Genevieve with the Duke of Falconbridge. How dangerously close Genevieve had come to marrying Harry, the wrong man. How hurt Harry had been. How brave Genevieve had been to do something about it before it was too late.

Her cousin Adam, the vicar, who had been nearly pilloried by the people of the town for love. But he had stood in this very church and one unforgettable morning he'd fought for her, the former Evie Duggan, a countess with a notorious past.

And there, to her surprise, in the very last pew, on the very edge nearest the door, was the beggar. Hunched and abject, perhaps hoping not to be seen, but wanting to be part of something beautiful.

Only now that they were all arrayed before her did she see clearly.