to play with. Why do you think sheâs so attached to Fuzzy? Did it ever occur to you heâs the only constant in her life? Sheâs been tossed from house to house like an unwanted object since the day she was born. Now sheâs a virtual prisoner at Farrington. All she wants is a real homeâfriends laughter â¦â Brigitte paused. âLove.â
âAre you quite finished?â Eric bit out.
Utterly incredulous, Brigitte shook her head from side to side. âYouâre not going to give an inch, are you? Youâre going to let your own anguish destroy that little girlâs life.â
Something inside Eric seemed to snap.
âCelebrate her bloody birthday then!â he stormed, crossing the room to seize a half-filled goblet of brandy from a barren writing table. âInvite the vicar. Bake a cake. Jump in the leaves from dawn till dusk, for all I care. Now get out.â
âAnd Christmas?â
The goblet banged to the desk. âNo.â
âNo? No what? No church? No tree? No gifts? No â¦â
âNo Christmas.â He wheeled about to face her. âAnd that is nonnegotiable. So far as Iâm concerned, Christmas does not exist. It ceased to be five years ago.â
âI understand your pain, my lord. But Noelle is a child. Surelyââ
âNo!â Eric roared, hurling his goblet against the wall.
Brigitte jumped, totally unprepared for the violence of his action. Taking an inadvertent step backward, she watched shards of crystal shatter, cascading onto the oriental carpet in a glittering spray.
Simultaneously, she became aware of her surroundings for the first time. Her unnerved gaze took in the doused lamps, the naked furnishings, the tightly drawn drapes. Grandfather was right, she reflected numbly. It is a mausoleum Other than the pile of books alongside the nightstand and the rumpled bedding, itâs as if no one lives here at all.
âAre you frightened, Miss Curran?â Eric put in, his tone menacing. âOr merely scrutinizing my quarters? Because right now Iâd be very frightened if I were you.â
His taunting words found their mark, and Brigitteâs stare returned to his, assessing him, not with alarm but with comprehension. Heâs challenging me, she realized. He wants to scare me away. Heâs fighting to protect himself.
All her girlhood dreams surged to life, mingling with the compassion and insight afforded by maturity.
âNo, my lord, Iâm not frightened,â she denied, with a decisive set of her jaw. âIâm also not âMiss Curranââat least not any longer.â
Ericâs eyes narrowed. âNo, youâre not, are you?â Purposefully, he stalked forward. âYouâre the Countess of Farrington.â He loomed over her. âMy wife.â
âYes. I am.â
âIn name only,â he reminded her. âAt least thus far.â
With the innate knowledge that she hovered on the brink of her futureâand EricâsâBrigitte sealed her own fate. âThat choice, my lord, was yours. Not mine.â
Anguish tore across his face. âDamn you,â he muttered through clenched teeth. âAnd damn me for wanting you.â
With that his arms shot out, dragging Brigitte to his chest, trapping her against the powerful contours of his body. Roughly, he seized her chin, lifting it to meet the descending force of his mouth, crushing her lips beneath his before she had a chance to breathe, much less protest.
Physical sensation, coupled with fierce emotion, crashed through Brigitte, taking her under in a huge, engulfing wave. Whimpering, she acceptedâno, welcomedâEricâs assault, her dazed mind wondering how many nights sheâd dreamed of this, at the same time knowing no fantasy could ever come close to this incomparable reality. Ericâs lips moved over hers with a burning intensity, urgent, reckless, but more like
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