"That's my girl." Justin grinned. "Run along now and play like a good child." Emily choked back a yelp

as he gave her bottom a fond pat, his hand lingering an instant too long on its rounded curve.


As she escorted their guest from the room, her cheeks burning from more than the stifling heat, Justin's querulous voice rose to a shout. "I don't want a frigging cup of tea, Penfeld. I want my soldiers. Fetch them for me posthaste, or it's off with your heads for the bloody lot of you!"


* * *


Emily chose a muslin shawl from the coat rack and accompanied Nicholas Saleri into the garden. After the stifling gloom of the smoking room, the cool, sunlit air sparkled with iridescence. A gentle breeze

blew from the south and the plain little wrens hopped and twittered across the softening earth in a poignant reminder that winter would not last forever.


They strolled in companionable silence for several moments before Nicky sighed heavily. "He's much worse than I feared. How do you bear it?"


She lifted her shoulders in a delicate shrug. "On his good days he flirts with amnesia. On his bad days, insanity itself. I fear the shock of seeing you yesterday put a terrible strain on his mind."


His voice oozed polite sympathy. "I'd heard rumors about his more bizarre incidents, but I didn't suspect the worst of it. Did he really threaten to eat one of your suitors?"


Emily bit her lip to keep from laughing. "I'm afraid so. But that wasn't nearly as devastating as the night he tried to end his life by throwing himself out of our opera box."


Saleri shook his head. "Tragic. Simply tragic. He was such a talented young man. It breaks my heart to see so much promise wasted. It's astounding what guilt can do to a mind of such fragile, artistic bent."


Emily sank down on a rustic garden bench, hugging her shawl about her in a protective gesture. "Perhaps we shouldn't speak of him so, Mr. Saleri. He did take me in and give me a home. I feel disloyal."


"You, disloyal?" He folded himself beside her, propped his walking stick against the bench, and cupped her hands in one of his own. "Surely you must be the most forgiving of creatures."


He tilted back his hat with one finger. Emily forced herself to meet his dark, hypnotic gaze. "Forgiving? How could I not forgive him? He explained everything to me in one of his brief moments of clarity."


Frowning as if deep in thought, Nicholas freed her hands and withdrew his cigarette case from his

pocket. "I'm afraid my encounter with your guardian has shaken me deeply. May I?"


She inclined her head demurely. "By all means."


He lit the cigarette, his hands steady, and took a deep draw. His lips puckered to blow out a flawless smoke ring. "I suppose Justin told you that ridiculous story about shooting your father to spare him a gruesome death at the hands of the natives."


"Ridiculous?" Emily echoed, trying to ignore the icy pounding of her heart.


"A charming fiction, I assure you, although perhaps he's grown to believe it himself over the years. I always told him he should have been a novelist instead of a pianist." He slanted her a look as if to assure himself of her full attention. "Justin's ambitions unbalanced him long before he shot your father. David suspected him of cheating us both and, sadly enough, chose to confront him while I was visiting with the natives."


"The Maori," she said softly. "I know of them. I spent some time with my guardian on the North Island."


"A kind and gentle people, as I'm sure you discovered. Hardly the devils with long forked tails of Justin's absurd tale." Trini's beaming face floated in Emily's vision. Saleri tapped away a cylinder of ash before continuing. "I heard Justin and your father quarreling when I approached from the bush that night. From what I could gather, David had caught Justin altering our land grant, erasing our names in favor of his own, all the better to cover the mysterious disappearance he'd planned for us." Emily remembered the ornate sheet of paper she'd found in Justin's cubbyhole. The sheet of paper she'd never bothered to examine.


"David was threatening to expose him to the governor general. Justin panicked and shot him. I had no choice but to flee for my own life. "


"How terrible for you!"


"It was. After the murder Justin fled and I sought shelter with the Maori until I could be sure he wouldn't return. Then and only then did I dare to claim the gold mine. But I spent years looking over my shoulder, knowing Justin still had in his possession that altered land grant and a motive for murder. You can imagine my shock to discover he was once again living in London."


"And what brought you to London again after all these years, Mr. Saleri?" she asked, fearful she was treading on dangerous ground.


"You."


His answer so closely mirrored Justin's that it shook her to the core. "Me?" she whispered.


"I've been holding David's share of the gold mine in trust for you all these years. I would have returned much sooner, but I feared my very presence might put you in jeopardy. I had no way of knowing you were already living with the man who had gone unpunished for your father's murder."


Emily wrung her hands. "Perhaps the price he has paid for his treachery is worse than imprisonment."


"Perhaps," he said, skepticism thick in his voice. He dropped the cigarette and ground it into the sparse grass. His gaze floated over her like silken fingers. "He could still be dangerous, you know. I hate to

think of a sweet, fragile creature like yourself living under his influence."


Emily stood abruptly, as if his bold look had shied her. "Your concern touches me."


He stood, his big, masculine shadow dwarfing her. "I've arranged for my solicitor to call on you to

discuss your inheritance. I cannot help but feel somewhat responsible for your present situation.

Perhaps if I had not waited so long to return …" He cupped her chin in his hands.


His smooth thumb grazed her lower lip. "May I call on you again as well, Miss Scarborough?"


She gazed up at him, softening her lips with the hint of a provocative pout. "I should be wounded if you did not, Mr. Saleri."


He snatched up her hand and pressed it to his lips. "I would rather destroy myself than wound you."


With that passionate declaration he gathered his walking stick and started toward the drive, pausing only once to look back and doff his hat to her in gallant farewell.


She stood alone after he had gone, the fringe of her shawl whipping in the wind. One question haunted her: Why was Nicholas Saleri offering to hand over her father's share of the gold mine without so much as a murmur of protest? Could Justin have been wrong about the man? And if he was, was he wrong about other things as well? The cold finger of a lengthening shadow touched her, making her shiver. She glanced toward the house. The sinking sun had set the windows of the west wing ablaze, but there was

no mistaking the watchful stance of the dark figure framed in an upstairs window. Tucking the shawl around her, Emily bowed her head and strode quickly toward the house.


Shadowy shapes cavorted in the firelight, their bronze bodies sheened ivith sweat. They leaped and twirled in a feral frenzy, rolling eyes and thrusting hips to the hypnotic chant of the sea and the

thundering rhythm of Emily's heart. She stood in their midst, her sheer nightdress dancing in the

balmy wind.


The natives parted ranks and that's when she saw him-a dark figure emerging from the bush, a

panama hat tilted low to hide his eyes. She tried to move, tried to run, but the sand sucked at her

ankles. It was too deep, too thick.


Toying with her, the man drew a cigarette case out of his pocket and slipped the thin cylinder between

his chiseled lips. He struck a match, and in that brief flare of glowing ash Emily saw ill his eyes-not

the molten brown of Nicky's eyes, but ruthless gold. Justin's eyes.


He advanced on her, stalking her with the lean, deadly grace of a tiger. As he passed through the

shadows cast by the feathery branches of a punga tree, he became a tiger, padding toward her on all fours. His powerful muscles shifted in lethal synchronicity as he crouched for the kill. Then he was

Justin again, flicking the burning cigarette into the night.


Emily stood frozen. She couldn't move, couldn't breathe. Bewitched by his approach, she realized she didn't want to move. Tears of shame trickled down her cheeks as she realized she was willing to pay

any price to feel his embrace one last time. He slipped behind her and wrapped his strong arms around her waist. He had the eyes of a tiger but the hands of a man. They were so warm, she could feel her

flesh melting beneath their heat. Her head fell back in surrender.


The heat from the flames climbed as he bent his leg between hers, dipping low to mold the muscular planes of his body to her own. His palm drifted down to cup the damp fabric of her nightdress to her breasts, then to the throbbing flesh between her legs. She could feel the dark, watchful eyes of the

natives on them, but was helpless to stop his sensual mastery of her body and soul.


Through a haze of dark pleasure she felt a new weight, heavy and cold, against her belly. Her gaze

drifted down to see the pistol gripped in his beautiful hand. With exquisite tenderness he trailed the

barrel between the aching fullness of her breasts and up until she felt the icy press of the muzzle against her temple. She writhed against him.


At the exact second his artful fingertips pressed her into ecstasy, his mouth sought and found hers, his

kiss so sweet and fraught with tender promise that it made her sob . . .


. . . then he pulled the trigger.


Emily sat bolt upright in bed, gasping for breath. The flames of her dream were gone now, leaving her drenched with sweat and shivering among the twisted bedclothes. Her bedroom was dark, the fire

almost out. She kicked the sheets off her ankles, remembering how the sand in the dream had held her fast. Her body still tingled as if from a lover's touch. She glanced at the door, half wishing the knob

would turn, the door would swing open.


Justin's mocking words came back to her: I have no intention of going where I'm not wanted.


Justin was wrong. She wanted him badly. She wanted him to cradle her in his arms, to reassure her

that Nicky was lying about her father's death, to chase away her doubts and nightmares with his tender kisses. But he'd kissed her in the dream, hadn't he . . . ?


Shuddering, Emily threw back the covers and padded restlessly to the hearth. Justin obviously had every intention of keeping his word. They'd barely spoken after Nicky's departure. Supper had been a stilted affair with the duchess and Justin's sisters casting puzzled glances between their guarded faces.


She stabbed at the glowing embers with the poker, hoping to stir the dying fire into flame. Beneath her clumsy probing, the last burning coal crumbled to ash. She dropped the poker and hugged herself, shivering. The sweat was drying on her skin and her bare feet felt like ice. Glaring at the door, she made her decision. Without bothering to grab her robe, she threw open the door and plunged into the black corridor.


* * *


Emily quickly realized it must be very late. The candles left burning at bedtime had all guttered in their sconces. The darkness enveloped her in its unrelenting folds. As she navigated the corridor, her toes slammed into the taloned base of an occasional table. Swearing under her breath, she caught a teetering china figurine before it could fall.


She continued on, hugging the center of the corridor. A loose board groaned beneath her weight. She froze, foot poised over the next board, waiting for a bevy of servants to come rushing up the stairs or