Joanâs neck, as though to whisper in her ear . . . or kiss her. Margaretâs stomach roiled. She couldnât see Joanâs face, but she saw Marcus capture the maidâs hand and begin to tug her down the corridor.
âThere you are, Mr. Benton.â The low voice of Murdoch, their butler, interrupted the scene. âYour uncle requests your presence in the study.â
Joan pulled her hand free. Marcus muttered an oath and disappeared.
Releasing a breath she had not realized she was holding, Margaret climbed back into bed. Yet long after Marcusâs footsteps faded and the house was quiet, Margaret lay awake, unsettling images circling through her mind: Sterling and Marcus. Marcus and Joan. Miss Lyons and Lewis. Lewis and Nathaniel . . .
The last image she saw before sleep finally overtook her was Nathaniel Upchurchâs look of disgust shooting across the ballroom and scorching her skin.
In the morning, Margaret entered the breakfast room, startled to find Sterling Benton eating alone. Sheâd hoped to avoid him, waiting until he, an early riser, would normally have departed, while his wastrel nephew would no doubt still be abed.
Sterling sat stirring a cup of coffee, although she knew he added neither sugar nor milk. With his thick silver hair, chiseled features, and confident sophistication, she understood what women like Miss Lyons, like her mother, saw in him. Still, how stunned and nearly sickened she had been when her mother announced her engagement to the man a mere twelvemonth after Stephen Macyâs death.
Margaret forced a civil tone. âGood morning.â
He looked up, piercing her with his icy blue eyes. âIs it? You tell me.â
Margaret helped herself to a plate at the sideboard, more as an excuse to turn her back on him than eagerness for food. Finding herself alone with him, her appetite had fled.
âI take it you did not enjoy yourself last night,â he said. âI did not approve of your leaving alone.â
âI was not alone. I left with Emily Lathrop and her parents.â
âAnd you did not dance once, although I am certain Marcus must have asked you.â
Margaret knew any offer Marcus madeâwhether for a dance or marriageâwas made at his uncleâs behest.
âI was not in the mood for dancing,â she said, thinking, since Lewis Upchurch never asked.
Sterling sipped his coffee. âYou left before the most interesting part of the evening.â
âOh?â
âNathaniel Upchurch returned from the West Indies as wild as a heathen. He struck his brother, Lewis, without provocation in front of the entire assembly.â
Margaret had heard snatches of the argument and surmised there had been some provocationâat least in Nathanielâs mindâbut she remained silent.
So Sterling had not seen her come back into the ballroom. The thought that Sterlingâs eagle eyes were less than perfect felt somehow comforting.
âYour mother tells me he once courted you,â Sterling continued.
Margaret blindly placed a muffin on her plate. âThat was years ago, before he left England.â
âAnd you rejected his suit?â
âI did.â
âVery wise, my girl. Very wise.â
It certainly had seemed wiseâthen and more so now, after last nightâs violent demonstration. Still the smug tone irked. âAnd why is that?â
âBecause you are free to marry Marcus. As it was meant to be. You cannot fight destiny, my girl.â
He rose and stood beside her, his long manicured fingers pressing into her arm. âI would not advise fighting destiny, Margaret. Destiny always wins. And so, my dear, do I.â
Margaret shivered but made no reply.
With a last warning look, Sterling left her.
Sighing, Margaret sat down to a solitary breakfast of tea, egg, and muffin. Her stomach churned, and she pushed away the food, sipping the tea instead.
It would not do