Prologue:
The Island, 1813
The woman stood on the shores of her homeland, gazing out to sea. In the distance, the ship was but a speck, no longer visible. The children had left, at last, as shehad always known they would have to.Their father had come to take them away. After seven years, he had finally come.
It was too soon.
She had been setting her plans for almost ten years, ten years before the duke had finally seen fit to take his children to his homeland - to her homeland. Even then, it had been almost too late, for the children had been almost grown, and would take time to adapt to the Island’s ways. She did not know how long the duke would stay. He had not mourned his wife, she knew, though he had been sad, for the children would no longer have a mother. He had come to the Island only for a brief respite from his life.
But fate had intervened, and the duke had found himself called upon to aid his country, to serve the King, and so for seven long years his children had been left on the Island, to face their legacy. To face their father’s legacy, which he had never known, having left the Island before he was of five years of age and thus unable to have fulfilled his destiny. It had been too late for him - but it was not too late for the children. No, it was not too late at all.
He had entrusted the children to her sister’s care, never knowing her true identity. The woman smiled at the thought. Foolish, foolish man. To think his destroyer had been under his nose all along...and that he had willingly delivered his children into her hands!
But the time would come, soon, when her plans would come into fruition, when, at long last, she would restore the Island’s legacy. The children would return, one day, to take their rightful place in the world that they belonged in, and then their mother would finally be able to rest. Their father had foiled her in taking them away once, fifteen years ago, and then once again, seven years ago, but never again would he do so. He did not know it, but his death was drawing near. One day, soon, his children would return, and embrace his killers as their people. Embrace the land he had spurned.
One day. Soon.
Chapter One: In Which Faith’s Pending Matrimony is Discussed
London, 1825
“Fayfee,” the man slurred, lurching drunkenly at her. “Fayfee, I luf you. I luf you, Fayfee. Why -” (he hiccuped) “Why can’t you mar- marrrrrry me?” He clutched at her gown, staring dolefully up at her with glazed eyes, and swayed slightly as he fought to keep his balance.
Faith Elizabeth Amalia Sarah Jannelle de Courte Constantinos, fifth Countess of Devenry, seventh Viscountess of Rawlston, 12th Baronness of Tusane, daughter of the late 6th Duke of Edenvale, and sister to the 7th Duke of Edenvale, rolled her eyes and resisted the extraordinarily strong urge to stamp her foot. Firmly, but gently, she removed Lord Perry’s hands from her sleeve, and set him solidly against the wall where he proceeded to begin sliding downwards. With a sigh she grabbed his arms and heaved him up again, where he stood, this time swaying, but upright.
Strains of music came tinkling in from the ballroom of the Mansfield’s elegant manor, where Faith had been a minute ago shrivelling up in boredom before being dragged quite gracelessly into one of the numerous alcoves of the hall by a drunk Lord Perry very much intent on (once again) declaring his eternal devotion. As tedious as the ball had been, she would have much preferred to stay there than to languish in Lord Perry’s drunken, although assuredly devoted, clutches. “Lord Perry,” she stated, trying to sound firm. “I have already told you why my brother turned down your suit - in fact, why he turned down all the gentlemen who have been calling on me. I am already betrothed, and therefore unavailable.” Much as she wished it otherwise, of course.
“Pah,” Perry said, managing to shower her with a rain of spittle while he was at it.
“Silll - Silverssstone don’t deserrrve you, Fayfee. He don’t deserrrve anyone. Damn - damn devil’s spawn!” He lurched again, tumbling into her and almost sending her sprawling.
“I’m rather inclined to agree,” Faith muttered dryly, looking around and hoping no one had, as yet, noticed their altercation. With a heave, she set Perry back against the wall once more and backed away hastily before he could launch himself at her again.
“Wassat?” Perry mumbled, looking at her blearily. “You agree? Really Fayfee? You do? You’ll marry me! Oh Fayfee...” he grinned sleepily. “You’ve made me so happy...”
“No!” the startled exclamation tore out of her before she had a chance to subdue it, and she was instantly rewarded with the brokenhearted expression on Perry’s face. His lower lip stuck out, and she saw it quiver suspiciously. He was harmless, really, she thought with a sigh. Too devoted perhaps, for his own good, and too free with his money, but he was a young man still, and would learn to curb his impulses.
“I’m sorry, my lord,” Faith said, trying to be as gentle as possible. “But I’m afraid the right to decide my marriage lies with my brother. You’ll have to consult him.”
Lord Perry’s face crumpled, looking almost as if he were about to burst into tears, and she immediately felt a fresh stab of guilt. It wasn’t his fault, really, she though with a twinge of shame. She supposed she had encouraged him, when she really hadn’t had the right to. But really, all she’d done was allow him to take her on the occasional ride around the park - she’d had no idea that he would take it as a sign of some sort of deeper feeling. “There, there,” she said awkwardly, patting his arm. “I’m sure you’ll find some lovely other young woman upon whom to bestow your affections - she’ll be most lucky, you’ll see.”
“No!” Perry cried suddenly, sounding remarkably lucid for his inebrieted state. “I won’t many another! And I won’t let you, either! If I can’t have you, no one will.” With disturbing grimmess and a surprising strength for all his unsteadiness, he latched onto Faith’s arm and began dragging her towards the side door behind them, wobbling all the way.
All traces of Faith’s good intentions vanished. “Here now!” she protested, trying forcefully to yank her arm out of his grip. “Let me go at once, sirrah, or I tell you straight, I’ll ,make sure you regret it!”
Lord Perry shook his head at her. “Sorry, my love,” he said regretfully. “Can’t do that. Besides, I know you’d never hurt me. I’m off to marry you, you see, and if I let you go, there’ll be no bride there! And if there’s no bride, there’s no wedding. You see my problem?”
“Oh yes,” Faith said grimly. “I see your problem.” Before he could do more than gape at her, she swung her fist and punched him, thereby knocking him conveniently out.
“Another disappointed suitor?” the amused male tones behind her drew Faith’s attention as he dusted off her hands and straightened her skirts. She swivelled around, panic flaring in her eyes before she realised it had been her brother Sylvester, who had spoken. “Don’t you make noise?” she demanded crossly. “I thought you were Lady Jersey come to crucify me.”
“Lady Jersey would make noise,” Sebastion reassured her blithely.
“I don’t suppose she’s named ‘silence’ for nothing,” Faith muttered.
Sylvester grinned. “I notice poor old Perry hasn’t recovered from the stunning blow you dealt him yet. What shall we do with him?”
“Leave him,” Faith shrugged. “He’ll wake up at some point. You ought to have been more clear with him about his suit, you know. He doesn’t seem to have got the point that you meant no.”
Her brother raised a ducal eyebrow. “Faith, my dear sister. My exact words to him were: ‘No, you may not marry my sister. If you broach the subject to me ever again I shall cut out your tongue.’ Exactly how clear did you wish me to be? By the way, someone is bound to trip over him if we leave him here.”
“You needn’t have been so cruel,” she insisted. “It probably triggered some sort of defence mechanism in him, made him shut out all opposition.”
“Do you mean he simply chose to ignore whatever he didn’t want to hear?”
“Yes,” she sighed. “He’s really very unfortunate, you know. His father was terribly cruel to him as a child, so now whenever someone says something he doesn’t want to hear - particularly cruelly - he simply chooses to ignore it.”
“Dear lord, Fayfee, when did you start analysing other people’s behaviour?”
She glowered at his deliberate mockery of her name. “I didn’t. He told me.”
“He did?”