out his own purse. He fumbled with it and pulled out a fistful of sovereigns. âHere,â he said gruffly. âTo pay for his funeral.â
The woman examined the gold pieces, looking stunned, and then scrutinized his face as if searching for signs of madness. Finding none, she stuffed them into her pocket and fled.
His curtness to the grieving woman shocked Zoe. Must the Dark Lordâs heir be a stranger to all human emotion? And yet, gruff though heâd been, heâd also been so generous.
When heâd dried his hands, Ramsay tore off his filthy shirt, and donned one a servant had brought him. Then, without another word, he strode out of the inn.
Heâd left her aloneâagain. And this time he hadnât made her promise she would wait for him. Surely, it was time to make her escape. There was no reason to stay with him any longer. Sheâd be mad to wait meekly for his return. He was almost certain to blame her for his failure to save the boy. Heâd already told her sheâd weakened his magical powers by assaulting his chastity. When he came back, he would rage at her or devise some terrifying punishment.
But she couldnât abandon him now, fool that she was. Sheâd seen anguish in his eyes when heâd washed the boyâs blood from his hands. Heâd wanted to save that strangerâs child so badly.
The world was very wrong to think sheâd been granted good sense in the place of good looks. A sensible woman would have already left Lord Ramsay without a backward glance. But she couldnât find it in herself to do it.
She settled herself in a chair in the parlor to wait for him, but, as the minutes turned into hours, and he didnât return she began to worry. Had he changed his mind after all, and gone on alone with his journey, abandoning her here to keep himself safe from the assault of her dubious charms? But no, a quick check reassured her that their post chaise still stood in the courtyard.
So he must still be somewhere in the area, avoiding her as he dealt, alone, with his pain. But try though she might, she couldnât free herself from the feeling that she must find him, that some catastrophe threatened the two of them, which made it essential that she not abandon him. She sensed him out there, desperate and bereftâand calling to her for help.
It could only be wishful thinking. She must be the last person on earth heâd want now. And yet, like a sleepwalker, she saw herself get up and fetch her bonnet. Then, ignoring the pain in her thigh and her lame ankle, she set forth into the twilight to look for him.
I t took a while to find him, but as she approached a tumbledown cottage a good half hour later, Zoe sensed Ramsay was nearby, though peer as she might through the fading light, she could see no trace of him. It was only as she came around a curve in the road by an old stone byre that she saw the flash of something golden glittering in the wan northern light. She hastened toward it. And then she saw him.
He was sitting by the byre, huddled into a ball, with his knees drawn up to his chest. He looked like a small boy, despite his height, and was holding his bronze knife before him, staring at it as if it alone could save him.
Sheâd never before seen him with any look on his face but anger or disdain, or, at best, a mild, distant amusement. But the man before her was not the man sheâd known until now. The pain on his face was so strong that, without thinking, she walked over and gently put her arm around his shoulders, as she would have done had he been one of her pupils at school whoâd just received some dreadful news from home.
He twisted out of her grasp, his face livid. âDonât touch me! Havenât you done enough damage to me already? I couldnât do anything for the boy but watch him die. His guts were spilling out and I couldnât even still his pain.â
âIf it was like that, then no one
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