Chapter One - The Letter

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Hero

My darling son, my hands are shaking as I pen this letter....

The devil had come to Deansbrook Hall. He hadn't come drawn by four white horses or in a blast of brimstone but in the dark hair and angelic countenance of Hero Fiennes Tiffin, the seventh duke of Deansbrook.

He strode through the marble corridors of the palatial mansion he had called home for the past twenty-one years, two brindle mastiffs padding at his heels with a leonine grace that matched his own.

He stayed the dogs with a negligent flick of one hand, then pushed open the study door and leaned against the frame, wondering just how long his cousin would pretend not to notice that he was there. Her pen continued to scratch its way across the ledger for several minutes until a particularly violent t-crossing left an ugly splotch of ink on the page. Sighing with defeat, she glared at him over the top of her wire-rimmed spectacles.

"I can see that Napoleon failed to teach you any manners at all."

"On the contrary," Hero replied with a lazy smile. "I taught him a thing or two. They're saying that he abdicated after Waterloo just to get away from me."

"Now that you're back in London, I might consider joining him in exile."

As Hero crossed the room, his cousin held herself as rigid as a dressmaker's dummy.

Oddly enough, Mercy was probably the only woman in London who did not seem out of place behind the leather-and-mahogany-appointed splendor of the desk. As always, she eschewed the pale pastels and virginal whites favored by the current crop of girls for the stately hues of forest green and wine. Her shiny blonde hair was drawn back in a simple chignon that accentuated the elegance of her widow's peak.

"Please don't sulk, cousin, dear," he murmured, leaning down to kiss her cheek. "I can bear the world's judgment, but yours cuts me to the heart."

"It might if you had one." She tilted her face to receive his kiss, her stern mouth softening. "I heard you came back over a week ago. I suppose you've been staying with that rascal Kent again."

Ignoring the leather wing chair that sat in front of the desk, Hero came around and propped one hip on the corner of the desk nearest her.

"He's never quite forgiven you for swearing off your engagement, you know. He claims you broke his heart and cast cruel aspersions upon his character."

Although Mercy took care to keep her voice carefully neutral, a hint of color rose in her cheeks.

"My problem wasn't with your friend's character. It was with his lack of it."

"Yet in all these years, neither one of you has ever married. I've always found that rather ... curious."

Mercy drew off her spectacles, leveling a frosty gaze at him. "I'd rather live without a man than marry a boy." As if realizing she'd revealed too much, she slipped her spectacles back on and busied herself with wiping the excess ink from the nib of her pen.

"I'm certain that even Felix's escapades must pale in comparison to your own. I hear you've been back in London long enough to have fought four duels, added the family fortunes of three unfortunate young bucks to your winnings, and broken an assortment of innocent hearts."

Hero gave her a reproachful look. "When will you learn not to listen to shitty gossip? I only winged two fellows, won the ancestral home of another, and bruised a single heart, which turned out to be far less innocent than I'd been led to believe."

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