Holy Mother of Molys...
I stared down at Mr Rikkard Ambrose kneeling in front of me, and at the ring in his hand. The big, golden ring. Were my eyes deceiving me? This couldn't be real, could it?
'Upon consideration,' Mr Ambrose stated, 'I came to the conclusion that we should take this customary step to formalize relations.'
This was real. Only Mr Rikkard Ambrose would make such a breathtakingly romantic proposal.
This was real. He was real. He was mine. I swallowed and forced my dry mouth to open.
'Formalize away.'
Reaching up, he took my hand with a care that almost approached tenderness.
'Miss Lillian Linton, do you want to become my wife?'
With all my might, I squeezed a single word past the lump in my throat. 'Y-yes.'
'Good. Because you're going to.'
Had he just said good? Good? Not adequate?
Taking a firmer grip on my hand, he slipped the beautiful, big golden ring onto my ring finger. It went easily. In fact...a little bit too easily. It was a little bit too big.
I blinked.
No, not just a little bit...The bloody thing was large enough for three fingers at a time! Had Mr Ambrose gotten a knock on the head during the fight that had messed up his eyesight? Why else would he pick such a humongous ring that actually didn't look like an engagement ring, but much more like a...
I froze.
No.
No, he wouldn't. Not even he would dare to...
Slowly, I raised my eyes high, high above to where the theatre curtain hung from the ceiling, held by a number of big, glinting, gilded rings. At the very edge of the curtain, one ring was missing.
My eyes snapped back to Mr Ambrose, sparking with fury.
'You...you...'
'...are the love of my life?' he suggested.
'You miserable excuse for a miserly son of a bachelor! I...I...'
'Yes?'
'...I love you, dammit!'
'How gratifying.'
'But don't ask me why!'
'I was not planning to.' Rising to his feet, he dusted off his tailcoat and offered me a hand. 'Shall, we, Mrs Ambrose?'
Unable to keep the smile from my face, I slipped the ring over three of my fingers and took his hand. So what if it was crazy? It was us. The rest of the world could go bugger themselves!
'We shall.'
Our little scene was interrupted by slow claps. Startled, I glanced around, just in time to see Claudette ascending from the orchestra pit.
'Perfait! What a spectacle. It's a pity sat I cannot turn your story into an opera. Se audience would flee se city in droves and I could get a well-deserved holiday.'
Mr Ambrose gave the prima donna a cold look. 'I thought I gave orders for everyone to vacate the great hall.'
'Pouah!' Claudette made a dismissive gesture. 'In my opera house, I can do what I want.'
Mr Ambrose opened his mouth, probably to remind her of the little fact that it was actually his opera house, but I squeezed his hand, and—wonder of wonders—he closed his mouth.
YOU ARE READING
Hunting for Silence
RomanceBritish business mogul Rikkard Ambrose has departed London to face his arch-rival in a deadly game of espionage and intrigue at the Royal Court of France, leaving his lady love behind to knit socks and twiddle her thumbs. Left behind alone? That is...