him.â
âYes.â
âI thought so. And the dress sword hanging on the wall? That was his, too?â
Where was this leading? âNo, it was my grandfatherâs.â
He peered closely at it. âAh, yes, Colonel Ansel Taylor. The boys in the regiment often spoke of Ansel the Anvil, who had a spine of iron.â
âIn the regiment? What were you doing in a regiment?â
A little twist of a smile touched his lips. âI fought in the Peninsular Wars.â
She regarded him disbelievingly. The very idea was ludicrous. Men with titles and fortune, men who were their fatherâs only heirs, didnât serve in the military. If they were killed, it would mean an end to the family line and the title. No father would allow it. No heir would suggest it. Everyone knew the military was for younger sons and lower gentry. âThatâs what you were doing on the Continent all those years?â she asked, not bothering to hide her skepticism.
âWhy? Do you wish to print my war history in your paper, too?â
His wary expression only heightened her suspicion of him. âCan you suggest some reason I should not print it?â
âI fear youâd claim I fought for the other side,â he said with acid condescension.
She glowered at him. âI donât invent information, my lord. I merely report it.â
âOr âspeculateâ on it.â
âWhen Iâm relatively certain the facts support my speculation, yes.â
âIt helps if you have all the facts, and not merely the ones that interest you.â He strode to the fireplace and lifted a piece of Jamesâs artwork, inspecting the crude wood carving of a sheep. Then he put it aside and faced her. âYour grandfatherâ¦did he have friends from his military career, men for whom he would have done anything?â
She searched her memory. âYes. He used to dine weekly with a fellow soldier.â
âThen you should understand my situation. Miss Greenaway is the sister of a man I fought with at the Battle of Vittoria. He died in my arms at that battle. And as he lay dying, he asked me to look after his sister. I promised I would. So when she was seduced by some bounder who got her with child, then abandoned her, she came to me. Of course, I agreed to help. Thatâs why I put her up in a house in Waltham Street.â
At first she felt utter guilt at her earlier supposition. How could she have been so wrong, so hasty? A poor woman found herself destitute and pregnant andâ
She suddenly caught his gaze on her, a gaze that was calculating and wholly dishonest. She glanced up at Grandpapaâs sword, then noticed the Army Gold Medal displayed beneath it. The one with Grandpapaâs name and rank engraved on it.
The scoundrel! Heâd pretended to know Grandpapa to reinforce his lies, to make her ashamed to sully his own reputation. She doubted the wretch had even heard of her grandfather, much less fought with men who knew him!Probably the only time Lord St. Clair wielded a sword was in duels over married women heâd bedded.
Ooh, she would show him she was no ninny. She flashed him an insincere smile. âHow noble of you to help your friend!â she gushed. âIâm so sorry I mistook you. Iâll add a correction to my column at once.â Hurrying to the desk, she brandished her quill over the paper, then began to write. âHowâs this? âLord St. Clairâs purpose in taking the house on Waltham Street was apparently not as it seemed. Having sworn to his dying soldier friend on the battlefield that heâd look after the manâs sister, his lordship was kind enough to provide her with shelter when some bounder got her with child and refusedââ
âYou canât write that!â he exploded behind her.
She pretended to reread her words. âI believe youâre right.â She fixed him with a hard look. âI