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Synopsis
A young woman's past liberates all that she's ever desired in this sparkling romance of adventure from international bestselling author Fern Michaels. . . As a van der Rhys, Caleb's first allegiance is to the sea. Close behind are his affections for anyone foolish enough to pass him in a skirt. But that shouldn't be a problem when he's hired to ship a cargo of Puritans to the colonies—until a stowaway is discovered onboard. Wren is equal parts stormy and beautiful, normally an irresistible combination for Caleb. But they have a shared past that deems her off limits. All they have are the stars to guide them, in which case anything is possible. . . Praise for Fern Michaels and Her Novels "Heartbreaking, suspenseful, and tender." — Booklist on Return to Sender "A big, rich book in every way. . ..I think Fern Michaels has struck oil with this one." —Patricia Matthews on Texas Rich 145,000 Words
Release date: March 6, 2014
Publisher: eClassics
Print pages: 404
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Captive Splendors
Fern Michaels
Tyler’s dark eyes became thoughtful as a squeal of girlish laughter rang in his ears. He would sorely miss Wren when she left with Sirena and Regan, who were expected in London within a fortnight. Now that Camilla had at last come into her own with approaching motherhood and little else filled her thoughts, he would be lost without Wren’s exuberance for life and her flattering dependency on him.
How alike the beautiful Sirena and Wren were, yet how unalike. He supposed he should resign himself to the fact that he would always worry about her in the manner of an older brother. He could never seem to gain the detachment toward her that even the role of a substitute stepfather would designate during these years in which Wren had come under his care. He sighed heavily. It was time for Wren to return to the Spice Islands with Sirena and Regan and find her place in life, whatever that might be. Just as long as it didn’t include that dandy, Malcolm. Weatherly.
God! How was he to explain that fop to Sirena? He shuddered as he pictured how those emerald eyes would spew fire when she was told that her little Wren was bent on marrying that rapscallion as soon as he could properly ask for her hand. A grudging smile split Tyler’s handsome face. If Malcolm Weatherly managed to escape Sirena’s fury, he would find he still had Regan to deal with. Tyler imagined he himself should be chagrined to consider that Regan might be able to gain control of a situation where he had not, but he soothed his spirit with the thought that Regan had not lived under Wren’s charm and winning ways for these past three yeears.
Tyler had found it impossible to deny Wren anything, and Camilla had found herself in the same predicament, especially where it concerned Mr. Weatherly’s courtly attentions. In fact, Camilla’s fondness for Wren was surprising on all accounts. Tyler smiled again as he thought of his pretty blond wife. Camilla had come a long, long way from that pretty, empty-headed young girl he had known and loved in spite of her selfish, self-serving behavior. She had grown into a loving, tender woman, and Wren, as well as he, was grateful for her cloak of maternal regard. The only area where Camilla was disapproving of Wren lay in the young girl’s friendship with the Puritan, Sara Stoneham. But even in that Camilla was being protective and defensive of her little family. The Puritans were speaking out dangerously against the King’s control of the Church of England, and there were even rumblings of civil war.
As a member of Parliament, Tyler knew Camilla’s fears were not unfounded, but he refused to allow his own concern to color his feelings toward Wren’s young friend. Sara Stoneham was a lovely girl from a notable family, one he had known for years. If her religious preference was different from his, it mattered little to Tyler. Besides, how could he, in all conscience, have turned Sara out into the street when she had come here, at Wren’s invitation, to await the arrival of her parents in London?
Tyler quickened his step toward the elaborately carved door of Wren’s apartment to bid the girls good night. He had lifted his hand to knock when the sound of their voices penetrated the thick panel
“Wren! In the name of all that’s holy, I didn’t think you were ever coming back! What could you have been thinking of? Sneaking off with Malcolm and staying out so late! What if the Baron or the Baroness popped in to say good night? What would I have told them?”
Wren spun around the room, her blue and mauve striped silk skirt ballooning away from her slim legs like a brightly colored parasol. She hugged her arms close to herself, an expression of rapture softening her features. “Ooh, Sara, don’t spoil this for me. You’re always so disapproving every time I’m with Malcolm. Not tonight. Please?” Wren’s eyes glowed softly in the light of the lamp, her thick lashes casting feathery shadows on her smooth cheeks.
Sara noticed the huskiness in Wren’s voice and that her hair was disarrayed and wispy tendrils curled toward her ivory brow. There was no mistaking that look of voluptuous satisfaction which pouted her kiss-bruised lips, nor the languid, sensuous expression in her eyes. Sara was familiar with these outward signs of lovemaking. She had seen them branded on her own features after slipping out of school for a spring night’s rendezvous. And, like Wren, but unknown to her, she, too, had spent breathless hours in Malcolm Weatherly’s arms. She knew how the touch of Malcolm’s hands on her flesh could transport her to worlds never before imagined . . . how his lips could plead and then tease until she was half mad with wanting him, with wanting to give herself to him. Then, suddenly, it had ended. The secret notes had stopped arriving; when she had slipped out of the dormitory at night, hoping to meet him, she had waited until the chill, damp, early-morning air had penetrated her clothing, causing her to shudder from the cold and from the deeper, more painful quiver of love lost.
After several weeks of pining for Malcolm and experiencing rapidly dropping grades, Sara had heard it rumored that Wren van der Rhys was keeping trysts with a handsome stranger. Her suspicions aroused, Sara had managed to befriend Wren and learned that indeed it was Malcolm Weatherly who tempted the innocent, young Wren to brave the dark and perilous rose trellis for a few moments in his arms. It was torture being here with Wren and knowing she was Malcolm’s new love, but Sara was beyond helping herself. In some undefinable way, being close to Wren was like being near Malcolm.
“You don’t like Malcolm, do you, Sara?” Wren said quietly, touching her friend’s sleeve. “I know you’ve gone along with my little deceptions, but underneath you disapprove, don’t you?”
Sara turned so that Wren couldn’t see her face. She wanted to lash out, to scratch Wren’s beautiful face, to force her to face the truth. Poor silly little Wren. Couldn’t she see that Malcolm was more interested in her family’s wealth than he was in her? Sara wished she had the courage to tell Wren that Malcolm had loved her, Sara, until he had discovered that the Stonehams had lost favor with the Crown over some loose remarks about the King’s failure to call together a session of Parliament. Times were uneasy for Puritans, to say the least. A swift seizure of properties, and the Stonehams were on the verge of bankruptcy. But to reveal this to Wren would mean a certain end to their relationship and to her vicarious closeness to Malcolm. Sara’s only satisfaction lay in the fact that Malcolm didn’t love Wren. It was just a scheming, self-serving game he was playing. Sara knew she should hate Malcolm Weatherly, and she’d even experienced twinges of guilt because she was keeping the truth from Wren, but she couldn’t hate him. She loved Malcolm Weatherly more than she had ever loved another person in her entire life. I must love him, she told herself; otherwise what kind of person am I, to have allowed him to do the things he has done to me?
A sly smile tugged at the corners of Sara’s generous mouth when she remembered the nights alone in Malcolm’s arms, the things she had done, the things she had permitted Malcolm to do to her. No one in the world knew what they had shared, and Malcolm certainly wouldn’t tell.
“Sara, answer me,” Wren persisted. “Why don’t you like Malcolm?”
“Wren, it’s not that I don’t like him. It’s just that . . . how will you explain Malcolm. to your . . . to Sirena and Regan?”
“Why can’t you ever bring yourself to refer to Sirena and Regan as my parents? They are, you know. They’re the only parents I’ve ever had, and they consider me their very own daughter,” Wren announced defiantly, her amber eyes lighting from within.
“Not in the true sense of the word, Wren,” Sara said falteringly. She recognized that light in Wren’s eyes, and it only meant an ensuing argument for the unfortunate person who dared to cross swords with her. Sara swallowed and pressed onward. “One of these days you’re going to realize that Sirena doesn’t belong on a pedestal and that she’s a human being like the rest of us mortals. And you must stop thinking about the infamous sea witch—you’re always talking about her and making her your idol. For shame, Wren! Here you are, contemplating marriage with old Mally, and it’s time to leave such fantasies behind. Now that you’ve finished school and are ready to meet society, you must put all that nonsense behind you. Do you understand what I’m saying?”
Sara faced Wren and saw that her ploy had been successful. Once again she had put doubts in Wren’s mind about the relationship between herself and her parents. She was quick to see that the seeds she had sown weeks ago as to Wren’s rightful use of the van der Rhys name had taken root and had begun to flower. Besides, this well-worn path of conversation was a perfect distraction for Wren’s too-personal questions concerning Sara’s opinion of Malcolm.
Outside the door, Tyler massaged his temples. He hadn’t meant to eavesdrop, but hearing that Wren had slipped out of the house for a clandestine meeting with Weatherly had stunned him. He hadn’t realized things had progressed so far. Now he found himself anticipating Wren’s answer. Sara was correct. Wren had been living in a make-believe world, and her fantasies were the prime reason she had fallen prey to Malcolm Weatherly’s charm. The stories about the Sea Siren, infamous piratess, told to Wren when she was a child, were meant to be just that. Stories. Fairy tales for a child to dream about, not a basis on which Wren should build her life.
“Sara Stoneham! There is a person, a real person, who was the Sea Siren! I really don’t care if you believe me or not, but you’re wrong—she doesn’t occupy all my thoughts, and I know you think I’m trying to pattern my life after her, but I’m not! There could never be another Sea Siren.” A wistful note crept into Wren’s voice. “The Siren was the most beautiful creature who ever rode the seas. Long, flowing hair, eyes the color of emeralds and skin like spun honey. She was a master of fencing, and there wasn’t a man who could best her. I could never hope to compete with her, either in looks or in actions. My eyes are the wrong color and my skin is too pale. And I’m too short, much too short. And try as I might, I’ll never equal her skill with the rapier.”
“See? Listen to yourself! Do you hear you compare yourself to that sea witch in such an unfavorable light?” Sara grasped Wren’s wrist and dragged her over to the pier glass. “Look at yourself! Look!” Reluctantly, Wren lifted her eyes to the glass. “Now, tell me that what you see there is not more beautiful than any fantasy about a female pirate! Tell me that just the sight of you doesn’t turn all men’s eyes. I’ve been to the Royal Exchange with you, Wren. I’ve seen the effect you have on the masculine sex. Didn’t Rolland Chalmers send you love notes that nearly singed the fingertips? What did he say to you? That your hair was a cloud of dark night and your eyes were golden embers and your skin—”
“Stop it, Sara!” Wren wrenched herself away. “I never said I was ugly!” she protested.
“True. But you compare yourself to this sea witch and it eats at you. Admit it, Wren. Why can’t you put these thoughts behind you? Take a word of advice from an old friend. You’d better concentrate on the problem at hand. Prepare yourself for what your guardians are going to do when they find out about Malcolm. Somehow I can’t see the van der Rhyses giving your their blessings over old Mally, not after what you told me about them.”
“They’d better give it, otherwise I’ll run away,” Wren declared recklessly.
It was time to intervene, Tyler decided. Privacy be damned. He knocked and opened the door at the same time. “It’s late, young ladies, and you need your beauty sleep. Or so my wife has been telling me all these years.” He looked from one girl to the other. Sara was tall and slender, like a yellow tea rose, he told himself. And Wren was like a tapered candle flame. Right now her eyes were like banked fires, ready to flare into flame if the conversation were allowed to continue. The girl had an ungovernable temper where it concerned Sirena and the Sea Siren.
Sara laughed, tossed her white-gold curls and quickly embraced Wren. “Baron Sinclair is right, Wren. We get along so well and we’re best friends. Let’s not spoil it now. Besides,” she added coquettishly, “Baron Sinclair has been so kind in allowing me to spend these few days with you before my parents arrive, I must insist that I am on his side.”
“I didn’t realize we were taking sides,” Wren snapped as she wriggled out of Sara’s embrace. “Tyler is right, though. We do need our beauty sleep—at least I do. Malcom is taking me to the country tomorrow and I want to look my best. Don’t frown so, Tyler,” she said as she threw her arms about him. “Sirena will love Malcolm just as I do, and believe me when I tell you she won’t hold it against you that I’ve been permitted to see him. She’s going to love him, you’ll see.”
“Somehow, little one, I can’t share your optimism.”
“You’re behaving like the new father you soon will be,” Wren teased, yet there was a ring of steel in her voice that could set Tyler’s teeth rattling. He knew in his gut that Sirena would take one look at the modish Malcolm Weatherly and rip out her rapier and cut him to pieces. Also, Sirena would blame him from start to finish for the relationship between Wren and Weatherly. Sirena van der Rhys never did things in half. No, he would receive full blame, and if she didn’t cut him down, then Regan would. Wren was the apple of Regan’s eye, and no dandy was going to snap up his little girl. Perhaps they would take mercy on Tyler when he told them he was about to become a father. He blanched as he imagined Sirena’s face after she heard the news. How well he knew her. She would say, “Congratulations,” and then cut him down. She had style, he must admit. Camilla would be forced to intervene on his behalf, and he would take the coward’s way out. God, how could he have been so foolish to let Wren get herself tangled up with Weatherly? How could he have foreseen that a mild flirtation would blossom into an engagement? Why didn’t he insist, right now, that she make a quick end of Weatherly? Because the girl could wrap him around her little finger—it was that simple. Women had always been his weakness. Jehovah! He hoped Camilla gave birth to a boy; otherwise he wouldn’t have a chance of living to forty. He had to get himself in hand; he couldn’t let the girls see how upset he was. He forced a smile to his lips, quickly pecked both of them on the cheek and exited the room, his stomach crawling with fear. Sirena would cut him down in his prime.
Sara’s hyacinth eyes were watchful as she and Wren prepared for bed. “Are you really going to take a drive with Mally tomorrow?”
“Sara Ann Stoneham, stop calling Malcolm Mally. Yes, I’m going for a carriage ride with the man I’m going to marry. Not another word, Sara Ann,” Wren shouted as she dived under the covers, her amber eyes peeping out from behind the satin-edged quilt.
“Very well,” Sara acquiesced. “As your infamous Sea Siren would say, ‘It’s your neck!’”
The hour was late, the night dark and silent as the hackney carrying Sirena and Regan van der Rhys made its way through the winding, narrow streets devoid of people and noise. As dark and silent as my thoughts, Sirena mused as she peered through the dirty panes of the carriage. The hack was taking the route from the docks to Tyler Sinclair’s house, the same route she had taken with Frau Holtz nearly nine years ago when she had come in search of Regan. Bitter memories stained the joy at seeing Wren again. Whenever she thought about the time she had been forced to live in England, she knew a hatred almost as strong as that which she still harbored for the memory of Stephan Langdon. Pressing her shoulder securely on Regan’s as he rolled against her in sleep, she felt a small knot of something akin to fear weave its way around her stomach. How did Regan feel about returning to England? Returning not only to England, but to the house of his former wife. What would the flowerlike Camilla be like now that she was married to Tyler? By now, with the lapse of time, childlike Camilla would be a woman fully grown, complete with a woman’s wiles. Would she tease and flirt with Regan, and what would be Regan’s reaction? Sirena sighed. She wouldn’t find out this evening, that was for certain. Dawn would soon be approaching. The Sinclair household would be asleep and unprepared for guests. Surely Tyler wouldn’t mind that she and Regan were arriving a week ahead of schedule. Nothing annoyed Tyler.
A smile tugged at the corners of her mouth as she recalled their days in Newgate Prison. In truth, that experience was probably the only thing that had ever annoyed good old Tyler. And if the truth were told, he had probably enjoyed every minute of it.
Sirena sighed again, wearily. That had been so long ago. Another time, another life. Unconsciously, she reached out to touch Regan, to reassure herself that he was still there. How wonderful he felt, so hard and firm. And how vulnerable he looked in sleep. Her bottle-green eyes lighted up momentarily as she realized that Regan was not in the least vulnerable. Well, perhaps in one area, where Wren was concerned. How eager he was to see the girl, to wrap her in his arms and make the sounds all fathers make when they look at their beloved daughters. Even though Regan and Sirena had adopted Wren, they couldn’t have loved her more if she had truly been theirs. Was this because they had produced four strapping boys who one day would be like Regan and Caleb? Sirena often wished she had given Regan a daughter of his own. No matter, Wren was their daughter, and that was enough. She carried the van der Rhys name, and Sirena was her mother and Regan was her father. And little Wren had five brothers who loved her dearly. Especially Caleb.
The hackney came to an abrupt halt and Regan was jostled from his comfortable position against her shoulder. “Good God, Sirena, are we finally here?”
Sirena patted his arm. “Now, Regan, remember your promise to me. You won’t demand that Wren be awakened. Morning is soon enough. As a matter of fact, it would be wise to insist that neither Camilla nor Tyler be awakened. Your promise, Regan.”
Regan grinned. “I must have been drunk when I agreed to such a promise, sweetheart.”
“Not drunk, darling, just in a rather compromising position.”
“One of these days I’ll manage to be one step ahead of you, Sea Witch,” he said fondly.
“I miss the children and I want to return to Java as quickly as possible. That was part of the promise.”
“You’re jealous of Camilla. I’ve felt it ever since we approached English waters,” Regan teased.
“You’re a bull, Regan, and I’m not jealous. If she makes one false move in your direction, it’s your eyes I’ll scratch out!”
Regan shuddered. She would do it, too. She might be the mother of four strapping boys and the stepmother of two other children, but she could best him in any way she chose and he knew it, not that he would ever admit it to her. Even now, after all these years, she was still as slim and fast as she had been when he first met her. Little did she know that he was aware that she still practiced daily with her rapier. One day he had by chance overheard her telling Frau Holtz that it was the only way to keep fit. As usual, she was right, he grimaced as his hands found their way to his midsection. Too much good food and rum would ruin the best of men. Not that he overindulged, but it was so easy to throw caution to the winds when a man was happy and contented. Regan was more happy and contented than he had ever been in his life, and now that Wren would be going back to Java with them, his cup would run over. The only thing missing was Caleb. If Cal would only see fit to make his home with them in Java, he swore to all the Gods in Heaven that he would never sin again. What more could a man ask?
“Do try to be quiet, Regan. We don’t want to awaken the entire household.”
“My dear, I will walk on tiptoe, as though I were walking on eggs. You need to have no fear of my awakening your dear friend Tyler.”
“You’re baiting me, Regan. Morning is only a few hours away, and sleep is what you need.”
“If you’re trying to tell me I’m getting old and feeble, you can bite your tongue, young woman. I can still outshine that Sinclair, and well you know it. I’ll tell you one thing: I’m not looking forward to seeing either him or Camilla. I gave you my word that we would leave as soon as it was decently possible. I’ll keep my word. No noise, I’ll sleep in your arms, and you’ll wake me at the first early light. I want to see what manner of young lady our Wren has become.”
Giggling like two small children, Regan and Sirena followed an aging servant up the curving staircase.
“Reminds me of the time I spent three days in Clarice’s brothel.” Regan grinned as he pinched Sirena on the thigh.
“If you think I’m going to ask you to tell me about that little escapade, dear husband, you’re wrong. I’ll take it up with you tomorrow,” she said, her eyes glinting dangerously.
“A slip of the tongue, sweetheart. You know how boastful I am at times. It was Dykstra who spent three days there. I merely stopped by to see how business was doing.”
“You kept that—that—establishment in business all by yourself. Don’t blame Captain Dykstra,” Sirena hissed.
“Well, I do feel a certain responsibility for him. After all, I did take him there, and Clarice . . . what she did . . . actually . . . You’re right, we’ll discuss it tomorrow. Suddenly I feel so tired I can barely keep my eyes open.”
“If I were you, I’d sleep with them open the rest of the night,” Sirena warned ominously.
The moment the door closed behind the servant, Regan gathered Sirena in his arms and kissed her passionately. God, how he loved her. He had baited her on purpose just to see her respond with anger. It was his way of proving to himself that she still loved him. He had to see her anger to know for certain that their love had not banked, that it could be rekindled in a moment with a few choice words. Right or wrong, he had to do it, and Sirena understood and played the game right along with him. God, how he loved her. Even more now than on the day he had married her for the second time.
Tyler Sinclair descended the stairs with the same worried expression on his face as he had worn when he had finally drifted off to sleep. He felt his stomach churn as the housekeeper told him that the van der Rhyses had arrived unexpectedly during the night and insisted that the Baron and the Baroness remain undisturbed.
“Is the Baroness ready for breakfast?” the housekeeper asked.
“The Baroness is feeling under the weather this morning. Have one of the maids bring her some mint tea and a sweet roll in about an hour. She will be down for luncheon with our guests.”
Good Lord, what am I going to say to Sirena? he wondered as he seated himself at the breakfast table. Perhaps he was worrying about nothing. Both of them might really like Malcolm Weatherly. No one likes Malcolm Weatherly except Wren, he answered himself. Camilla had said that Malcolm could pass muster in a dark room, but this was the bright light of day, and both Sirena and Regan were clear-eyed and as sharp as axes.
Tyler bit into a sweet roll and chewed with a vengeance. Two more rolls and two more cups of coffee laced with rum—or was it three cups of rum laced with coffee?—and he was ready to meet any and all challengers, providing they didn’t carry a rapier or a cutlass. Damn it, he was feeling the edges of drunkenness and it was still breakfast time. To be cut down in his prime! “Never mind the coffee, just give me the bottle,” he demanded of the cook.
“But, Baron Sinclair, your kippers are ready, and Cook prepared them especially for you.”
“Kip, kip, kip,” Tyler hiccuped drunkenly. “The child is nothing more than a little kipper, that’s what she is.”
“Do my eyes deceive me, or are you drunk?” Sirena’s melodious voice called out from the doorway. “Two hours past dawn and you’re in your cups.” Camilla must be up to some of her old tricks to make Tyler resort to spirits so early in the morning, Sirena mused. Tyler was no sot; at least he had never been one before. On the other hand, being married to Camilla should be reason enough to turn to drink. Hadn’t Regan tipped the bottle more than usual during his short-lived marriage to that fair petal of flowerhood? A wide smile broke across Sirena’s face as she patted a perspiring Tyler on his head. “I can forgive you anything, Tyler, since you’ve been so generous to give our Wren a home and take care of her.”
Tyler extended a shaking hand to grasp Regan’s and finally conceded failure when he couldn’t establish contact.
“You resemble a fish out of water, Sinclair,” Regan said, his eyes narrowed in suspicion. No self-respecting man drank at dawn, or what passed for dawn in this damnable country. Camilla was undoubtedly leading Tyler a merry chase. Suddenly Regan grinned as the thought struck him that, but for the grace of God, he could be walking in Sinclair’s boots. Mercifully there was a God, and every day he thanked Him for his good fortune.
Tyler thought the van der Rhyses a striking pair. Regan looked as fit and agile as a man twenty years his junior. Only a slight salting of gray at the temples hinted that it was almost nine years since Tyler had last seen him. He noted happily that Sirena had been treated well by the passage of time. A vague aura of maturity about her belied the sparkle in her extraordinary green eyes, and she wore her hair in a more sedate style, rather than loose and flowing. But her figure was still trim and girlish. Tyler had a vision of Sirena as she had looked aboard her ship, her long, tawny legs revealed by tatter-edged breeches cut up to her curvaceous hips, the salt spray glistening on her skin, her dark hair free to blow in the wind. He knew that beneath her wide skirts and decorous manner still lived the beautiful Sea Siren.
“Tell me, Tyler, how is your business thriving?” Sirena asked.
Tyler flinched. Damn her, she knew something was troubling him, and she hadn’t changed a bit. She knew it had something to do with Wren; he could feel it in his bones and see it in her sea-green eyes. There was nothing for him to do but tell both of them the straight of it. With any luck, they would listen with open minds and hear him through. Mentally he squared his shoulders and stood up, his back to the seated couple. He fixed his gaze out the window, on a tree swaying in the early-morning breeze, and watched a sparrow take wing.
Sirena and Regan exchanged glances and waited patiently for him to speak.
“You were never one of my favorite people, van der Rhys,” Tyler began, “but you, Sirena, were always like a sister to me. I agreed to look out for Wren and act as her guardian while she was here at the academy. I’ve done the best I could, but you, Sirena, filled her head with so many tales of the Sea Siren and all that rubbish that there was little I could do when it came to things of that nature. She’s devious, something I found very hard to accept. Camilla tells me that all young girls are impressionable and devious; she calls it women’s wiles. What I’m trying to say to you is that Wren fancies she is in love with and wants to marry a man named Malcolm Weatherly. She plans to have him ask for her hand. The young man is a dandy, a fop of the worst sort.”
“What’s this tale you’re peddling, Sinclair?” Regan demanded, leaping from his chair. His intentions were clear to Sirena, who reached out for his arm.
“Regan, hear him out,” she pleaded.
“Thank you, Sirena,” Tyler said quietly, grateful for her interference. All signs of inebriation gone, he proceeded to tell them what he knew. “You see, I was unaware of this affair until very recently, and then I learned about it quite by accident From what I’ve been able to gather, Wren met this Weatherly while at the academy. She was shopping in town when she happened to make his acquaintance. She
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