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Synopsis
The Hamilton sisters have found true love to rival any novels sold in their famous London bookshops. And the story continues, as each of their offspring discovers the perfect partner . . .
Quiet and intuitive, Lady Mara Reeves has always felt more at home amid the green hills of her native Ireland than in London’s stifling ballrooms. Determined to remain single, she’s adept at gently rebuffing any suitor who comes her way. So why is she so drawn to Foster Sheridan, Earl of Sterling? It’s a connection unlike anything she’s ever known, yet complicated by one scandalous fact: the man she believes to be her destiny is already married . . .
Trapped in a loveless union with a woman who refuses to divorce him, Foster is resigned to loneliness until he meets the exquisite Mara. Her wants her as a wife, not a mistress, but he can’t resist her unconventional offer. Their passion is intense, as is the risk. For even as Foster follows Mara home to Ireland, their pasts will lead them toward danger that only the deepest love can overcome . . .
Praise for The Heiress He’s Been Waiting For
“This charming romance is a strong start, and readers will eagerly anticipate the next installment!” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“The same mix of engaging characters and an emotionally compelling love story found in O’Riley’s Hamilton Sisters books provides a solid foundation for the launch of her series.”
—Booklist
Quiet and intuitive, Lady Mara Reeves has always felt more at home amid the green hills of her native Ireland than in London’s stifling ballrooms. Determined to remain single, she’s adept at gently rebuffing any suitor who comes her way. So why is she so drawn to Foster Sheridan, Earl of Sterling? It’s a connection unlike anything she’s ever known, yet complicated by one scandalous fact: the man she believes to be her destiny is already married . . .
Trapped in a loveless union with a woman who refuses to divorce him, Foster is resigned to loneliness until he meets the exquisite Mara. Her wants her as a wife, not a mistress, but he can’t resist her unconventional offer. Their passion is intense, as is the risk. For even as Foster follows Mara home to Ireland, their pasts will lead them toward danger that only the deepest love can overcome . . .
Praise for The Heiress He’s Been Waiting For
“This charming romance is a strong start, and readers will eagerly anticipate the next installment!” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“The same mix of engaging characters and an emotionally compelling love story found in O’Riley’s Hamilton Sisters books provides a solid foundation for the launch of her series.”
—Booklist
Release date: July 30, 2019
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 271
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
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The Irish Heiress
Kaitlin O'Riley
September 1894
It was happening again.
When it occurred in a public place, Lady Mara Reeves tended to panic at the very thought of it happening to her. As it was just now . . .
There really was no way to stop it once it started. At least not a way that she was aware of as yet. No, Mara’s only recourse was to find a quiet corner and hope this particular episode passed quickly. It hadn’t happened to her in quite a while, but she recognized the prickly signs immediately. And they were inordinately strong this time, as if making up for their long absence with a vengeance.
It reminded her once again how different she was from everyone else.
Casting a silent prayer that no one would notice her, with hurried steps Mara retreated to a small alcove along the massive hallway, as she suddenly grew very dizzy, almost faint. Her elegant champagne-pink silk ball gown grew restrictive around her chest. She reached out to a marble pillar for support, the cool white stone sending chills right through her long white gloves to her heated flesh.
Then, just as she knew it would, that peculiarly familiar tingling sensation crept over her skin ever so slowly, awakening each and every nerve in her body. Her heart raced and she grew warm and yet she shivered. The hair on the back of her neck stood on end and she clenched her teeth. Pressing her fingers to her temples, Mara closed her eyes and held her breath. The lively music from the ballroom receded into a dark cloud of silence. Sharp pinpricks of awareness lit up inside of her, flashing sparks of light from within.
And then it happened . . . Misty wisps of images began to take shape in her mind.
Fire. Glints of flames. Blinding bursts of light. Shimmering walls of golden orange and brilliant yellow. Breathtaking, scorching heat. Trapped in the burning building, blazing embers and smoky ash filling the air, Mara didn’t know where to go. Gut-wrenching, tormented screams echoed against the rush of flames. Her own panicked, terrified cries reverberated around her. Scalding tears, knowing it was her fault, knowing it was too late. Blinding heat and black smoke and swirling flames, the vicious sting of fear and the horrific smell of imminent death.
Her death. She was going to die in this raging inferno.
Then nothing. A short breath of blessedly cool air. She gasped.
A man. Frantically calling to her, his hand outstretched, reaching for her, a look of love, mixed with anguish and horror, awash on his handsome face. His eyes, oh, his eyes! Deep green and filled with abject longing and desire, they implored her to come with him, to believe him. And she wished to be with him with a certainty that belied all else. She held out her hand to him, trusting him implicitly, the terror that engulfed her dissipating at the touch of his fingers. Flooded with relief and elation, buoyed with happiness and hope, Mara clung to him, his strong arms embracing her.
He pulled her tightly to his broad chest and she was safe, secure, loved. In spite of their dangerous surroundings and the acrid smell of smoke thick around them, she could breathe easily within his sheltering embrace. A profound peace enveloped her. Never had she felt such an ebullient happiness and tranquility. This man loved her deeply and she loved him. She looked into the greenest eyes she had ever seen. The desire to be with him overwhelmed her. She was his and he was hers. The certainty, the rightness of it, was all-consuming.
She belonged to him. They belonged together.
And just like that, the intense images evaporated, as if Mara had simply awakened from an incredible and vivid dream.
Yet Mara had not been sleeping. She had been very much awake.
Shaken by what she’d just seen, she remained motionless, fighting the urge to cry. The loss of the exquisite connection with that man and the inexplicable sense of warmth, happiness, and pure love brought tears to her eyes.
Mara trembled, as if she were shivering from a cold wind.
Whenever she had one of her strange premonitions, it was always about someone else, never about herself. It had been that way her whole life. Sometimes she could foresee the future, getting a glimpse into what was going to happen to the people she loved. Sometimes she saw good things, other times she saw things she did not wish to know. But they always presaged the actual events themselves. And she had never been wrong. When she saw something in her visions, it always came to pass.
Ever since she was a little girl, she had kept these premonitions, these feelings or intuitions or signs or whatever they were called, to herself. Locked deep inside. She’d mentioned them to her father once when she was about seven years old, and from the panicked and worried expression in his paternal eyes, she learned not to mention them to him ever again. Another time, she had half-heartedly confided in Sara about them, but her cousin seemed baffled by her revelation.
However, this time her premonition was completely different from any of the others she had ever had.
This time the vision was about . . . her. Mara was the center of it all.
Mara was the girl in the flames.
Fire had haunted her whole life. Was it any wonder that a vision that involved her included flames and smoke? Fire fascinated her and terrified her. There was no mistaking what she had seen and felt just now, even if she could not discern what it meant in any real context. Was she in danger now? When would this come to pass? Tonight? Tomorrow? A year from now?
The only thing she was certain of was that it would happen.
“Mara . . . ? Mara, are you unwell?”
In a daze, she blinked up at a familiar face.
Her cousin, Phillip Sinclair, placed a steadying hand on her arm. His voice full of concern, he repeated her name. “Mara?”
Bracing herself, trying to refocus her mind, Mara finally responded with an automaticity that surprised her. “I’m perfectly fine, thank you.”
“Well, you don’t look perfectly fine at all.” Phillip shook his head, his boyishly handsome features lined with skepticism. “You look ghastly and about ready to faint. Let’s go sit in the drawing room for a moment, so you can rest. You’re lucky I happened to come along when I did.”
Nodding in wordless agreement, Mara followed Phillip away from the grand ballroom, where the sounds of lively music from the orchestra and the exuberant rise and fall of laughter and voices muddled together. All the guests were enjoying a wonderful evening of dancing and dining to celebrate Uncle Jeffrey’s birthday. Meanwhile an icy-cold knot tightened in the pit of Mara’s stomach.
What had just happened to her?
It was unlike anything she had experienced before. Of all the visions, the seeings, she’d had in her life, this one had been drastically different. Still trembling, she took a gulp of air and walked unsteadily beside her protective cousin, holding tight to his arm, grateful for his calming presence, for it anchored her in reality.
As they moved down the marble-floored corridor and passed by her aunt and uncle’s other guests, Mara looked up and into the face of the man she had just seen in her vision. She gasped.
Eyes of the deepest forest green, fringed with dark lashes and framed with dark brows, arched in matched surprise as they met her own. These eyes gazed into her very soul, until Mara felt as if she were drowning in them, consumed by them. The man did not look away from her, nor did he flinch from their locked gaze. Strange feelings washed over her.
Instant recognition. A sense of knowing and belonging. A feeling of wonder. A blossoming of something exquisitely wonderful. Mara could not breathe. There was a connection so strong, she could only stop abruptly in place and stare back at him, utterly speechless. Frightened by the power of it, by the sheer beauty of it, she was motionless.
It was him.
She knew it was him. Not only that, she knew his name.
Mara sensed Phillip’s confusion as he stood beside her, wondering what had caused her to suddenly become still. She heard Phillip’s voice greeting the man from her vision. “Good evening, Lord Sterling.”
The man’s green eyes never left Mara’s, although he addressed her cousin. “Waverly, isn’t it?”
“Yes, I believe we met at the races last spring,” Phillip continued amiably, “May I introduce you to my cousin? This is Lady Mara Reeves. Mara, this is Foster Sheridan, Lord Sterling.”
Utterly transfixed by him, Mara remained immobile and incapable of forming words, while he and her cousin exchanged pleasantries.
It was then Mara took in his whole face. The masculine features of Foster Sheridan, the Earl of Sterling. She had seen him before! Oh, yes, she had . . . It was a few months earlier, and she had been distracted and worried about her cousin Sara that evening, and did not speak to him. But Mara had watched this attractive man from afar during Lady Cabot’s ball that night. Thinking him quite handsome, she had even asked Lord Bridgeton about him that night, to learn his name.
That had been all there was to it. They had not spoken or even exchanged glances and she had not seen him again. She hadn’t given him more than an idle thought since that summer night.
Until her vision.
Until now.
And here he was before her, saying what a pleasure it was to meet her, the rich tone of his voice sending excited shivers throughout her body. Mara heard mumbled words escape from her own lips but hadn’t a clue what she’d actually said, for she was momentarily mesmerized by the magnificence of his smile. His attractive face lit up from within and his eyes danced with merriment, with enchanting crinkles at the corners. Warmth emanated from this man and enveloped her like a luxurious velvet blanket. She clenched her fingers, fighting the urge to reach out and touch him. To actually caress his smooth-shaven cheek, to run her fingers along his strong, chiseled jaw, to brush them across his full, inviting lips.
Lord Sterling. Foster Sheridan.
It was him.
He was the man in the premonition that had just shaken her to the core. The images in which she felt such indescribable happiness and peace. With him. With this man who left her feeling completely unlike her usual self. With this man she had never really crossed paths with before. Yet she knew, with an unwavering certainty in her soul, that their futures were irrevocably entwined.
So lost in her little reverie of wanting to touch this man, to know him, she was only vaguely aware of her cousin bidding him farewell. No! No! Not yet! It’s too soon! Mara wanted to cry out with the loss of him, yet she could not think of anything to say to prolong their encounter.
Lord Sterling gave her a gentlemanly bow. “Lady Mara, it’s quite early yet, but I must admit that meeting you has most definitely been the highlight of my evening.”
She merely nodded and smiled, for she couldn’t form coherent sentences at a time when her little world was suddenly turned upside down. Before she knew it Phillip was guiding her along the marble hallway again, as if nothing extraordinary had just happened. She fought the overwhelming desire to run back, back to Lord Sterling and his remarkable eyes. And that exquisite feeling she had while standing near him.
However, Mara managed to steal a quick glance over her shoulder. Lord Sterling simply stood there watching her walking away, looking as bewildered as she felt. And the longing in his eyes echoed the feelings that flooded her being.
She wanted to be with him.
Phillip led her to a private drawing room that belonged to Aunt Yvette. Once she was seated upon a blue damask divan, Phillip asked, “Mara, you are not at all yourself. Can I get you anything? A glass of water? A cup of tea? Some champagne, perhaps?”
When she found her voice, she answered, “Tea, please. Thank you.” A cup of tea might take him longer. She simply needed to be left alone for a bit to collect her thoughts and calm down.
“You rest here. I’ll bring you some tea.” He paused hesitantly, his look questioning. “Would you like me to fetch your mother or father? Would you prefer to go home instead?”
“Oh, no. I’m quite all right, Phillip. Truly. Please don’t worry my parents. They are enjoying Uncle Jeffrey’s birthday party. I’m just light-headed because I haven’t eaten much of anything today. I suppose I’m just hungry.” She gave him a half-hearted grin. “It’s all my own fault.”
It was a fib about not eating, for she’d had quite a hearty lunch, but it was all Mara could think of to explain her dizziness. She surely couldn’t tell him the truth. Oh, Phillip, I just had the most life-altering premonition, which left me dizzy and breathless and then we ran smack into the man I am certain will change my life! Her cousin was sweet and understanding, but she could never reveal her true feelings to him that way!
“I shall bring you a plate as well then, you goose. There is a mountain of food at the buffet. I shall return straightaway.” He patted her hand comfortingly.
“Thank you, that would be wonderful. I’m sure I’ll be fine as soon as I eat something.”
He gave her another concerned look before he left the room.
After the door to the drawing room closed, Mara was alone in blessed quiet and solitude. For a time anyway. Phillip was a sweetheart to worry over her so, but she simply needed to be alone. With a sigh, relief flooded her but she felt uncomfortably warm. Slowly she removed the long white gloves that covered her arms up to her elbows. She detested wearing gloves! They were too constricting. She lay back against the soft cushions on the divan, closed her eyes, and took a deep breath.
In truth she was more exhilarated than anything else by what had just happened to her. And a tiny bit frightened too.
That premonition! That man! It was indescribable.
But there was great sadness too, in that vision she’d had. There was gripping fear and blazing flames.
Fire.
Mara knew firsthand the deadly ravages of fire. Fire plagued her life and terrified her like nothing else. It was a fire that had killed her mother one night when Mara was just a little girl, and Mara had been unable to save her.
But what did it all mean? The fire particularly worried her. Was she in some kind of danger? Her premonition evoked two distinctly different feelings, deathly fear and utter peace and love. And there was something else too . . . Something she couldn’t quite name.
The sudden click of the drawing room door caught her attention. Was Phillip back already? That was ridiculously fast! Disappointed by his quick return, she reluctantly opened her eyes.
And saw him.
Lord Sterling stood at the foot of the divan, gazing at her in wonder.
A long, silent moment passed between them.
Good heavens, but he was the most gorgeous man she had ever seen. Tall and well built, with an air of quiet strength around him. Dark brown hair, the color of rich chocolate, was slicked back from his classically handsome face. A streamlined nose, straight white teeth, and those eyes! Those eyes!
Finally he uttered, “I beg your pardon, Lady Mara . . . I didn’t mean to intrude . . . It’s just that I-I—” His deep voice faltered for an instant and he shrugged, as if completely baffled by his own actions. “I must confess. I just had to see you again.”
She could barely breathe. He had to see her. He’d had to see her!
“I’m glad you came to see me.” Yes, her own words. She could actually speak in front of him!
He smiled at her then, and her heart seemed to melt inside her chest. She found herself grinning back, helplessly.
“There was something just then in the corridor between us . . . There is something about you . . . I don’t know.” He seemed almost startled by his own thoughts, his handsome face a mask of bemused confusion.
Once again, they stared at each other silently for a few moments.
“May I?” He gestured to the divan.
Instinctively Mara sat up slightly and scooted her stylishly slippered feet over, adjusting the skirt of her champagne-pink silk gown to make room for him to sit at the foot of the divan. Yet he sat even closer to her than she’d expected. It was a highly improper act, decidedly scandalous, in fact, for a gentleman she barely knew to act so familiarly with her. If anyone entered the drawing room and found them this way together, her reputation would be quite ruined.
But for once in her life, Mara didn’t care. And neither did Lord Sterling, apparently. The risk seemed trivial. Things like etiquette and proper deportment did not matter at a time like this.
And what time was that, exactly?
Mara was sure she didn’t know. Yet it felt momentous. Special. Magical. Thrilled by his unexpected appearance and the prospect of speaking with him privately, she could barely contain herself.
Had he felt what she had when they met?
Judging from his expression and his presence beside her on the divan, he must have felt the same magnetic pull to her as she had with him. If she felt it, good heavens, how could he have not?
“Who are you?” he murmured, more to himself than to her.
“I’m myself.” She felt a bit foolish answering that way, but what else was she to say? He wasn’t simply asking to know her name. And she couldn’t tell him the actual truth. That she was the woman who would change his life.
He nodded, yet seemed unclear. With a gesture to the divan and her appearance of malaise, he asked, “Are you unwell?”
“No, no, I’m quite all right.” She waved her hand airily. “I just had a bit of a dizzy spell. My cousin is very overprotective of me and insisted that I rest. It’s nothing though. I am fine. I probably didn’t eat enough today.” It was so odd, her sudden rush of words. Mara did not feel as shy or self-conscious with Lord Sterling as she did with other gentlemen. They usually made her feel nervous and silly and as if everything she said was foolish.
Men were typically drawn in by her attractive appearance and then, after a moment or two, they seemed bored or completely uninterested in her and drifted away. She supposed it was all her fault. She was not a natural coquette or a social butterfly, like her cousin Sara Fleming, who had gentlemen constantly vying for her attention. Lady Mara Reeves had never been mistaken for the belle of the ball.
“You have the trace of an accent,” he noted, eyeing her closely. “Is it Irish?”
“Yes, I was raised in Ireland. My father is the Earl of Cashelmore. Our home is there, but we spend a good part of the year here in London.”
“I’ve never been to Ireland.”
“Oh, it’s beautiful.” She smiled at him. “You shall just have to come visit me there.” Goodness! Had she just flirted with him? Invited him to stay at her home? What on earth had come over her?
His eyes lit up. “I cannot imagine anything more wonderful than going somewhere with you, Lady Mara Reeves.”
“Then let’s go somewhere together.” The words flew far too easily from her lips. Somewhat aghast at her brazenness, she almost put her hand over her mouth. This was not her usual self talking!
“I would like nothing more than to take you away somewhere.” He shook his head reluctantly. “I feel as if I’ve suddenly been bewitched. By you. And such a beautiful witch you are.” Lord Sterling reached over, and as if it were the most natural occurrence in the world, he picked up her hand and held it in his.
Mara caught her breath in suspense. His hand was warm and it fit hers perfectly. The touch of his skin sent shivers of delight washing over her. There was such a sense of belonging. Belonging to him. Belonging together.
“You are the most exquisitely beautiful woman I have ever seen.” He brought her hand to his lips and placed the softest of kisses upon the top of her fingers.
All the manners she had been trained to employ, all the deportment lessons that had been drilled into her, and all the endless hours of instructions and rules about proper behavior with gentlemen that had been given to her over the years, completely evaporated into meaningless fluff. Which only reinforced her belief that something extraordinary was happening to her. Happening with this man. To them both. All the conventional rules of courtship would not apply to them. Of that she was quite certain. This, whatever this was between them, would be vastly different from anything she had been prepared to expect.
Thrilled by his words, his touch, and his sweet kiss, happiness surged through her entire being. He thought she was beautiful! Little Mara with her colorless hair and too wide eyes who always felt invisible in a room full of people . . . Yet to him, to him, she was beautiful. Her heart fluttered and soared.
Lord Sterling gently lowered her hand to rest with his on his lap, their fingers intertwined. For as unusual as it was, it seemed to be the most natural thing for him to do.
“I don’t know what it is about you, Mara . . .”
Even the intimate use of her first name should have shocked her. But it did not. It only drew them closer together. “You felt it too then?”
“I’m not altogether sure.” He shook his head slightly, looking baffled. “I’ve never felt quite like this.”
Neither had she, and it thrilled her to know that no one else had ever made him feel this way. “I saw you once before,” she confessed.
“You did?” His face lit with pleasure. “Whenever it was, I know I did not see you. I certainly would have remembered you.”
Elated that her confession pleased him, she continued. “Yes, I saw you, but you didn’t see me. It was a few months ago, at Lady Cabot’s ball.”
His brows furrowed slightly. “I can barely recall that evening.”
“Well, I recall it quite well and I definitely saw you there. I’m so pleased to see you here tonight at my uncle’s party.”
“The Duke of Rathmore is your uncle?” he asked, a note of surprise in his voice.
With a nod, she added, “And I’m very happy you came in here to see me.”
“I am too.” A brief sigh escaped him. “Although I should not be here with you like this, Mara.” Yet he did not let go of her hand.
“I don’t mind,” she said softly. “I’m not worried or scandalized or frightened by you, if that’s what you are thinking.”
A shadow darkened his expression. “Yes, your reputation is one thing. But I should not be here, taking such liberties with you, saying these things to you, my beautiful little Mara.”
At his words, she knew she was his. His Mara. She belonged completely to him. There was not a doubt in her mind. They were linked together, bound together by something outside of themselves. Fated. And they had finally found each other. Brimming with a blissful sense of purpose and rightness that belied anything she had ever known or been taught, she beamed at him. Her heart, her destiny lay with this man. She knew it.
And he knew it too.
Her world careened around her, while rushing feelings of love and desire wreaked havoc with her usually reserved self. How could she feel this way, so strongly, so suddenly, and so perfectly? The need to kiss him was overwhelming.
Mara had never kissed anyone before. Ever. On pure instinct she slowly leaned forward to kiss him. She closed her eyes, hoping he would take the hint and kiss her too . . .
“No.”
The harshness of the word shattered the intimate moment between them. No? Her eyes flew open in surprise. She stared at the lips that she had been wantonly leaning toward. Had they just uttered the word no? No to a kiss? Surely he’d known that she wanted to kiss him. What had she done wrong? Did he think her too brazen?
Before she could utter a word in response, Lord Sterling abruptly stood up and stepped away from the damask divan, where she still lay. “You are much too beautiful and deserve someone far better than I. I should not have come in here, Lady Mara. Please forgive me. Really, I must leave now.”
Startled by the abrupt change in mood, Mara was about to protest, but the stricken look on his face stopped her cold. What had happened? What had changed? Everything had been wonderful, even magical.
And then it wasn’t.
Hot tears pricked behind her eyes. She blinked rapidly to keep them from spilling down her face.
“Good night, Lady Mara.”
And just as suddenly as he appeared in her life that evening, Lord Sterling was gone.
Later that same evening, Foster Sheridan, the Earl of Sterling, filled with a sense of dread, trudged up the steps of his London townhouse. It was going to be ugly, but there was no avoiding it. Which was a shame because it had been such an extraordinary evening otherwise, and h. . .
It was happening again.
When it occurred in a public place, Lady Mara Reeves tended to panic at the very thought of it happening to her. As it was just now . . .
There really was no way to stop it once it started. At least not a way that she was aware of as yet. No, Mara’s only recourse was to find a quiet corner and hope this particular episode passed quickly. It hadn’t happened to her in quite a while, but she recognized the prickly signs immediately. And they were inordinately strong this time, as if making up for their long absence with a vengeance.
It reminded her once again how different she was from everyone else.
Casting a silent prayer that no one would notice her, with hurried steps Mara retreated to a small alcove along the massive hallway, as she suddenly grew very dizzy, almost faint. Her elegant champagne-pink silk ball gown grew restrictive around her chest. She reached out to a marble pillar for support, the cool white stone sending chills right through her long white gloves to her heated flesh.
Then, just as she knew it would, that peculiarly familiar tingling sensation crept over her skin ever so slowly, awakening each and every nerve in her body. Her heart raced and she grew warm and yet she shivered. The hair on the back of her neck stood on end and she clenched her teeth. Pressing her fingers to her temples, Mara closed her eyes and held her breath. The lively music from the ballroom receded into a dark cloud of silence. Sharp pinpricks of awareness lit up inside of her, flashing sparks of light from within.
And then it happened . . . Misty wisps of images began to take shape in her mind.
Fire. Glints of flames. Blinding bursts of light. Shimmering walls of golden orange and brilliant yellow. Breathtaking, scorching heat. Trapped in the burning building, blazing embers and smoky ash filling the air, Mara didn’t know where to go. Gut-wrenching, tormented screams echoed against the rush of flames. Her own panicked, terrified cries reverberated around her. Scalding tears, knowing it was her fault, knowing it was too late. Blinding heat and black smoke and swirling flames, the vicious sting of fear and the horrific smell of imminent death.
Her death. She was going to die in this raging inferno.
Then nothing. A short breath of blessedly cool air. She gasped.
A man. Frantically calling to her, his hand outstretched, reaching for her, a look of love, mixed with anguish and horror, awash on his handsome face. His eyes, oh, his eyes! Deep green and filled with abject longing and desire, they implored her to come with him, to believe him. And she wished to be with him with a certainty that belied all else. She held out her hand to him, trusting him implicitly, the terror that engulfed her dissipating at the touch of his fingers. Flooded with relief and elation, buoyed with happiness and hope, Mara clung to him, his strong arms embracing her.
He pulled her tightly to his broad chest and she was safe, secure, loved. In spite of their dangerous surroundings and the acrid smell of smoke thick around them, she could breathe easily within his sheltering embrace. A profound peace enveloped her. Never had she felt such an ebullient happiness and tranquility. This man loved her deeply and she loved him. She looked into the greenest eyes she had ever seen. The desire to be with him overwhelmed her. She was his and he was hers. The certainty, the rightness of it, was all-consuming.
She belonged to him. They belonged together.
And just like that, the intense images evaporated, as if Mara had simply awakened from an incredible and vivid dream.
Yet Mara had not been sleeping. She had been very much awake.
Shaken by what she’d just seen, she remained motionless, fighting the urge to cry. The loss of the exquisite connection with that man and the inexplicable sense of warmth, happiness, and pure love brought tears to her eyes.
Mara trembled, as if she were shivering from a cold wind.
Whenever she had one of her strange premonitions, it was always about someone else, never about herself. It had been that way her whole life. Sometimes she could foresee the future, getting a glimpse into what was going to happen to the people she loved. Sometimes she saw good things, other times she saw things she did not wish to know. But they always presaged the actual events themselves. And she had never been wrong. When she saw something in her visions, it always came to pass.
Ever since she was a little girl, she had kept these premonitions, these feelings or intuitions or signs or whatever they were called, to herself. Locked deep inside. She’d mentioned them to her father once when she was about seven years old, and from the panicked and worried expression in his paternal eyes, she learned not to mention them to him ever again. Another time, she had half-heartedly confided in Sara about them, but her cousin seemed baffled by her revelation.
However, this time her premonition was completely different from any of the others she had ever had.
This time the vision was about . . . her. Mara was the center of it all.
Mara was the girl in the flames.
Fire had haunted her whole life. Was it any wonder that a vision that involved her included flames and smoke? Fire fascinated her and terrified her. There was no mistaking what she had seen and felt just now, even if she could not discern what it meant in any real context. Was she in danger now? When would this come to pass? Tonight? Tomorrow? A year from now?
The only thing she was certain of was that it would happen.
“Mara . . . ? Mara, are you unwell?”
In a daze, she blinked up at a familiar face.
Her cousin, Phillip Sinclair, placed a steadying hand on her arm. His voice full of concern, he repeated her name. “Mara?”
Bracing herself, trying to refocus her mind, Mara finally responded with an automaticity that surprised her. “I’m perfectly fine, thank you.”
“Well, you don’t look perfectly fine at all.” Phillip shook his head, his boyishly handsome features lined with skepticism. “You look ghastly and about ready to faint. Let’s go sit in the drawing room for a moment, so you can rest. You’re lucky I happened to come along when I did.”
Nodding in wordless agreement, Mara followed Phillip away from the grand ballroom, where the sounds of lively music from the orchestra and the exuberant rise and fall of laughter and voices muddled together. All the guests were enjoying a wonderful evening of dancing and dining to celebrate Uncle Jeffrey’s birthday. Meanwhile an icy-cold knot tightened in the pit of Mara’s stomach.
What had just happened to her?
It was unlike anything she had experienced before. Of all the visions, the seeings, she’d had in her life, this one had been drastically different. Still trembling, she took a gulp of air and walked unsteadily beside her protective cousin, holding tight to his arm, grateful for his calming presence, for it anchored her in reality.
As they moved down the marble-floored corridor and passed by her aunt and uncle’s other guests, Mara looked up and into the face of the man she had just seen in her vision. She gasped.
Eyes of the deepest forest green, fringed with dark lashes and framed with dark brows, arched in matched surprise as they met her own. These eyes gazed into her very soul, until Mara felt as if she were drowning in them, consumed by them. The man did not look away from her, nor did he flinch from their locked gaze. Strange feelings washed over her.
Instant recognition. A sense of knowing and belonging. A feeling of wonder. A blossoming of something exquisitely wonderful. Mara could not breathe. There was a connection so strong, she could only stop abruptly in place and stare back at him, utterly speechless. Frightened by the power of it, by the sheer beauty of it, she was motionless.
It was him.
She knew it was him. Not only that, she knew his name.
Mara sensed Phillip’s confusion as he stood beside her, wondering what had caused her to suddenly become still. She heard Phillip’s voice greeting the man from her vision. “Good evening, Lord Sterling.”
The man’s green eyes never left Mara’s, although he addressed her cousin. “Waverly, isn’t it?”
“Yes, I believe we met at the races last spring,” Phillip continued amiably, “May I introduce you to my cousin? This is Lady Mara Reeves. Mara, this is Foster Sheridan, Lord Sterling.”
Utterly transfixed by him, Mara remained immobile and incapable of forming words, while he and her cousin exchanged pleasantries.
It was then Mara took in his whole face. The masculine features of Foster Sheridan, the Earl of Sterling. She had seen him before! Oh, yes, she had . . . It was a few months earlier, and she had been distracted and worried about her cousin Sara that evening, and did not speak to him. But Mara had watched this attractive man from afar during Lady Cabot’s ball that night. Thinking him quite handsome, she had even asked Lord Bridgeton about him that night, to learn his name.
That had been all there was to it. They had not spoken or even exchanged glances and she had not seen him again. She hadn’t given him more than an idle thought since that summer night.
Until her vision.
Until now.
And here he was before her, saying what a pleasure it was to meet her, the rich tone of his voice sending excited shivers throughout her body. Mara heard mumbled words escape from her own lips but hadn’t a clue what she’d actually said, for she was momentarily mesmerized by the magnificence of his smile. His attractive face lit up from within and his eyes danced with merriment, with enchanting crinkles at the corners. Warmth emanated from this man and enveloped her like a luxurious velvet blanket. She clenched her fingers, fighting the urge to reach out and touch him. To actually caress his smooth-shaven cheek, to run her fingers along his strong, chiseled jaw, to brush them across his full, inviting lips.
Lord Sterling. Foster Sheridan.
It was him.
He was the man in the premonition that had just shaken her to the core. The images in which she felt such indescribable happiness and peace. With him. With this man who left her feeling completely unlike her usual self. With this man she had never really crossed paths with before. Yet she knew, with an unwavering certainty in her soul, that their futures were irrevocably entwined.
So lost in her little reverie of wanting to touch this man, to know him, she was only vaguely aware of her cousin bidding him farewell. No! No! Not yet! It’s too soon! Mara wanted to cry out with the loss of him, yet she could not think of anything to say to prolong their encounter.
Lord Sterling gave her a gentlemanly bow. “Lady Mara, it’s quite early yet, but I must admit that meeting you has most definitely been the highlight of my evening.”
She merely nodded and smiled, for she couldn’t form coherent sentences at a time when her little world was suddenly turned upside down. Before she knew it Phillip was guiding her along the marble hallway again, as if nothing extraordinary had just happened. She fought the overwhelming desire to run back, back to Lord Sterling and his remarkable eyes. And that exquisite feeling she had while standing near him.
However, Mara managed to steal a quick glance over her shoulder. Lord Sterling simply stood there watching her walking away, looking as bewildered as she felt. And the longing in his eyes echoed the feelings that flooded her being.
She wanted to be with him.
Phillip led her to a private drawing room that belonged to Aunt Yvette. Once she was seated upon a blue damask divan, Phillip asked, “Mara, you are not at all yourself. Can I get you anything? A glass of water? A cup of tea? Some champagne, perhaps?”
When she found her voice, she answered, “Tea, please. Thank you.” A cup of tea might take him longer. She simply needed to be left alone for a bit to collect her thoughts and calm down.
“You rest here. I’ll bring you some tea.” He paused hesitantly, his look questioning. “Would you like me to fetch your mother or father? Would you prefer to go home instead?”
“Oh, no. I’m quite all right, Phillip. Truly. Please don’t worry my parents. They are enjoying Uncle Jeffrey’s birthday party. I’m just light-headed because I haven’t eaten much of anything today. I suppose I’m just hungry.” She gave him a half-hearted grin. “It’s all my own fault.”
It was a fib about not eating, for she’d had quite a hearty lunch, but it was all Mara could think of to explain her dizziness. She surely couldn’t tell him the truth. Oh, Phillip, I just had the most life-altering premonition, which left me dizzy and breathless and then we ran smack into the man I am certain will change my life! Her cousin was sweet and understanding, but she could never reveal her true feelings to him that way!
“I shall bring you a plate as well then, you goose. There is a mountain of food at the buffet. I shall return straightaway.” He patted her hand comfortingly.
“Thank you, that would be wonderful. I’m sure I’ll be fine as soon as I eat something.”
He gave her another concerned look before he left the room.
After the door to the drawing room closed, Mara was alone in blessed quiet and solitude. For a time anyway. Phillip was a sweetheart to worry over her so, but she simply needed to be alone. With a sigh, relief flooded her but she felt uncomfortably warm. Slowly she removed the long white gloves that covered her arms up to her elbows. She detested wearing gloves! They were too constricting. She lay back against the soft cushions on the divan, closed her eyes, and took a deep breath.
In truth she was more exhilarated than anything else by what had just happened to her. And a tiny bit frightened too.
That premonition! That man! It was indescribable.
But there was great sadness too, in that vision she’d had. There was gripping fear and blazing flames.
Fire.
Mara knew firsthand the deadly ravages of fire. Fire plagued her life and terrified her like nothing else. It was a fire that had killed her mother one night when Mara was just a little girl, and Mara had been unable to save her.
But what did it all mean? The fire particularly worried her. Was she in some kind of danger? Her premonition evoked two distinctly different feelings, deathly fear and utter peace and love. And there was something else too . . . Something she couldn’t quite name.
The sudden click of the drawing room door caught her attention. Was Phillip back already? That was ridiculously fast! Disappointed by his quick return, she reluctantly opened her eyes.
And saw him.
Lord Sterling stood at the foot of the divan, gazing at her in wonder.
A long, silent moment passed between them.
Good heavens, but he was the most gorgeous man she had ever seen. Tall and well built, with an air of quiet strength around him. Dark brown hair, the color of rich chocolate, was slicked back from his classically handsome face. A streamlined nose, straight white teeth, and those eyes! Those eyes!
Finally he uttered, “I beg your pardon, Lady Mara . . . I didn’t mean to intrude . . . It’s just that I-I—” His deep voice faltered for an instant and he shrugged, as if completely baffled by his own actions. “I must confess. I just had to see you again.”
She could barely breathe. He had to see her. He’d had to see her!
“I’m glad you came to see me.” Yes, her own words. She could actually speak in front of him!
He smiled at her then, and her heart seemed to melt inside her chest. She found herself grinning back, helplessly.
“There was something just then in the corridor between us . . . There is something about you . . . I don’t know.” He seemed almost startled by his own thoughts, his handsome face a mask of bemused confusion.
Once again, they stared at each other silently for a few moments.
“May I?” He gestured to the divan.
Instinctively Mara sat up slightly and scooted her stylishly slippered feet over, adjusting the skirt of her champagne-pink silk gown to make room for him to sit at the foot of the divan. Yet he sat even closer to her than she’d expected. It was a highly improper act, decidedly scandalous, in fact, for a gentleman she barely knew to act so familiarly with her. If anyone entered the drawing room and found them this way together, her reputation would be quite ruined.
But for once in her life, Mara didn’t care. And neither did Lord Sterling, apparently. The risk seemed trivial. Things like etiquette and proper deportment did not matter at a time like this.
And what time was that, exactly?
Mara was sure she didn’t know. Yet it felt momentous. Special. Magical. Thrilled by his unexpected appearance and the prospect of speaking with him privately, she could barely contain herself.
Had he felt what she had when they met?
Judging from his expression and his presence beside her on the divan, he must have felt the same magnetic pull to her as she had with him. If she felt it, good heavens, how could he have not?
“Who are you?” he murmured, more to himself than to her.
“I’m myself.” She felt a bit foolish answering that way, but what else was she to say? He wasn’t simply asking to know her name. And she couldn’t tell him the actual truth. That she was the woman who would change his life.
He nodded, yet seemed unclear. With a gesture to the divan and her appearance of malaise, he asked, “Are you unwell?”
“No, no, I’m quite all right.” She waved her hand airily. “I just had a bit of a dizzy spell. My cousin is very overprotective of me and insisted that I rest. It’s nothing though. I am fine. I probably didn’t eat enough today.” It was so odd, her sudden rush of words. Mara did not feel as shy or self-conscious with Lord Sterling as she did with other gentlemen. They usually made her feel nervous and silly and as if everything she said was foolish.
Men were typically drawn in by her attractive appearance and then, after a moment or two, they seemed bored or completely uninterested in her and drifted away. She supposed it was all her fault. She was not a natural coquette or a social butterfly, like her cousin Sara Fleming, who had gentlemen constantly vying for her attention. Lady Mara Reeves had never been mistaken for the belle of the ball.
“You have the trace of an accent,” he noted, eyeing her closely. “Is it Irish?”
“Yes, I was raised in Ireland. My father is the Earl of Cashelmore. Our home is there, but we spend a good part of the year here in London.”
“I’ve never been to Ireland.”
“Oh, it’s beautiful.” She smiled at him. “You shall just have to come visit me there.” Goodness! Had she just flirted with him? Invited him to stay at her home? What on earth had come over her?
His eyes lit up. “I cannot imagine anything more wonderful than going somewhere with you, Lady Mara Reeves.”
“Then let’s go somewhere together.” The words flew far too easily from her lips. Somewhat aghast at her brazenness, she almost put her hand over her mouth. This was not her usual self talking!
“I would like nothing more than to take you away somewhere.” He shook his head reluctantly. “I feel as if I’ve suddenly been bewitched. By you. And such a beautiful witch you are.” Lord Sterling reached over, and as if it were the most natural occurrence in the world, he picked up her hand and held it in his.
Mara caught her breath in suspense. His hand was warm and it fit hers perfectly. The touch of his skin sent shivers of delight washing over her. There was such a sense of belonging. Belonging to him. Belonging together.
“You are the most exquisitely beautiful woman I have ever seen.” He brought her hand to his lips and placed the softest of kisses upon the top of her fingers.
All the manners she had been trained to employ, all the deportment lessons that had been drilled into her, and all the endless hours of instructions and rules about proper behavior with gentlemen that had been given to her over the years, completely evaporated into meaningless fluff. Which only reinforced her belief that something extraordinary was happening to her. Happening with this man. To them both. All the conventional rules of courtship would not apply to them. Of that she was quite certain. This, whatever this was between them, would be vastly different from anything she had been prepared to expect.
Thrilled by his words, his touch, and his sweet kiss, happiness surged through her entire being. He thought she was beautiful! Little Mara with her colorless hair and too wide eyes who always felt invisible in a room full of people . . . Yet to him, to him, she was beautiful. Her heart fluttered and soared.
Lord Sterling gently lowered her hand to rest with his on his lap, their fingers intertwined. For as unusual as it was, it seemed to be the most natural thing for him to do.
“I don’t know what it is about you, Mara . . .”
Even the intimate use of her first name should have shocked her. But it did not. It only drew them closer together. “You felt it too then?”
“I’m not altogether sure.” He shook his head slightly, looking baffled. “I’ve never felt quite like this.”
Neither had she, and it thrilled her to know that no one else had ever made him feel this way. “I saw you once before,” she confessed.
“You did?” His face lit with pleasure. “Whenever it was, I know I did not see you. I certainly would have remembered you.”
Elated that her confession pleased him, she continued. “Yes, I saw you, but you didn’t see me. It was a few months ago, at Lady Cabot’s ball.”
His brows furrowed slightly. “I can barely recall that evening.”
“Well, I recall it quite well and I definitely saw you there. I’m so pleased to see you here tonight at my uncle’s party.”
“The Duke of Rathmore is your uncle?” he asked, a note of surprise in his voice.
With a nod, she added, “And I’m very happy you came in here to see me.”
“I am too.” A brief sigh escaped him. “Although I should not be here with you like this, Mara.” Yet he did not let go of her hand.
“I don’t mind,” she said softly. “I’m not worried or scandalized or frightened by you, if that’s what you are thinking.”
A shadow darkened his expression. “Yes, your reputation is one thing. But I should not be here, taking such liberties with you, saying these things to you, my beautiful little Mara.”
At his words, she knew she was his. His Mara. She belonged completely to him. There was not a doubt in her mind. They were linked together, bound together by something outside of themselves. Fated. And they had finally found each other. Brimming with a blissful sense of purpose and rightness that belied anything she had ever known or been taught, she beamed at him. Her heart, her destiny lay with this man. She knew it.
And he knew it too.
Her world careened around her, while rushing feelings of love and desire wreaked havoc with her usually reserved self. How could she feel this way, so strongly, so suddenly, and so perfectly? The need to kiss him was overwhelming.
Mara had never kissed anyone before. Ever. On pure instinct she slowly leaned forward to kiss him. She closed her eyes, hoping he would take the hint and kiss her too . . .
“No.”
The harshness of the word shattered the intimate moment between them. No? Her eyes flew open in surprise. She stared at the lips that she had been wantonly leaning toward. Had they just uttered the word no? No to a kiss? Surely he’d known that she wanted to kiss him. What had she done wrong? Did he think her too brazen?
Before she could utter a word in response, Lord Sterling abruptly stood up and stepped away from the damask divan, where she still lay. “You are much too beautiful and deserve someone far better than I. I should not have come in here, Lady Mara. Please forgive me. Really, I must leave now.”
Startled by the abrupt change in mood, Mara was about to protest, but the stricken look on his face stopped her cold. What had happened? What had changed? Everything had been wonderful, even magical.
And then it wasn’t.
Hot tears pricked behind her eyes. She blinked rapidly to keep them from spilling down her face.
“Good night, Lady Mara.”
And just as suddenly as he appeared in her life that evening, Lord Sterling was gone.
Later that same evening, Foster Sheridan, the Earl of Sterling, filled with a sense of dread, trudged up the steps of his London townhouse. It was going to be ugly, but there was no avoiding it. Which was a shame because it had been such an extraordinary evening otherwise, and h. . .
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The Irish Heiress
Kaitlin O'Riley
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