Her Honour For An Heir
uched, the nerves replaced with resentment. Seething anger that my husband, a man
ay in his study at Tarrick Hall. His months are my months. As t
my peers. The Season lasts from November to July. Last year I managed just a few balls in March. It was excruciating to
missing Duchess," a line that always made the Du
to finish a needlework pattern. Since our grand showpiece of a wedding a
all but me when he proposed our union to
er's liking. Too much dancing and spirited debate for his liking
yous married union could be. With rambunctious children sure t
woman. Before I knelt before God, dressed in snow-white lace, and swore to honour th
ceiling seemed to swallow me whole. My lively spir
ion but I saw him only as my father's friend. Edmund, Duk
ning me to his chamber throughout our honeymoon in Venice. The lapping of the canal water below ou
sat on the side of the bed roughly jerked away
ready over fifty he was a lean, wiry figure. When dressed in his
becoming wrinkled and flaccid. Youth had fled, leavin
ar to try and produce the necessary rise took that impressive image away swi
d only heard about the act of love at that point. I knew he needed his male part to
ts and drawings that the Duke was lazy enough to leave lying around in his library. Naked bodies entwined, breasts exposed, men's
nths I stared at the mucky pamphlets he had corrected trying to spot the thing t
s volcanic. The realisation h
down, then sat on a chair but nothing. Thankfully his solution after this mortification was to pretend I did not ex
ecial rubs from the far continents. Every newspaper we received carried adv
s so bad I fear he will refuse to visit London entirely this year. Apparently his nerves are b
ster Kitty visits infrequently, finding Tarrick Hall as dull as myself. My mother I do not wish to see. I
se riding. At least my tears vanish into the wind
yself when I hear it. Which is why I remained silent
gardens that lined our drive was my sanctuary. He had his library, study and
ould reply, he continued. "I intend for you to produce an heir. The next London season is in
his conversation he sniffed in derision. He thought me a simpleton, a fact I was happy to allow. With all the readin
d then Sir, y
ndows. "I need an heir for the Tarrick Estate to avoid it going down my hateful brother's line." With
enty being considered old by the wither
lf-corset brutally fastened underneath, around my ribs to ensure my chest was amply displayed whilst
uest who could arrive. I still had youth on my side, although perhaps little els
as merely a beautiful possession,
our sugges
he asked coldly, as if checking wheth
tra to me briefly flickering through my mind. Children would surely relinquish some of the loneliness of
stics to myself shall breed you. Oh and Jeremiah was kicked in the head b
he phrase, so coldly cruel, as if he was discussing racehorses. My vi
ket in order that he might pass his pile
had stabbed my needlework pin de