“Stop,” George began.
“No, please, allow me to finish. If you do this, I promise I shall not bother you again. I will be honest, there is some danger involved. There are men who know it is coming, and they will wish to stop it. But these are documents of vital importance.” And then Arbuthnot went in for the kill. “It could even save your brother.”
Arbuthnot was good, George would give him that. He did not believe for a second that this Kent-bound packet had anything to do with Edward, and he still almost blurted his assent the moment the general had stopped talking.
“I’m not your man,” he said quietly.
That should have been the end of it.
It would have been the end of it, but then the door slammed open and there, standing in the doorway, eyes shining with reckless purpose, was Billie.
Billie had not meant to eavesdrop. She had been on her way down to breakfast, her hair perhaps too-hastily pinned due to her eagerness to see George again, when she’d heard his voice in the drawing room. She’d assumed he was with his mother – who else would be at Manston House this time in the morning? – but then she heard the voice of another gentleman, and he was saying something about the night before.
The night that George had said he could not tell her about.
She shouldn’t have listened, but honestly, what woman could have pulled herself away? And then the man asked George to deliver a package, and he said it might help Edward?
She could not stop herself. All she could think was – this was Edward. Her dearest childhood friend. If she was prepared to fall out of a tree to save an ungrateful cat, she could certainly take a package to some inn on the coast. How difficult could it be? And if it was dangerous, if it was something that required discretion, surely she was an excellent decoy. No one would expect a woman to be making the delivery.
She didn’t think. She didn’t need to think. She just ran into the room and declared, “I’ll do it!”
George didn’t think. He didn’t need to think. “The hell you will,” he roared.
Billie froze for a moment, clearly not expecting this sort of reaction. Then she girded her shoulders and hurried in. “George,” she said entreatingly, “we’re talking about Edward. How can we not do everything —”
He grabbed her by the arm and yanked her aside. “You do not have all of the facts,” he hissed.
“I don’t need all the facts.”
“You never do,” he muttered.
Her eyes narrowed dangerously. “I can do this,” she insisted.
Good God, she was going to be the death of him. “I’m sure you can, but you won’t.”
“But —”
“I forbid it.”
Billie drew back. “You forbid —”
That was the moment Arbuthnot sidled over. “I don’t think we were properly introduced last night,” he said with an avuncular smile. “I am Lord Arbuthnot. I —”
“Get out of my house,” George bit off.
“George!” Billie exclaimed, her face betraying her shock at his rudeness.
Arbuthnot turned to him with a thoughtful expression. “The lady appears to be quite resourceful. I think we could —”
“Get out!”
“George?” Now his mother appeared in the doorway. “What is all the yelling about? Oh, I’m sorry, Lord Arbuthnot. I did not see you there.”
“Lady Manston.” He bowed properly. “Forgive my early visit. I had business with your son.”
“He was just leaving,” George said, tightening his grip on Billie’s arm when she started to squirm.
“Let me go,” she ground out. “I might be able to help.”
“Or you might not.”
“Stop it,” she hissed, now pulling furiously. “You cannot order me about.”
“I assure you I can,” he shot back, his eyes burning down into hers. He was going to be her husband, for God’s sake. Did that not count for anything?
“But I want to help,” she said, lowering her voice as she turned her back on the rest of the room.
“So do I, but this is not the way.”
“It may be the only way.”
For a moment he could do nothing but close his eyes. Was this a taste of the rest of his life as Billie Bridgerton’s husband? Was he destined to live in terror, wondering what sort of danger she’d thrown herself into that day?
Was it worth it?
“George?” she whispered. She sounded uneasy. Had she seen something in his expression? A sign of doubt?
He touched her cheek, and he looked into her eyes.
He saw his whole world there.
“I love you,” he said.
Someone gasped. It might have been his mother.
“I cannot live without you,” he said, “and in fact, I refuse to do so. So no, you will not be going on some ill-advised mission to the coast to hand off a potentially dangerous package to people you don’t know. Because if anything happened to you…” His voice broke, but he didn’t care. “If anything happened to you, it would kill me. And I’d like to think you love me too much to let that happen.”
Billie stared at him in wonder, her softly parted lips trembling as she blinked back tears. “You love me?” she whispered.
He nearly rolled his eyes. “Of course I do.”
“You never said.”
“I must have done.”
“You didn’t. I would have remembered.”
“I would remember, too,” he said softly, “if you’d ever said it to me.”