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She gave a confident, businesslike nod. “I came from Mrs. Trilby’s Agency for Superior Governesses.” Which wasn’tentirelyuntruthful. She’d walked here directly from the agency. And shehadbeen promised a position.

Just not this one.

“It’s lovely that you were able to come so swiftly, Miss Perkins,” said the lady sitting near the fire. “I’m India. Which doesn’t really rhyme with anything, I’m afraid.”

Mari curtsied. “Pleased to meet you, my lady.”

Lady India was the most beautiful creature Mari had ever seen, with hair the color of ripe blackberries, pale violet eyes, and high slanted cheekbones.

Though her attire was decidedly odd, almost rakish, even. A tailored gentleman’s cutaway coat over a draped gown that almost appeared to be split down the center.

Mari dismissed the preposterous idea. The lady couldn’t be wearing trousers.

“How old are you, Perkins?” asked the duke.

“Twenty, Your Grace. Though I’ve had the care and tutelage of young children for many years.”

His unsettling gaze pierced through her clothing, skin, and bones to see through to her wildly beating heart. She stood taller under his scrutiny, careful to maintain a half smile on her lips and a calm, efficient tilt to her head.

She could tell he found her lacking by the way the line between his brows deepened.

“Your shoulders—” said the duke, staring in the general direction of her bosom “—are insufficiently brawny.”

“Ah... I do apologize, Your Grace. I will begin performing strengthening exercises immediately.”

Another frown. “And your smile is suspiciously cheerful.”

He didn’t want cheerful. Mari instantly dropped the smile. “How impertinent of it. I specifically told it to be stern and capable.”

She matched the thunderous frown on the duke’s face.

His eyes narrowed and he tapped his pen against the blotter. “Flippancy is not a trait I’m looking for in a governess.”

“I meant no disrespect, Your Grace,” she replied, keeping her expression neutral and humorless.

Her future rested in his hands.

His extremely large, surprisingly rugged hands. The hands of a man who knew hard labor. Rough-padded and crisscrossed with burns and scars.

Where had he acquired those scars?

He watched her closely. She widened her stance and threw back her shoulders in an attempt to appear more substantial. She held her breath, sending a silent prayer heavenward.

“You’re too small, Perkins,” he said.

“Never judge things by their appearances, Your Grace. I’m stronger than I appear.”

Strong enough to survive the typhoid fever that had taken Helena, her only friend, and left a gaping hole in Mari’s heart.

Strong enough to withstand years of punishment, freezing damp, and deprivation.

“Spare me your proverbs, Perkins,” said the duke. “I’m not a child.”

“Of course you’re not, Your Grace. You’re definitely all man. That is to say, your shoulders are more than sufficiently brawny, er...”

What had come over her? She never dithered.

He was just so verymale. She hadn’t meant to let on that she’d noticed the breadth of his shoulders or the size of his hands, though what girl wouldn’t notice?

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