"Are all tutors as widely traveled as yourself, sir?" she had asked.
Jared had given her an unreadable look. "Ah, no. I have been rather fortunate in that regard. I have worked for some people whose business ventures frequently took them abroad. My employers chose to travel with their families."
Olympia nodded sagely. "Naturally they would wish their children's tutor to accompany them on an extended journey. What a wonderful career you selected for yourself."
"It it only lately that I have come to fully appreciate it." Jared rose from his chair, picked up the brandy decanter, and poured more of the amber liquid into her glass. "I see you have a rather nice chart depicting the South Seas on your wall."
"I have done a great deal of research on legends that originate in that part of the world." What with the combined effects of the fire and the brandy, Olympia was feeling pleasantly warm and quite relaxed. A woman of the world conversing with a man of the world, she thought with satisfaction.
Jared poured a bit more brandy into his own glass and replaced the decanter on the table. "One of my more interesting trips took me to a number of islands in that region," he said thoughtfully. He sank back into the depths of his chair.
"Really?" Olympia gazed at him in wonder. "That must have been thrilling."
"Oh, it was." Jared touched his fingertips together. "There are a variety of interesting legends from that part of the world, as you are no doubt well aware. One in particular rather intrigued me."
"I should love to hear about it," Olympia whispered. The library seemed to be filled with a dreamlike quality, as if the entire room, complete with Jared and herself inside, had been transported to another place and another time.
"It has to do with a pair of lovers who were not allowed to marry because the young woman's father was opposed to the match."
Olympia took another sip of brandy. "How very sad. What became of the lovers?"
"Their passion was such that they were determined to be together," Jared said. "So they arranged to meet secretly at night on the beach of a hidden cove."
"I suppose they talked until dawn." Olympia said wistfully. "No doubt they whispered words of poetry to each other. Confided their most intimate secrets. Dreamed of a future together."
Jared looked at her. "Actually, they spent the time making passionate love."
Olympia blinked. "On a beach?"
"Yes."
Olympia cleared her throat. "But wouldn't that have been somewhat uncomfortable? I mean what with the sand and all?"
Jared smiled slightly. "What is a little sand to a pair of lovers who are desperate for each other?"
"Yes, of course," Olympia said hastily. She hoped she had not sounded too terribly naive.
"And besides, this was a very special beach. It was sacred to a certain island deity who is said to have taken pity on the lovers."
Olympia was still not entirely convinced that making love in the sand was a particularly sound notion, but she certainly did not intend to argue the matter. "Do go on, sir. Tell me the rest of the legend."
"One night the lovers were discovered by the woman's irate father. He killed the young man."
"How terrible. What happened?"
"The young woman was grief-stricken, naturally. She waded out into the sea and disappeared. The deity in charge of the beach was outraged. He punished the young woman's father by turning all the sand on the beach into pearls."
"That was a punishment?" Olympia asked, startled.
"Yes." Jared smiled coolly. "The man was so excited about the discovery of the pearl beach that he went home to rouse the rest of his family. But the deity cast a magic spell over the cove, making it invisible to all those who searched for it."
"So this pearl beach was never found?"
Jared shook his head. "To this day the islanders still talk of it. Many have searched for it. But no one has ever seen it. It's said that it can only be discovered by a pair of lovers whose passion is as great as the two who used to meet there and make love in the moonlight."
Olympia sighed. "Just imagine risking all for love, Mr. Chillhurst."
"I have begun to believe that a great passion is like a great legend," Jared said quietly. "It is worth any risk."
A shiver coursed through Olympia. She felt first hot and then cold. "You are no doubt correct, sir. In any case, I thank you for the tale. I have never heard it and it is a lovely legend."
Jared looked deeply into her eyes. Something dark and disturbing moved in his own gaze. "Yes," he said softly. "Quite lovely."
In that moment Olympia could almost believe that he was speaking of her, not the legend. A sense of excitement stirred deep within her. It was similar to the thrill she got when she pursued a legend, but it was far more powerful. It left her feeling oddly shaken, a little giddy.
"Mr. Chillhurst… ?"
Jared removed his watch from his pocket. "I see it is very late," he said with obvious regret. "It is time I went back to my cottage. Perhaps tomorrow night I shall have an opportunity to describe a rather unusual custom that was practiced by the inhabitants of another South Seas island which I chanced to visit."
"I should like that very much," Olympia breathed.
"Good night, Miss Wingfield. I shall see you at breakfast."
"Good night, Mr. Chillhurst."
A shimmering sense of longing had welled up within Olympia as she accompanied Jared to the front door. She had stood watching as he walked off into the night and became one with it.
And then she had gone to bed and dreamed of being kissed by Jared on a beach scattered with pearls.
Now, in the bright light of day, she listened to him tell tales to her nephews and realized that Jared had very quickly become an important part of her small household. She was learning a great deal about this man who had the face of a pirate and she was finding that she liked him very much. Too much perhaps, she thought.
She must not forget that someday Jared would leave and she would again be alone with her library and no other adult companion with whom she could share the intellectual pleasures it contained.
At that moment Jared glanced up and saw her standing just inside the schoolroom. The corner of his mouth curved faintly.
"Good morning, Miss Wingfield. Was there something you wanted?"
"No, no," Olympia said quickly. "Please carry on. I merely wished to observe the lesson."
"By all means." Jared indicated the globe. "We are studying geography this morning."
"So I see." Olympia took a step closer.
Ethan grinned. "We are learning all about the West Indies, Aunt Olympia."
"And about a pirate named Captain Jack," Robert added.
Jared cleared his throat slightly. "It should be noted that Captain Jack was a buccaneer, not a pirate."
"What's the difference?" Hugh demanded.
"Very little, in point of fact," Jared said dryly. "But some people are quite insistent upon the distinction. Buccaneers sailed with a commission. In theory they were authorized by the crown or by local authorities in the West Indies to attack enemy ships. But it got rather complicated at times. Why was that, do you suppose, Robert?"
Robert straightened his shoulders. "Because so many different countries have colonies in the West Indies, I expect, sir."
"Precisely." Jared smiled approvingly. "Back in Captain Jack's time there were English, French, Dutch, and Spanish vessels in the region."
"And the buccaneers were not supposed to attack the ships and towns of their home countries, I'll wager," Ethan said. He frowned. "That would mean the English would have sailed against the French and the Spanish and the Dutch. The French would have attacked the English and the Spanish and the Dutch."
"It does sound rather complicated," Olympia said. She abandoned any pretense of being an interested observer of Jared's instructional methods. She hurried across the room to join her nephews. "What was this about a venture across the Isthmus of Panama in search of treasure?"