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Prince of Ravenscar

Page 34

by Catherine Coulter


  “And there you were, kissing me until I was mad for you, but you kept saying over and over you wouldn’t dishonor me, wouldn’t have me naked until our wedding night.”

  “Would you believe I suffered more than you did?”

  “No.”

  “Well, I did, since I knew exactly what I was missing. Do you know, dearest one, I shall congratulate Sophie in the morning for pulling such an amazing stunt on her aunt. However, Roxanne, very soon you will be naked and beautiful, your cheeks all rosy with delight from the pleasure I will give you. Forget making love against the wall at midnight. This is much better. I think our wedding night has been perfect so far, don’t you? Come here, Roxanne.”

  She frowned down at him, her voice snide. “I assume you know how to continue this business, since you’ve had simply scores of mistresses. That wasn’t a lie, was it?”

  He grinned, patted the side of the bed. “No more than two score, but you know, I suppose it’s possible I could have forgotten how one accomplishes this business in the past four weeks of sainthood. Come here, let’s see what happens.”

  When she was stretched out beside him, Devlin leaned down, kissed her, and kept kissing her as he stripped her naked. He leaned up and stared down at her. Slowly, his hand cupped her beautiful white breast. His leg moved to press hers apart. “Now you are as naked as I am. Hmmm, what is next, I wonder?”

  “That feels rather nice. Whatever you’re doing, don’t stop.”

  “I shan’t, my darling, I shan’t. Ah, look at us, Roxanne. I believe I am the whiter.”

  She studied them for a moment, pressed together, then, “No, I am the whiter.”

  “No matter, we blend perfectly together, just as I knew we would.”

  Roxanne kissed his chin, his nose, his eyebrows. “Thee and me,” she whispered against his mouth. “Have I told you how much I love you, Devlin?”

  “Not since this morning, after I kissed you in the church. I believe I told you I loved you more. As we’ll blend our whiteness, let’s blend our love. Come, let me show you pleasure now.”

  In the other corner bedchamber of the Shapewick Inn, Julian was grinning down at his new wife. “I cannot believe you told such an outrageous tale to your poor aged aunt. Don’t worry, Devlin will make her realize you were pulling both her legs and her arms as well. Seducing me two full days before our wedding? Beware, Roxanne is liable to clout you once she realizes what you did.”

  Sophie giggled. “I got her,” she said between giggles. “She was red with rage at me—her little niece—learning things she didn’t know before she did.”

  He was laughing with her until she began kissing him all over his face, her hands stroking over him, his chest, his belly, and lower, until he moaned. Finally, he came over her, stretched out on top of her, pressed her into the soft mattress, and soon she was panting between her kisses. She whispered against his throat, “Tell me again you love me, Prince.”

  “I love you, and my four dogs love you.”

  “And the unborn pups?”

  “Yes, the pups, too.”

  She touched her fingertips to his beautiful mouth, his chin, stroked her thumbs over his black eyebrows. “I am the only woman in the world for you. Because you are a smart man, it did not take you all that long to realize it.”

  “I did but what my mother wished me to do.”

  “And my mother. How I miss her, Prince. If only she had not died, if only—”

  “I know, sweetheart. But I have this belief deep inside me that your mother was there in the church with us, and she was happy, Sophie.

  “Now, my noble self is brimming with lust that needs to be requited.” And he kissed her, his mouth going down her body as her hand had his. In the next minute, Sophie burst with pleasure, and she screamed with the power of it. She would swear she heard Cletus barking his head off when the prince threw back his head and yelled to the ceiling.

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  EPILOGUE

  Ravenscar

  FEBRUARY 2, 1832

  Julian read the letter from Baron Purley once again.

  Dear Prince:

  It is snowing today in Washington, and the winds gust through the trees and make the windows rattle. Vicky and I are just returned to our home only one short mile from where the American president Andrew Jackson resides. We attended his New Year’s reception, a wild affair given to much drink, immoderate jollity, and dancing. Withal, I find President Andrew Jackson a magnificent man.

  Two nights ago, we attended a ball at Straithberry House, and Vicky laughed. She danced with two gentlemen. I believe she is healing. The past will never be forgot, but perhaps she will learn to deal with it. I doubt, however, there will ever be forgiveness; that is too much to ask.

  I wish to tell you, Prince, that I betrayed your father because of my greed. When he gave me his portrait to hold for you, he also entrusted to me a sealed envelope to give to you as well, when you reached manhood. I opened it and read it. It was the clues to the magic jewel. I could not find the spears of stone, and I searched and searched. When I remembered your father’s portrait, I tore free some paper from the back of the frame and slipped your father’s letter inside, hoping you would find the hiding place. I planned to retrieve the treasure before you could.

  But you didn’t know where these spears of stone were, no one knew, including Corinne. Sophie guessed the stalactites in the cave, but I had dug beneath those spears, probably all of them over the years. Nothing.

  Before Vicky left me this evening to go to bed, she said she remembered something, and she told me she knew where the spears of stone were.

  Vicky says you are to go down to the beach below the promontory. There are three rocks there; you will recognize them, since you and Richard always played there as boys. She said the middle one is shaped particularly like a spear, the other two not so much, really. She said that beneath the middle rock must be the flat and ugly jewel, whatever it is.

  Can it be so simple? So mundane? In any case, I hope you find it, Prince, whatever it is. Is it magic, like your father believed? If so, where, I wonder, did your father obtain it? Does it come from an ancient time? Perhaps it belonged to Merlin? Like your father, I wonder if it, whatever it is, will work for you, his son. I pray you will forgive me for my deceit.

  Your father told me once he wished he could know you as a man grown, but he knew his time was running short. I told him I knew to my bones you would be a man he would be proud of, a man who would make his way well in this world, that you would conduct yourself fairly and honorably, and you would love your family to the fullest of your heart. He died two days later.

  I wish, too, you could have known your father. Before I left with Vicky for America, I visited his grave once more, a very fine resting place your mother keeps covered with flowers. I told him he now had a fine daughter to birth sons to carry on his line.

  I think of Lily and know in my heart there would be no blame in her against her sister. My own regret is deep for not seeing what Vicky was becoming. I begin to believe pain has become an old friend, but perhaps, in time, the pain will lessen, if only this bitter winter weather will go away.

  You should know Richard writes he is attempting to court Leah again. I do not know if she will forgive him. We will see. He also wrote he is having the Dower House rebuilt. Do you believe it possible the two of you might become friends again?

  I thank you for telling Vicky you forgave her, that you didn’t blame her. Mayhap you will even come to forgive her, for you have great kindness.

  My regards to your wife,

  Your respectful servant,

  Rupert Langworth, Baron Purley

  Ravenscar

  THE NEXT DAY

  Cletus barked, butted Julian’s leg with his nose. “What is it? You wish me to admire your pups? They’ll be as big as you are within the year.”

  He walked outside to see two spaniels, Tynley and Maude, rolling over and over, barking, yipping,
trying to bite each other’s necks. Their two siblings lived currently in London with Devlin and Roxanne, city dogs, Sophie snorted, and wouldn’t they be spoiled rotten, used to sitting on pillows, waited on hand and paw, not knowing what it was like to face death, racing toward a cliff on a dare?

  Roxanne was pregnant, Devlin had written to him, and they were looking forward to bringing a new vampling into the world, and Julian could see the two of them laughing as they sampled this new word.

  Sophie came out through the estate-room doorway. It was blowing hard today, and the wind whipped her hair around her head, plastered her skirts to her legs. She waved at him, and he saw she was wearing the damnably ugly ring they’d found in a lead box wrapped in oilskin some two feet under the beach sand, beneath that middle stone Vicky had described. Odd that it fit her perfectly. Odd as well, she said wearing it made her feel blessed. Blessed how? She didn’t know, simply blessed. As for any magic in the thing, they’d both played with it, trying to evoke some sort of power. But there didn’t seem to be any.

  She was striding to him, all beautiful long legs. There was something different about her lately, something different about the way she moved and how she sometimes sat, simply smiling at nothing in particular. But what was it? When he asked, she merely smiled and waved away his words.

  Life, he thought, it was a chain of miracles that sometimes gave you a glimpse of Heaven.

  REGENCY NOVELS BY CATHERINE COULTER

  The Sherbrooke Bride

  The Hellion Bride

  The Heiress Bride

  Mad Jack

  The Courtship

  The Scottish Bride

  Pendragon

  The Sherbrooke Twins

  Lyon’s Gate

  Wizard’s Daughter

 

 

 


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