Wild, Wicked and Wanton: A Hot Historical Romance Bundle

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by Natasha Blackthorne

“I was gone longer than I expected.”

  “Yes.” Her eyes were even wider now. “Yes, you were.” She drew her dramatically arched auburn brows together, creating a wrinkle above her perfect little nose. “Your eyes… You look—have you lost weight?”

  She spoke the words as if such a thing were impossible.

  “Perhaps I have. I don’t know.”

  She laughed softly, nervously. “Well, didn’t you eat in Philadelphia?”

  “I was…preoccupied.”

  “I guess you must have been. Goodness.” She came and took his arm and smiled, all dazzling white teeth, rich, red mouth and sparkling green eyes. “We must feed you then.”

  Her touch sent bristles up his arm. He was wrong to be here. He just wanted to leave.

  Good God. This was his mistress’ house. He owned this house. He was not wrong to be here.

  Yet he felt…

  Unfaithful.

  Damn it all.

  He gently disentangled himself from Kate. “I am not hungry.”

  Her mouth dropped open softly. She reached up and placed her hand to his forehead. “You don’t feel warm but you must turning sick.” She lowered her hand and compressed her lips for a moment. “You must go home and go straight to bed and let your valet care for you.”

  He suppressed a chuckle at the manner of her concern. She would never suggest that he stay here and that she would care for him. Kate found sickness as depressing as she did poverty and elderly, unattractive or tiresome people.

  But it suited him very well. He just wanted to be alone.

  * * * *

  “Will you be seeing her again?”

  The direct question from his normally quiet, unassuming valet startled Grey out of his reverie.

  The water in his bath was growing cold and he stood. Will hurried over with a linen towel. Grey took it and dried his body. He definitely needed a break from women.

  “No, I don’t think I’ll be visiting Kate again for a while.”

  “I didn’t mean Miss Doyle, sir.” Will handed him his banyan. “I meant the little lady from the bookseller’s.”

  Grey froze in the act of tying his belt. To hide his shock, he smiled. “Ah, so Pete has been gossiping, has he?” It wasn’t like Pete to go and tell tales of Grey’s assignations with women. Grey sat in his chair by the hearth and lit a cigar. For the first time in days, he felt amused. “That’s how Pete described her? The little lady from the bookseller’s?”

  “He said she was a petite thing. Polite, modest manners. Very pretty.”

  “Very pretty, eh?”

  “Unusually so, yes.” Will’s voice resonated awkwardness and he cleared his throat.

  “Modest, too, did he say?”

  “He said he’d driven the two of you from the bookseller’s to her home, as the young lady had been stranded and you didn’t want her to have to walk in the rain. Then later you’d gone back to visit her there yourself.”

  Pete’s edited version made it all sound like courtship. Again, Grey was amused.

  “Mrs. Lefebvre has gone home to her family?” Will asked. “Gone for good?”

  Grey took a drag on his cigar and nodded. “Gone for good.”

  “And you don’t plan to see Miss Doyle any time soon?”

  Irritation began to erode Grey’s good humor. “Will, would you please come to the point?”

  Will paused in the act of laying out Grey’s clothes for the next day. “Well, you see, sir, Mr. Sexton…”

  “Will, please.”

  “I was wondering if you might be thinking of marrying the little miss from the bookseller’s?”

  Chapter Ten

  The early summer’s afternoon sun shone through the canopy of the tree. A slight breeze made lacy patterns of light that wavered on the ground at Grey’s boots. It was the middle of the week and yet he found himself sitting here, in the park when he should be working.

  The beauty of the day, nevertheless, failed to alleviate the gnawing, relentless, restless disquiet which had beleaguered him every moment since he’d come home to New York.

  “I was wondering if you might be thinking of marrying the little miss from the bookseller’s?”

  Days later, Will’s words still echoed in Grey’s mind and he found them no less irksome.

  Marriage. Good God. After all these years of freedom, he wasn’t about to get married. Not again. The only reason a woman wanted to marry a man like himself was to attain his position in society. He’d wanted Beth to give herself to him freely, not in exchange for a wedding ring. Not just to be Mrs. Sexton.

  But the insane thing about this whole matter was that Beth didn’t seem to hunger for social power and position.

  She wants your wealth then. They always want something.

  But he had tried to give her his wealth.

  She had rejected it out of hand.

  Maybe he did her an injustice by distrusting her. But his youthful experience with wedlock didn’t allow for much trust.

  Why marriage? What did Beth expect to gain that she couldn’t accomplish by accepting his carte blanche?

  Childish laughter carried on the wind. He looked up.

  A young woman had sat upon the bench across from him. She was tying the ribbon on the bonnet of a little girl.

  The child fidgeted and fought against the attempt to restrain her, and her loose blonde curls bounced wildly.

  She put him in mind of what Beth must have been like as a little girl.

  Grey couldn’t help a small smile.

  “Stop squirming! Be a lady, Peggy. What will that nice gentleman think of you, huh?”

  Peggy faced him and froze, as though surprised to find anyone watching. Round blue eyes studied him and her chubby cheeks lifted as, apparently undaunted, she smiled at him. Her dress and bonnet looked ridiculously extravagant.

  She was clearly someone’s beloved little darling.

  A pang swelled within his chest. He had never thought of having a daughter. He had never missed having a daughter.

  Until this moment.

  He glanced away; his throat was dry. It must be. For he found a need to swallow. Hard. And he blinked, several times.

  “Come inside me this time.”

  “We made commitments today, Beth.”

  “Commitments? When?”

  “You know when.”

  The pang in his chest became a sharp catch. Grey took a deep, uneven breath.

  “You would never come to my brother’s shop and ask to court me. Admit it.”

  Sky-blue eyes flashed into his mind, full of aching, longing…and something else. Abject sadness. Haunting.

  The restless disquiet settled into his bones again. But this time, with stunning clarity, he recognized it.

  He was lonely.

  * * * *

  Grey walked across the darkened chamber and felt his way around. When he reached the bed, it rocked gently. “Juliana,” he whispered softly.

  “Grey?” Disbelief sounded in her voice. “What are you doing here? You know the doctor said—”

  “Yes, I know.” He sat on the side where he lay when he visited her here and he ran his hand along the coverlet until he reached her stomach. He gave the soft swell a caress. “I am not here for that.”

  “Then why are you here?” Did she have to sound so pained?

  “I just want to…” He’d been lonely. He’d wanted to be close to his wife, to lie in this bed and hold her. But saying it now felt foolish. Before their marriage, he’d only been with her, no other woman. And he still felt wholly awkward around her. He cleared his throat and attempted to make his voice steady. Confident. “I want to sleep with my wife.”

  The beating of his heart seemed timed with the ticking of the clock in the silence.

  She sighed. “You’ll be too restless.”

  “I shan’t be restless.” He caressed her arm, trying to make the gesture conciliatory.

  “Grey, please, I need to sleep. Alone.”

  Grey o
pened his eyes and focused on the moonlight filtering through the window. A crushing sensation weighed on his chest as strong as though he were once again a nineteen-year-old, recently-wedded man. Rejection as bitter as sour wine on his tongue, icy disappointment, freezing him inside colder than winter.

  Christ. He arose from the bed and went to pour himself a brandy. It burned warmly all the way down but as it sat in his stomach, his insides began to ache.

  A hollow, empty ache.

  He rubbed his belly and stared down at the night shadows in his garden. How many years since he’d even allowed himself to think deeply about his marriage, much less to feel the emotions of his youth?

  This was her doing. Beth, the bold girl with the sad, haunting eyes. She made him feel again. And now that she was gone, when he felt, he felt so cold inside. Only her impulsive fire could warm him.

  But he didn’t need anyone.

  He had everything a man in his position could want. An heir who was almost grown. A splendid personal fortune. A business dynasty. A fine house. A beautiful mistress. His life was carefully arranged.

  He had everything. And yet he had nothing.

  Chapter Eleven

  “Good day, Mr. Sexton.” Charlie’s cheerful voice rang out from the other side of the counter.

  Beth’s pencil froze. She jerked her head up from the row of figures she’d been calculating.

  A beam of sunlight cast the hard angles and planes of his face into stark relief, electrifying the blue highlights in his coal-black hair. Her heart failed on its next beat. He was even handsomer than in the dreams that had tormented her every night in the two weeks since the awful day when he had put his need for control above his affection for her.

  Yes, affection.

  She wasn’t so thoughtless that she didn’t realize how much he had offered her and why he had done so.

  Had it been so wrong of her to want more? To want him to pick her out of all the other women of the world and hold her up as his chosen bride, special and cherished above everything else in his life? Was she so foolish that she couldn’t let go of childish fairy tales?

  Had she thrown away her only chance for happiness simply because of pride and wanting to be something more than she could ever be?

  Her throat burned and she swallowed hard, resisting the urge to run for the back room where she could burst into tears.

  It wasn’t fair for him to be here. It was cruel.

  “Mr. Sexton, we specialize in workingman’s footwear. I suggest a man of your obvious means ought take his business elsewhere,” she said.

  “I am not here for boots.” He turned to Charlie. “I am here to speak with you, Mr. McConnell.”

  Charlie blinked. “Uh…yes, what can I do for you, Mr. Sexton?”

  “I beg permission to court your sister.”

  Beth’s breath froze. Charlie hooked his fingers into his apron straps, glancing sideways at her, catching her eye and twittering his fingers on the stained leather. “Goodness, Elizabeth, what do you say to that?”

  His voice was strained and he had gone pale with what must be shock. She half expected him to faint.

  But for her, time had seemed to stop. A strange numbness held her shock at bay. She didn’t quite believe her own ears.

  “I think I’d like to hear more of what Mr. Sexton has to say,” she replied.

  Grey turned back to her, his silver eyes gleaming with some emotion she couldn’t decipher. “Will you walk with me, Miss McConnell?”

  * * * *

  Outside, sunshine glared. Seeking refuge in the shade of the shop, she leaned against the red-brick wall.

  He took her hand and that ever-present sensual awareness crackled between them.

  “Once I left Philadelphia, I didn’t spend one single moment at peace with myself.” He brought her hand to his lips, his eyes burning into hers with emotion as he kissed it. “I acted like a jackass. I hurt you, and I am sorry.”

  She stared at him, no longer numb but stunned. Her lips tingled and she felt a little lightheaded. She would never have dreamed this arrogant, patrician man would apologize to anyone, especially not the soiled dove he’d shared hours of illicit passion with.

  “I admit I have been difficult as well. I owe you an apology in kind,” she said, just to play fair.

  He turned her hand and pressed his lips to the palm. “I hope you can learn to trust in me. Because God help me, I think I love you.”

  Shock made her weak and she was grateful for the brick wall supporting her. She could only stare at him, speechless.

  He loved her?

  He loved her?

  “Don’t you have anything to say to that, you heartless little vixen? I just told you that I think I love you.” His tone was severe but his silver eyes glinted warmly.

  Joy bubbled up from her belly in a laugh as rich as honey. “You think so?”

  He smiled, his eyes lighting up as if his whole soul shone through. “Yes, I very much fear it.”

  “Well.” She tilted her head, a slight smile curling her lips. “I might love you, too.”

  “Might you?”

  “I don’t know for sure yet. It will depend on how persuasive your courting is.” She let her smile widen.

  “I am not going to offer for you, Beth.”

  Her smile froze. He didn’t want to marry her? But what was this all about then?

  He was still smiling broadly, confusing her even more.

  She frowned.

  He shook his head. “I am not going to offer you marriage until I am sure that you’ll actually meet me at the church at the appointed time.”

  She laughed a moment. Then stopped as unbidden awareness of the huge, gaping chasm in their situations intruded on the moment. “I haven’t trusted you, Grey, I am so sorry for that.”

  “Neither of us has trusted the other. We have to re-learn how to trust.”

  “But how can we learn to trust each other, when we never did trust each other to start with?”

  His expression turned serious. “It won’t happen overnight. We have all our differences to talk over. So much to share and come to understanding on.”

  No, she decided, she would not push him away with a caustic remark, nor would she distract from the moment by using her sensuality and wiles upon him. Instead, she met his gaze steadily, no matter the anxiety quaking through her limbs. “Yes, we certainly do have a lot to sort out.”

  “We’re both going to have to compromise and make sacrifices. But it can happen, if we both want it badly enough and are willing to work together.” He pressed her palm to his cheek. “Are you willing?”

  “Yes.”

  His whole body seemed to relax and his eyes shone again with warmth that was more than warmth. This time she recognized it for what it was. Unbelievable though it might be. His strong arms pulled her close and they kissed, a long and heated kiss. After some time, they broke for air and she nuzzled her face into his jacket. Inhaling his scent, citrus, spice and something indefinably and indelibly Grey, Beth knew a sense of finally finding home.

  White Lace and Promises

  ©Copyright Natasha Blackthorne 2011, 2013, 2015

  Cover Art and photo by The Killion Group, Inc. 2014

  Kindle Edition

  All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Publishing History

  Third Edition published by Hearts Aflame Press October 2015

  Second Edition published by Hearts Aflame Press October 2013

  First Edition published by Total-e-Bound Publishing December 2011

  All rights reserved. This e-book may not be loaned via email or any type of file transfer to anyone except through a legal lending program by a valid retailer. No part of this e-book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form, including email or IM, without prior written permission from the author, Natasha Bla
ckthorne, at [email protected].

  WARNING: The unauthorized reproduction, sharing, or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to five years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.

  DISCLAIMER: This e-book contains explicit erotic scenes and graphic sexual language. Some readers may consider such content offensive. It is for sale to adults ONLY, as defined by the laws of the country and/or state where this e-book was purchased. Please store your files where minors cannot access them.

  Natasha Blackthorne writes romantic historical fiction for entertainment purposes only. This is a work of erotic romance fantasy. Real life relationships are more complex and usually take longer to develop. The author, Natasha Blackthorne, will not be responsible for any loss, harm, injury or death resulting from use of the information contained in any of her titles.

  Prologue

  Philadelphia, PA,

  June 1812

  Five hundred dollars. Five hundred fucking dollars. Given straight into the hands of Charlie McConnell. Around and around Grey’s mind those words circled, shoving aside any rational thought. He took a deep breath, inhaling the scent of moldering paint and wood. The shock of the fetid odor slowed the swirl of his emotions. He glanced around at the broken-down scraps and sticks of furniture littering the back room of the shop.

  This had been her home for almost four years. Four years. God.

  The anger inside him churned a bit less intensely. Some semblance of thought returned and with it a hearty dose of remorse.

  Yes, he should never have turned his back on her and walked away. Especially without explanation.

  But he’d been forced to escape. Anger had struck him quickly, like a blow from some unseen assailant, rocking him to his core. It still quivered in his muscles. God, he’d completely lost his control. Rather than say anything he might have regretted, he had escaped.

  “Grey, please…”

  The soft, breathy voice with its slight halting note made him turn.

 

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