Tempt the Devil

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by Anna Campbell


  Something—satisfaction, triumph, possession?—gleamed from under his heavy eyelids.

  “Good.” He stood and stared down at her. She’d never been so conscious of his impressive height or the latent power in his body. “I’ll see you tonight, Olivia.”

  It was the first time he’d used her Christian name. Given what they’d soon do to each other, the small intimacy shouldn’t matter. Somehow it did. That deep voice saying “Olivia” shredded her protective formality and laid her bare as if she already stood naked before him.

  I will not surrender to fear.

  She tilted her chin and glared. “I don’t entertain my lovers in this house,” she said icily.

  “I didn’t imagine you would.” His narrow, sensual mouth curled into a sardonic smile. “I want every man in London to know you’re mine. I want to see you. It builds the…anticipation.”

  How could he make such a harmless word sound more decadent than all the profanities she’d heard in a lifetime of whoring? The temperature of her voice sank another couple of degrees. “I belong to no man, Lord Erith.”

  “You’ll belong to me,” he said steadily.

  Before she could move, he bent across the tea table and grasped her chin. She registered a chaotic mix of impressions. His fresh, clean smell. The warmth of his fingers on her skin. The almost feminine abundance of the lashes fringing his cold gray eyes. The flare of his nostrils as he inhaled her scent, like an animal before mating.

  His implacable hold stifled struggle or protest. Panting like a trapped fledgling, she waited for his mouth to meet hers. Her heart beat so fast, she thought it would burst from her chest. For one blind, terrified moment she felt like a silly virgin trapped in a rake’s net.

  Those firm, almost cruel lips captured hers. A moment’s clinging pressure. Hot like fire. Hard like steel.

  Abruptly, the searing contact ended.

  He let her go and stepped away with a bow. “Until this evening.”

  Before she could summon an adequate reply, any reply, he turned on his heel and strode from the room.

  Dazed and shaking, she clenched and unclenched her fists in her lap. When she licked her lips, she nearly groaned. She’d kept her mouth shut during that importuning kiss. Even so, his taste lingered. Rich. Tantalizing. Evocative.

  Fear surged up and overwhelmed her.

  “Damn you, Erith,” she whispered to the empty room. “Damn you to hell.”

  Erith paused at the entrance to the large salon where he’d first seen Olivia Raines. It was late, past midnight. The room was almost empty, and lit by only two candelabras, felt even more cavernous. Half a dozen men gathered around the fire, smoking and drinking brandy. He noticed the group’s air of ease as they lounged on the pair of gilt couches or stood leaning against the mantel. He also noticed that ease evaporate at the sound of his name.

  Where was Olivia? The sulky but undeniably picturesque Lord Peregrine turned toward the doorway. The four seated young men stood to greet him. They were strangers, although all were young and handsome. So handsome that any could have modeled for pouting naked Ganymede in the frescoes. Erith barely spared a glance for one gentleman lingering in the shadows.

  Then that last member of the gathering stepped with languid grace into the light. Erith found himself staring into his mistress’s slanted sherry-colored eyes.

  The breath jammed in his throat while shock warred with astounded admiration. His hands curled at his sides as he physically restrained himself from reaching across the few feet separating them.

  My God, she was magnificent.

  Olivia was dressed like any buck of the ton. Biscuit trousers, close-fitting black superfine coat, white brocade waistcoat, elaborate neckcloth. Her long hair was bound tightly to her head, so he hadn’t immediately realized he was looking at a woman. Why would he? Women of his acquaintance didn’t dress as men.

  The pure white neckcloth set off her fine-grained, slightly olive skin, and the stark tailoring shaped her lissome body with the closeness of a lover’s hand. Erith felt a kick of arousal and his heart began to hammer wildly. His fists clenched harder. He wanted her under him. He wanted her naked and gasping her pleasure as he pounded into her.

  You are mine. He nearly growled the words aloud.

  “Lord Erith,” she said calmly, and lifted her hand to take a long draw on a slender cigar. He bit back a groan as he watched her full lips close on the cigar. Decadent images of her taking his cock into her mouth seared every coherent thought to ashes.

  Her eyes were brilliant with challenge as she stared back at him. She knew what she did to him.

  Of course she did, the teasing baggage.

  With difficulty, he fought back the covetous clamor in his blood and found his voice. “Miss Raines.” He bowed. “Gentlemen.”

  Lord Peregrine looked even more hostile than he had yesterday. Clearly, Olivia had told him she’d accepted Erith’s carte blanche. Yet again the puzzle of the decorative lordling’s relationship with her teased Erith. He sensed closeness but no frisson of sexual attraction.

  He studied the men, then glanced at the frescoes once more. No female forms graced the walls. No female forms anywhere in the house, if one discounted his mistress’s lithe figure. A suspicion grew in his mind, a suspicion sheltered English minds mightn’t entertain but that seemed increasingly plausible to a man who had traveled across Europe and Asia. If true, it explained a great deal.

  “Fancy a brandy, Lord Erith?” Olivia drawled as if they’d bumped into one another at his club. “Perry’s broached a fine bottle tonight.”

  Her overtly theatrical behavior made him want to laugh. She dared him to explode into outrage, but she picked the wrong target. He could play games with the best of them. It was what made him a brilliant diplomat.

  “Why not?” he said smoothly. “Lord Peregrine, I don’t believe I’ve met your friends.”

  While Montjoy performed introductions, Erith watched Olivia pour him a drink from the decanter on the Boulle sideboard. Her attire was so severely masculine. Why did it make her seem more a woman? His eyes dwelt on her legs. His guess yesterday had been right—they were long and slender. He savored the prospect of those legs wrapped around him while he thrust into her.

  He emerged from his brief daydream to find her passing him the glass. She very deliberately stroked her fingers across his. It was the first time she’d done anything overtly seductive, and his skin tingled under her touch.

  He wanted her immediately. Since he’d met her, the delay had chafed. Now it became unbearable.

  But for the moment, bear it he must.

  She lifted her cigar again, drew on it, then exhaled so a drift of blue smoke wreathed her angular features. Features that merged to form a more compelling whole than conventional beauty ever could. No wonder she had every man in London in a flap.

  “Lord Erith, this is Sir Percival Martineau,” Lord Peregrine said with a distinct snap. Clearly he’d been speaking while Erith stared lost into his mistress’s fathomless eyes.

  “Sir Percival.” God help him if he needed to remember anyone’s name other than Olivia’s. She’d bewitched him.

  Bewitched?

  Hell, what was wrong with him? She was just another female. He’d grab her, he’d take her, he’d discover there was nothing new between her legs or in her head. He’d had so many women since his wife died, and none had engaged his heart. However much they’d engaged his body. His body, which currently hummed as though a mountebank ran an electrical current through it. He couldn’t remember a female stirring him up like this since his first season. When tender emotions of love and respect had tempered his male excitement.

  Good God, how could he link this harlot with Joanna? This conniving witch would never touch his finer feelings. Although she was welcome to touch anything else she liked.

  Oh, yes, please. Raw expectation scurried down his spine.

  She gestured coolly to a sofa. “Would you like to sit down?”

 
; “No, I want to talk to you. In private.”

  She shrugged, placed her glass on the mantel and stubbed out her cigar. “As you wish. This way.”

  He followed her through a corridor and into a library. Lamplight gleamed softly on richly colored leather covers and picked out gold lettering on rows of books.

  Olivia moved forward and turned to face him, leaning with a grace that stopped his breath against the desk behind her. “What is it?

  He realized he was smiling. “This room. It’s the only one I’ve admired in this house.”

  Surprisingly, she smiled back. A real smile conveying a wealth of affection for the man who owned the library. A shaft of unpleasant emotion stabbed Erith. Not jealousy. He was never jealous. And why be jealous when his suspicions about her host had firmed into certainty?

  “Perry doesn’t read much. He hasn’t redecorated in here yet.”

  “You like it,” he said softly. It was the first room he’d seen her in that didn’t jar with his instincts about her. He slouched against the doorjamb and studied her.

  “Yes, I do.”

  She bent her head and light caught bronze strands in her thick hair. She really was an extraordinarily beautiful woman. More beautiful at this moment because her usual self-consciousness was absent.

  “There’s a library in the house I found.” When he’d seen the neat book-lined room in York Street, he’d assumed his new mistress would find it of no interest. Now he wasn’t so sure.

  She raised her head and the wariness returned. The regret he felt surprised him. For a moment he’d felt real connection. Not the connection of sexual attraction. That never waned. But briefly the ghost of a different bond had hovered, one that in other circumstances could blossom into friendship. Should friendship be possible between two such well-armored creatures as they.

  “You’ve found a house already?” She didn’t sound pleased.

  “Something became available.” He didn’t tell her he’d had an army combing London for a suitable residence nor that the hunt had started when he arrived home from seeing her the first time.

  The place he’d rented was perfect. Small, luxurious, private, and close enough to Erith House for him to maintain a double life without flaunting his affair before his family. After leading a bachelor’s life for so long, he wasn’t used to practicing discretion. Alluring as she undoubtedly was, Olivia Raines offered merely a diversion. His real purpose in London was to reconcile with his children, and he could do nothing to risk that.

  He wondered if he’d been prudent in his choice of chère amie. The news that he’d become Olivia Raines’s protector was already the talk of London. Over port after dinner at Erith House, he’d responded to his cronies’ envious comments while avoiding Carrington’s reproachful glower. How long before the story reached more respectable ears?

  Too late to change his mind. Even if he could summon the will to break free of the jade’s damnable allure. He spoke into the silence. “I hope you’ll move there tomorrow.”

  Given a choice, he’d sweep her away now, ensconce her in the pretty little house and exorcize her inconvenient fascination over him. But his men worked all night on minor alterations and the place wouldn’t be ready until morning.

  She looked startled. “Tomorrow?”

  “You have some objection?”

  “I hadn’t expected such dispatch.”

  She spoke with the smooth cadences and ironical inflections of a Cambridge graduate. Had she risen from the streets? If she had, she’d done an extraordinary job teaching herself the ton’s manners.

  He shrugged, striving for an appearance of detachment that was far from reality. “I’m a man who makes his mind up quickly.”

  “Clearly.” Her lips twitched in the familiar wry smile.

  “In the morning, I’ll send my carriage to convey you to the new house, then call in the evening to discuss arrangements. Perhaps a visit to Tattersalls the next day to choose your cattle. I thought two carriage horses and a hack. I’ve also ordered a curricle that I dare say will meet your approval.”

  “Very efficient, my lord,” she said with unconcealed irony. “You will stay to dine tomorrow?”

  They both knew she offered more than food. Heat blasted him, made him hard as oak. “Thank you. It would be my pleasure.”

  Oh, absolutely.

  Why wait? So far, the tame liberties his notorious mistress had allowed wouldn’t raise an eyebrow among the marriage-minded misses at Almack’s. Well, perhaps not altogether true. She was a dab hand at double entendre. And that one burning kiss still haunted him.

  One burning, possessive, damnably short kiss.

  Too short.

  When he kissed her, he’d tasted anger. And surprise. She hadn’t wanted to kiss him, but that flaring instant incinerated every one of his doubts and dissatisfactions. Even the dull, constant ache of old grief and old guilt had briefly faded. Only with the greatest difficulty had he forced himself to stop after that one searing kiss.

  By then her fate was sealed. He would have her. She alone could offer him surcease.

  He wanted to kiss her again. Straightening, he prowled across the rich red and blue Turkish carpet. She tensed as though scenting a predator.

  “My lord, I told you my rules about this house.” Her fingers curled against the desk’s wooden lip. How delightful that she was nowhere near as self-possessed as she wanted him to think. It made him feel less helpless against the inexorable pull of attraction.

  His approach didn’t slow. “I can wait until tomorrow night for…satisfaction.” He almost purred the last word. “But perhaps a kiss on account?”

  Her chin’s defiant angle was unmistakable. “I should have outlined my requirements in a lover more fully this afternoon.”

  “I’m all ears, madam,” he whispered. Very deliberately, he placed each hand on the desk next to each of hers. He wasn’t touching her but his body created a cage around her. “You have my complete attention.”

  Without a hint of a blush, she glanced down to where his erection strained against his trousers. She was no innocent, his mistress. He liked that. He’d been innocent once, and the tragedy of it had left him broken and ruined.

  She was on edge and unsure, and he liked that too. He fought the urge to press himself against her. This close, he smelled her skin’s delicate perfume. Lilies. Roses. Honey. Something warm and female that came from her and not a glass vial. His nostrils flared as he drew that delicious fragrance deep into his lungs.

  “I don’t kiss, Lord Erith.” Her voice lowered and the husky contralto vibrated in his bones. “At least not on the mouth.”

  He leaned forward to catch another wash of her scent. Oh, she was glorious, this woman. “You’ll kiss me.”

  Her mouth formed a stubborn line. “No, I won’t. This, my lord, is how I conduct my liaisons. My time is my own, I’m completely faithful and I don’t kiss.”

  He was an inch from tasting the creamy skin of her neck. A tendril of hair had broken free of the severe hairstyle. He reached to brush the stray lock aside. She stiffened under his touch.

  “So many rules, Olivia,” he murmured. “Rules are made to be broken.”

  “Not mine.” She strove to sound forbidding but her unsteady voice betrayed her. He was close enough for her breath to brush across his face. He caught a hint of rich brandy and tobacco. “If my requirements seem onerous, it’s not too late to cancel our arrangement.”

  “Now, that would be a pity.” He let his fingers drift to her nape. “When I’ve taken such trouble over you.”

  He bent and placed his mouth fleetingly on her neck. Her skin was so soft there, like living silk. The honey in her scent left a sweet flavor on his tongue. She was exquisite. He couldn’t remember wanting a woman more. His heart kicked into a pounding gallop.

  Just one taste. Although the desire raging in his blood urged him to devour her whole. He raised his head and looked into her guarded whisky-colored eyes. Her lips were slightly parted,
hinting at hot darkness within, and he heard the faint puff of her breath. His cock jerked and pressed against the front fall of his trousers. His fingers tightened in the soft hair at the base of her skull.

  “I’ve never kissed a woman wearing trousers. The decadence is rather stimulating.”

  He watched that slender throat move as she swallowed. “You’re not going to kiss a woman wearing trousers now. I told you, I don’t kiss on the mouth. I can’t believe you mistake my wishes.”

  “Ah, your wishes, Olivia. I look forward to hearing more about those.” He smiled as his pleasure in her mounted along with his arousal. “I’ll have you to myself tomorrow night. What harm a sample now so I wander home with sweet dreams?”

  In her remarkable eyes he caught a flash of something that might have been fear. The thought nagged at the edges of his mind but not enough to stop him. Be damned to her rules. Somehow she’d hoodwinked every man in London into dancing to her tune. But he was the Earl of Erith. No woman snatched the lead from him as he waltzed her into his bed.

  He pressed his mouth to hers. Her lips were sweet and soft. And firmly closed. It was like having the gates to heaven slammed in his face.

  Well, there were more paths into paradise than the one through the front door.

  Olivia remained taut and motionless beneath Lord Erith’s kiss, while inside clawing panic shrieked to break free. A scream choked in her throat. It would be too humiliating to reveal how his kiss distressed her. She fought to stave off the blackness. She could survive this. She could survive anything. And with her pride intact.

  This man would not defeat her.

  Good God, she was a tall, strong woman, not a defenseless child. But his overwhelming height and heavily muscled body made her feel small and vulnerable in ways she hadn’t experienced for years. The musky scent of aroused male sucked the air from the room. His kiss tormented her, frightened her, reminded her of events she’d tried desperately to forget.

  The horrible black suffocation only lasted a moment. Her mind recognized that. Her soul cringed and cowered and felt it had plunged back into endless nightmare.

 

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