Some Like It Scandalous

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by Carole Mortimer




  London, 1817

  “You are suggesting that, now our year of mourning for our husbands has come to an end, we should all take at least one lover?”

  Sophia Rowlands, the widowed Duchess of Clayborne, is shocked by her friend’s daring proposition—but is even more astounded when Dante Carfax, Earl of Sherbourne, offers to do the honor! He may be rakishly handsome and undeniably arousing, but he’s also four years her junior and they’ve been at odds ever since he stole a kiss from her ten years ago....

  As a young man, Dante had taken one look at the beautiful Sophia and desired her more than any other woman before—or since. After years of longing, he’s determined to claim her at last. But can he convince Sophia to risk scandal and surrender to their passion?

  Some Like It Scandalous

  Carole Mortimer

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Historical Undone BPA

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  May, 1817

  Clayborne House, London

  “Correct me if I am wrong, dear Genevieve,” said the raven-haired Sophia Rowlands, widowed Duchess of Clayborne, looking at her two companions as the three of them stood talking together beside the crowded dance floor in the ballroom at Sophia’s town house in Grosvenor Square, “but it appears to me that you are suggesting that, now our year of mourning for our husbands has come to an end, we should all take at least one lover if not several before this tedious Season closes…?”

  “That is exactly what I am suggesting, yes.” The red-haired, mischievous blue-eyed Genevieve Forster, Duchess of Woollerton laughed softly. “Discreetly, of course.”

  “Oh, of course…” Sophia echoed faintly.

  Genevieve giggled. “Just think, my dears—in private, we might become all the rage, and become known collectively as the Daring Duchesses!”

  “Or the scandalous ones,” Sophia offered wryly.

  “I believe I have had quite enough of scandal this past year to last me—did you say several lovers…?” the golden-haired Pandora Maybury, Duchess of Wyndwood prompted dubiously.

  “I do not mean for you to take them all at the same time, my dear Pandora!” Genevieve assured her with an affectionate laugh. “Although…” Those sparkling blue eyes had settled speculatively across the room. “I am sure I should not complain if those two gentlemen were numbered amongst the aforementioned lovers, either separately or together!”

  “Genny!” Pandora Maybury sounded even more shocked.

  Sophia, at two and thirty, several years older than her two friends—and supposedly less shockable!—was no less unsettled by Genevieve’s suggestion, and the scandal such behaviour might bring upon them all, as she turned her deep green gaze towards the arched doorway where two strikingly handsome and rakish gentlemen were now paused in order to survey the candlelit ballroom with equally jaundiced, if different coloured, eyes.

  The two gentlemen known by the ton as Devil and Lucifer!

  The gentleman on the left—Devil—possessed the hard and masculine but beautiful face of a fallen angel, his fashionably styled hair also an angelic gold, the gentleman standing at his side—Lucifer—having the black hair and eyes of the same demon that lurked in those hard black orbs as his disinterested gaze skimmed across the other guests currently gathered in the crowded and noisy ballroom.

  “Taking either, or both of those gentlemen, as a lover, would almost certainly cause a scandal!” Sophia protested.

  “Sherbourne does not appear to have accompanied his two friends this evening,” Genevieve murmured disappointedly, as if unaware—or simply uncaring? —of Sophia’s warning.

  “I wonder why not?” Pandora prompted with the same air of disappointment.

  “He is not here this evening because I did not invite him.” The haughtiness of Sophia’s tone did nothing to disguise her feeling of satisfaction in that knowledge.

  “Indeed you did not,” drawled a softly mocking voice from close behind her—so close, in fact, that Sophia felt the warm brush breath against her exposed nape! “A mere oversight on your part, I am sure. Which is why I decided to correct the omission.”

  Sophia had stiffened at the first sound of that infuriatingly mocking drawl, her pleasure in the success of the evening also diminishing before taking wing completely, as she acknowledged that the gentleman who had briefly been a friend of her husband’s nephew and ward whilst the two young men were at Cambridge together had, with his usual arrogance, obviously decided to present himself at her ball without so much as a by-your-leave. Or invitation!

  His proximity also led Sophia to wonder just how long he might have been standing so close behind her, and whether or not he might have overheard any of her less-than-proper conversation with the Duchesses of Woollerton and Wyndwood!

  “I believe, as you are otherwise engaged, that I might go and offer entertainment to your two newly arrived guests, Sophia.” Genevieve Forster hastily made her excuses, as she obviously saw the frown, which had now tightened Sophia’s creamy brow, as a prefix to the verbal set-down she intended giving her uninvited guest, no doubt.

  “I believe I shall accompany you.” Pandora Maybury excused herself with the same haste, the two ladies linking arms before crossing the ballroom in the direction of those two fashionably late arriving gentlemen.

  A deep and throaty chuckle sounded behind Sophia. “Are you about to run away like a scared rabbit also, Sophia?”

  Sophia had never ‘run away like a scared rabbit,’ from anything, or anyone, in her life! Neither did she intend for that to change simply because she found the arrogant Earl of Sherbourne too infuriating for words.

  She drew in a deep breath and arranged her features into an expression of extreme boredom before turning to face the man who seemed to take such delight in bedevilling her. “Sherbourne.” She gave a cool nod of acknowledgement as she chose to level her gaze upon his square and determined jaw rather than that arrogantly mocking face, having taken in at first glance how handsome he looked in his tailored black evening clothes and snowy white linen, his shoulders wide, with the tapered waist, muscled thighs and long legs of the excellent swordsman he was known as through the length and breadth of England.

  “Sophia,” he returned tauntingly.

  Sophia raised her long dark lashes long enough to give him a reproving glance at his familiarity, and at once wished she had not, as she was instantly overwhelmed by the masculinity of the man’s rakish good looks. A handsomeness that had set many a female heart aflutter since this man had first made his appearance into Society on attaining his eighteenth year. Feminine hearts which had remained unsatisfied, as he easily and continuously managed to avoid being entrapped by both the marriage-minded mamas and their equally eager female offspring.

  His dark hair was fashionably styled to look tousled across his high forehead, with dark brows set above piercing eyes as green as Sophia’s own, high cheekbones either side of his long and aquiline nose, and sculptured lips that could tighten almos
t to a look of cruelty or curve with a wicked sensuality. At the moment they were most decidedly the latter!

  Sophia’s own mouth firmed with displeasure at this unexpected encounter. “I believe I have mentioned before how much I abhor your familiarity.”

  He gave a rakish grin. “Oh yes, I remember only too well the set-down you gave me, when aged eighteen, I stole a kiss or two from you!”

  She drew in a sharp breath at being reminded of this man’s audacity ten years ago when he came to stay for several weeks in the summer at Claybourne Park with her husband’s nephew before the two separated to attend different universities.

  ‘A stolen kiss or two’ which Sophia was ashamed to say she had thought of far too often during these past years…

  Her mouth pursed. “I was a married woman and you—”

  “And now you are not,” he murmured softly, appreciatively.

  “—were nothing more than a boy taking advantage— “Sophia broke off with a frown as Sherbourne began to laugh softly. “Pray tell what is so funny in that statement?”

  He gave a shake of his head. “I was almost nineteen years of age at the time, Sophia, nor had I been a ‘boy’ for some years. Since my sixteenth birthday, to be exact,” he added dryly.

  “What happened on your sixteenth birthday…?” Sophia prompted softly.

  He raised dark and mocking brows. “Are you sure you really wish me to tell you that?”

  No, Sophia was not, and never had been sure of anything where this particular man was concerned. “Of course.” She nodded coolly.

  “On your own head be it,” Sherbourne drawled. “I am not sure if you are aware, but my mother died when I was born? My father, after dutifully attending her funeral, then left his only son and heir in the care of a wet-nurse, followed by a nanny, a tutor and then boarding school, and to all intents and purposes forgot my very existence until my sixteenth birthday. Imagine my surprise when he then arranged for me to be taken up to London and placed in the arms and bed of his current mistress, for the purpose of tutoring me in all the pleasures of my own flesh as well as hers.” He gave a humourless smile. “Lessons I applied myself to diligently, I assure you, and which for the next two and half years I continued to practise as often as time and chance allowed.”

  Sophia would be lying if she claimed not to be shocked by the behaviour of the previous Earl of Sherbourne. What sort of father ignored his son’s existence for sixteen years, and then only showed an interest in him in order to have him tutored in the arts of the bedchamber by his own mistress…?

  Sherbourne gave another of those humourless smiles. “I trust that this explanation succeeds in assuring you that my advances towards you ten years ago were that of a man and not a boy?”

  Which only succeeded in making Sophia’s memory of this man’s kisses all the more alarming! “It certainly assures me of something, Sherbourne—”

  “I believe that we are now well enough acquainted, Sophia, for you to call me Dante,” he corrected challengingly.

  Dante.

  It was a name, which conjured up, for Sophia at least, visions of burning infernos and devils with horns and pitchforks. Unfortunately, it also brought to mind a hot, masculine and muscled chest, bared and slicked with sweat—

  She shifted uncomfortably. “Your title is that of the Earl of Sherbourne,” she insisted firmly.

  “Could we both now drop all pretence of formality and simply become Dante and Sophia…?”

  “I think not,” she said haughtily.

  “And I would rather you did not think at all in my presence, my dear Sophia.” Dante deliberately lowered his voice to a soft purr, a sensual huskiness that resulted in a scornful smile now curving the pouting temptation of Sophia’s full and delectable lips.

  “No doubt that is how best you like your women, Sherbourne, but do not ever expect such subservience from me!” She eyed him derisively.

  Dante had long enjoyed this verbal battle of wills with this particular woman, but hopefully, now that her year of mourning her husband was over, the battle between them would come to an end, too. To his most enjoyable—and long-awaited—satisfaction, he could only hope. And Sophia’s too, if she would but allow it.

  And, no matter what she may think to the contrary, he had no wish for Sophia to be in the least subservient to him—in bed or out of it.…

  Chapter Two

  “Our dance, I believe, Sophia.” Dante had no intention of waiting to hear her refusal as he drew her determinedly onto the dance floor the moment the musicians began to play a waltz.

  “You know perfectly well ‘we’ do not HAVE ‘a dance’!” Her eyes flashed her displeasure as she attempted to resist going into his arms. “Besides, I have already promised this dance to Lord Thorpe—”

  “Then his loss is my gain.” Dante gave that gentleman a hard and dismissive glance as he approached. “Now place your hand in mine and your other hand upon my shoulder—please, Sophia!” he bit out when he knew from the light of battle in her incredible green eyes that she was about to argue further. “Everyone is watching,” he warned softly, his sigh heartfelt when she at last moved reluctantly into his arms.

  Dante’s impatience, his desire for this woman, was now at such a pitch that he wished for nothing more at this moment than to whisk her out of the ballroom and up the stairs to her bedchamber above, where he would proceed to make love to her until she had no breath left with which to offer so much as a single one of the verbal set-downs she had shown him since he had dared to steal those kisses from her ten years ago.

  He and Lord James Rowlands had met and become friends at the boarding school they had both attended, and as the heir to the title Duke of Claybourne, James had been more than a little put out when his uncle Simon, a man already in his fifties, had announced it was his intention to marry Lady Sophia Shelby, a young lady who was but two and twenty years old, and the beautiful and vivacious daughter of a gentleman who had been cast out of Society some years ago.

  Invited to spend several weeks of the summer holidays with James at the country estate of his uncle and guardian the Duke of Claybourne, and his young and beautiful duchess, Dante had taken one look at the exquisitely beautiful Sophia Rowlands and known, that for all of his youth, he desired her in a way he never had any other woman.

  A desire which had resulted in his stealing those kisses from Sophia the first time he managed to engineer a few minutes alone in her company…!

  The result of his impudence had been for him to never receive another such invitation to stay at the home of James’s uncle and aunt, the only occasions upon which Dante so much as glimpsed the beautiful young duchess during the next ten years being when they attended the same social functions—Dante invariably in the company of his rakish friends, Devil and Lucifer, Sophia always on the arm of her much older husband.

  The same excruciatingly painful ten years that Dante had known that he still desired Sophia Rowlands, Duchess of Clayborne, to the exclusion of all other women, and that SHE continued to look upon him as nothing more than that impudent boy.

  Dante’s exclusivity of desire for Sophia had earned him the reputation of being cold and heartless in regard to the women whom, when physical desire became too much even for his legendary self-control, he occasionally bedded.

  But, if the conversation he had overheard taking place a short time ago between Sophia and her two companions was a true indication of Sophia’s own needs, then it would appear that
desire might shortly be appeased to everyone’s satisfaction.…

  * * *

  Sophia was most unhappy at being trapped in this way into dancing with Dante, and so forcing her into a proximity with him which she would far rather have avoided. Indeed, Dante held her far too close for propriety as he whirled her expertly about the ballroom, his fingers firm and warm about her gloved ones, his arm like steel about the slenderness of her waist.

  Which resulted in Sophia being far too aware of him for comfort as their legs touched often during the enforced intimacy of this particular dance, and the hard warmth of Dante’s chest brushed in arousal against the softness of her breasts, causing the sensitive tips to tingle and harden in response.

  An occurrence she was sure Dante was all too aware of if the smile of satisfaction on those sculptured lips, as he looked down at her challengingly, was any indication!

  Neither did Sophia care for the predatory light she could now see gleaming in his wicked eyes.

  His next comment confirmed that she was perfectly justified in feeling that apprehension. “You need look no further for your lover, my dear Sophia,” he assured her in that purringly sensuous voice as his arm tightened about her waist to draw her even closer. “I assure you, I will be more than happy to oblige you!”

  Sophia drew her breath in sharply, even as she looked about them to see if anyone else might be close enough to have overheard his words. She was reassured that her reputation as being an attentive and entertaining hostess was fully justified as she saw that all of her guest were either occupied in dancing, drinking, or simply engaging in lively conversation, rather than paying heed to Sophia and the Earl of Sherbourne. A man who needed to be reminded that he was still, and always would be, four years her junior, and as such, totally unacceptable as a lover to her or anything else!

  Her own green eyes glittered as she looked up at Dante. “You are not only an impertinent young puppy, sir, but you must also be addle-brained, if you think for one moment that I would ever countenance any sort of relationship between the two of us—”

 

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