After the Kiss

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After the Kiss Page 14

by Joan Johnston


  “Yes, but—”

  “Then you must help me! I will make him a good wife, I promise you.”

  Marcus stood without speaking, unwilling to be interrupted again. When she remained silent for more than a moment, he said, “There is one fatal flaw in your plan.”

  She took a step back and looked at him, a V of concern between her eyes. “What is that?”

  “I presume you want Julian to fall in love with you?”

  “Correct.”

  “I am afraid I cannot help you with that, Miss Sheringham.”

  “But—”

  He cut her off before she could touch him again. “I can teach you how to seduce him,” he clarified. “I cannot teach you how to make him fall in love with you. They are not at all the same thing, you know.”

  “Oh.” She sank onto the stone bench. “Oh, dear. I was so sure … I was certain … How could I have made such an error in calculation? You are right, of course.”

  The delightfully eager face she had shown him only moments before was painted in gloom. Her shoulders sagged, and she put a hand to her forehead, as though she felt faint.

  “Are you all right, Miss Sheringham?”

  “No,” she whispered.

  He wanted to rescue her from desolation. He wanted to kiss her and caress her. He wanted to do with her what he was known best for doing with women. He wanted to ravish her.

  He did not know what was stopping him. She was vulnerable. It would not take much. A soft word, a softer touch, and she would be his. He could take her right here on the ground. He knew how to make her crave what he had to offer her. She would forget all about Julian.

  She loves Julian.

  He swore under his breath. Honor had reared its head at a particularly inconvenient moment. Julian had rejected Miss Sheringham. That ought to be enough to leave the way clear for him.

  In this case, it was not.

  Miss Sheringham clearly still had her sights set on his friend. Until she gave up on Julian, he was not free to pursue her. So he might as well help her.

  The words were out of his mouth before he could stop them. “I could teach you a few things that might work to garner Julian’s attention. Once you have him by your side, he cannot fail to notice what a prize you are.”

  Her head came up. Her shoulders squared. Her eyes gleamed bright with hope. “Do you think so?”

  “It is worth a try.”

  “Thank you, Captain. Thank you!”

  She leaped up from the bench and threw herself toward him before he could curb her exuberance. His arms naturally encircled her waist. And he had his answer. She fit against him perfectly in all the right places.

  “Enough of this,” he said, pushing her away. “Someone might come along and get entirely the wrong idea.”

  She grinned. “I imagine so.” She hugged herself, forcing her bosom even farther out of the low-cut gown, and beamed at him. “Where shall we start? What should I learn first?”

  “I will think about it and let you know,” he said. “Right now, we must return to the ballroom.”

  “But I want to get started right away. Tonight.”

  “It should suffice that we have disappeared for a few minutes together,” Marcus said with a rueful twist of his mouth. “Unless I am very much mistaken, the gossips—Miss Whitcomb comes to mind—will have pointed out to your cousin that we are missing together. He should be looking for us at this very minute. I suggest—”

  “Eliza? Are you in here?”

  “It’s Julian!” she hissed.

  “Over here, Julian,” Marcus answered in a loud voice.

  “What are you doing?” Miss Sheringham whispered. “He will be furious with me.”

  “He will notice you. And that is the point, is it not, my dear?”

  Her eyes went wide. “Oh. I see.”

  “However, I suggest we head back in his direction, and please, Miss Sheringham, stop chewing your lip. Your cousin is liable to misinterpret the reason it has become so swollen.”

  “Oh.” She touched her damp, swollen lower lip. “You mean he will think you have been kissing me.”

  “Exactly.”

  “Perhaps a little jealousy—”

  He pulled her to a stop. “A word of warning before you play at seduction, Miss Sheringham: it is a dangerous game. The consequences can be deadly. Do not underestimate Julian. He has killed men for less reason than the one you would offer him.”

  “But Julian would never—”

  “Julian would kill me as certainly as he would any other man for an insult to your honor. Never doubt it, Miss Sheringham. It will make this game safer for both of us.”

  To Marcus’s utter amazement, the first person around the corner of the maze was not Julian, but the Countess of Denbigh. She was followed closely by the Duchess of Braddock.

  “Good evening, Captain Wharton,” the countess said with a breezy smile. It was immediately apparent she had come to rescue Miss Sheringham from his nefarious clutches. She slipped her arm through Miss Sheringham’s on one side, while the duchess did the same on the other. “I have been missing my friend, Captain. Her Grace and I decided we could not wait one more minute for Miss Sheringham’s return. Please excuse us.”

  Eliza stared helplessly over her shoulder at him as the ladies led her away.

  Marcus smiled ruefully. One problem had been solved. He would not have to make excuses to Julian for what he was doing alone with Miss Sheringham. And if he was not mistaken, the two ladies involved would ensure that no slanderous repercussions resulted from Miss Sheringham’s temporary disappearance from the ballroom.

  “Shame on you, Eliza,” Charlotte chided, a gleam of laughter in her eyes. “To steal away to the maze with the worst rake in London.”

  Eliza was still too stunned to speak coherently. “I never meant—”

  Charlotte laughed. “Of course you did. What woman would not have welcomed a tryst with such a man? Did he kiss you? I must say it appears he did. Did you enjoy it? I hear rakes make the very best husbands.”

  “Charlie!” Olivia protested. “Leave the poor girl alone. You are pushing her in a direction she may not wish to go.”

  “He is perfect for her,” Charlie said. “And she is just the woman for him.”

  Eliza stared dumbfounded at the countess.

  “All I did was provide the opportunity for you to meet each other,” Charlie said. “I hoped that fate would arrange the rest. And I see it has.” She eyed Eliza’s swollen mouth. “Which means, that unless you are ready to be whisked off to church without further adieu, we must make some excuse and escort you upstairs without anyone the wiser.”

  “But the captain did not kiss me,” Eliza protested.

  “Fortunately, you will not have to make that protest to anyone but us,” the countess said with a smile. “Because you do not say it in the least persuasively.”

  Eliza groaned. How had everything gotten so mixed up? All she had wanted to do was learn how to make Julian love her. Instead, her hostess had her paired with entirely the wrong man! There was no time for delay. She would have to set to work immediately making Julian notice her.

  That is, after she had first met privately with the Beau for her first lesson in seduction.

  Chapter 10

  Amisty fog cloaked the hills, making Eliza’s early morning tryst with the Beau seem even more furtive. Mephistopheles fought the bit, as she held the stallion to a canter. The sun barely teased the dark horizon, spilling pink and yellow into the early morning sky.

  “All right, boy,” she said, giving the stallion his head when her destination was in sight. “Run to your heart’s content.” The earth smelled fecund as the stallion’s hooves tore into it. Eliza leaned forward and laughed, as the wind whipped the man’s hat from her head and sent her hair tumbling in all directions.

  She reined Mephistopheles to a stop at the bottom of the hill and turned him back to retrieve her—or rather, Julian’s—hat. She planned to sneak back i
nto the Braddock house as she had left it—dressed as a man. She had already tasted the sharp edge of Miss Whitcomb’s tongue. She had no intention of giving Miss Whitcomb further scandal-broth to bandy about behind her fan.

  Nevertheless, Eliza was determined to meet in private with the Beau. She had sent a note to him through Griggs the previous evening, suggesting the two of them ride out separately at five in the morning. They would then meet at Braddock’s Folly near the lake to begin her lessons in seduction.

  Eliza was disappointed when she reached their rendezvous to discover that she was ahead of the captain. She tied the reins up, so Mephistopheles could graze, and impatiently circled the exterior of the pentagon-shaped folly.

  It turned out to be nothing more than a wooden gazebo framed in waist-high white lattice. However, the lattice was entwined with marvelously scented trailing pink roses. She bent over to sniff and surprised an early morning bee at work. She gave a startled laugh and backed up to give it room. It was then she noticed a great many bees were at work gathering pollen.

  Enough dew had gathered on the toes of Julian’s borrowed Hessians to ruin the shine. It was a good thing she had worn her London disguise. A riding skirt would have been soaked to the knees by now.

  Bluebirds had made a nest in one section of the folly’s diamond-shaped lattice and chattered at her to keep her distance. She was so distracted by their antics, she did not hear the Beau’s arrival.

  “I have not been up this early since I was a boy at Eton.”

  A smile lit Eliza’s face even before she whirled to greet him. She saw Captain Wharton had left his Thoroughbred gelding to graze near Mephistopheles. “I am so glad you came.”

  She slipped on the wet grass at the first step and would have fallen flat on the seat of Julian’s breeches, if the Beau had not caught her by the waist.

  He grinned down at her. “How could I resist such an eager invitation? Where would you like to start?”

  “You are the expert,” Eliza replied breathlessly, aware of the lack of space between their bodies and his strong grip on a part of her that rarely felt the touch of male hands. “I am merely the willing pupil.”

  It did not feel as though her feet were on the ground, though she knew they were. Her horse snuffled as he grazed. The bluebirds sang melodiously. Her heart beat an uneven tattoo in her chest. She stared up at him, helpless to move, unable to speak.

  His eyes were hooded, his nostrils flared, his blue eyes intent on her golden ones.

  She shivered unaccountably.

  “Are you sure you need lessons?” he asked in a husky voice, one brow arching. “What provoked you to shiver like that?”

  “I am cold!”

  He laughed, breaking the tension between them, and released her. “Of course, my dear, that is the excuse one uses. The first rule of seduction: A woman’s shiver is a delectable invitation to a man.”

  “To do what?” Eliza asked, eyes narrowed suspiciously.

  “Any number of things. You see, it arouses his protective instincts. Suppose you are cold. He can remove his jacket and place it on your shoulders to warm you.”

  He suited word to deed and a moment later Eliza found herself ensconced in the warmth of Captain Wharton’s plum riding jacket. He was left wearing white shirtsleeves and a brocaded waistcoat slightly darker than his fawn breeches. The jacket bore the distinct scents of bayberry soap and horse and … him.

  “This gesture will leave the lady surrounded by the heat of the gentleman’s body, and the gentleman wearing fewer clothes than before.”

  “I see,” she murmured, running her fingertips along the edges of his velvet jacket. “Can every man be depended upon to respond in the same way?” she asked, trying to imagine Julian slipping his jacket, warm from his body, onto her shoulders.

  “Not necessarily.” He reached out to take his jacket from her. “May I?”

  She shrugged out of it and handed it back to him. “Of course.”

  Instead of putting it back on, he threw it over the white lattice framework that framed the lower half of the folly. And set the bluebirds to chattering again.

  “They have a nest close by,” she said, crossing to carefully remove his coat. The chattering stopped. “See?” she said with a smile. “And there are bees at work in the flowers.” She laid his jacket across one side of the wooden bannister that framed the three broad steps leading into the folly. “I will put it here, if you don’t mind.”

  She eyed the white wrought-iron bench set within the folly, but sat herself on the topmost of the three steps instead, putting some needed distance between them. To her chagrin, he sat down right beside her.

  “Now. Where were we?” he murmured in her ear.

  “I was shivering,” she said with a rueful twist of her lips. “And you were being protective.”

  “Ah, yes. Suppose you were not cold, but frightened. What better source of security than the nearest gentleman.”

  Her brow furrowed. “I must be missing something. What is it I am to do?”

  “Seek refuge in my arms.”

  She blushed to the roots of her hair and tucked her hands beneath her knees. “I could not possibly.”

  “Come, come, Miss Sheringham,” he said, rising and holding out his hand to her. “You need only take a step in my direction. I will do the rest.”

  She took a deep breath and let it out. “Very well.” She rose and took a step toward him.

  His right arm slid around her waist, the left around her back as he led her up into the folly with him. Her cheek naturally rested against his shoulder, and she could feel his warm breath on her face. The palm of his right hand slid down below her waist. In fact, he had a large handful of her trousers. His little finger might even be resting on the crevice between …

  “Oh, dear.”

  She could not seem to catch her breath. The growth of roses through the supports holding up the roof of the folly filled the space with a heady perfume that made fresh air scarce. That must be the problem.

  “Do you feel safe now, Miss Sheringham?”

  She had never been more frightened in her life. Her body anticipated what it would feel like if his hand moved any farther downward. If it slid into her trousers and touched her naked flesh.

  She shivered again.

  “Are you cold?” he asked, looking down at her. “Actually, you make a very fine furnace, Captain. I believe I am quite warm enough now. And feeling absolutely safe from … whatever.” She was prepared to wrench herself from his embrace, but such violence proved unnecessary. His hands released her without hesitation.

  “Ah,” he said.

  Ah, what? she wondered, glancing at him from the corner of her eye. Had that second shiver given her thoughts away? Did he know she had felt physically excited by his touch? Should she make another excuse for her reaction? Or should she leave well enough alone?

  She knotted her fingers in front of her and met his knowing gaze as though nothing had happened. “So, if I am standing near Julian on the terrace and happen to shiver, I can expect a similar result?”

  “I cannot think why not,” he said. “If you are as attracted to him as you say you are.”

  “I love Julian,” she said defensively.

  “Then, by all means, be sure to shiver when he is looking, Miss Sheringham.”

  “I shall,” she said. “What else would you suggest?”

  He rubbed at his beard.

  “You haven’t shaved!” she exclaimed. The shadow on his face had not been apparent earlier, but had become visible in the growing light.

  “No. Do you mind?” He lifted his chin and ran a hand under it and across the day’s growth of beard on his cheeks. “It seemed a shame to make Griggs go to work so early.”

  “I suppose I did drag you out of bed at the crack of dawn.”

  “Were you there? I missed seeing you,” he teased. “All I remember was Griggs growling at me to get up.”

  She flushed. “Of course I was not—�


  “I wish you had been,” he said in a silky voice, stalking closer, like a large, predatory animal.

  She backed up until she ran into the lattice and then took a step forward again, because she did not wish to be stung by an irritated bee. She stared at the captain warily, unable to keep images of herself in a silky nightgown, slipping beneath the covers to seek the heat of his naked body, from running through her mind.

  “Very good,” he said, his gaze focused on hers. “Very good, indeed. I am sure you do not need lessons, Miss Sheringham. You seem to anticipate what I would ask you to do.”

  “What?” she said, blinking as though she had just awakened from a trance.

  He slipped her arm casually onto his and led her down out of the folly. “Lesson two in seduction: Innuendo. And knowing glances. The gentleman will provide the innuendo. You need only respond with a look that promises everything but, naturally, delivers nothing.”

  “Is that what I did?”

  “I believe so. Were you not imagining us together, Miss Sheringham?”

  She pulled herself free and planted herself in front of him, booted feet spread wide, fists on hips. “I … You … We … Fiddlesticks!” She could feel the heat on her face. At least she would not be shivering again anytime soon. “Will Julian be able to read my mind as easily as you seem to do?”

  “I am sure if you look at Julian as you looked at me, he will receive the invitation as clearly as I did.”

  “What invitation?”

  “To bed you, of course.”

  She marched across the grass toward Mephistopheles. “You go too far, Captain.”

  He shrugged. “I am merely offering you the benefit of my experience, Miss Sheringham. Quitting so soon?”

  Eliza halted in her tracks. She had come to learn how to seduce Julian. It was be a shame to leave without finding out everything she could. She turned to face the Beau, careful not to slip on the wet grass and give him another excuse to touch her. “I want to know everything you can teach me.”

  He raised a questioning brow.

  “Everything,” she repeated.

  “Very well, lesson number three: Proximity, proximity, proximity.”

 

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