“I’m here to make good on the debt I owe you,” she said quietly.
His gut clenched so tightly that he almost dropped to his knees. Her words were the last he’d expected to hear.
“And when the debt is paid, I want to be released from the bargain we made.”
He could hardly blame her for that request. He had no doubt that his earlier actions had brought her shame. He nodded. “Agreed.”
“Do you remember the conditions of the debt, Tom? The conditions that apply to you?”
He swallowed hard. “Look, but don’t touch.”
“I want your word that you’ll keep your end of the bargain.”
His word? Not to touch what he so desperately wanted to hold? To walk away from what he so desperately wanted to claim? Did she know what she was asking of him and what it would cost him to follow through on his end of the bargain?
His hands were already shaking so badly that he figured they’d be here all night while he struggled to make them work. “I won’t touch you, but you’ll have to do the unbuttoning.”
She gave a brisk nod. “And with that little change in the arrangement, you’ll consider the debt paid in full?”
Nodding, he took a step back. “Pay up, Lauren.”
Pay up so he could release her from both bargains. Pay up and he’d purchase her passage back to Texas within a day. Pay up and she’d never have to spend another minute with the savage who couldn’t bring his best behavior to a ballroom, who’d acted as though he were in a saloon. He didn’t deserve her. He never had. He wanted her running from him as fast as her legs would take her.
She dropped her gaze to the floor, licked her lips, took a deep breath…
And just stood there.
“I’m not going to consider the debt paid until those buttons are undone,” he said.
“How many?”
“Clear down to your waist.”
He thought she flinched, watched as her cheeks turned as red as a summer strawberry, thought about calling the debt paid, but when this was no longer between them, they would have nothing. “Come on now—”
“Stop rushing me! I’ve never done this before.”
He knew it was wrong to let her spark of anger so please him. But it did. She had the ability to stand up to him, the ability to give back as good as she got. She deserved a man who would give her the best, and that wasn’t him.
“You’ve never unbuttoned a bodice?” he asked.
“Not in front of a man.”
“It’s no different.”
“Of course it’s different. How would you like it if I insisted you unbutton your trousers?”
He couldn’t stop the slow smile from spreading across his face. “I’ll be happy to oblige if it’ll make you feel more comfortable.”
A corner of her mouth twitched. “You’re always corrupting me, Tom.”
“Keep taunting me, Lauren, and I’ll decide that I need to do the unbuttoning.”
“Don’t rush me, Tom.”
“Don’t rush you? Hell, woman, I’ve waited ten years! Now do it!”
Before he did lose what little patience remained to him. The impatience seeped right out of him when she raised her hands to that first button just below her throat and he saw how badly they were shaking—almost as badly as his would be if they were about to do the same task.
“Lauren?”
Lauren lifted her gaze back to his. The tenderness in his voice, in his eyes was almost her undoing.
“Just take your time,” he said quietly, without the anger or the impatience that had marked his earlier words.
It was an odd thing to be in the reality of a moment she’d fantasized about over the years. She was taunting him, deliberately, making him wait for what he wanted, just as she’d had to wait all these years. Wait for him to come for her until she’d given up on him, until she’d almost given herself over to another man’s promise.
She wasn’t afraid of Tom. She never had been. Not from the first moment she’d laid eyes on him. But he did call out to the wildness in her, to the part of her that wanted to be wicked, to do things that she knew were wrong. To be the uncivilized hellion that London’s ladies whispered about with meanness. To be everything she had shoved aside.
She sometimes felt as though she’d been suffocated, shaped and molded into what her mother thought she should be, what society thought she should be, rather than the woman she truly was. Only with Tom did she ever feel that she had a chance to be herself.
Which was the very reason that she was there. Because there was a wicked part of her that did want to unbutton her bodice for him…a terrified part that feared he’d be disappointed with what he saw.
He’d not spoken a single word about love. He was interested in her for a debt owed, a bargain to be kept. And it was time she kept it. Released them both from the past.
He wasn’t going to touch her. He wasn’t going to see much more than was revealed by her most immodest of evening gowns. It was just the idea…that she would slowly reveal what was presently hidden. And slowly was exactly how she intended to do it. Make him wait a little longer.
She pressed her fingers against her palms to stop their shaking and took a deep breath to try to stop her body’s trembling. The tremors cascading through her were distracting, and she was afraid that he could see them, traveling over her skin, that he would know how nervous she was.
She reached for the first button, not certain if it was her fingers or the ivory that was so terribly cold. That she managed to loosen it so easily was encouraging, for surely, then, her nervousness didn’t show. With the second button, she’d expected his gaze to dip, but it didn’t. It remained steadfastly fixed on hers. With the fourth button, he bunched his hands into fists at his side. With the fifth he reached out with one hand and grabbed the mantel, his fingers digging into it until his knuckles turned white, and she was surprised that the black marble didn’t crumble within his grasp.
A light sheen of dew appeared on his forehead, and she wasn’t even certain that he continued to breathe. When she loosened the final button, she eased her fingers between the parted material and brought it back to reveal the white cotton of her chemise and while she was still modestly covered, she felt as though she were completely naked.
He lowered his gaze then, and what she saw in his eyes was almost her undoing. Raw, feral desire, a yearning so great as to be painful.
He turned away from her, grabbing the mantel with his other hand, bowing his head, staring at the flames dancing in the fire.
“The debt’s paid,” he rasped. “You can go.”
It was what she wanted, to be free of the debt, to have nothing between them that could separate them. She took a step toward him—
“Get out of here, Lauren,” he growled through clenched teeth without looking at her, “before I do something we’ll both regret. I proved to night that I’m not far removed from being a barbarian.”
And that, too, was the reason she was there. Because she’d seen his face after he hit Whithaven, had seen the shame and mortification he felt before he’d quickly masked it. She’d seen a man who wanted to prove he was different from the man who had come before him, different from his father, and in the eyes of those surrounding him, had seen that he was thought to be the same.
“A barbarian would have me on the bed already,” she said quietly.
He looked at her then—and in his eyes, she saw not the boy he’d once been, but the man he’d become, a man who was barely holding on to his passions. “I’m warning you. You’d better go.”
“Barbarians don’t warn.” She took a step closer. “Why did you hit Whithaven? Did he say something—”
“He said a lot.”
“About you?”
She watched as the muscles in his jaw jumped.
“About me,” she said softly. “What exactly did he say?”
“That you had someone. I’m busting my back in Texas and you’re favoring some fella—”r />
“I never got your letters,” she said calmly. “Ten years. You can’t possibly believe in all that time that some gentleman didn’t give me attention or that I didn’t give attention to him. You can’t tell me that you never had a woman—”
“Mine were all paid for. Not a one of them ever thought she meant something to me, Lauren, not a one ever expected a marriage proposal, not a one ever thought I’d give her the honor of taking my name. Not one stood a chance of taking your place in my heart.”
In his heart. She’d held a place in his heart. Did she still?
She moved nearer. “It’s different over here, Tom, different for a woman. A woman’s value is based upon what she brings to a marriage. From the time she has her coming out, her only acceptable goal is to get married. She is constantly on display, no matter where she goes: for a stroll in the park, to a concert, a ball, a dinner. The way she is dressed is commented on, the way she behaves is the subject of conversations. Every damned aspect of her life is scrutinized: Does she have the proper friends? Did she dance the proper number of dances?
“So, yes, when Kimburton singled me out for attention, I reciprocated. It was so damned wonderful to feel that I had to please but one man instead of a hundred. And he was so incredibly nice, and for a while I wasn’t lonely. For a while, I didn’t go to bed every night thinking about you.”
“Why did you turn him down?”
Her throat burned with the effort to hold her tears at bay, but they escaped, spilling over onto her cheeks. “Because I realized that if I married him, I would have to live here forever, and I couldn’t promise him forever. That’s when I went to work, when I started making my plans to return to Texas, because I had to know if you’d forgotten me.”
“Ah, darlin’.” Then he was there, holding her near with one arm while with the knuckles of his other hand he tenderly gathered up her tears. “I could never forget you, Lauren. Sweet Lord, girl, how could you ever think that I would?”
He lowered his head and brushed his lips over hers as lightly as a breeze wafted over the first blossoms of spring. Yearning so intense nearly caused her knees to buckle, and she thought if he wasn’t supporting her with one strong arm, she might have fallen.
He slanted his mouth across hers and settled in as though he had plans to take up permanent residence. Somewhere in the far recesses of her mind, she thought she should object, but her heart was winning this battle, begging her to stay, to finish what they’d started so very long ago, when they were both too young to care about anything or anyone other than themselves and their wants. Before society stifled them with rules, before earlier promises gave way to later ones.
He nibbled on her lips, then glided his tongue over her mouth as though to heal what he might have hurt, but his actions caused no pain, except to her heart, which had been without him for too long and could no longer be with him forever. Still, she relished his touch, his attentions, and when she parted her lips in welcome, he took full advantage, using his tongue to explore, to taunt, to tease. No other man had ever kissed her as Tom did, and she realized with startling clarity that she’d never wanted another man to be so intimate with her. Kissing Tom, pressing her body against his, recognizing the feel of his burgeoning desire, was as natural as breathing.
There was no shame in these feelings, no dishonor in this closeness. She wanted to do more than unbutton her bodice. She wanted to remove all her clothes, unbutton his trousers, and remove all his clothes.
Tom deepened the kiss, relishing the feel of her arms winding around his neck, her body flattened against his. The willowy girl who had climbed out her bedroom window to meet with him had grown into a woman that a man’s arms ached to hold. She fit perfectly, and it was all he could do to restrain himself, not to discover how perfectly he might fit within her.
With a groan, he tore his mouth from hers, lifted her into his arms, and carried her the short distance to the bed. Gently, he laid her down before following and stretching out beside her. Her gaze was riveted on his face, as she watched him, but he saw no fear. He saw only desire that rivaled his and something that ran much deeper.
He kissed her chin, her jaw, and trailed his mouth along the column of her throat, so silky smooth, so soft. A sloping pathway to more softness.
He raised himself on an elbow and, with his forefinger and thumb, he grabbed the end of the bow that kept her chemise closed. Such a flimsy piece of satin for such an important job.
He slid his gaze up to hers, taking in the creamy texture of her skin, the slight blush that marred it where his roughened jaw had journeyed, and he cursed himself for not shaving after he got home, but he’d had no way of knowing she’d come to him. Or maybe it was his mustache that had caused the damage. For her, if she asked, he’d shave it off as well.
He kept his eyes on hers, his breathing ragged, waiting for her to react to his veiled request, and her answer came as he’d hoped, with nothing more than a lowering of her lashes that struck him deep in the gut.
When she’d been unbuttoning her bodice, he’d never wanted anything in his life more than he’d wanted to cross over to her and finish the task, brush his knuckles against the inside swells that she was so slowly revealing. He’d always known he was a man of determination, but until that moment he’d never known how much control he had over himself. Only a man encased in steel could have looked at her and not taken.
He swallowed hard, his mouth suddenly dry, his breaths coming in harsh gasps. He tugged on the ribbon, watched as the bow ceased to exist. Fighting to hold his fingers steady, he pulled the ribbon loose of its moorings, watching as the material parted to reveal her flesh.
With the side of his hand and the gentlest touch, he moved the material farther aside to reveal her breasts, in full, the pale pink nipples, the light blue veins. His gut and groin tightened so much that it was almost painful. “You are so beautiful.”
“I’m not really very fully growed,” she whispered.
With effort, he shifted his gaze up to hers. Her cheeks were a bright reddish hue. “Not like Lady Blythe or Lady—”
He touched his finger to her lips. “You’re perfect.”
“I’m small.” Her breath wafted over his hand.
“You’re perfect.” He lowered his mouth and kissed her while he moved his hand down, his fingers curling over her perfection.
Lauren was beginning to wonder if the fire had jumped out of the hearth and was blazing around them. She’d never felt so hot and flushed in her entire life. Tom’s kiss was as feral, possessive as his hand laying claim to that which he wanted. She couldn’t envision any of the gentlemen of London behaving as Tom did, ravishing her to within an inch of her life. For surely she would die from the sensations that he was creating with each sweep of his tongue, each stroke of his fingers.
This time when he trailed his mouth along her throat, he didn’t stop at its base, other than briefly to dip the tip of his tongue into its hollow, then he continued on, kissing the inside swell of her breasts, before journeying on to kiss and plunder that which he’d brazenly paid to see. She combed her fingers up into his hair, still too long, still so thick, still dark and beautiful, with the firelight glistening over it.
And then it was as though what ever he’d held leashed, he released. With a deep groan, he returned for another kiss, this one more intense, more possessive than any that had come before it. It was a prelude to a promise she wasn’t certain she could keep.
They were suddenly hands, mouths, tongues, touching, kissing, stroking, pressing. His body was weighing down on hers. A pleasant weight. She would have thought that his height, the breadth of his shoulders would have made her feel as though she were suffocating, but instead she only felt the increase of passion, the desire to have him closer, as close as possible.
She was barely cognizant of a subtle shifting of his weight and then his hand was beneath her skirt, gliding up her thigh…rough skin against smooth flesh, hands that had tamed horses, trailed cattle, br
anded, roped, fought stampedes were working to tame her, and in the taming, he was unleashing the wildness in her.
She pushed her hands against his shoulders. Breathing heavily, he stilled, holding her gaze. The intensity with which he looked at her sent desire, hot and burning swirling through her.
“I unbuttoned my buttons for you,” she rasped, surprised by the harsh sound of her own voice. “The least you can do is unbutton yours for me.”
“If I do that, Lauren, your clothes are coming all the way off.”
She nodded.
He pushed himself up until he was sitting on the edge of the bed, looking down on her, his hands working the buttons free with such haste that she almost laughed. Instead, she sat up, too, reached out, and took hold of his cuff, slipping the button through its loop. She did the same with the other. Then she sat back and watched as he pulled his shirt over his head, to reveal his magnificent chest.
Reaching out, she touched an old scar that ran across his ribs. “How did you get this?” When he didn’t answer, she looked up at him, into his eyes, saw the haunting look of memories best left behind. “Was it when the old man who took you off the orphan train beat you?”
Slowly he shook his head and rasped, “No.”
“How did you get it?”
“My father,” he said through clenched teeth.
His father? The horror of that statement must have shown on her face, because he continued. “I’m remembering things, Lauren, and I’m wishing to God that I didn’t. I wish I hadn’t hit Whithaven—”
She pressed her fingers to his lips. “I know. But we can fix that. We can, Tom.” She lowered her head and pressed her lips to the puckered flesh.
His breath caught and she felt him go absolutely still. “Lauren?”
She looked at him, watched as his throat worked while he swallowed.
“I don’t want to remember the past to night,” he finally managed to say, as though dredging the words up out of a bottomless well. Then he hitched up the corner of his mouth in the all-too-familiar grin, the smile that she’d loved from the moment he first bestowed it on her. “Are you going to unbutton my trousers?”
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