He needed to see Colette. Three days of contemplating his situation with her had left him maddeningly frustrated and still unclear of what to do about any of it. The only blessing was that he had the foresight to end his ridiculous association with the Bromleighs. Nice people though they were, he and Faith would be miserable together.
Colette was something else altogether. He could not stop thinking of her and wanting to be with her. He adored her family, in spite of Juliette’s meddling. Colette had completely won over his father. She loved her family, and her loyalty to them was astonishing. He found her intelligent and charming. Lucien respected and even admired her ability to manage the bookshop. She was witty and fun to be with, and of course, there was the sex. He desired her more than any woman he had ever known.
And after his jealous reaction to Jeffrey’s plan to marry her, he finally came to the realization that perhaps he was in love with her after all.
He was in love with a woman he was terrified to marry and who, at the moment, wanted nothing to do with him.
“Will you be joining us for dinner?”
Distracted, Lucien glanced at his mother as if just noticing her presence for the first time. “I’m sorry. No. No, I don’t think I’ll be able to join you this evening.”
“Are you going out again?”
“Yes, I suppose I am,” he replied slowly.
“Are you going to see Miss Hamilton?” she asked.
He did not answer.
“She was here yesterday.”
He eyed his mother sharply, his heart suddenly racing. Colette had come to see me?
She looked at him knowingly and continued talking. “Yes, Miss Hamilton came by to finish the library before she leaves town. In fact, she was here most of the day. She had dozens of books delivered, along with the rest of the furniture. The library looks quite grand now. Wait until you see it. She even read to your father.” Lenora paused, thoughtfully tilting her head at him.
Lucien still said nothing, somehow not surprised by Colette’s determination to finish the job she agreed to do in spite of their differences. He had grown to admire that quality in her.
“She’s a lovely girl. We had a nice little chat, she and I.” His mother turned to leave the room. She gave him an enigmatic smile. “Good luck, Lucien.”
Looking back at her, Lucien grinned.
The elegant sign on the door of Hamilton’s Book Shoppe had been turned to read “Closed,” but Lucien ignored it and opened the door anyway. The bells jingled a now-familiar tune as he let himself in the little shop. He should warn Colette to always lock the door when the store was closed. What if a thief wandered into the store with Colette there alone? It was too careless of her not to lock the door.
He stopped short in surprise as he looked around him. Four pairs of blue eyes stared at him. Juliette, Lisette, Paulette, and Yvette Hamilton stood looking at him curiously. Colette was nowhere in sight. They were in the process of packing books into crates, obviously preparing for their move to Brighton. But what they were planning to do with all the books he had no idea, for certainly they could not fit them all into a little cottage. It pained him to see the shop being packed up.
“Good evening, ladies.” He stepped farther into the shop, feeling the chilly reception in their silent and awkward stares.
“In case you couldn’t read, Lord Waverly, we are closed,” Juliette said in a clipped tone, obviously still angry over their little discussion a few days ago.
“Then you should have locked the door,” he rejoined lightly, enjoying the spark that flashed in her eyes when she could not think of a witty response. He looked toward Paulette with a grin and said, “Hello there.”
When his faithful ally turned his back on him, Lucien knew he was in trouble with the Hamilton sisters. Then little Yvette, too, turned up her nose and looked away. Something was definitely wrong. To his surprise, the usually reserved and shy Lisette walked forward to greet him with a hesitant smile.
“Good evening, Lord Waverly. Please excuse my sisters. We are a little overwhelmed with packing for our move to Brighton. It is fortunate you are here, since as the new owner, we had no idea what you wanted to do with the bookshop.”
He gave her a pointed stare. “I don’t wish to do anything with the shop. I want it to remain the way it is. That is why I purchased it, Lisette.”
The quizzical look in Lisette’s eyes gave him pause. She said nothing and glanced away uncomfortably.
“Ladies, the reason I bought the shop was so that you could remain here,” he announced to all of them.
Stony silence filled the room.
Had Colette poisoned all their thoughts against him? He understood, partly, why Colette was angry with him, but he could not fathom why all four sisters looked daggers at him. What had he done that was so terrible?
“You can stop packing the books,” he continued. “I wish for them to stay in the shop. Where is Colette?”
Paulette finally spoke to him, her expression searching and apologetic. “Upstairs with Mother.”
“May I go up and see her or should I wait?” he asked in a tone that left no doubt in their minds that he would be doing one or the other.
“Monsieur le Comte, I believe you may see my daughter now.”
Genevieve Hamilton stood tall in the doorway, her hand resting on her ornate, gilt-handled cane. She looked more alive than he had seen her before, more alert. Colette stood beside her.
Lucien could not keep his eyes from Colette. The unreadable expression on her beautiful face made him wonder what she was thinking. Was she glad to see him there? Surprised? Her clear blue eyes stared back at him with a magnetic force, drawing him in. Seeing her chocolate-colored hair pulled up revealing her graceful neck, he was stuck by the overpowering desire to pull her into his arms and hold her to him.
“Good evening, Mrs. Hamilton,” he said. “Colette.”
“Good evening, Lord Waverly. Nous voudrions parler en privé. Monte dans ta chambre. Girls, please leave us. We wish to speak privately. Go upstairs now,” Genevieve commanded. Without a word, Colette’s four sisters scurried from the room.
Lucien motioned toward a chair for Genevieve to sit. She shook her head. “Merci, mais je ne préfère pas. I shall not stay long. I only wish a moment of your time.”
“Of course, Mrs. Hamilton,” Lucien agreed. He glanced at Colette, hoping to get an idea of what her mother wished to speak to him about. Wondering what and how much Colette had told Genevieve about their relationship, he asked, “How can I help you?”
“Well, monsieur, I have learned that you are the gentleman who has purchased the bookshop from me.”
“That is true, yes.”
“I see.” She gazed at Colette for a moment, then her eyes refocused onto his. “I assume you had good reason for doing so?”
“Yes, Mrs. Hamilton,” Lucien said pointedly. “I had excellent reasons. Six of them.”
Genevieve smiled faintly. “Yes, that is what I thought, although perhaps one reason motivated you more than the others.” She paused in thought, glancing between Lucien and her daughter. “You wish for the bookshop to remain open and for Colette to continue on as she has?”
“That was my intention, yes,” Lucien stated.
“We have some arrangements to make, and Colette and I were just discussing them. You have made it possible for my daughter to keep this shop, which she loves so much, while setting me free. And for that I thank you from the bottom of my heart.”
“You are very welcome.”
“I believe you two have some important matters to discuss, so I shall leave you now. Bonsoir, Monsieur le Comte. Je vous remercie du fond du coeur. Good evening.” With that Genevieve Hamilton turned and walked from the room, leaving him alone with Colette.
They stood awkwardly with each other, before Lucien reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a sheaf of papers tied with a ribbon. “I have something for you, Colette.”
“I don’t want anyt
hing from you.” Her words were terribly cold and nothing less than he expected from her.
“I realize that, but please take this anyway.”
Hesitantly, her hand reached out to take the papers. Before she had them in her grasp, he pulled them back and grabbed her hand in his. Slowly he dragged her toward him. Her feet reluctantly stepped forward across the wooden plank floor. When she was close enough, he cupped her face in his hands. “I know you are angry with me, and you have every right to be, because I have behaved like a fool. But I want you to know something first.”
Colette glanced up at him, eyeing him suspiciously, but he noted that she also seemed nervous.
“I love you, Colette Elizabeth Hamilton. I love everything about you, from your pretty blue eyes to your sexy mouth to your adorable, meddling sisters to your working in the bookshop to the way your kisses drive me wild. I love the color of your hair and the shape of your nose. I’ve made myself crazy thinking it would never work between us. I have tried for weeks to deny my feelings for you, and I simply cannot do it any longer.”
Colette couldn’t breathe. A million thoughts raced through her head, not one of them coherent. Had Lucien just said the words she had longed to hear? “Lucien, I…I think…”
“Don’t speak yet.” He pressed the papers into her hand. “Look at this before you say anything.”
With her heart thumping wildly in her chest, her fingers trembled as she untied the ribbon and unfolded the pages he had given her. At first she could not believe what she was seeing. She glanced up at him in uncertainty. His gorgeous green eyes twinkled in response. She returned her gaze to the sheet of paper in front of her on which Lucien had written her favorite poem, Who Ever Loved That Loved Not at First Sight? by Christopher Marlowe. The first line, “It lies not in our power to love or hate…” swam before her eyes.
“I think I fell in love with you the moment I met you, Colette, but I was too blind to recognize the truth.”
“Lucien,” she began, but he interrupted her again.
“And just so you are aware, I did not buy that poetry book for a ‘lady friend,’ as I led you to believe. I kept it for myself and read page seventy-four thinking of you. I could not get you out of my mind from the day I saw you here in the disordered shop with dust in your hair and dirt on your face. You were still the most beautiful creature I had ever laid eyes on.”
Speechless, Colette stared at him. Lucien Sinclair loves me? And had loved her from that first day? She could not take in such momentous news.
“Look at the next page,” he coaxed her with a warm smile that caused her heart to flutter wildly.
She shifted the papers and read the next page, recognizing it immediately as the deed of ownership to the bookshop. However, what caused her to catch her breath and almost sink to her knees was her name. There in black ink on a white page was printed the name of the new legal owner of Hamilton’s Book Shoppe. It was her name, Colette Elizabeth Hamilton. Lucien had put the shop in her name when he bought it. It now belonged to her.
“Lucien?” She could barely speak, for her throat had gone as dry as a desert.
“Yes, it is yours.” He placed a sweet kiss on her lips. “I realize that you are under the mistaken impression that I bought the shop as a way to compensate for not marrying you after that night we were together. But, Colette, I bought the shop before anything happened between us. Weeks before we became intimate, if the truth were told. I never thought you would end up in my bed, and I never would have purchased the bookshop as a way to ‘buy you off,’ as you so eloquently phrased it one time.”
Colette actually blushed at his words. “Why did you buy it, then?” she managed to ask when she was able to breathe again.
He looked flustered and then admitted, “At first I told myself I bought it to help your family. Which is true to an extent. I care for your sisters very much, and I thought it would make things easier for all of you if I were to help. When I learned that your mother was selling the place, I knew immediately how devastated you would be. I wanted you to keep the shop and make it the huge success I knew only you could make it. I didn’t want any of you to feel indebted to me in any way, so I kept it anonymous.”
Pausing, Lucien took a deep breath and gazed at her with longing that she felt to the tips of her toes.
Overcome with emotions, Colette noted the date at the bottom of the page. He had purchased the shop before they had made love together that night at Devon House. He bought the shop for her, knowing just how much it meant to her.
“That is the sweetest and the most thoughtful thing anyone has ever done for me,” she whispered breathlessly, afraid she might burst into tears. “I don’t even know what to say to you.”
“Say that you will marry me.” With his green eyes pinned on her, she could not move, could not think of anything but him.
“You want to marry me?” Her voice quaked and her heart flipped over.
“Yes.”
It suddenly seemed as if the world as she knew it had simply turned upside down and nothing made sense anymore. She began to babble, “But the bookshop is…I thought…I want to work…You want—”
“I want you, Colette.” He placed his hands on her shoulders and she shivered from the contact. “I’ve come to realize that I am proud of you and the work you have accomplished here. I want you to continue making the bookshop a success.” His tone was filled with determination.
“But a countess…a marchioness…Your wife cannot work in a shop.”
“My wife certainly can if she wants to. If you want to, Colette. I have no doubt that you can do anything you put your mind to doing.”
Colette opened her mouth to speak. She closed her mouth. She opened it once again and then closed it, unable to utter a single word. She was stunned. Lucien loved her and wanted to marry her, and it did not matter to him if she still worked in the bookshop. My bookshop. He had given it to her. He made it possible for her to keep the shop forever. Her heart flipped over in her chest.
“Oh, Lucien, do you mean that?” she finally gasped, her voice surprising her by sounding higher than usual.
He pulled her into his arms, the papers spilling unheeded to her slippered feet on the floor. He leaned in close to her, slanting his mouth over hers, and crushed a kiss to her lips. “Yes, I mean that.”
With her mouth close to his, inhaling the scent of him, she whispered on a shaky breath, “Thank you.”
“What about ‘yes’?”
“Yes?” she asked, confused by his question.
His emerald green gaze penetrated her entire body. “Will you marry me?”
Recognition dawned. “Oh, yes!” She pulled his head to hers, spreading her fingers into his thick, dark hair, and kissed his lips. This was what she wanted more than anything in the world. “Yes, I will marry you.”
“I love you, Colette.”
“And I love you, Lucien, with all my heart.”
And that heart of Colette’s pounded with anticipation as Lucien’s mouth covered hers with a kiss. Slowly he began to walk her backward in the direction of a certain bookshelf in the history section.
Chapter Twenty-Nine
The Family That Plays Together…
Colette grinned while her husband laughed with her sisters as they all gathered around him for a photograph. After their wedding ceremony earlier that morning, Lucien had specially arranged for one of the city’s best photographers to come to Devon House to take a family portrait. The new art of photography was all the rage in London, and Lucien wanted a photograph of the entire family to commemorate the occasion. With Genevieve, Juliette, Lisette, Paulette, Yvette, Simon, and Lenora standing beside them, she and Lucien posed in front of one wall of fully stocked bookshelves in the newly renovated Devon House library.
The rather short and anxious photographer instructed them to hold very still while he arranged the camera. The large wooden camera rested on a tripod, and he fiddled with brass knobs before he lifted a dark cloth and
huddled beneath it.
Before he could take their picture, however, Juliette called out, “Wait! Where is Jeffrey? He needs to be in this picture, too.”
“Yes, he should be with us,” Colette agreed, moving from her carefully posed position beside Lucien. After all they had been through together, Colette now considered Jeffrey as not just a friend but as a part of her family. She also sensed how much it would mean to him to be in this family portrait with them. And he had just returned from Paris to attend their wedding and serve as Lucien’s best man.
“You cannot move!” the photographer wailed.
“I’ll go and get him,” Lucien volunteered, lifting his hand from where it had been strategically placed on Colette’s shoulder, but not before caressing her lightly. “I shall only be a moment,” he explained to the photographer.
He left the library to retrieve Jeffrey, who was more than likely still mingling with the other wedding guests in the grand salon. After Juliette’s little scheme to make Lucien jealous, which actually had some merit to it after all, Lucien and Jeffrey had enjoyed a good laugh over Jeffrey’s part in it.
“Don’t anyone else move!” the frustrated photographer pleaded with them, throwing his hands up in the air at the groom’s departure.
Of course no one listened to him. Juliette immediately began telling Lisette that she was blocking her, while Paulette and Yvette giggled. Lenora, Simon, and Genevieve chatted amiably together.
Lucien returned momentarily with his friend following behind him. Jeffrey looked slightly befuddled and somewhat embarrassed. “I thought this was a Sinclair-Hamilton family portrait. Are you sure you wish for me to join you?”
A resounding chorus of “Yes!” answered his question. He smiled and thanked them, following the photographer’s anxious instructions for him to stand behind Yvette.
“Now, you must not move again. Remain very, very still,” the photographer murmured before diving beneath the camera cloth again.
Adjusting the long train on her sumptuous bridal gown of embroidered white silk and satin, Colette smiled as Lucien once again placed his hand upon her shoulder. This photograph, the first Colette had ever had taken in her life, marked a special day. It was not just her wedding day, but the beginning of her new life. With Lucien’s encouragement and support she could now make Hamilton’s Book Shoppe the premier book store in the city. There was nothing she could not do.
When His Kiss Is Wicked Page 29