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Mission_Improper

Page 16

by Bec McMaster


  in green silk. "Did you know that there are fire-

  breathers in the back room? This place is...

  extraordinary."

  That was one way of putting it. At the front of

  the room, the crowd thinned as attendants wearing

  only tweed vests, tight pants, and bowler hats

  cleared some space. A sheet was dragged across

  the stage, but her attention was focused on Ava,

  and Kincaid's words.

  She liked Ava. And she obviously wasn't the

  only one who'd noticed how the pretty laboratory

  assistant lit up when Byrnes entered the room,

  which left Ingrid feeling like slime coated her skin.

  "Shadow Show's starting," Kincaid said, his

  voice like liquid velvet in the night, and again, they

  were on the same wavelength.

  Ingrid had rather hoped Ava would stay

  enamored with the fire-breathers a little longer.

  "Ladies and gentleman." A tall woman

  wearing a ringmaster's attire strode onstage as the

  lights dimmed, and instantly the room fell quiet.

  "The lovely Miranda and Cozette are about to

  begin their act. Do we have any volunteers to

  assist them?"

  Over two dozen men threw themselves to

  their feet, waving their arms.

  "Pick me, ma'am!"

  "I volunteer!"

  A chorus of enthusiastic cries rolled around

  the room, leaving only their table untouched.

  Kincaid looked unimpressed and poured

  himself another brandy as a spotlight suddenly

  flicked on behind the sheet, highlighting a bed.

  "You're not keen to volunteer?" Ingrid

  murmured.

  "Do I look like I'm the fucking entertainment?"

  He held out his hand, and she passed him her

  cheroot, which he took a long drag from. "I

  prefer... something a little more private." His gaze

  lit on the long-legged beauty in the ringmaster's

  outfit.

  "What must he do?" Ava asked, as a young

  man was helped onto the stage, thrusting a fist in

  the air in victory toward his rowdy table.

  Ingrid looked at Kincaid. Kincaid looked

  back at her, and actually appeared to blush.

  Coward. "He's, ah, they're going to engage in

  —"

  "Oh, my goodness," Ava whispered, staring at

  the stage. "Are they...." Her mouth fell open as the

  shadows moved, and it became very clear that yes,

  yes they were. "Is that even legal?" she gasped, as

  the two curvaceous women dragged the willing

  young fellow behind the sheet.

  Kincaid eyed the fellow's rampant excitement

  as one of the shadows pushed the fellow down on

  the bed. "Probably not."

  Ava blushed to the roots of her hair, but tore

  her gaze away. "Oh, my goodness."

  Ingrid shot Kincaid a look, who returned it

  steadily. Then he handed back Ingrid's cheroot and

  sighed. "Would you care to take a stroll in the

  gardens, Miss McLaren?"

  "Is it going to be any safer out there?"

  "Possibly." Kincaid's smile turned slightly

  evil. "But then, you'll be with me, so possibly not."

  Onstage the female shadow crawled up over

  the ecstatic young volunteer, and Ava staggered to

  her feet. "Yes! Yes, the garden would be good."

  "I deserve a medal for this," Kincaid

  murmured in Ingrid's ear as he rolled to his feet

  and extended an arm toward Ava.

  "Be nice to her," Ingrid warned, and it wasn't

  entirely playful.

  Kincaid rolled his eyes. "Virgins," he said, in

  some disgust.

  And then they were gone.

  Ingrid stayed to watch the show. A swift

  glance showed Charlie caught up at the bar,

  laughing at something that another young man was

  saying. The play onstage didn't interest her overly

  much, but if she closed her eyes and listened to the

  soft sounds of laughter and panting, then she could

  imagine she was elsewhere.

  In Byrnes's bed, her thighs straddling him as

  she bent down to take his nipple between her

  teeth.

  That got her going. Half memory. Half dream.

  Soft fingers of heat trailed through her abdomen

  and lower, leaving her wet as the man onstage

  gasped . Then she was sliding lower, down the

  chiseled ridge of his abdomen, as Byrnes flexed

  beneath her, his wrists bound to the bed with her

  stockings.

  "Touch yourself," he rasped.

  And Ingrid smiled, rearing up to tug at the

  ribbons on the chemise as they trailed between

  her full breasts. "Oh, Byrnes... who said you were

  in control?"

  A shiver ran over her skin. A sense of

  foreboding. Ingrid stubbed her cheroot out,

  exhaling the smoke. She felt like she was being

  watched.

  Opening her sleepy eyes, she had a moment of

  disorientation, as though she were in the dream

  again, reliving that memory. But as Byrnes

  prowled the edge of the room, his gaze locked on

  her, she realized it wasn't a dream. Nor a memory.

  But the man himself.

  GIVING IN TO TEMPTATION, Byrnes trailed his

  fingertips along Ingrid's shoulders as he slid into

  the chair next to her, ignoring the stage with its

  enthusiastic noises. "Where was my invitation?"

  "You weren't around," she replied, the sudden

  stiffening of her spine belying the easy way she'd

  been sitting with Kincaid and Charlie until he

  showed up.

  And didn't that get to him.

  Watching her laughing and drinking with the

  other men had set him close to the edge. Because

  she didn't behave like that around him. No, there

  was always some sort of tension in her whenever

  they shared a room.

  It was his own bloody fault too. He'd not

  considered how frustrating this would be. Not so

  much in a sexual manner, though there was that too,

  but returning to Baker Street with the expectation

  of running into Ingrid and starting some kind of

  teasing debate, and then not finding her there....

  "See something you like?" he asked, glancing

  toward the stage. There was not a chance in hell he

  was going to admit his conflicted feelings.

  “Not yet,” she replied.

  “Liar.”

  She smiled faintly.

  Despite the rowdy shouts throughout the

  room, and the ensuing climax onstage, they might

  as well have been alone. Byrnes reached out and

  traced his fingers down the back of her hand. She

  didn't pull away, but she didn't encourage it.

  And he didn't know what to do about that.

  Withdrawing his hand with a wry smile in her

  direction, he leaned his arms along the back of his

  chair and two neighboring ones, creating just

  enough of an illusion of distance to make her settle.

  There was an uncomfortable knot in his abdomen.

  He shouldn't have come. But the second Herbert

  had told him where they'd all gone, he'd wanted to.

  He'd even looked forward to it, to seeing her,
<
br />   taking some time to reconnect with her after a day

  apart. She'd enjoyed his kiss, but had it only been

  the heat of the moment?

  “Find anything today?” he asked.

  “Nothing,” she replied, in a disgruntled voice.

  “And you?”

  “Same.”

  Silence fell, and her gaze locked on the stage.

  Was this affliction something only he felt?

  Suddenly he couldn't handle it anymore.

  "I need some fresh air." The chair legs

  squealed on the floor as he stood.

  Byrnes was halfway across the room before

  he realized he was being followed. Those sharp

  rapping heels alerted him to her identity, a second

  before Ingrid shoved him into a dark corner at the

  back of the room. "What was that?"

  Byrnes glanced around. Nobody watching.

  "Nothing."

  "You're the one who fled with his tail tucked

  between his legs."

  That irked him. "Maybe I'm weary of being

  left out in the cold. You clearly didn't want my

  company. So I complied with your unspoken

  demand."

  "I didn't want you to...." Ingrid pursed her lips

  together, then looked down, at the hand pressed

  against his chest.

  "Didn't want me to what?" Byrnes captured it,

  and pinned it there, so that she could feel the beat

  of his heart. Come on, damn you.

  Ingrid's eyes flared with heat as the pressure

  on his chest eased. "I shouldn't do this right now.

  I've been drinking."

  "Don't go." He held her hand there, the words

  blurting out of him. At her arched brow, he cursed

  under his breath. "Nothing's going to happen

  tonight. Not if you've been drinking. I promise I

  won't touch you."

  "How gentlemanly of you."

  But she relaxed. And it felt like a kick in the

  guts.

  "If you don't want this, Ingrid," he growled,

  "then tell me. And this ends. Now. Tonight. I keep

  thinking you're enjoying having me chase you, but

  then"—he let her hand go, gestured to her—"your

  spine practically acquires an iron rod whenever I

  walk into a room. And if I get too close to you, you

  push me away. If you don't want me, then say so."

  Ingrid looked away. "You make me nervous."

  Which was not what he'd expected her to say.

  Byrnes sorted through the words. Then again. And

  then a smile curved over his mouth as he began to

  understand them. "In what way?"

  She buffeted him in the arm. "Stop smirking at

  me."

  But all of the tension between them was gone.

  Thank God. He wasn't the only one who was

  afflicted with this... issue. "That's not an answer."

  Ingrid rolled to the side, resting her back

  against the wall and closing her eyes. “You make

  me nervous because I’m not entirely certain I trust

  your intentions.”

  “I—”

  She waved his words away. “But I trust that

  you want me, more than you’re willing to

  compromise that.”

  He brushed a strand of honey-brown hair

  behind her ear, resting the other hand on the brick

  wall behind her, near her hip. “Have I not proved

  that I’m willing to work with you? That I can

  compromise?”

  Ingrid sighed. “That wasn’t what I was

  referring to.”

  He examined her. “Then what—?”

  “Forget it, Byrnes.” She rested her head

  against the brick wall, looking up at him from

  beneath that fan of dark lashes. “Just forget it. It’s

  the brandy talking.”

  Byrnes studied her, his thumb stroking her ear.

  He wasn’t going to forget a thing, though he’d

  comply for the moment. “So… are you going to

  give me the second challenge?"

  Ingrid considered it, then her eyes turned

  smoky with devilry. "Maybe.”

  “You’ve had time to think.”

  “Fine. Give me a present the likes of which

  no one's ever given me."

  "Done." His smile widened, his thumb

  brushing against her cheek. Once. Twice. It didn't

  escape his notice that she was virtually asking him

  to court her. “And what do I get when I complete

  the challenge?”

  “What do you want?”

  Everything. “Don’t tempt me,” he whispered,

  leaning closer.

  Ingrid’s gaze dropped to his mouth, almost

  unconsciously. He wanted to kiss her, knew she

  wanted it too—but he’d promised.

  Byrnes withdrew, just an inch or two. “I

  want… to pleasure you. I want… my mouth all

  over you.”

  Again that smile. “That sounds like a reward

  for me.”

  “Maybe it’s a reward for both of us? You

  don’t know how often I’ve thought of what

  happened last year, of how close we came….” He

  couldn’t help himself. “Did you ever think of me?"

  "Of course I thought of you." Her voice

  softened. "I'm rash sometimes, Byrnes. What I did

  that day—writing that poem and leaving it on your

  pillow, leaving you tied to the bed—it was not.... It

  was wrong of me, and I regret it."

  Byrnes made a frustrated sound in his throat.

  This was not what he’d meant. "Are you actually

  apologizing?"

  "Of course I am. I shouldn't have liked it if

  you'd done it to me. I was angry, and you were

  being your obnoxious best, and I lost my temper."

  "Somehow I remember it differently."

  "Really?" Her words came out more growl

  than speech again, but she did that when she was

  uncomfortable, he'd noticed, not just when she was

  angry.

  He crossed his arms over his chest,

  considering his words. "It's entirely possible that

  I... deserved it. Sometimes I say things I don't

  mean." Clearing his throat, he added, "Lynch

  always tells me that pride will be my downfall."

  "You're just saying that because you want to

  get under my skirts and get your revenge."

  "Revenge has nothing to do with what I've in

  mind. I told you that."

  "Oh?”

  "Damn it, Ingrid. Is that all there is? All

  you've thought about me in the last year is regret

  about leaving me tied to my bed?" He reached out

  and rested his hand on the brickwork beside her

  head. "You didn't once think about what could have

  been? You didn't once regret the missed

  opportunity?"

  Wary eyes gazed back at him.

  "I've thought of you every day," he admitted,

  and that uneasy twisting sensation in his stomach

  made him pause. It was hard to admit this. Harder

  to let go of the secrets he kept hidden within him.

  But he needed to. "Every day." His voice softened

  as he saw that he had her attention. "And I looked

  for you. At first because, yes, I wanted revenge.

  Not in the way that you think. It was not your

  humiliation I sought, but you. What you'd promised.

  I wante
d you. I wanted to kiss you, damn it, to taste

  your mouth again." His gaze dropped to her lips.

  Those tempting plump pillows of rose. "I dreamt of

  that mouth. Of all the things it could do to me. I

  woke up with you tangled in my mind, but missing

  from my bed. A perfumed ghost. And you haunted

  me, day and night. You got under my skin and I... I

  don't even know how you did it."

  Ingrid's heart began to race. Byrnes closed his

  eyes, leaning closer to her until their foreheads

  pressed against each other and his hands cupped

  her cheeks. Giving in to temptation, he stroked her

  silky mouth with his thumbs. "I hate it that you

  didn't think of me at all." Easier to admit when he

  couldn't see her looking at him. He brushed his

  mouth against her temple. "Not like that. I hate it

  that whilst you haunted me, I was barely a glimmer

  on your horizon, a port that you'd sailed from,

  without a single look back."

  "I thought of you." She barely breathed the

  words.

  Did you? His heart leapt at the thought.

  "And then I thought that only madness came of

  following those thoughts, so I pushed you out of my

  mind." Her hands curled around his wrists, and she

  ducked beneath his arm, heat flushing through her

  cheeks. "How can I believe you? It sounds too

  good to be true. You're not the type of man to be

  tied down."

  "Because I don't lie, Ingrid. You know that."

  Those considering eyes killed him. But she

  finally nodded. "No. You don't, do you? Even if the

  truth is a blunt-edged weapon in your hands."

  "Then hear this: this is my truth. I don't want

  revenge, Ingrid. I don't want forever. I just want

  you in my bed. I want to know what it feels like to

  explore that... that spark between us. I want to

  exorcise you from my mind, from my thoughts.

  That's all. I want to burn like the supernova that

  flames through my veins when you're nearby, and

  drown myself in these feelings until it's done. Until

  you're... extinguished from my soul."

  Until I can finally forget you.

  Ingrid's eyes grew dreamy, but the hesitation

  was still there.

  "I want you," he breathed. "This needs to end

  between us, Ingrid. I need to burn you out of my

  blood, and the only way I can think to do so is to

  follow this through to its natural conclusion. I will

  complete your challenges." The words were a

  promise. "And you will end up in my bed. And

  then? Then I can forget you."

  Ingrid watched him as he backed away, her

 

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