A Lascivious Lady

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by Jillian Eaton




  A Lascivious Lady by Jillian Eaton

  CHAPTER ONE

  “It is sunrise. You may leave now.” Lady Josephine Marie Gates sat up one elbow and stared down at the man in her bed with an expression that bordered on disgust. “Leave,” she repeated. “Now.”

  Lord Richard Penny, an unmarried Viscount of considerable holdings, rolled off the side of the bed and landed on his feet with a groan. He ran his hand through his short brown hair and yawned before offering Josephine a slumberous smile that had never before failed to get him pulled back under the covers for another lusty round of love making.

  She gazed up at him, heedless of her nudity or the sheet that had slipped, and he allowed his eyes to wander down across her breasts. Good God, but she was a fetching creature. Her blonde hair curled over her shoulders and down her back like a cloak of spun gold. Heavy eyes, tilted at the corner and just a tad too large for her face, were the color of glimmering amethysts. And her body…

  Richard sucked in a breath as he recalled the slender curve of her hips, the plumpness of her backside, the swell of her—

  “You do speak English, do you not, Lord Penny?” Josephine purred, tilting her head to the side and running her tongue across her full bottom lip.

  Had Richard known more about the woman he had just bedded, he would have recognized that while her body suggested things only a wicked man would dare dream of, her eyes told a different story entirely. Unfortunately for the Viscount, he was not a man who picked up on subtleties.

  “You know I do,” he said as he leaned forward to rest his hands on the edge of the mattress. “Did you not hear all the naughty things I whispered to you last night?”

  “Yes, I did.”

  “And?” he said expectantly.

  “I have heard them all before. Really, Lord Penny, you have far outstayed your welcome. If you do understand English, which I can see that you do, although some of the larger words seem to escape you, then you must understand when I tell you this: get out.”

  Thoroughly taken aback, Richard straightened and looked around for his trousers.

  “On the back of the rosewood chair in the corner of the room,” Josephine said helpfully before she fell back onto the pillows with a little sigh and crossed one arm over her face.

  Her breasts were still exposed, the morning light from the window dancing across her dusky nipples, and Richard snuck another look as he yanked on his pants and slipped on his shirt. Giving up his cravat for lost, he hurried to the door and hesitated, still rather unsure where he had gone wrong, or why the infamous Lady Gates was kicking him out of her bedroom at such an indecent hour.

  Had he not pleased her? Richard scoffed at the thought. Her throaty moans and breathless cries had said otherwise. Not once, not twice, but thrice he had taken her during the hours between dusk and dawn. Though five years his senior she had sated his lust as no other woman had before her, or – he feared – no other woman would after.

  “Marry me,” he said impulsively.

  “Marry you?” Josephine echoed. Leaning up her elbow she finally drew the sheet up to cover her chest and arched one eyebrow. “Why in the world would I do that?”

  Richard flushed, but did not back down. He was not a man without means. He was a bloody Viscount, for heaven’s sake. Had he not already been chased to the ends of the earth and back by half crazed mothers looking to marry off their daughters? Vain, insipid, ugly chits, the lot of them. No, what he desired – what he deserved – was a real woman. A goddess, just like the one sprawled before him.

  “I will spoil you beyond measure,” he said. “You shall never want for anything. Jewels? They are yours. Furs? I shall strike the beasts down myself. Mansions? I will—”

  Josephine waved her hand in the air, cutting him off. “Do stop,” she implored, her lower lip jutting out in a pout that made his loins surge anew. “I fear you are making my head ache. Really, Lord Penny, you are only embarrassing yourself. Rather like a flea ridden dog begging to be taken back by his master after he has been thrown on the street.”

  Richard gaped. “A f-flea ridden d-dog,” he sputtered, his cheeks growing mottled as humiliation and anger swept through him.

  Never, in all of his twenty one years, had he ever been so insulted. And by a woman, no less! Hands curling into fists, he said, “Now see here, you have no right to speak to me in such a manner! I am a Viscount, and—”

  “Yes, yes, so I have heard,” Josephine said. Yawning, she stretched out one arm and rang the small silver bell that sat on the corner of her nightstand. A maid appeared almost immediately, stepping through the door and past Richard to stand attentively at the foot of the bed.

  “What do ye need, mum?” she asked in a chirping voice that hinted strongly at her Scottish roots.

  Richard could not help but notice that the maid ignored him completely, as if she had grown accustomed to finding men in her mistress’s chambers. For some reason that annoyed him even more than being compared to a flea ridden dog. Was he… jealous? His skin grew clammy at the very thought. No, surely not.

  “Amelia, please escort Lord Penny outside. I fear he has overstayed his welcome,” said Josephine.

  “Of course, mum.” Pivoting crisply on her heel, the maid marched back across the room and held open the door. “Me lord?”

  she said, keeping her eyes downcast. She could not, however, completely control the twitch of her lips as she stifled a laugh.

  A common servant, laughing at him? It was the last straw. “I shall see myself out!” Richard snapped. Wrenching the door free from the maid’s grasp, he slammed it forcefully behind him and stormed down the stairs.

  Josephine peeked between the fingers she had covered her face with to contain her own laughter. “Oh, Melly, is he truly gone?”

  Slouching against the door, Amelia drew off the lace cap she had placed haphazardly over her unruly red curls and rolled her sparkling blue eyes. “As gone as ‘e is going tae get. May I go back tae bed now? Ye said I could have Friday mornings off and I am quite tired.”

  A frown flitted across Josephine’s mouth, pulling the corners down and causing her forehead to wrinkle. “I forgot. I apologize, Melly. Take the entire day if you need. I will not be doing anything.”

  “Yer not goin’ out? ‘Tis a beautiful day, mum.” Walking briskly to the floor to ceiling windows, Amelia drew back the heavy velvet curtains with a flourish, exposing the bustling street below. Already the merchants were setting up their wares, carts drawn by drowsy draft horses ambled past, and paper boys ran this way and that, dashing through London’s foot traffic with ease. Spring was in full bloom and as Amelia huffed and puffed to get one of the windows open, the sweet, heavenly scent of cherry blossoms and tulips began to trickle into the room.

  Closing her eyes Josephine inhaled deeply, reminded once again why this time of year was her favorite. Everything was so fresh and new. It was a time for second chances and new beginnings. For everyone but her, of course.

  “No,” she murmured wistfully, sinking back down and bringing the sheets to her chin. “I fear I am not feeling well today. You go out, Melly. Enjoy the sunshine for me.”

  “Are ye certain, mum? Perhaps a bit o’ sun is just the thing to make ye feel right as—”

  The gunshot that sounded from downstairs caused both women to shriek. In a flash Josephine was on her feet and at the door, her face pale but determined. There had been a rash of daytime burglaries as of late. Just three days ago Lady Dobson from only two houses down had been robbed of all her jewels and treasured paintings. Josephine would be damned if she let some lily livered thief steal from her.

  “Has Bates arrived yet?” she asked, referring to the brawny retired boxer who now earned his living as Josephine
’s butler and occasional driver.

  “N-no,” said Amelia. “It is just y-you and m-me and c-c-cook.”

  Cook, who was no doubt cowering under the kitchen table at this very minute. That was, if he had not already dived out the window.

  “Stay here and lock the door behind me,” Josephine ordered.

  “What are ye going to do?” Amelia cried, wide eyed.

  Holding the sheet around her body with one hand, Josephine reached out the other to grasp a heavy poker resting next to the dormant fireplace. Her arm trembled as she lifted the poker, but her grip was sure, and her determination strong. “Stay here and lock the door,” she repeated. Taking in a deep breath, she slipped from the room and crept silently down the stairs. At the bottom of the landing she stopped and tensed, brandishing the poker as if it were a club.

  Too late she realized that the decision to face down a possible robber wearing nothing more than a sheet had not been a wise one, but what other alternative did she have? Sit idly by and let her precious things be stolen? Josephine’s lips thinned as her resolve strengthened. Certainly not.

  Unfortunately for her it was not a thief that she came upon when, drawn by the sound of muffled yells, she reached the front parlor and peered between the pocket doors.

  Oh, but how she wished it was.

  Hopping on one leg and clutching the other at the knee, Lord Penny was howling in pain. Yet that was not the worst of it, for sitting across the room, calmly cleaning out his pistol, was the last man in the world she had ever expected to see. He did not look up when she stumbled inside the parlor, but Lord Penny did.

  “Josephine,” he gasped, his face a mask of agony. “I have been shot!”

  Dazedly she looked back and forth between the two men, quite incapable of saying a word. Oh dear God in heaven, she thought, yearning to be swallowed up on the spot, for surely being cast into hell would be better than this.

  “Did you hear me?” the Viscount yelped. “That – that bloody bastard shot me! He shot me, Josie!”

  No one called her Josie. No one but her husband. Her eyes flicked to Lord Penny, taking note of the blood that seeped between his fingers as he clutched his leg, then skittered across the room to the other man who had finally set his gun aside. He did not rise, merely crossed his legs at the ankle and lounged back, propping his hands behind his head as if nothing was amiss. His gray eyes studied her, traveling with detached, scientific appraisal down her body and up again before dismissing her in one easy sweep.

  Josephine swallowed hard and pulled the sheet tighter around her bare shoulders. “I… I do not…” The words stuck in her throat, refusing to come out. Panicked, she began to retreat from the room with slow, measured steps.

  “Do you know who he is, Josie?” Lord Penny said, effectively halting her in her tracks. “The man who shot me! Do you know him?”

  Her cheeks paled. She pressed one hand to her chest, feeling the rapid beat of her heart. “Yes,” she managed to squeak, all of her carefully constructed layers of confidence stripped to the quick. “Yes I do.”

  Lord Penny’s eyes bulged. “Then who is the damn cur?” he demanded.

  Josephine braced one arm against the doorframe to hold herself up. “My husband,” she said, finally meeting Traverson’s cold gaze. “He is my husband.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  “Your husband?” Lord Penny echoed. Eyes wide, gunshot wound temporarily forgotten, he looked from Josephine to Traverson and back again. “I thought you were a widow.”

  “Amusing, really, how many people think that,” Traverson said. “But I can assure you I am very much alive.”

  Lord Penny nodded sagely. “I can see that. Pistols at dawn tomorrow, then?”

  “If it is all the same to you, I would rather not. I fear I do not have a natural affinity for firearms, nor do I have a desire to die before my time.”

  Josephine, who had tensed at the first mention of a duel, sagged against the doorframe in relief. She knew her husband did not like guns – she was still trying to comprehend how he had managed to shoot Lord Penny in the first place – and although there was no love lost between them, she certainly did not want to see the man dead. It was a little disconcerting, however, that he would not be moved by moral obligation to protect her honor.

  Apparently Lord Penny thoughts were of the same vein, for with an expression of disbelief he said, “No duel? But what of defending your wife’s good name?”

  “I cannot defend something that does not exist,” Traverson said flatly.

  Josephine’s gasp drew the attention of both men. Instinctively raising the sheet to her chin, she stared them down in turn, the high color in her cheeks the only indication she was flustered beyond all bearing. “Lord Penny I do believe it is time for your, ah, social call to be at an end. Good day to you, sir, and thank you for bringing me that medication, although it was quite inappropriate to attend to the matter at such an early hour.”

  “Medication?” said Lord Penny, his eyebrows drawing together in confusion. “I do not under—”

  “Oh just go,” she cried, stamping her foot. “You blundering idiot of a man. Get out, get out, GET OUT!”

  Spinning on his good leg, Lord Penny hobbled past her, paused, and turned half way around. “I would formally like to withdraw my invitation for marriage,” he informed her coolly.

  Josephine bared her teeth. Bending, she picked up the poker she had dropped upon entering the room. With a muffled yelp Lord Penny made all haste for the front door and slammed it behind him. The loud noise echoed through the still house, plucking at Josephine’s rattled nerves like a finely tuned bow. Had that really just happened? It was almost too unbelievable to be true. If only it were a dream… No, for surely it would be a nightmare and she always woke up from those.

  To be on the safe side she gave her arm a little pinch. When nothing happened she pinched harder, her brow furrowing from the effort. From the corner of the room Traverson gave a low chuckle.

  “If you are hoping this has all been but a bad dream, I am sorry to disappoint you.”

  Josephine lifted her chin to stare at him. As always, her stomach gave a little lurch when she met his cool gray eyes. It was not a pleasant lurch. Certainly not the kind one was supposed to feel when they gazed upon their husband. It was more akin to a stomach pain, or a side stitch.

  His hair had grown longer yet again, she noted absently. The last time she had seen him those dark curls had been at his collar.

  Now they reached with their typical unruliness all the way to his shoulders.

  Her fingers itched to tidy those mahogany locks. To comb them back from his face and collect them in a velvet ribbon, one gray as the sky before a summer storm to match his eyes.

  Josephine blinked. Now where had that thought come from? She abhorred the way Traverson presented himself. She always had. The buttons on his shirt were mismatched. His cravat and vest were missing all together. Mud stained his fawn colored breeches and dark brown boots. For a woman who cared for her appearance as fastidiously as Josephine did, being married to a man who cared not a whit for his own was irritating beyond all measure.

  Of course now, wearing nothing more than a sheet with her pale hair in wild disarray around her face and her lips swollen from another man’s kisses, Josephine hardly had room to complain. The guilt weighed heavily on her shoulders, as it always did, and she pushed it ruthlessly to the back of her mind, as she always did. I did not ask for this, she thought for the millionth time. I never wanted to be married, especially not to Traverson. We are as ill suited as any arranged couple I have ever come across.

  Squaring her shoulders, Josephine stared boldly at her husband, her gaze unflinching. He looked away first, his eyes dropping to study his hands. Rough on the inside and tanned on the out, they were not the hands of a gentleman lord, but rather those of a common laborer, born from hours spent outside conducting his research.

  “I see I have come at a bad time,” Traverson said quietl
y, not looking up.

  “Yes,” said Josephine, tossing back her hair. She took a deep breath, relief filling her as she felt her composure sliding back into place. It always seemed to leave her when Traverson was about, reducing her to nothing more than the babbling, idiotic young girl she had once been. The young girl who had dreamed of princes and fairytales, and had known nothing of the real world or the dangers it presented. She despised that young girl with every fiber of her being, and knew she could dispose of her entirely, if only for her husband.

  Josephine did not know why her carefully constructed layers of control slipped away when Traverson was near, nor did she care to. She knew only that they did, and she hated him all the more for it. “You know we have an arrangement. You must inform me of your intention to call before you simply show up on my doorstep like an uninvited pest.”

  A faint smile touched Traverson’s lips. He was never put out by her insults, as other men were. Instead he merely seemed to find them amusing, as if he knew something she did not.

  “Did you hear me?” Josephine asked, incensed by the smile that curved his mouth. She did not like it when he smiled. It showed off the slightest hint of a dimple in his left cheek, a dimple she could pretend did not exist as long as his expression remained stern, which of course it never did. Traverson was forever smiling at the most trivial of things. A clear blue sky. A bright sunset. A hawk circling low overhead. Once he had tried to point those things out to her, but had long ago given up when she did nothing but scoff.

  Honestly, what did he expect her to do? Cheer and clap at the sight of a silly bird? It was ridiculous.

  Traverson sat up a little straighter and uncrossed his ankles. “Of course I heard you,” he said mildly. “I am daft, not deaf. And I apologize for arriving while you were, er, entertaining other guests.” His eyebrow shot up, letting her know he had not been fooled for a minute as to the real reason Lord Penny had been in attendance. “However I wished to deliver your present with all post haste.”

  “My present?” Josephine asked suspiciously. Traverson never brought her presents. Other than the embarrassingly simple gold wedding band she kept locked away in her jewelry box, he had never gifted her with anything.

 

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