“Are you all right?”
He whispered the words, watched her eyes focus.
“Yes.” The reply came on a soft exhalation. She licked her lips, looked briefly at his. Cleared her throat. “That was…”
Leonora couldn’t find any word that sufficed.
His lips kicked up at the end. “Stupendous.”
She met his gaze, knew better than to nod. Could only wonder at the madness that had gripped her.
And the hunger, the raw need that had gripped him.
His eyes were dark, but softer, not sharp as they usually were. He seemed to sense her wonder; his lips curved. He touched them to hers.
“I want you.” His lips brushed hers again. “In every possible way.”
She heard the truth, recognized its ring. Had to wonder. “Why?”
He nudged her head back, set his lips cruising her jaw. “Because of this. Because I’ll never have enough of you.”
She could sense the power of his hunger rising again. Felt the sensation of him within her grow more definite.
“Again?” She heard the stunned amazement in her voice.
He answered with a low growl that might have been a very male chuckle. “Again.”
She never should have agreed—acquiesced—to that heated second mating among the tablecloths.
Sipping her tea at the breakfast table the next morning, Leonora made a firm resolution not to be so weak in future—during the rest of the month that was left to them. Trentham—Tristan as he’d insisted she call him—had finally escorted her back to the reception rooms with a smug, wholly male, proprietory air she’d found irritating in the extreme. Especially given she suspected his smugness derived from his entrenched belief that she would find his lovemaking so addictive she’d blindly agree to marry him.
Time would teach him his error. In the meantime, it behooved her to exercise some degree of caution.
She hadn’t, after all, intended to acquiesce to even a first mating, let alone the second.
Nevertheless…she had learned more, had definitely added to her store of experience. Given the terms of their agreement, she had nothing to fear—the impulse, the physical need that brought them together
Except for the possibility of a child.
The notion floated into her mind. Reaching for another slice of toast, she considered it. Considered, surprised, her initial impulsive reaction to it.
Not what she’d expected.
A frown growing in her eyes, she waited for common sense to reassert itself.
Eventually acknowledged that her interaction with Trentham was teaching her, revealing to her, things about herself she’d never known.
Never even suspected.
Through the following days, she kept herself busy, studying Cedric’s journals and dealing with Humphrey and Jeremy and the customary round of daily life in Montrose Place.
In the evenings, however…
She started to feel like the perennial Cinderella, going to ball after ball and night after night inevitably ending in the arms of her prince. An exceedingly handsome, masterful prince who never failed, despite her firm resolve, to sweep her off her feet…and into some private place where they could indulge their senses, and that flaring need to be together, to share their bodies and be one.
His success was startling; she had no idea how he managed it. Even when she avoided the obvious choice of entertainment, guessing which event he would expect her to attend and attending some other, he never failed to materialize at her side the instant she walked into the room.
As for his knowledge of their hostesses’ houses, that was beginning to border on the bizarre. She had spent far more time than he in the ton, and that more recently, yet with unerring accuracy he would lead her to a small parlor, or a secluded library or study, or a garden room.
By the end of the week she was starting to feel seriously hunted.
Starting to realize she might have underestimated the feeling between them.
Or, even more frightening, had totally misjudged its nature.
Chapter
There was very little Tristan didn’t know about establishing a network of informers.
Lady Warsingham’s coachman saw no difficulty in providing the local streetsweeper with news of whither he’d been instructed he would be heading each evening; one of Tristan’s footmen would go strolling at noon to meet with the streetsweeper and return with the news.
His own household staff were proving exemplary sources, intrigued and eager to supply him with details of the houses Leonora chose to grace with her presence. And Gasthorpe had exercised his own initiative and handed Tristan a vital contact.
Toby, the Carlings’s bootboy, inhabited the kitchen of Number 14 and therefore was privy to his masters’ and mistress’s intended directions. The lad was always eager to hear the ex–sergeant major’s tales; in return, he innocently provided Tristan with intelligence on Leonora’s daytime activities.
That evening, she’d elected to attend the Marchioness of Huntly’s gala. Tristan sauntered in a few minutes before he estimated the Warsingham party would arrive.
Lady Huntly greeted him with a twinkle in her eye. “I understand,” she said, “that you have a particular interest in Miss Carling?”
He met her gaze, wondering…“Most particular.”
“In that case, I should warn you that a number of my nephews are expected to attend tonight.” Lady Huntly patted his arm. “Just a word to the wise.”
He inclined his head and moved into the crowd, wracking his brains for the relevant connection. Her nephews? He was about to go and look for Ethelreda or Millicent, both of whom were somewhere in the room, to request clarification, when he recalled Lady Huntly had been born a Cynster.
Muttering a curse, he executed an immediate about-face and took up a position close by the main doors.
Leonora entered a few minutes later; he claimed her hand the instant she was free of the receiving line.
She raised her brows at him; he could see a comment regarding overt possessiveness forming in her mind. Placing his hand over hers, he squeezed her fingers. “Let’s get your aunts settled, then we can dance.”
She met his eyes. “Just a dance.”
A warning, one he had no intention of heeding. Together, they escorted her aunts to a group of chaises where many of the older ladies had gathered.
“Good evening, Mildred.” A bedezined old dame nodded regally.
Lady Warsingham nodded back. “Lady Osbaldestone. I believe you’ll remember my niece, Miss Carling?”
The old dame, still handsome in her way but with terrifyingly sharp black eyes, surveyed Leonora, who curtsied. The old harridan snorted. “Indeed I remember you, miss—but you’ve no business being a miss still.” Her gaze moved on to Tristan. “Who’s this?”
Lady Warsingham performed the introductions; Tristan bowed.
Lady Osbaldestone humphed. “Well, one can hope you’ll succeed in changing Miss Carling’s mind. The dancing’s through there.”
With her cane, she waved toward an archway beyond which couples were whirling. Tristan seized the implied dismissal. “If you’ll excuse us?”