“He did?” She clapped in delight. “Well, I am immeasurably happy for her.
Monsieur Le Coq seems like a . . . a . . . that is to say, he is a—”
“French chef.”
Her stomach was all butterflies. The air in the hothouse was sweetly scented and warm. “Was that it?” she asked. “What you did back there? Was that the inappropriate touch I am to have?”
“It suits the terms o’ yer wager.”
“Our wager.”
He moved close and the budding branches of a peach tree framed his handsome face and wide shoulders. “Our wager,” he repeated.
“You startled me, you know. I am unaccustomed to men groping my behind.”
His brows rose. “I should hope so.”
“You sound like Lady Elspeth.”
The twinkle she adored lit his eyes. “’Tis the first time anybody’s accused me o’ that, to be sure.”
“About that inappropriate touch . . .” Her mouth was terribly dry. She licked her lips.
“Do that again,” he said in a low voice.
“Do what again?”
“Lick yer lips.”
She did it, and it felt like wicked sin to do it expressly for him.
He took her face in his hands and covered her mouth with his. It was certainly testament to his extraordinary skill in kissing that she experienced the descent of his hand in a sort of molten haze of pleasure. When his palm came to rest at the small of her back then slipped down to possess her buttock, this time thoroughly and securely, she heard herself moan into his mouth.
“I want to feel ye against me, Teresa Finch-Freeworth o’ Brennon Manor at Harrows Court Crossing in Cheshire,” he said huskily over her lips, his hand stroking her behind. “All o’ ye.”
“I—” She grabbed hold of his coat and nodded. “I believe the terms of the wager allow for that.”
He drew her against him and it did not feel distasteful like when the bounder had pushed her against the gunroom wall, but a little alarming and very good. His chest and thighs were hard and her breasts flattened as he crushed her against him. Nothing except resting on her belly had ever caused her breasts to do anything other than stick out too far, and then they always made it too uncomfortable to sleep. This was
Twining her hands into his waistcoat, she let him bear her back against the hothouse wall, and at that moment was introduced to that particular hardness the likes of which Annie had been telling her about for years —a
But they were not married and were unlikely to become married. He was kissing her because she had invited him to do so with a wager, the terms of which were truly impossible to fulfill even given her early serendipitous success. And although he wanted her to go away and had in fact told her so in no uncertain terms, she was kissing him back and allowing him to press her thighs apart with his knee and massage her behind with his strong fingers until she was mad for some uncertain satisfaction. When his hands urged her hips against his she arced to him. For a fleeting instant she knew a frisson of gratification, an instant that made her seek it again. It felt
“
The rumble in his chest echoed her gasp. He kissed her neck, his mouth hot on her tender skin, and the humid air of summer bursting with life and sex surrounded her and filled her head and body with yearning. Six years of need, a young womanhood of frustrated passion desperate to find a mate, seemed to burst from her and fed itself into her clutching hands and her gasps of pleasure.
He held her against him and spoke at her throat. “Why did ye chuise me, Teresa?”
“Why did I—
“I’ve nothing.” He nipped at her lower lip and a tingling rush filled her belly.
“No money.” His hands bracketed her hips, his fingertips caressing, pleasing.
“A crumbling castle. A brood o’ wimmenfolk I canna even clothe properly. A benighted title no proud man would wish to claim.” His voice was heavy with bewilderment and need. “Why me?”
She ran her palms along his arms, solid and bunched with tension, and groaned from the echoing tension deep in her. “I don’t know.”
His hands stilled. “Ye
“I dinna ken!” She opened her eyes. “It was a fantasy, a dream, a make-
believe story like the stories I always tell. But this time I told it to myself.” The words stumbled from her tongue. “I saw you that night at the ball, and you were so far beyond my reach, and I invented it but I never expected it to come true. I don’t really know how I actually went through with it, came to London and went to your flat and proposed to you. Propositioned you. It was a dream.
An impossible dream. It still feels like a dream, for I cannot have possibly traveled so far from being the exceedingly proper wife of the local vicar to kissing an earl with a dark and violent past in a hothouse. It is unthinkable.”
“’Tis anly a dream, yet ye’ve gone an done this to me?” His eyes seemed to plead and accuse at once. But he had done it all to her, taken her in his arms and touched her and made her need not some ephemeral taste of spring, but
His arms fell away from her and he stepped back. “The exceedingly proper wife o’ the local vicar?” he said in a thick voice.
“Not yet. And
“Ye’d be a poor match for a beadle.”
“If by beadle you mean a vicar, I consider that a compliment.” She lifted her hands to her flaming cheeks. “Now what?”
“Nou, Miss Teresa Finch-Freeworth,” he said in his beautiful rolling brogue, a muscle contracting in his jaw. “Ye leave.”
Of course. He had paid on the wager. He owed her nothing more.
She moved around him toward the door, but he grasped her hand and stayed her.
“Ye’ve got me so I dinna ken what’s up or down.”
“Then the sentiment is mutual.”
She disengaged from his grasp and left the hothouse. As she walked rapidly along the path toward the picnic blankets, willing away the heat in her cheeks and the quivering in her blood and the sudden acute disappointment of having gotten what she wanted but not at all what she began to realize she needed, she noticed a small carriage alongside the others.
She recognized it, as well as the soberly clad gentleman disembarking from it. Like the devil, the Reverend Elijah Waldon had arrived at the ideal moment to cause the most damage.
Her vicar was a starched, priggish pole of a Sassenach, and Duncan took a quick disliking to any parents who would seek to ally their vibrant, passionate daughter with such a man.
She affected the introductions with grace. Only a hint of dismay in her lily pad eyes conveyed her displeasure over welcoming Waldon to her party.
Duncan shook the man’s hand and found his grip surprisingly firm.
“How fortunate you gentlemen are,” Waldon said expansively, “to enjoy the company of so many lovely ladies.” He chuckled as though he’d uttered a witticism.
“Will ye join us for refreshments, Reverend?” Elspeth said.