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Authors: Lynn Kerstan

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BOOK: Lady in Blue
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“I shall deliver it personally,” Lady Isabella informed her. “It will be a small adventure, and you have my word I shall tell no one. Naturally, you’ll owe me a favor in return. Shall we say another of Lyle’s excellent luncheons, perhaps Thursday next, during which I shall regale you with the success of my mission? Send word when you know your plans, Clare. I am counting on it.”

Clare gazed at her self-consciously.

“Use a footman, my dear. If you are to remain any time with Bryn, you must accustom yourself to luxury. He can afford to provide it, and it gives him pleasure to do so.”

With that the improbable vision took her leave, carrying in her purse a bank draft representing ten thousand guineas of the earl’s pleasure.

8

Later that afternoon,
Bryn entered Ernestine’s house through the back door. It had been three long days since he delivered Clare, with equal stealth, to the mansion on Grosvenor Square, and he was wild to see her again.

A servant led him to the music room, where Clare was seated at the piano plunking a discordant tune. She was wearing gloves, he noticed, but when had he ever seen her without them?

She stood immediately when the butler announced him. God, he’d thought her lovely wearing that heavy blue dress, but in a pale muslin gown with puffed sleeves that left her arms bare, she was breathtaking. Her long hair hung in a thick braid down her back, soft tendrils drifting over her ears and forehead.

“I’ve missed you,” he said simply.

“My lord,” she replied, her gaze focused on the carpet.

Not sure what to do next, he gestured to the piano bench. “Please go on. I am partial to music. Play a bit myself, actually.” When he moved closer, she resumed her place on the bench with her hands folded in her lap.

“I’ve not touched a piano for many years,” she said. “This is a wonderful instrument.”

He sat next to her, deliberately moving close. Her thigh felt warm and tense. “Do you like music then?” he inquired, rippling his fingers over the keyboard. “I learned to play as a boy but have forgot what little I knew. We can have a piano at Clouds if you like. In fact, that’s an excellent idea. I’ll find a teacher for you.”

Flushing, Clare said nothing.

“Lacey tells me we can move you over on Saturday next. Several of the downstairs rooms will not be finished, but he expects the bedroom to be ready.”

She erupted from the bench and fled to the bay window, arms clutched around her waist.

A woman condemned to the gallows might react like that. In silence he watched her take hold of herself, and when she turned around, her smile was pleasantly impersonal. He sighed.

“Excuse me a moment,” she said. “I’ll arrange for tea. Unless you prefer something else?”

“Tea will be fine.” She might have pulled the bell cord inches from her hand, but he knew she was looking for an excuse to leave the room. When the door closed, he let his fingers move over the keyboard, falling naturally into a haunting folk melody.

Was he handling this all wrong? He’d been so busy setting her up and rigging her out that he’d scarcely spent five minutes alone with her since their meeting at Clouds.

In part, that was essential. It was dangerous to be with her until he reclaimed control of himself. From experience he knew that virgins were inevitably nervous, even apprehensive, about the first night. But Clare was downright terrified, and growing more so each day the final accounting was delayed. Ought he carry her upstairs and have done with it? He banged a loud chord and stalked away from the piano, combing his fingers through his hair. Part of him thought it a good idea. All of his body thought so.

She wouldn’t want to do it in Ernie’s house, of course. She didn’t even like staying here. And he could not repeat the mistake of taking her into his own mansion at St. James’s Square. That part of his life must remain separate.

A hotel, perhaps. He knew an elegant and discreet establishment frequented by gentlemen and their lovers, although he’d never been there himself. But the idea of making love to Clare on mattresses and pillows used by others disgusted him. He could imagine her repulsion if they slunk into a hotel for an afternoon tumble.

Clare deserved better. The first time should be special. Memorable. So good it would make her want more. If he escorted her upstairs, or to a hotel, she’d be gone by sunrise, and there had not been time for the Runners to trace her background. Worse, Florette had disappeared, without so much as a goodbye. Whatever she knew about Clare had gone with her.

No, the first plan was best. He would ease her gently into an enduring relationship. Past time he learned how to court a woman, he reflected. He’d never done so before, but why should an expensive mistress require wooing and seducing? He was an attentive lover, which ought to suffice.

But Clare was . . . Clare. And worth any degree of trouble. He had five days to entice her into his bed, more if necessary, but she’d be expecting him to claim her Saturday night. By then it was unlikely he’d be able to resist.

Bryn heard the door open and returned to the piano, trying to play the song that had come so effortlessly to his fingers when he wasn’t thinking about it. This time the results were not so good.

A maid placed a tray on a table near the piano and left with a curtsy.

“I prefer tea without milk and with a great deal of honey,” he told Clare, stealing a glance at her as she followed his instructions. She added nothing to her own cup, he noted. “Tonight,” he said, after tasting the tea and nodding approval, “we shall go to the opera.”

Her cup rattled in its saucer. Deliberately, she set it on the tray. “I do not wish to appear in public, my lord. That was not part of our agreement.”

Standing, he held out his hand. “Come here, Clare.” He led her to a small divan and sat beside her at an angle so he could see her face. “We must talk,” he said gently. She stared back at him, her gaze somber. “Tell me what is troubling you, my dear. Have I said something, or done something, to make you afraid?”

“You have been all that is kind,” she said in an expressionless voice. “I simply do not wish to go where people can look at me.”

“Do you think to hide away at Clouds twenty-four hours a day?” He regarded her speculatively. “Or is it that you expect to be there only twenty-four hours?”

Her lips tightened.

“I realize,” he said carefully, “that you have made me no promises beyond the first night. Perhaps you are unable to think any further, and for that I am sorry. Things have not been as I hoped, and the delay is unsettling to us both.”

“Yes.”

So guarded, he thought, massaging her palm with his thumb. So many barriers between them, like these damned gloves. She never took them off, not when she stripped naked for him that morning in his study, not even when she played the piano. Curious, he began to peel the supple leather from her wrist.

She recoiled, snatching her hand from his grasp as if he’d burned her.

He raised a quizzical brow. “Only your glove, princess. No more than that.”

“Please don’t,” she said, clearly distressed.

After a moment, he held out his own hand. “I rather think I must. Come, my dear, let me see what you are hiding.”

In the long silence that followed, he thought she was going to refuse him—and wondered how he would react if she did. But finally, her arm trembling, she placed her hand in his and allowed him to remove the glove.

Her fingers were long and slender, the nails clipped short. A lovely hand, he was thinking as he turned it over and caught sight of the palm. “My God,” he whispered between clenched teeth. “Who did this to you?”

She stared at a spot over his shoulder, her face impassive. “I was punished, for insolence and disobedience. Mostly for my ungovernable temper. It was a long time ago.”

“By your father?” he demanded.

She shook her head. “Papa was the sweetest man ever lived. He could not step on a spider.”

“Tell me, Clare. I’ll persist until you do.”

She released a sigh. “It was my stepmother. And she had been hurt, by someone she loved before she married Papa. I suspect she went a little mad.”

“Bloody hell, how could any man let a child be whipped like this? Why didn’t your father protect you?”

“He died soon after they were married, Bryn. And she’s dead too, so what does any of it matter now? Besides, I deserved to be punished. I could do nothing to please her, and after a while I stopped trying. She never beat me unless I defied her openly.” She met his gaze steadily, as if they were discussing the weather. “I should warn you, my lord. The bottoms of my feet are marked in the same way.”

Her face became a blur. Gripped by a fierce rage, he lowered his head and kissed the webbing of scars on her hand. Then he pressed her palm to his chest, over his heart. “I would avenge you if I could, butterfly, and comfort you if I knew how, but I feel as helpless as you must have been when your stepmother took a cane to you. Only remember, you are not responsible, in any way, for her cruelty. I forbid you to blame yourself.” His lips quirked. “If insolence and bad temper merited a whipping, I would be scarred from head to toe by now.”

“Perhaps you will be,” she replied with a touch of spirit. “Later in this life, or the one hereafter.”

“That’s my girl,” he said appreciatively. “From now on, I hope you’ll not wear those gloves when we are alone together.” Once again, he pressed his lips to the scars. “And since you have gifted me with a confidence, in all fairness I should return one of my own. What would you like to know?”

“Gifted?”
she inquired with a delicately arched brow.

“As you say. I forced the issue. But this is your chance to do the same, so fire away.” He leaned back and folded his arms behind his head, prepared for the worst.

“Very well,” she said primly. “I should like to know precisely why you will only bed a virgin.”

He winced. “I ought to have expected that question. And you have a right to know, I suppose, although I don’t like explaining the reasons. Especially to an innocent girl. What do you know of the pox, Clare?”

Her eyes widened. “I’ve heard of it, or perhaps read about it. Is it like smallpox?”

“No. I refer to syphilis, which is contracted by having carnal knowledge of someone who has the disease. Any man or woman who is profligate gambles with the devil. Prostitutes, and the men who seek them out, risk their lives every time money changes hands. Even one encounter with an infected lover can be a sentence of death. For that reason I take only virgin mistresses and demand fidelity while they are under my protection.” He gazed at the ceiling. “Does that answer your question?”

She took a moment to answer. “In part. But my God, how could
anyone
chance becoming ill for a few minutes of—well, whatever one experiences when . . .” Her voice faded off.

He sat forward, propped his elbows on his knees, and buried his chin between his hands. “Ah, Clare. I cannot explain in words why I need a woman in my bed, or why a woman desires a man. You will understand when we are lovers. And you can be assured that you are safe with me, as I am with you.”

She put her hand on his thigh. “You have a deeper reason for taking such care. I hear it in your voice. Do you want to tell me?”

He managed a wry grin. “Not until you answer another question about yourself, my dear. One confidence at a time, in equal measure. Agreed?”

“Perhaps it is better that way. But if it’s now my turn to share a secret, we’ll make no further progress.”

“Have you so many secrets, butterfly?”

“None to speak of,” she said tranquilly. “Shall I enjoy the opera, do you think?”

Recognizing submission, Bryn came to his feet. “You’ll either like it or hate it, but you must judge for yourself.”

“Will everyone stare at me?”

“I have a prominent box, Clare. We can’t help but be noticed. Still, it is not my intention to flaunt you in public. I love the opera, even the silliness and high theatrics, and wish to share it with you.” He didn’t give her time to change her mind. “I shall collect you at nine o’clock. We needn’t arrive for the preliminary concert, which is always terrible, nor stay for the afterpiece. Will you wear the gold silk? Lacey told me it had been delivered.”

He kept track of her wardrobe? Clare studied his face, reading nothing there but sincerity and something that looked like friendliness. “As you wish, my lord.”

“Until tonight,” he said with a bow. “And please, call me Bryn. Or any name you choose that does not set us at distance. You cannot hold me away with words, Clare, however hard you try.”

“I don’t mean to,” she confessed. “But you are so . . .
lordly.

He laughed. “You won’t think so when you know me better.”

IF BRYN EXPECTED gratitude, he was disappointed.

“I don’t want it,” Clare told him flatly when he opened the satin-lined case and held out an exquisite gold-and-topaz necklace.

“Someday perhaps you will. And jewelry is
de rigueur
at
the opera. Do you wish everyone to think me a pinchpenny?”

“Perish the thought,” she said, as he fastened the clasp at her nape. His hand lingered there until she deliberately swung around.

“It suits you,” he remarked before she could speak. “As does your gown. You are always beautiful, Clare, but especially so tonight.”

And so was he, she reflected, while he hooked a matching bracelet around her wrist. The earl was rigged out in evening dress, all black and white except for the pale gold lining of his cape and the darker gold of his brocade waistcoat. A diamond stickpin winked from his cravat.

“I am quite put in the shade by my escort,” she said a little breathlessly. “You are altogether magnificent.”

He stepped back, an astonished look on his face. “Was that a compliment?”

“I’m afraid so.” She tilted her head. “It pains me to flatter you, for you are too vain as it is, but I could not help myself.”

He looked absurdly pleased. “Thank you. That may be the first kind thing you ever said to me. I shall contrive to remember magnificent,” he added with a wink, “and forget the retraction that followed.”

BOOK: Lady in Blue
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