My Three Masters

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Authors: Juniper Bell

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My Three Masters

Juniper
Bell

 

This book is the sequel to
My Three Lords

.

It’s been years since the Marquis
de Beaumont, London’s most notorious rake, felt anything more than sexual need.
But something about the mysterious nursemaid Miranda Brown catches his eye. Why
is her face so terribly scarred? Why does her speech slip into the cadence of
the upper class? Why is she haunting his dreams?

Miranda is used to hiding in plain
sight. After fleeing her vicious guardian, she’s wary of everyone, especially
the Marquis, who stars in her most secret nighttime fantasies. But not even her
fantasies could prepare her for the truth about the Marquis, the Duke, the Earl
and the Countess…or for the intense passion that flares between them. As the
secrets from her past begin to surface, she fears their fragile bond won’t
survive, and that not even her three masters will be able to save her from a
cruel fate.

 

An
Exotika®
Regency BDSM ménage erotica
story from Ellora’s Cave

 

My Three Masters
Juniper Bell

 

Prologue

 

Once upon a time, I was a girl with a future. It shimmered
on the horizon like a name day gift waiting to be unwrapped, more wondrous than
I could ever imagine. If I thought about it—and I rarely did so, since my
present held my full, fascinated attention—I assumed it would contain the usual
marvels. Passionate gentlemen, glittering balls, blue twilights, fresh dew on a
morning rose petal, sweet kisses, plump babies.

I had no knowledge about how such things were connected. If
I’d been asked, I would have said that kisses must contain some sort of magic,
a magic of the heart that, in due time, blossomed into a new life. Such
innocence came to an end the day I turned sixteen. The day a whip, in the hands
of my guardian, slashed across my cheek, forever scarring my face and rending
the world as I knew it.

How can a whiplash destroy so much and yet launch a journey
that transforms innocence into ecstasy beyond all comprehension? Perhaps I was
correct, and there does exist a magic of the heart… Not to mention certain
other parts of the anatomy…

Chapter One

Beaumont House—October 1812

 

The Marquise de Beaumont was dying. Her household followed
her strict command to keep this fact from society at large; to do otherwise
would invite the cruel vengeance in which their mistress specialized. All the
servants carried on as usual. The housemaids dusted, the cook created
ten-course dinners, the scullery maid cleaned the pots, the footmen stood ready
to serve, the grooms tended the horses, the butler answered the door. If no one
ate the meals, if the butler had to relay more and more creative reasons for
the Marquise’s withdrawal from society, why, it was simply one more odd
development in an already unusual household.

Only one servant was admitted into the Marquise’s presence.

The infamous Marquis de Beaumont sprawled in an armchair in
the corner of his wife’s bedchamber and watched with hooded eyes as Miranda
Brown quietly entered the room with a tray. On it sat a bowl. A pleasant steam
rose from its depths, smelling of chicken and cozy winter nights. He watched
her breathe it in, saw her eyelids flicker.

His wife’s nurse might dress like a wren; she might have
hair the color of a prickly horsehide chair; she might say no words other than
those required; she might have a hideous gash of a scar marring her face; but
the Marquis knew the truth about her. Miranda Brown was a sensualist.

“Ma’am,” she murmured, coming close to the Marquise’s bed.
The sick woman opened her eyes the merest slit. Iridescent teal shone through.
Men had dueled to the death over those eyes. It was said the Duke of Annan had
fled to the New World to forget her. She’d broken hearts from Scotland to
Italy, and even India during a brief sojourn on the other side of the world.
She’d fucked more men, in more different ways and combinations, than could fit
inside Parliament. She’d blazed across London society as if she were a sexually
overheated comet, and now she was dying in a solitary bed, attended by one
plain girl and her much-despised husband.

It certainly made one reflect.

The Marquise waved one skeletal hand. “Couldn’t possibly,”
she said. “Table.”

“Please,” said Miranda firmly. “I made it special. It has
herbs in it that will give you ease and comfort.”

The Marquise opened her eyes another, more interested, slit.
At this point, Beaumont knew, comfort was all she could hope for. She opened
her mouth and let Miranda dribble a spoonful of soup between her lips.

The Marquis narrowed his eyes, homing in on Miranda’s plump
bottom lip, which was caught between her white teeth as she concentrated on her
task. Something didn’t quite ring true about Miranda. Her speech was that of
the servant class—except when it wasn’t. On occasion a few words slipped out
that were purely of the aristocratic sort. When she was tired, she sounded more
like a proper young miss about to make her come-out than a nurse-companion at
the beck and call of a monster.

“Mmm,” said the Marquise, a slight smile curving her
glorious lips. Odd that only her mouth and eyes should show no sign of the
disease wasting her body. “Hideous, but soothing.”

“Yes ma’am.”

“Is that you, Gerard?”

Miranda looked up sharply. Ah, so she hadn’t noticed him.
She wasn’t as attuned to his presence as he was to hers. Pity. Or a challenge.
The broth sloshed in the bowl. She stilled the bowl with a quick gesture.

“I thought I smelled your filthy rotten person,” continued
the Marquise.

“I wonder why I take the trouble to bathe at all. It seems
to have no effect.”

“Some things can’t be washed away,” said the Marquise
darkly.

“Indeed. A fact that must be greatly on your mind these
days.”

Miranda’s drab breast rose and fell with a long breath. The
Marquis, through close observation, knew how the corrosive relationship between
her employers upset her. She wasn’t a member of the
haut ton
, which
considered their vitriolic barbs weapons in a highly enjoyable spectator sport.

“As a matter of fact, it is. I want to make a will.”

“May I point out that the ritual emasculating of the males
in your vicinity does not confer maleness upon you?”

“Women make wills.”

“If they have possessions of which to dispose. Everything
you have belongs to me.”

She’d come to him with nothing. She’d been no one—less than
no one. She’d been an actress reduced to performing sexual scenarios in French
brothels when he’d become obsessed with her and married her to spite his
family. Instead of being grateful, she’d proceeded to unleash the full force of
her rage on him and the society in which he lived.

“Or perhaps you have some small mementoes of your former
life? Handcuffs? A whip?”

Miranda gave a tiny flinch, invisible save to someone as
highly observant as the Marquis. “Must you…?” She burst out, then subsided back
into her usual invisibility.

“It’s not your concern,” the Marquise told her sharply. “I
intend to pass on as I have been, no better, no worse. The one quality of my
husband I have always appreciated, aside from his talented cock, is his
honesty. I expect no less now.”

A slow wave of crimson crept up Miranda’s delicate cheeks.
She averted her face. From this side, she looked like the most perfect of
angels, a Madonna in dun-colored muslin. From the other side, Gerard knew, she
looked like a hideously malformed ogre.

“Must you embarrass the girl?” murmured Gerard.

“In my employ, she’s already seen and heard more than most
Covent Garden whores.”

Miranda busied herself with the bowl and spoon. Gerard would
have paid a handsome sum to know what was passing through her thoughts at that
moment. Whatever it was made her hands tremble and her pulse quicken. He could
feel it from across the room.

As an experiment, he rose to his feet and lazily strolled
closer. The Marquise held up one commanding hand. “Some distance, if you
please.”

The Marquis halted. He had no need to go closer; he had his
answer. The girl’s pulse was skittering like that of a trapped mouse. So he
unnerved her. Hardly a surprise. He unnerved most people, except for his dear,
soon-to-be-departed wife.

And the three lovers who had become the true home of his
heart.

He returned to the armchair and rested his head on one hand.
“May I remind you, my vicious one, that you requested my presence here today?”

The Marquise motioned to Miranda for a sip of water. The
girl held it to her lips. When she withdrew the cup, the Marquise’s lips glowed
ruby red and wet. “I had no choice. You are, despite my most determined efforts
to cuckold you in the most humiliating ways possible, still my husband.”

Gerard barely blinked. The days when she could hurt him with
her treachery were long over. “Your lord and master, in fact.”

She bared her teeth. “Do you know, Gerard, that I can
pinpoint the precise date you ceased caring about anything I did?”

“I’m surprised you would even notice such an event.”

She patted her mouth with her lace handkerchief. “It ruined
my fun. Of course I noticed it. I’ve always wanted to know exactly what goes on
at Warrington House.”

The Marquis smiled darkly. “Did you now?”

“There’s no need for secrets now, is there? I even paid a
footman to report back with anything untoward.”

“Then you know all there is to know.”

“Indeed not. Apparently he received a better offer.”

The Marquis snorted. The Duke of Warrington was no sap, nor
was his lady love, Lady Alicia, nor, for that matter, was Lady Alicia’s
husband, the Earl of Dorchester, the Duke’s heir. “Foiled again, I see.”

“I don’t suppose you would submit to a dying woman’s request
and reveal all, would you?”

Hellfire.
“No,” he said shortly. Even on her
deathbed, he didn’t trust his wife. And his secrets did not belong only to him.

“Ma’am,” said Miranda softly, “I must go fetch your willow
bark tea.”

“Then go,” she said with her accustomed irritation. “You
need not inform me of each and every thing you do in the course of a day.”

“No ma’am.” Miranda carefully put the bowl on the side
table, settled the tray under her arm and stepped quietly to the door.

“Can you make that swill taste any better?” the Marquise
called after her.

“I’ll see what can be done.” Miranda’s tranquil voice
floated from the corridor. It baffled Gerard that she managed to retain that
air of fragile serenity under the constant barrage of the Marquise’s nastiness.

“You don’t deserve that girl,” he told his wife. “I’m
shocked she hasn’t turned tail by now.”

“Where would she go? Who else would hire a monstrous-looking
chit like that? Still, I agree she’s been a great comfort during this past
year. Her desperation and mine have been of mutual benefit.”

Desperation? Gerard didn’t like hearing such a word applied
to the gentle Miranda. But why wouldn’t she be desperate? How many households
would be willing to hire a girl with such a terrible mark on her face?

“I’d like to make certain she isn’t ill-treated after I’m
gone.”

Gerard gazed at his wife in astonishment. He couldn’t recall
her ever, in the fifteen years they’d been married, expressing any concern for
the well-being of any other creature unless it benefited her.

“But you’ll be dead,” he pointed out.

“Indeed.”

“Her gratitude will do you no good.”

“Maybe I’m trusting this one final kind thought will help me
into heaven.”

“That’s a heavy burden to place on one thought.”

The Marquise pulled herself into a sitting position. For a
moment, Gerard was shocked at how much more flesh she’d lost since the last
time he’d seen her. She resembled a skeleton wrapped in nearly transparent
skin. She looked tiny in the huge four-poster with its luxurious bounty of
gold-embroidered pillows. Her bedchamber, decorated in erotically ornate tones
of scarlet and bronze, had always had the air of an Ottoman harem. The only
difference he could see now was the absence of the mirror she’d once installed
over the bed.

Watching oneself fuck was probably much more enjoyable than
watching oneself die.

“Gerard. Pay attention.” She snapped her fingers at him.
“We’re discussing my dying wishes. Show a little respect.”

He tilted his head. “As you command.”

“I’m talking about my nurse, Miranda. The reason she’s never
left me is that she owes me her life. I found her in a brothel.”

The Marquis’ whole body tightened.

“Her job was to tend to the whores who became diseased. I
feel certain she would have contracted something sooner or later. I convinced
her that her chances of survival would be much higher if she became my private
nurse.”

“One Marquise de Beaumont versus a brothel full of whores.
Some might say she made a strange choice.”

A glimmer of a smile ghosted across her white face. “Since,
according to you, I cannot make a will, I’ll make a request. I want you to find
her a decent position after I’m gone. I don’t want her to return to the
brothel, or to the lepers or the hospital or to any of the places she may see
as her only choice. She has a gift for bringing ease. Many times I’ve awoken in
the blackest frame of mind, prepared to commit murder or worse, only to find my
mood lightened by a touch or a word from that girl.”

The Marquis stayed silent out of sheer bafflement. He’d
waited fifteen years for evidence of a heart beneath his wife’s icy exterior.
Who would have guessed a plain, quiet nurse would bring it to the fore?

“In many ways,” mused the Marquise, fingering the lace on her
pillowcase, “this past year has been one of the sweetest I remember, thanks to
her. She’s given me more kindness than I likely deserve.”

The Marquis could think of no good answer to that. “You
despise me. Why would you trust me to do anything for you once you’re gone?”

“An excellent question. Yes, I despise you. But not you, in
and of yourself. I despise what you represent. Power. Arrogance. Gratification
of one’s needs.”

“Unless they happen to be yours.”

“Did I say that I don’t despise myself? I’ve gloried in my
own selfishness, I’ve reveled in it. But that poor child out there has devoted
herself to me heart and soul for the past year. I owe her.”

The glittering iridescent eyes softened. Her eyelids drooped
and suddenly she looked extremely tired. The Marquis jumped to his feet, ready
to adjust a pillow or some other task, but once more she put up a determined
hand.

“I don’t love you. I spent my married years venting my
hatred on you. But I know you to be a man of honor. You may be the most
infamous rake in England, but you are also someone who doesn’t prevaricate. And
so I am placing my trust in you. Will you honor my last request?”

She gave a light cough, which nearly masked the light tap on
the door that signaled Miranda’s return. “Enter,” she said, still coughing.

Miranda hurried in, the tray laden with another steaming
dish. She stopped in her tracks at the sound of the Marquise’s racking cough.
“Milady, I beg your pardon, one of the footmen knocked against me, completely
by accident, of course, and I was forced to brew another pot of willow bark
tea. Please, no more talking. Please, my lord, she must rest.” Her alarm was so
great, she actually turned and met the Marquis’ gaze. Big, clear brown eyes,
the color of the finest Earl Grey tea, framed with thick sable lashes, pleaded
with him.

“Your word,” insisted the Marquise, as Miranda brought the
tea to her lips.

He nodded reluctantly. What, precisely, was he promising?

“Ma’am, please drink. I beg you.”

Satisfied, the Marquise took a long swallow of willow bark
tea, then made a face. “Horrid. Absolutely horrid. Girl, I’ve made him promise.
He’s good for it. When I’m gone, he’ll look after you.”

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