The Countess Conspiracy (37 page)

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Authors: Courtney Milan

Tags: #courtney milan, #historical romance, #rake, #scoundrel, #heiress, #scientist, #victorian, #victorian romance, #sexy historical romance, #widow

BOOK: The Countess Conspiracy
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“I think you’re cheating.”

He set his hands on her ankles and looked up at her. His grin was cocky and untamed. “I know I am,” he told her, and he slid his hands up. Up, under her shift, up until he encountered the linen of her drawers.

Up further still, past her knees, her thighs, sliding until he found the waistband of her drawers.

Somehow, he managed to undo the tie with one hand. In the dark. Under her shift. Thank God for rakes.

“Shall I cheat some more?” he asked.

He didn’t wait for an answer. He leaned forward and kissed her on her shift over her navel. And then—because he’d hiked the fabric to her waist and was sliding her drawers down, his mouth brushed her skin below, sliding down, down.

“Oh, please,” Violet gasped. “Cheat desperately.”

He slid his tongue between her thighs, and this time, her knees really did give way. He caught her gently, laid her on the bed, and then bent over her. God, that felt good—so good—to be able to relax into the magic of his touch and let the world slide away.

To fear nothing. He swept away all her cares, drowning them in sweet pleasures. In the pressure of his mouth on the center of her pleasure, the strength of his fingers, sliding up her body. She was close—so close to that moment—

He lifted his head.

“Oh, God, Sebastian. Don’t stop.”

“But I won,” he announced.

“You…won?” Her whole body echoed with want, so close to completion that she almost vibrated with need.

“Indeed.” He held up her shift, which he’d untangled from her arms. “I undressed you first.”

She might have argued—if she’d had another night with him, she probably would have. But she had only tonight.

She raised herself up on one elbow. “What do you win? Something wicked?”

“Something wonderful,” he said solemnly.

Yes. She could give him that. Something perfect. Something for tonight, something to remember her by. He took off his coat, his waistcoat. He undid his belt, winking at her as he did. He slid his trousers and smallclothes down, revealing the crumpled tails of his shirt and strong thighs dusted in dark hair, thick-muscled calves. Her mouth went dry.

He lifted his shirt over his head, revealing the planes of his chest at the same time as his thick, hard erection pointing toward her.

He turned away for a moment and then came back.

“Here,” he said, sliding something into her hand. “This is a sheath.”

It was made of a flexible material. Not of animal intestine, as she’d been expecting.

“Vulcanized rubber,” he told her, as if he’d followed the chain of her thoughts, “and if you ask me about the process at this moment, you’ll owe me two ices.”

She couldn’t help but smile in the darkness.

“Here’s my prize. I want you to help me put it on.”

She slid her hand over his penis. It was long and smooth, the shaft firm to her touch.

“It rolls.” His hand came over hers, adjusting the rubber over the head of his cock. It was dark and swollen; she touched it tentatively, and then, when his breath hissed in, with more firmness.

“God, Violet.”

It seemed almost a shame to cover that magnificence—but she did, sliding the material over the head and then down. She reached the end of the sheath—and then realized there was nothing else to do.

Nothing but…

He leaned down and kissed her again, a leisurely kiss, as if they weren’t on the brink of intercourse, as if his limbs weren’t tangled with hers. It was a kiss that made her believe they had all the time in the world.

Lies, those kisses. They had only tonight.

But she let his kisses whisper sweet falsehoods to her. She even allowed herself to believe them—to give herself up to the gentle touch of his hands, the rub of his bare chest against her nipples, the brush of his cock against her hip, then her thigh. She let herself sink into a dream in which this might happen on a regular basis.

Not every day; that bore too much risk. But maybe once in a crescent moon, once in a few weeks. Often enough to shine light into the darkest recesses of her memories and sweep away her fears.

By the time he entered her, thrust after patient thrust, it seemed inevitable. Inevitable that he should fill her so. Inevitable that her pleasure would come so swiftly. Inevitable that they should find each other’s hands, clenching them together. It was inevitable that they should join, his hips seeking hers, hers rising to his.

“I love you,” he whispered to her.

I love you,
she told him with her caresses,
I love you.
Her hands twined with his, her body nestled against his. She hoped he could hear how much she loved him. That he’d remember that in the lonely nights that followed.

He never slammed into her. He took her, rocking against her, pushing, coaxing her along until his every motion elicited her gasps, that spark of pure pleasure floating in the air as if struck by a flint.

She caught fire beneath him. Even then he didn’t speed up. He continued through her every last sob, taking every inch of pleasure from her until she was worn out. Only when she was completely sated did he take her hard, his hands holding her hips in place, his thrusts growing harder, faster, his breath becoming ragged—

He pulled out of her and groaned, his hips still pumping.

She could scarcely think, and he’d done it precisely as he’d promised—wearing a sheath, pulling out before the moment of crisis. Not an iota more risk than was necessary. She’d known that he would. Sebastian would never have lied to her about such a thing.

She couldn’t return the favor.

Instead, she reached out and wound his hair around her fingers, bringing her mouth close so that she might brush her lips against his.

One truth. She could give him one truth, even if he wouldn’t believe she’d meant it come the next morning.

“I love you,” she said.

He kissed her back. “I know.”

I
T WAS ONLY NATURAL,
Sebastian told himself, that Violet would be a little nervous this morning.

The magistrate’s court in Cambridge rarely saw more than college pranks conducted under the auspices of cheap wine, or thefts from the aforementioned inebriates.

These magistrates had no doubt had more than their share of run-ins with the aristocracy, but this—a charge laid against a countess, and on such grounds—was a novelty, and novelty drew crowds. People lined the wooden benches, chattering amongst themselves. They were packed so close that the temperature in the room was not just summer-morning uncomfortable; it was hellishly hot.

Violet didn’t look at him—not even a hint of a glance, a reassuring flicker of her eyes in his direction. She sat ten feet in front of him, but she felt desperately distant.

The morning started precisely as Sebastian had predicted. The magistrates entered; the crowd rose. Court was called into session, and the eldest of the three men stood.

“While it is true that the Countess of Cambury, a peeress of the realm, is not subject to our jurisdiction on matters of felony charges, the privileges of peerage do not extend to misdemeanors. Upon agreement of the prosecutor, the indictment has been amended to reflect only the lesser charges.”

There was a flurry. A paper was passed to the barrister; Violet peered at it over the man’s shoulder. Sebastian’s shoulders tensed. This was precisely what they had most worried about, after all—that they would choose to charge Violet with something mild rather than allow her to slip through their fingers.

And that was when Sebastian realized that something was deeply wrong. He had known Violet was uneasy—sitting too straight, pinching her lips together. He’d expected her to be even more unsettled by this development. But when the magistrate announced that, she smiled—a tight, fierce smile.

Under the circumstances, it was completely baffling. This was the worst possible outcome. Why was she
smiling?

“How does the accused plead?” the magistrate asked.

The barrister beside her blew out his breath. Violet stood.

“As I have just been presented with an amended indictment,” she said, “I should like to make sure I understand the charges.”

This wasn’t what they’d talked about. She wasn’t supposed to say that. She was supposed to blame him, to throw herself on their mercy. It made no sense for her to say that.

Her voice was clear and carrying. It reminded him of the way she’d spoken last night: confident and strong. Her head was held high; her hands were relaxed at her sides.

She looked marvelous, but Sebastian felt a cold pit growing in his stomach. Something was wrong. Horrifically wrong.

“You may ask questions,” the magistrate said.

“I see now only two charges on the indictment,” Violet said. “The first is that I did speak of lewd and lascivious subjects in a public gathering yesterday evening.”

“Yes.”

“Am I to understand, then,” Violet said, “that I am no longer being charged with the lecture that was given here in October of 1862?”

“Yes, Your Ladyship,” the magistrate said with a touch of deference. “You are not.”

“How odd.” Violet raised her chin. “I was responsible for that, too.”

Sebastian felt his heart squeeze. No. She
hadn’t
said that. She could not have said that. What did she think she was doing?

“In fact, over the years of 1862 through 1867, there were ninety-seven lectures given by Malheur. I am not being charged in connection with those, either. Do I understand that correctly?”

The magistrate leaned back in his chair, looking a little annoyed. “No, Your Ladyship. You are not being charged in connection with those events.”

“Strange,” she said. “Because those were my ideas he presented.”

“Are you
trying
to expand the indictment?” asked the wigged man to the right in confusion.

“I am merely trying to understand the charges, so that I might appropriately enter a plea,” Violet said.

Sebastian had a bad feeling—a
very
bad feeling—about what was about to transpire. He squeezed his hands together, but no matter how hard he compressed them, it didn’t help.

Violet glanced down at the paper in front of her. “As to the charge of disturbing the peace. I understand that presenting my work to an audience in Leicester in 1864 caused a near-riot involving a herd of goats. That incident is not included on this indictment?”

“No,” the magistrate responded. “I think you understand the charges fairly well by now, Your Ladyship. How do you plead?”

Violet’s chin went up in defiance. “Are you asking me if I announced yesterday that I had uncovered the mechanism by which sexual reproduction transmits inherited traits? Are you asking me if I showed a crowd a sketch of the male sperm cell, magnified several thousandfold to show the material inside the nucleus?”

“No,” the magistrate responded with a touch of impatience. “I am asking you to enter a plea. You may remain silent, and your plea will be presumed to be ‘not guilty’; you may plead guilty or not guilty. But what you may not do is continue with a recitation of these items. Do so and I’ll hold you in contempt of court.”

“But a plea requires me to consider whether there were mitigating circumstances,” Violet said. “Whether I was subject to undue influence, whether I was the one who instigated these events or if someone else directed me.”

Sebastian held his breath in agony. She had to say it. They’d planned it all last night. He’d sealed her participation with her marble, for God’s sake.

“A plea requires you to say if you are guilty or not guilty,” the magistrate snapped back.

“The answer,” Violet said, “is
no.”

Oh, thank God. She hadn’t completely lost her mind.

“No,” Violet continued, “there were no mitigating circumstances.”

For a moment, the room was as stunned as Sebastian was, so quiet that he could hear his own breath hissing in utter, betrayed agony.

“No, nobody but me instigated these inquiries. I was assisted by others, and I will give all due credit when the time is right, but the science of inheritance has always been
mine.
It was my choice to speak of it last night, my choice to make the presentation. They were my words, my work, and I’ll be damned to hell before I let anyone else take the credit.”

Sebastian let out a staggered, shaking breath.

“You are in contempt,” the magistrate bellowed. “Now, will you enter a plea?”

“Isn’t it obvious?” Violet was standing straight, her eyes flashing. “I’m guilty. Guilty on both counts, Your Worship. I’m guilty, and I’m proud of it.”

Sebastian couldn’t think. He had no idea what to say. Even after everything that she had said, the magistrate paused.

“Are you certain? You are voluntarily entering a plea of guilty of your own free will?” He frowned. “You are aware that there is a term of imprisonment associated with these offenses?”

“Of course I know that,” Violet said scornfully. “But they want to stop me. They want to shut me up—me and everyone associated with my work. If I show fear, they’ll never stop. I shall always be forced to defend myself from ludicrous charges.” Her chin went up. “They need to know that they have no recourse. That I am not afraid of them, not even if they throw the entire weight of the law at me. So yes, Your Worships. I discovered the truth. I told the world.” She straightened and glared at them. “I’m guilty.”

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