The Langley Sisters Trilogy Boxed Set (23 page)

BOOK: The Langley Sisters Trilogy Boxed Set
12.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Say you’ll take my gifts, sweet Olivia.” His words brushed her cheek as she tried to turn her head.

Sealing her lips so he couldn’t kiss her, he kissed her chin instead and then her cheeks, moving to the curve of her jaw. He then caught the whisper of breath as she spoke. Taking her mouth again for a slow, thorough exploration, he then lifted his head. This time, they were both breathing heavily.
 

“Say it again, Livvy.” His words were ragged.

“Yes.”

“Good girl.”

Before Will could react, she had pushed him back a step and slipped off the bench. Will tried to catch her as she ran for the door.
 

“However, you will not manipulate me in such a manner again, my lord, or I will be forced to take action.” Chin raised, she looked defiant; however, he could see the sensual heat lingering in her eyes.
 

“I shall look forward to your action, my sweet,” he drawled, following her from the room.

They toured the warehouse and then Phoebe collected two bolts of fabric—one for herself and one for Bella, while Livvy got some spices for Jenny.

“Select something for yourself, Olivia,” Will urged.

“We have enough, my lord.”

She gave him a prim look which told him she thought she had won.

“You spent a long time lingering over the large satin pillows, so I shall gift you one of them.” Pushing aside visions of her glorious hair spread over the emerald satin, he picked it up and lifted it high as Livvy tried to snatch it from his hands.

“Don’t be churlish, Livvy. You know you want it,” Phoebe said.

Will swallowed his smile as Livvy reluctantly thanked him and then, twitching her skirts, she followed Luke back outside towards the carriage.

The temperature seemed to have dropped again and the wind was whipping along the dock.

“Will you show us the water before we go, Lord Ryder?”

Opening the carriage Will placed their gifts inside before he spoke. “It’s dangerous for most people to linger here too long, Livvy, but for beautiful women even more so.”

“You’ll keep us safe,” she said, looking longingly to where the boats were moored.
 

Something moved in Will’s chest at the conviction in her words. She trusted him to keep them safe. He suddenly felt as if he could fell a tree with his bare hands.

“We have never been to the coast, my lord, nor touched the sea.” Phoebe added her voice for encouragement.

There was a space to the left of the ships that was free. Will could take them there briefly, they could dip their fingers and then he would get them back to the carriage before anyone noticed two beautiful women wandering around the docks.

“Luke, walk at the rear!” Will called as he held his arms out for the Langley sisters to take one each.
 

They made it there safely and he and Luke stood behind them as they pulled off their gloves then bent to touch the water. He even smiled as they gasped at the temperature and then discussed the feel of it against their skin.

“Let’s go,” he then said as they straightened.
 

“Will! Egad, you have returned to us!”

“Viscount Marshall.” Will bowed to the man who approached.
 

“Excellent! It shall be like old times, the five of us together again.”

Will allowed the man to slap him on the back. They had been friends, after all, before he realized the man he once was was someone he could no longer be. He held out little hope that the Viscount had undergone any changes in his absence. In fact, the red veins in his face and plump figure told him he had not.      

“What has you in this disgusting place? For my part, I’m charged with a commission for my father. Silly old fool, I keep him happy, thus the money keeps coming,” Viscount Marshall declared loudly.

Of average height, he looked as if he had stepped out of a fashionable men’s club, dressed in a great coat left open to reveal a pale blue satin, embroidered waistcoat and darker blue jacket with lemon breeches. Viscount Marshall was a man whose sole focus was himself and he never left home looking anything but the dandy he was. Will felt another wave of shame at the group he had been a part of and the drunken, idle pursuits they had undertaken in the name of boredom.

He realized the moment the man saw the Langley sisters, because he straightened and his eyes started moving, running over them from the top of their heads to the soles of their feet, just like he would have done had the opportunity arisen many years ago.

“Will you introduce me to your friends, Lord Ryder?”

He made to move past Will, but he and Luke simply stepped together, thus blocking the Viscount’s path.

“Come now, Will, such beauty and form,” he said, the last in a manner that left Will very aware what part of their form the Viscount was discussing. Anger flooded him as he watched the man’s eyes trailing over Phoebe and Livvy. He had once been like that, but no longer.

“They are friends from the country here to visit a relative, Marshall. They have not yet entered society, therefore no introductions will be made.”

“But we never gave a fig for the rules, and surely I can get a jump on the others, especially with the beauty, Will. That bodice is filled to perfection.”

“If you wish to keep breathing, I suggest you lift your eyes.”

“What!”

“Luke, take the ladies back to the carriage, please.”

Will’s words were not spoken loudly, but his friend heard them clearly, as well as the anger beneath. In seconds, Livvy and Phoebe were being escorted back to the carriage. Neither, he was relieved to see, were questioning his orders, although Livvy sent him a look that he was sure meant she wanted a full explanation later.
 

“I find your manner insulting, Marshall, and were the ladies not watching us as we speak, you would be flat on your back with a very sore jaw.” Will kept his tone pleasant and his fists unclenched, aware that he had an audience. “But remember this warning, my lord. If I ever see you within two feet of those women, I shall be a very unhappy man, and you more so.” He then offered a quick, insultingly short, bow. “Good day to you. I shall spend no further time in your company now or in the future.”

The man’s lips curled in a snarl as he looked Will over.

“It’s hardly surprising you now have the manners of a savage, considering you have spent five years in their company, Lord Ryder. Believe me, it shall be no hardship to exclude you from the ranks of my friends.”

“I’m desolate, of course,” Will drawled.

Viscount Marshall’s eyes widened as he noted the hostile gaze directed on him. He then spat out something vulgar and turned on his heel and fled.

One down
, Will thought, knowing this was the first in a long list of encounters he was not looking forward to.
       

“You are traveling back to the hotel with us, my lord?” Phoebe asked when he entered the carriage and closed the door behind him minutes later.

“Yes, I have another appointment not far from the Grillion,” he said, taking the seat next to Olivia.

“And all is well, my lord, with you and that man?”
 

He smiled at the concern in Livvy’s eyes. “My past is rearing its ugly head, I’m afraid, and that encounter was something I knew was coming, Olivia. I’m just sorry you had to witness it.”

“We will not be overset by a few heated words, my lord.” Livvy twitched her skirts out of his way as he moved closer to her. “Indeed, our household has a conversation like that most days before breakfast.”

Phoebe nodded. “’Tis true, my lord. We are not an even-tempered family; Livvy, of course, is the worst of us.”

“Oh, like anyone would fall for that obvious falsehood, sister.”

Will felt his mood lighten as the sisters started bickering. Laughing, he raised both hands. “All right, you have made your point, ladies; you can cease arguing as I am now going to be your tour guide.”

“Wonderful.” Livvy smiled at him which made the last of his anger disappear.

He pointed out buildings and places of interest as they traveled and he endeavored to answer their questions; although he had been absent from London for years, not much appeared to have changed.

“Why are we stopping, my lord?”

“You shall see,” Will said as he got out of the carriage after Luke had pulled to a halt in front of a small building with a curved white front door and mullioned windows.

Livvy watched as Will disappeared into the shop.
 

“What do you suppose he is getting?” Phoebe said looking out the window.

“I’m not sure.”

Minutes later, he returned carrying two large cups, a man followed carrying a plate loaded with cake and another two cups clasped in a beefy hand.

“How strange,” Phoebe said, opening the door for Will as his hands were full.

He handed one cup to Phoebe and one to Livvy and then, taking the third cup and plate, he thanked the man who closed the door behind him as he once again seated himself.
 

“Who was the fourth cup for?” Phoebe questioned, sniffing the contents of hers.

“Luke,” he said. “Had I not given him a cup he would have moaned for days.”

“You and he have become friends since your absence, my lord?” Livvy questioned gently. He gave her a short nod and she believed that was to be his answer but then he surprised her by saying, “He is my best friend, and one I could not have survived the past five years without.”
 

For some reason, the sincerity in his voice made Olivia want to cry so she quickly lifted her mug and inhaled the fragrant beverage. “It certainly smells nice,” she said and then took a small sip. Her mouth was instantly filled with the smooth, tart, chocolate drink that was sweetened with honey. It was blissful and she felt the warmth travel slowly through her body.
 

“This was the best chocolate drink in London before I left and this,” he said, holding out the plate, “was the best cake and I have great hopes that has not changed.”
 

“I smell cinnamon and currants,” Livvy said, looking eagerly at the treat Will was now waving under her nose. Clutching her cup in one hand, she pulled one of her gloves off with her teeth and reached for a piece of the cake.

“She loses all propriety when there is anything with cinnamon or fruit around. It’s quite cute, actually,” Phoebe said, showing more restraint as she took the plate Lord Ryder offered and placed it beside her while she took off her gloves.
 

“Very cute.”

Livvy could not interpret the look Will gave her as she bit into the cake. For a few seconds, he was her sole focus. Then he looked away and she drew an unsteady breath.
 

Silence filled the carriage while the occupants ate and drank, and then Will took the empty cups and plate back into the shop.

“Thank you, that was delicious,” Livvy said upon his return.

“Believe me, the pleasure was all mine,” he said, watching her pull on her gloves once more. “I had no idea that all it took was food and drink to subdue you.”

“Hardly subdued, my lord; however, I am partial to cake with cinnamon or currants in it.”

“I shall secure the recipe at once in that case, Olivia, as I may need to manipulate you in the future.”
 

            
 

CHAPTER TWELVE

Livvy pressed a hand on her stomach. Nerves churned at the prospect of seeing her cousin again. One of the hotel staff had hailed her a hackney and now she was traveling to his address. It was cold inside, unlike the warmth and luxury of Will’s carriage, and smelled of disgusting odors she had no wish to analyze.
 

Will had told both her and Phoebe not to leave the hotel without Mr. Blake, Luke or himself for company after returning them to their room; however, Livvy did not want anyone to know where she was going, or why, so she’d slipped out when no one was looking. Phoebe had, of course, tried once again to accompany her but Livvy had refused. She had no wish for her sister to start arguing with Lord Langley if he said something she took offense to.
 

The carriage halted minutes later outside Lord Langley’s town house. Climbing down, she looked fleetingly at the stone façade before turning to pay the driver.
 

“Will it be difficult for me to hail another hackney from here, driver? I am not sure how long I will be at my appointment,” Livvy questioned as he prepared to leave.

“Just walk up the street to the corner, miss, and you’ll get one. I’ll drive by again in a while to see if you’re waiting.”

“Thank you.”

Why did she feel suddenly alone as the carriage rolled up the street? Forcing back her shoulders, she took a deep bracing breath and walked up the steps to knock on Lord Langley’s front door. Her father and mother had once spent time in this house, as would she and her sisters if her father still lived.
 

“May I help you?”

Other books

Crossroads by Mary Morris
The Dancers of Noyo by Margaret St. Clair
Hellbound: The Tally Man by David McCaffrey
Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carey
The Gloaming by Melanie Finn
Taking Care by Joy Williams
Bin Laden's Woman by Gustavo Homsi
Shepherd One by Rick Jones
Where Trust Lies (9781441265364) by Oke, Janette; Logan, Laurel Oke