Settings

When the Duke Returns

Page 56

   



It’s—
“I’ll show you,” he said, his voice catching because her hair against his cheek was as soft as spun silk and he just wanted to eat her. To lick her. It could rain on them and he would lick every drop from her body and keep her warm.
But the gentleman in him was shouting No. Still.
“Show me what?” Her whisper was languid, sweet. “Simeon?”
“Yes.”
“Don’t you want to help with my lacings?”
Madness fought with the plan, fought with civility, fought—and lost. “No.”
That was definitely disappointment in her eyes.
“When I—” What word was he supposed to use? Not cock and not pizzle. “This is is my prick.” The word fell harshly from his lips.
She surprised him; she’d probably always surprise him. She laughed. “The bawdy prick of noon!”
“Shakespeare was very fond of punning and pricks.”
“I like that word,” she said, reaching out. It was unfortunate that his brain stopped working the moment her cool fingers began running over him, touching him, tightening.
He tried. “When I—” The words were lost in a groan.
“Your naked weapon is out,” she said, gurgling with laughter. But he couldn’t join her in a game of Shakespearean quotes, not when his body was on fire. He jerked in her hand and she laughed again, the triumphant sound of a woman who’s discovered a power she didn’t understand she had.
“When I come—” he said, pulling himself together.
“When you what?”
“Come. Oh God, Isidore, if you keep doing that I am going to come.” He leaned into the pillar at his back. The marble was chilly and gave him some sanity.
“Do,” she breathed, swaying closer to him. Her hand was trapped between the silk of her skirts and the rough hair of his belly. But he didn’t want to frighten her, to have her disgusted.
He pushed her back. “Just watch, this time.”
Her eyes were huge, excited. He managed to pull his thoughts back from his groin. “In order for us to be successful between the sheets, we have to understand what makes the other person feel pleasure.”
She opened her lips but said nothing. Still, there was something in her eyes that made him keep going. “Tomorrow, I’ll ask you to show me.”
“Show you what?”
“What you find pleasurable,” he confirmed. “My body isn’t nearly as interesting as yours, but there are points that—” He put a thumb over his own nipple. “This isn’t as beautiful nor useful, but it feels pleasure.”
Her mouth curled in a little smile that affected him much more than his own touch on his body. He moved his hand down, deliberately, slowly, wrapped his fingers around his length. Slid his hand. Took his pleasure from the way she shifted back and forth, as if she was feeling heat between her legs, as if she were remembering the afternoon.
“It looks larger than it did earlier,” she whispered.
His body moved instinctively toward her, passionate to establish a rhythm that would satisfy and daze her, drive her to the pleasure he had felt.
“So when you lose control, what happens?”
The question hung on the air. He cleared his throat. “I eject fluid that contains my contribution to a future child.” And: “I wouldn’t describe it as losing control.” He let his hand fall away from his body.
She put her hand on him, and he instantly shuddered. The fire touched his spine, raced down his legs like a premonition of the future. “If I keep doing this—” she demonstrated—“wouldn’t you lose control?”
“No.” But it was a gasp.
“Because you never lose control?”
“Because that’s not—” he drew in a breath—“an accurate description.”
Her fingers dandled him, stroked him, fired him. “Are you sure that I couldn’t make you lose control?”
“You could give me the greatest pleasure,” he said. “As I will give to you.”
She smiled, lopsided, let her hand fall. “What else feels good?” He blinked. “Only those two parts of your body? That’s it?”
“That’s enough,” he told her.
She was smiling again. “Can I show you now what pleasures me?”
“The night and this place are too dark and cold for a lady,” he said, pulling his shirt over his head. His body was thrumming to a rhythm of its own, madness flaring in his blood.
“I thought our bed, perhaps…”
“But Godfrey is in the sitting room.”
“We shall have to be quiet,” she said, turning to walk out of the courtyard. The moonlight caught her hair, turned it to darkened spun silver, precious liquid light chiseling the curve of her cheek, the plumpness of her bottom lip, the wry wit in her eye.
He was just pulling on his boots when she paused.
“Of course,” she said, “it’s a good thing that all of this doesn’t mean losing control, Simeon, don’t you think?”
“Yes.”
“Because while I might be worried that I would make some sort of untoward noise and wake young Godfrey, I would never have to worry about you.”
He followed her. Years in the desert had taught him a number of survival lessons.
One of them was never to ignore a gauntlet thrown at your very feet.
Chapter Thirty-five
The Dower House
March 3, 1784
Honeydew greeted them in the entryway to the Dower House, as if disheveled dukes were all in a day’s work. “Your Graces,” he said. “If you would be so kind as to keep your voices down, the young master is asleep.”
Isidore took off her wet pelisse and handed it to him. “My goodness, Honeydew,” she said, “you must take yourself to your bed. It’s begun raining again.”
“There appears to be some small chance of flooding,” Honeydew said.
“Nonsense,” Simeon said. “We’re on a hill.”
“The bridge leading to the village,” Honeydew clarified. “I took the liberty of sending your lady’s maid to temporary lodgings in the village; if the bridge went out, we’d have to house everyone in the barn and Miss Lucille would not be pleased.”
“Are you staying in the village as well?” Simeon asked.
“I shall retire to the barn again tonight, Your Grace. We need to keep an eye on the silver.”
“Good man,” Simeon said briefly. “We won’t keep you.” He closed the door behind his butler, thinking that Honeydew was a man he’d always want at his back, whether on a camel or in an English country house. He was loyal and honest, through and through.
Isidore had vanished. Simeon poked his head into the sitting room. The fire was burning low, so he threw on a couple more logs and walked over to look at his brother. Godfrey was lying flat on his back. In the blurry firelight he looked unnervingly like their father. He even snored like their father.
Simeon listened to the noise for a few seconds and then began to grin.
The little bedchamber wasn’t directly off the great room; there was a small passageway, almost a hallway leading to it.
He paused for a moment, wondering if husbands knocked at their wives’ bedchambers.