Read I Kissed an Earl: Pennyroyal Green Series Online
Authors: Julie Anne Long
Tags: #Historical, #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Historcal romance
Next the earl bent to peer beneath the bed, and that’s why Violet saw the rosewood box before the earl did.
And all the tiny hairs on the back of her neck went erect.
It was a utilitarian, unadorned, uncarved rectangle about the length of one bound book and about the height of two, and nearly the same color as—and thus nearly camouflaged by—the table it sat upon. It had a hinged lid, currently closed.
It also had a lock that could be easily picked with a hairpin and a false bottom that could be sprung if one only knew where to press. Violet knew this, because she’d been an exceptionally nosy and deft younger sister, and she’d seen Lyon do it once, and she’d done it out of curiosity when he’d left his room.
It was all she could do not to throw her body over it. As though Lyon himself stood there, smirking at her. And as she grew accustomed to the terror of the moment and it ebbed, that familiar, glorious, sun-bright burst of affection and an equal fury yanked her between them. Lyon had left his family behind without a word.
But he’d brought the bloody box with him, out of sentiment.
And she suspected he’d left it here for her to find. Because she would know something was hidden in it. But what?
Her stillness alerted the earl as surely as if she’d gasped.
He straightened abruptly from where he was peering under the bed.
“Violet? Is aught amiss?”
“Nothing’s amiss.” Her lips seemed strangely disconnected from her body; she sensed them go up. She hoped the smile didn’t look as ghastly as it felt.
“You’re pale.”
“I was born pale. It’s a family trait.”
She could have predicted the tilt of his lips. You’re everywhere pale, he was thinking, she could tell. Your throat, your breasts, your long, long legs. But his smile faded the longer he watched her. To be replaced by a tiny vertical dent between his brows, the precursor of a genuine frown.
Every bit of Violet’s strength was required to not only meet that gaze evenly, but to also get a piquant eyebrow up. As if she were playfully basking in his scrutiny. A woozy light shivered on the wall, bounced from the water below through the window. Asher turned away to look out over the sea, magnetized as always to it. And then he sighed, and stretched his arms extravagantly, which nearly brought his fingertips in contact with both walls of the small room. He pulled out his watch and reviewed the time, glanced toward the door as if contemplating leaving, sighed and tucked his watch back into place…then wandered a little too nonchalantly to the little table next to the bed. Well, why wouldn’t he? She’d bloody been staring at it.
She took a page from his book of nonchalance and sauntered to the window and peered out, saw endless water, feigned meditative contemplation. As though that rosewood box hadn’t sent up a veritable screech of awareness in her mind. She watched from the corner of her eye. Asher almost whimsically lifted the candle. Hefted it, placed it down again. Right next to that box.
Violet tensed.
“Cold,” he said wryly. “Scarcely burnt. So he didn’t snuff a candle an instant before our arrival and bolt.”
She produced another weak smile and gave a half turn, to watch. He dragged a thoughtful finger over the top of the rosewood box. Her stomach turned to ice. Her limbs followed suit.
“Do you recognize this box?” he asked absently.
“No,” she managed. It was only one syllable, after all.
When he tried the lid, she bit her lip hard to send the blood back into her head. A little preventative against fainting.
The lid resisted his tugging.
She knew him well enough to know it was too soon to be relieved.
“Is it locked?” She sounded admirably, calmly curious. But in her ears, her voice had a peculiar echo, as though it had traveled from a long way away to exit her mouth. He didn’t look at her. “Seems to be. Doubtless I can get it open with a hairpin, however. Can I prevail upon you to loan one to me?”
“Violet?” He turned to her swiftly when she didn’t answer. Whatever expression he saw fleeing her face caused him to go strangely still and very stiff. As though a sudden movement might jar some old injury.
“Of course,” she said finally. She thought her face might crack from the effort of nonchalance.
“Just…just allow me to find one for you…”
It seemed to take an inordinate amount of time for her brain to communicate the message
“find a pin” to her hand, and her hand seemed peculiarly ungainly and ineffectual, once she got it up into her hair. As if it didn’t belong to her at all. As if she’d borrowed it for the search. He moved to her. Two tentative steps. When he stopped near she decided then the scent of him, so uniquely masculine and intoxicating, would bring her to the point of swooning until the very day she died. She’d recognize it, find it blindfolded in a room of thousands of men. And as he stood there in all casualness she breathed him in as if it were the last time, because for all she knew it was.
She gave up and dropped her hand from her hair.
His face betrayed nothing of his thoughts, but his eyes were as usual searching her face. She was suddenly violently resentful of his cleverness; it was as invasive as it had seemed liberating. But if he drew any conclusions or magically deciphered the run of her thoughts, his expression never betrayed it. His hand just came quickly up.
She blinked, but managed not to flinch. He stroked it into her hair, and his expression subtly moved as he braced himself against whatever rushed his surface when he touched her. Feelings he would always beat back, never give voice to.
He found a pin, naturally.
And then drew it from her hair gently and too slowly, watching her face the way he’d watch for threats on a distant horizon.
Oh God. He knew something was amiss.
“Thank you,” he said ironically. “Didn’t muss a hair, either. But don’t sneeze or it might all come down.”
And then she was forced to stand and casually wait while he turned his back on her and inserted the hairpin into the keyhole of that box.
The next few moments were a hell of anticipation accented by the scritch scritch scritching sound of Captain Flint, the Earl of Ardmay, attempting to pry into the secrets of yet another Redmond. Though he didn’t know yet this was what he was doing. Until at last the earl removed the hairpin, stood back, and stared at the box. Hallelujah! He’d failed! And she most certainly didn’t intend to volunteer to pick the lock while he stood there.
But Flint cast a look at the line of lengthening shadow between them drawn by the lowering sun. “It’s growing late. I think perhaps we ought to just take the box with us and I’ll try again later.”
He didn’t wait for her reply. He tucked the box beneath his arm, turned and said politely,
“Thank you for the loan of your pin,” held it out to her, and she reached for it. He seized her hand between his.
A trap! Damn him.
She was certain he could feel her pulse rabbiting away inside her wrist.
“Your hand is ice cold, Violet.”
The intelligence behind those blue eyes probed away at her. Has he memorized my face the way I’ve memorized his? Does a twitch of a lash tell him something about my thoughts, the way the slightest change in light in the sky over the Sussex Downs hints at the coming weather?
She was fairly certain her face gave him nothing. Because Violet had lately learned what she capable of doing in order to protect the people she loved, and if this meant shooting a man to death to save her lover’s life or cultivating a gaming table face in order to save her brother’s life, so be it.
“Fatigue,” she said lightly. With a one-shouldered shrug that curiously caused him to frown faintly.
He held her hand a moment longer, tightly, as though she were a skip that would bob out to sea if he released her. Tension gathered in his face; she thought he would speak. Then his eyes flicked away from her. And perhaps the shadows were painting everything in the room with more drama and shade than they could rightfully lay claim to. But for the span of a breath she thought she saw something lost, something resigned in his face. There and then gone as if it had never been.
He dropped her hand.
They stared at each other a moment.
“Flint?” she asked tentatively.
“Yes?”
“Why did you tell the crew to make sure they were familiar with Plaza de Mina before tomorrow?”
“Why do you think, Violet?”
She watched him. Then gave a short nod.
He arched a brow, and motioned gracefully for her to precede him out of the room.
Chapter 25
T orture for Violet resumed that evening after a meal taken in a suite of rooms the earl took for himself at a similar, though more comfortable inn, farther along the Plaza. The crew, led by Lavay, were exploring all the pleasures Cádiz had to offer by night, and getting the lay of Plaza de Mina, while Violet confronted a dinner of chicken and peas and rice all swimming in a dark spiced sauce and washed down with what she was told was a good Spanish wine. She could barely swallow any of it. The earl devoured his.
After he’d pushed his polished-clean plate away, Flint set to work avidly on the box with a hairpin, like a man with a whittling project, whistling.
Whistling! The bloody man whistled while he worked.
And thus, it a state of suppressed hysterical hilarity and terror she was forced to listen to a medley of sea chanteys while she waited to learn whether the box would yield up proof of Lyon’s perfidy.
To a man, her brothers would have said she deserved every bit of torment she was experiencing now. That she had brought it all upon herself entirely. When the box lid finally gave way with a POP, she could have sworn it was the sound of the top of her head flying off.
Asher peered into the box. Then upended it and gave it a hard shake. A few sad flakes of tobacco rained out. The stale tobacco scent trapped inside soared out and quickly mingled with the lingering aroma of devoured chicken.
“It’s empty,” he said.
So you think.
Though perhaps it was indeed. But knowing Lyon, she doubted it sincerely. Absurdly, for a moment, she was disappointed on Flint’s behalf. And then exhausted again to feel like a wishbone between her brother and her lover.
He was unnervingly gentlemanly about turning his back and allowing her to slip into her night rail. He was then unnervingly matter-of-fact about stripping down to nothing as per usual and climbing into bed as though that first eyeful of his nude rugged beauty didn’t club the breath from her entirely and prevent her from moving for a few solid seconds. He pulled the blankets up to his chest, crossing his arms behind his head, and after she unpinned and brushed her hair smooth, wordlessly she did the same, wondering if this was how wives or mistresses behaved: climbing into bed with men as if it were the natural conclusion to brushing one’s hair or cleaning one’s teeth. If she’d somehow entered the territory of “kept” or “fallen” and whether there was a protocol she ought to be aware of.
She punched a pillow to soften it, and let her head sink into it, knowing there would be no sleep for her at all tonight as long as the rosewood box sat in the next room. It seemed to swell, that box, taking on grail significance.
It was only after he doused the lamp that she wondered why he hadn’t bothered to seduce her. On what could very well be their very last night together.
And five minutes after the lamp was doused, she learned she’d wondered too soon. He rolled over onto his side and looked down at her. Touched a finger to her lips, drew it softly along them to the line of her jaw. His eyes glinted in the shadows. For the past two days, he’d reached for her like a man certain of his welcome, or a man who didn’t care whether she welcomed him at all because he had a world of faith in the powers of his persuasion.
But his touch was strangely tentative.
He touched her now as though she’d become a stranger.
He suspects something.
She caught his hand as he was tracing her ear. She held it fast for a second or two. Both to tease him with indecisiveness, and to remind herself of his strength. But even as that rosewood box consumed her thoughts, her body knew what it wanted. She dragged her fingernails down his sinewy furred forearm, to flatten against the hot hard planes his chest, halting when she found the hard thump of his heartbeat. His lips impatiently found hers which welcomed him, as his hands impatiently pushed up her nightdress, waited while it snagged on her chin, pulled it off with an oath and flung it to the ground as though it had attacked him first. How she didn’t recognize herself: She wanted to unfold like a bloody flower when he touched her, wrapping her arms and legs around him, glorying in the opportunity to give, to take. Good God, what a poor thing she’d been before, a half person. She didn’t know what this made her now.
At the very least, it was definitely wanton to want him even as she might need to betray him. Suddenly he covered her so swiftly, so nearly angrily she stifled a gasp. He held the heat and weight of his body just above her like a threat: I can possess you however I please. She slid her arms up his chest, clung to him, arched up to brush teasingly against his swollen cock, to tell him she would surrender willingly, to let him know he could take her how he pleased, hard or quickly. Appeasement. She wanted quickly; she wanted him, but she also wanted him asleep.
He knew it.
He wasn’t to be appeased.
He sat up again abruptly instead, straddling her thighs with his full weight, peeling her hands abruptly from him. And then with another swift move that made her gasp he knelt between her legs, lifting her calves over his shoulders. Then he laced his fingers through hers and pressed her hands flat above her head, pinning them. Imprisoning her. Forbidding her to touch him. He seemed to have a plan.
He positioned himself between her legs, teased her where she was damp and aching. She swallowed a gasp; her flesh pulsed its protest, its yearning.
Damn him.
And then he did it again, until she arched for him, urging him on, and the need surged and ebbed, then surged again, a thing with claws.