Authors: Laura Kinsale
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General, #Regency
dress fell from her shoulder. She tilted her head aside as he kissed the curve of her throat
and pulled her hips up against him.
With a light direction, he urged her toward a chaise lounge and drew her down with
him. He didn't look at her; he kissed her shoulder while he unfastened the dress and
pulled at all the pins that the modiste had so lovingly inserted to set her hat.
The headpiece swept to the floor, along with the gauzy veil and shawl. He pressed her
back down on the sofa, both of them breathing quickly. Callie held on to his lapels. As
she laid her head back, she moved her hands inside his coat, feeling the solid shape of his
chest under a satin waistcoat.
He made a fervent sound and sat back a little, yanking his waistcoat open and his shirt
free, so that she could spread her palms against his bare skin. He closed his eyes as she
stroked her hands up and down. His chest rose and fell under her touch. He swore
roughly under his breath. When she ran her fingers along the edge of his trousers,
slipping them between the fabric and his skin, he opened his eyes, putting his hand over
hers, stilling her.
Callie gave him a naughty look. She knew—she remembered what he liked, what he
had taught her, though she had hidden it away in the darkest corners of her recollections
until now. It was something she had only allowed herself to remember in the deepest
black of night, alone in her bed, dreaming.
He growled and leaned over her, brushing her chemise down off her shoulder, pulling it
down until she felt her breasts exposed, pressed upward as they were by the corset. He
bent his head, kissing and licking at the edge of the stiff garment until he teased her
nipple free.
Callie gasped and clutched at him as the sensation shot through her. His tongue on her
was hot and sweet, tugging gently, then harder as she arched up to him. She heard small
sounds of delight working in her own throat, impossible to smother.
She lost herself in it, this stolen moment. It was bliss. Everything around her was him:
his weight on her and his hair brushing her chin, his skin warm beneath her hands. All
modesty deserted her, discarded as freely as her hat had been tossed to the f loor. She
spread her legs and pressed her body up to his. The air seemed to leave her lungs. Waves
of sensation made her breasts seem to swell and rise to the delicious pull.
When he broke away, she could hardly gather her wits and recall who and where she
was. He turned from her, sitting up and leaning back against the wall, staring at the tea
table. He released a deep exhalation and closed his eyes. "I think—we had best stop
there," he said.
"Oh," she said, vastly disappointed. "Gooseberries."
He laughed, turning to lean down to her again, his face close to hers. "I want you far
too much," he said. "Miss Gooseberry."
Her eyes widened. "You do?"
"Oh no, I'm just about to have an apoplexy, that's all."
"An apoplexy!" She stuck out the tip of her tongue at him. "I suppose we don't want
that."
"No indeed. Where would Hubert be if I fell dead on the floor?"
"I expect I should have to call in Major Sturgeon," she said airily.
He nipped her shoulder hard enough to make her yelp. Then he nuzzled her throat.
"That pompous flatfish? What would you want with him?"
Callie giggled. "If you must know, he said he would do anything for me," she informed
him in an arch voice.
Trev drew back a little. "He did, did he? And just when did he make this satisfying
offer?"
"He has called
several
times," she said. "He was
most
obliging."
She expected that Trev would laugh, but his face changed subtly, grew cooler. "Several
times!" he said. "I suppose one can guess what his object is." He pushed away from her,
leaning on one elbow, his back propped against the wall. "Has he proposed to you yet?"
Callie began to be sorry she had mentioned Major Sturgeon, even to tease. It was hardly
the moment to bring up the most persistent admirer of her fortune. She bit her lip.
"Has he?" Trev sat up. He began to tuck in his shirt and rebutton his waistcoat.
When Callie didn't reply, he stood, leaving her amid the disarray of her skirts and
chemise. She pulled the fabric over herself and sat up also.
"Of course he has," Trev said. His mouth formed a hard line. "Did you fob him off?"
Callie held the dress to her breast. "I suppose I should have," she said faintly.
"You didn't?" His voice held a slight crack. "You're engaged to him?"
"No," Callie said. "Of course not."
He blew out a harsh breath. Callie watched him uncertainly. A notion occurred to her,
one that she wished for so much that she didn't even dare entertain it for more than an
instant. He took a few paces across the room. She thought he might speak. He stopped
before the window and stood with his hand gripped on the drape, staring out.
"So you refused him?" he asked without turning.
She would have liked to say that she had. It seemed worse than a disgrace now, it
seemed a betrayal to be here with Trev, to want him beyond anything else, and yet be
entertaining a proposal from another man. But it was not as if Trev had asked for her
hand. Indeed, he said he was going away back to France. And he had said nothing to
suggest that he desired to wed her and take her home to his estates. She might indulge in
a great number of fantastical daydreams, but that was one fantasy that she ruthlessly
denied to herself.
She straightened and lifted her chin, pushing back a lock of her hair that had fallen
loose. "I told him that I would consider it."
He gave a brief, cold nod, as if he had expected it.
"I don't think I'll be happy living with Hermey." She felt compelled to explain. "And
so…" Her voice trailed off. "Well, I said to him I would think it over."
He tilted his head back and gave a short laugh. "Sturgeon!" he said bitterly. He turned
to her. "I don't trust him, Callie. It's your money he wants."
"Yes," she said stiffly. "Of course."
He frowned at her, his jaw working.
She kept her chin lifted. "It would be foolish to expect at this juncture that I would
marry out of affection or anything of that nature. If I married at all."
He stood looking at her, and then he shook his head. He put his hands up and ran them
through his hair, as if he were quarreling with some recalcitrant and impossible child. He
laughed again, a little wildly. "Accept him, then!" he exclaimed. "Why not? What's love
to do with it, after all?"
She rose to her feet, gathering the white shawl from the floor. "I only told him I would
think about it. But Hermey's fiancé doesn't want me. And I can't remain at Shelford. I
won't. Trev, I don't know what I'm to do! If you—if I thought for a moment, if I thought
that you—" She stopped, unable to complete the sentence, angry that she had said so
much. She turned her back, clutching the dress and shawl against herself.
A heavy silence filled the chamber. Callie could hear her own breathing, rough with
gathering tears. She stared at the mahogany leg of a chair, waiting for what she knew
would not come, feeling her heart break with foolish hopes, fruitless wishes. The words
that he didn't say hung between them.
"Of course I have no right to question you," he said in a low voice. "I beg your pardon."
She could think of no reply. She squeezed her eyes shut as she heard him come behind
her. He put his hands on her bare shoulders, a light, warm touch that was like a sweet
ache all down through her body.
"I want you to be happy," he whispered. "I don't want him to hurt you again."
She shook her head wordlessly. All she could think was that he would go away, and not
take her, and it hardly mattered what she did then. He put his face down in the curve of
her neck.
"I know," he said softly, as if she had spoken her misery aloud. "I know." He sighed,
his breath a warmth against her skin. "We have a few days."
"Three," she said in a small voice.
He ran his hands down her arms and back up again, then held her against him, his lips
at her throat. "Callie, I do love you. You know that."
She shook her head again, very quickly. "Don't," she implored. "Do not suppose you
have to say that. I know you're my friend, my very best friend, and—that is quite
enough."
"Friend," he said with a slight, derisive laugh. "Your friend." With a fierce move he
clasped her hard and kissed her, burying his face in her shoulder. "Give me these three
days, Callie."
She made a whimper of assent, nodding.
"It'll be our finest adventure," he whispered. "I promise you." He lifted his head and
drew a deep breath against her hair. Then he slipped the chemise up over her shoulders
and pulled the dress into place. With a few authoritative tugs, he buttoned the fabric over
the tight corset while Callie held in her breath and smoothed down the front.
For a moment he stood behind her, resting his cheek on her head and holding her
gently. Then he reached down and retrieved her hat.
"Now we must set you to rights and embark upon our first mission," he said briskly.
"Procuring a steady source of Bath buns."
Thirteen
HAVING TAKEN DOWN AN ORDER, IN SPITE OF THE heavy accent of his
customer, for twelve dozen Bath buns to be delivered daily to the exhibition pen of
Monsieur Malempré, an elated baker escorted Monsieur and Madame into the street. He
took leave of them with a surfeit of bowing and repeated pledges that his buns would
most assuredly contain a generous measure of white currants. Having bespoke the buns,
at a price so outrageous that it would have embarrassed His Majesty's pastry chef, Trev
took Callie's arm and turned her toward the High Town.
He kept his hat brim low and gave the veiled lady on his arm the benefit of his full
attention and gallantry. He was not overly concerned that Hubert would be recognized in
the city of Hereford, but he was not so sanguine about himself. Here in the marches of the
West Country, close by to Bristol—that first-rate source of burly butchers' boys anxious
to enter the prize ring—the very soil seemed to produce prime pugilists. Trev had always
limited his own scouting to the south and east, deliberately avoiding Hereford and
Shelford and Callie, but he would be a fool to count himself perfectly safe here. He was
too well-known among the Fancy.
Jock and Barton had been busy chasing up old acquaintance for the past several days,
calling in all favors on Trev's behalf. And he had a wealth of credit to call upon, he
found, for the thing he'd done for Jem Fowler's wife and baby boy. The hefty green-
coated footman who now walked behind the Malemprés had only recently been
pummeling a challenger in some set-to in a Bristol training yard. Across the way lounged
a pair of regular brutes in the science, who owed their success and early opportunities
largely to Trev's patronage. The men assigned to handle Hubert were experienced both in
cattle yards and prizefights. There was a marvelous influx of boxing men to Hereford at
the moment.
For his own part, Trev had discarded his Belcher necktie and adopted a sword cane and
several other sartorial details to camouflage himself as a continental beau rather than a
sporting buck. Walking beside Callie now, he regretted having chosen the name
Malempré for their masquerade—he'd been in a hurry, arranging for the van and
commanding the painting of the canvas to swathe Hubert's pen, and the first name he'd
summoned to mind was a town in Belgium where he'd spent a few weeks of his
imprisonment just after Napoleon's first abdication.
It had been an easy enough situation there. On his gentleman's honor to attempt no
escape, he'd had the freedom of the pretty village and even waltzed at the
assemblée.
The
sole inconvenience had been the wife of the local chevalier, who had conceived a most
ardent fondness for Lieutenant LeBlanc on the basis of a single trifling kiss, which no
amount of diplomacy—or indeed, discourtesy—had seemed to cool. She had been so
relentless in her pursuit that he'd become the butt of the captive officers' mess until he
was moved to Brussels to await a prisoner exchange that had never materialized—the
defeated French apparently having no pressing need for one more LeBlanc littering their
countryside.
He'd forgot about her until this morning, and that her name was also Malempré—a silly
oversight that annoyed him. It seemed almost an insult to Callie. But it was too late to
change now. He carried in his inner pocket several copies of a broadside imprinted with
the handsome image of a dark bull and the breathless details of the Malempré Challenge:
é
He had made sure that Colonel Davenport would be absent for the formal
announcement by the simple expedient of putting a man to spy on him and discovering
his schedule. The good colonel was engaged this morning to determine which farm
laborer had the honor of Supporting the Largest Number of Legitimate Offspring without
Recourse to the Parish, for a prize of two pounds, and thereafter to judge turnips.
Presumably he would be fully occupied in the counting of children and adjudicating of