However, upon reflection, I have come to understand our disparate consequences. To continue as
we have is impossible, and I must ask that you not attempt to contact me again. I will not be
available to you, as our arrangement is at an end.
I pray you will respect my wishes, but have taken steps to secure my privacy. You will
not be admitted should you call, and any missives will be returned unread.
I thank you sincerely for all you have taught me about myself, and about you.
Respectfully,
Mrs. Desiree Huntington
With hands shaking, Prentice read the words several times before they began to
mean anything to him. The feeling of desolation and hopelessness quickly replaced the
happiness he'd felt just moments before.
He jumped up, the chair skittering across the floor. He began to pace. Through
the haze that infiltrated his mind, he heard, "Prentice, old man, are you quite well?" It
was Lucien.
"No." He handed the paper to his friend.
After a moment, Lucien sighed. "I don't know what to say."
"I believe she has said it all."
"You aren't going to leave it at this, are you?"
"Apparently you
didn't
read it. She doesn't wish to hear from me. I certainly will
not force myself upon someone who wishes otherwise."
"What could have happened? From everything you have said, the situation
couldn't have been better."
"So I thought."
Conflicting emotions battled for prominence as Prentice relived the last few days.
There was nothing. Even when he'd bid her farewell, he'd sensed only sadness, a
reluctance to part.
Fear's tentacles were grabbing at the sanity he had begun to make of his life. He
had no idea where to go from here. He'd begun making plans, which had included
marriage. Lord, he was meeting with his mother later in the day to float the idea of his
marrying an untitled woman. That was enough to set him back in itself.
"I've no clarity of mind. Everything is a jumble."
He looked at Lucien, his friend of many years, the only man who knew all the
secrets, and still loved him. Lucien's black brows arched, reading plainly what Prentice
wanted.
"Come, my friend. We will see if some sense can be made of this."
At times such as these, when Prentice became unable to sort his thoughts, he
relied upon Lucien, not an easy thing to do for a man used to control. However, he'd
learned early in his life that one's thoughts could be temporarily refocused through
pain, a lesson learned at the hand of his tutor many years before.
Mr. Wexler had been an angry man, who felt strict discipline was as much a part
of a boy's education as were mathematics and Greek literature. Regular canings and
birchings became part of the curriculum, encouraged and often witnessed by his
parents, much to Prentice's shame and humiliation.
The one thing the whippings had done for him was enable him to sort through
the unnecessary thoughts and direct his attention to what was most important. By the
time he'd had this epiphany, he'd begun to crave the pain, a secret he'd kept closely
hidden, but for discussing it with Lucien. His friend had a taste for the same.
The men went to the third floor where Lucien and Serenity lived. There was a
hidden passage, located in the library on the first floor, which led directly to the
residence. It ensured their privacy, as Lucien had had the stairways to the top floor
blocked off, lest club members begin to travel about the house and accidently stumble
upon places they shouldn't go.
Lucien had a room outfitted with all that was needed. He used this room for his
afternoon spanking appointments with his wife.
As Lucien prepared the strap, Prentice disrobed. They'd done this many times
since Abigail died, and he would never have been able to live through the grief without
it.
Prentice situated himself on the spanking bench, lying down on his stomach,
arms above his head. He wanted to feel nothing but the pain. It certainly couldn't feel
worse than his broken heart did.
"Lay it on, Lucien."
"As you wish."
Lucien was a master, with years of practice. He'd blistered arses of men and
women with equal aplomb. Prentice was continually amazed at how many in the
ton
offered up their privileged rumps for punishment.
The first strike was light, earning a grumble from Prentice. The next—and all
subsequent blows—rocketed pain through Prentice's body. He gritted his teeth and
squeezed his eyes closed as slap after slap struck his buttocks. When Lucien stopped,
Prentice insisted on more, until he had endured forty lashes.
"Enough?" Lucien asked, to which Prentice simply nodded. "I shall leave you
alone then."
After Lucien left the room, Prentice lay still for long minutes. He finally allowed
the tears to flow, but not from the pain in his hind quarters. No, there was a profound
emptiness in his chest. Desiree's missive had dug a deep hole there. She'd snatched his
hope for the future from him, the cruelest of all gestures. However, clarity had come to
him; he knew what he must now do. He would have Desiree, for at this moment, he
wanted nothing more.
Chapter Fifteen
Desiree hadn't eaten in days. She'd not even felt the urge. She'd locked herself in
her bedchamber, kept the draperies closed and cried until no more tears would flow.
The misery she felt was beyond her bearing.
She'd gotten her revenge, though it didn't feel as sweet as she'd expected. She felt
like she'd slashed her own wrists and was dying a slow, painful death. She'd had no
idea that her revenge would affect her in such a profound way. She'd pictured herself
laughing at his pain, when instead, she found herself mired in her own.
He hadn't said the words, but she knew Prentice Hyde was in love with her.
Without confirmation of it, she knew she'd hurt him, as he had hurt her years before.
However, she had
never
expected to fall in love with
him
. To her shock and dismay,
she'd realized on the morning they'd left the folly, that indeed she had.
Prentice filled a need in her even she never realized she had. He'd immersed her
in his erotic world, one of sexual satiation, and a recognition of her body's wants and
needs. He'd given, making her want to give back in treble.
She'd felt his warmth toward her at the folly. Consciously, she knew he had
changed in his feelings toward her. However, in the end, her need for revenge trumped
the joy he had given her. While at the folly, she was willing to forego what he had done
to her, how he had ruined her life. It is petty revenge, she'd told herself. He's a different
man now
.
Yet, when she awoke the first morning back in her house, she'd momentarily
felt differently. Now, she had no idea why, and regretted writing the quickly dashed off
missive. She lamented having sent it.
I would have been better to have used it as a catharsis,
then chucked it into the grate.
Nonetheless, it was over now. He'd never wish to see her again, even if she
prostrated herself at his feet. Prentice was not the type of man to forgive.
She'd not heard from him since she'd sent the note. She kept telling herself that
was what she wanted, but then anger rose anew at the thought that he hadn't attempted
to kick her door in and carry her off to a glorious future. She'd even pictured the scene
where he
did
kick the door in, stormed the stairs, stripped her naked and spanked her
raw for acting so foolishly.
Her bottom tingled, remembering the glorious spankings he so adeptly
administered, and how there would never be another. She'd almost convinced herself
she could live on the memories but now she knew she'd deluded herself in the worst
possible way. He'd ruined her again, this time for anyone else.
She stared at the floral canopy above her head and imagined Prentice in this
room. He'd lain on the pillow that was now clutched in her arms. He'd taken her under
these bed linens, touching her body and her soul. The memories were too vivid, too
sweet, the loss too agonizing. She didn't think she could bear it, yet she knew not what
to do.
Pride would keep her from retracting what she'd done, even if he'd accept an
apology. She could always offer up her bottom to his strap, but he could as well laugh
at her as apply it. A man can tolerate just so much foolishness.
Oh, if she could just turn back time. If only life could be as simple as it was at the
folly. She'd been happy there, and he was too. She began to laugh at the thought of him
trying to cook bacon in the nude. Then, she cried at the thought of all he had done to
her, the unmitigated joy he had shown her. How her body responded to his slightest
touch, as it now did in the remembering.
She reached into the drawer in the bedside table and retrieved a familiar object.
She threw the covers to the side, drew her nightrail to her waist and raised her knees.
Her fingers danced over her moist folds until they found the most sensitive spot. Short
of a spanking, this was all she knew to do to make her feel alive again. With fingers
pressing and circling over her clitoris, she plunged her phallus deep within and began
simulating the act she so wished Prentice were committing upon her body at that
moment.
Her orgasm came, but it left her bereft. Again, she dissolved into tears, feeling
empty and alone. Revenge was a bitter bed partner, but it was hers, for she had chosen
the course, and there was no turning back now.
* * * * *
Several days later, Prentice took the brandy his mother's butler offered as he
waited for the Grande Dame to make her appearance. He needed the fortification of the
burning amber liquid to see him through this meeting, for he would run up against
opposition from the start.
Thirty minutes after his arrival, the dowager Marchioness of Wycroft, Dorothea
to her closest friends, entered the parlor of her home in Grosvenor Square. She entered
in a flurry of swishing satin, a toothy smile upon her face, which totally belied the
woman's usual miserable disposition.
On her best days, she was cranky; on the worst, she was to be avoided. Prentice
couldn't tell quite yet what he was facing but the brandy helped.
"Good afternoon, my darling son. Please do sit down, and tell me all you have
been up to."
"I'd prefer to stand, Mother, but please, you sit."
She did so, spending an inordinate amount of time straightening her skirts. She
perched primly upon the edge of the chair, lest her aristocratic torso touch the back. She
folded her hands in her lap and looked up at him with an enigmatic smile.
"I haven't much time, dear. I am expected for tea at the home of Duchess
Hackberry, but I am ever so happy to see you."
"Thank you, Mother, as I am you."
"Do you have anything specific of which you wish to speak, or is this simply a
social call."
"I wish to inform you of my impending marriage."
The dowager marchioness clapped her hands, and Prentice could envision what
was going on inside her empty head.
"Oh, my darling, I knew the duke's daughter would accept your suit. She isn't the
loveliest thing I've ever seen, but she comes from a fine family—"
"Mother, please. There is no duke's daughter. My soon-to-be wife is Mrs. Desiree
Huntington. I am sure you don't know her."
His mother raised her haughty nose, and her smile disappeared. "No, I most
certainly do not. Who is the person? Please, don't tell me you are marrying your
mistress. Good lord, Wycroft, one doesn't marry one's mistress."
"She is not my mistress. She is the person I love." His temper never failed to
shorten in his mother's presence. She was a most provoking woman.
"Who are her people? Is she a widow or something else?"
"Mother, have a care. I have no idea about her
people
. She is a widow of several
years." His tone was curt, but it didn't deter his mother from further interrogation.
"She must be after your money, and you are too blinded by lust to see it. Oh, dear
lord, you are the Marquess of Wycroft. You are meant to marry well and fill the nursery
with children with noble blood from both their parents running through their veins. I
forbid it, Wycroft, I say, I forbid it."
She'd extracted a fan from her sleeve and began to pump it rapidly before her
face, the lace of her cap lifting and falling with the breeze. He had neither time nor
patience for melodrama, an affectation his mother employed as often as those around
her allowed. He rarely did.
"I came here to inform you, madam, not seek your permission. I trust you will be
civil when I bring her 'round."
"I shall be dead, yes indeed, I shall be dead. You will be the death of me. Thank
the good lord your father isn't here to witness this. You would kill him as well."
"It has been a pleasure as always, Mother." Prentice strode out of the room, his
mother still blustering about death and such. He'd gotten no more or less than he'd
expected, but then he never did.
He settled somewhat uncomfortably on the seat of his carriage, more determined