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Authors: Madeline Hunter

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General, #Regency

Sinful in Satin (21 page)

BOOK: Sinful in Satin
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“If you believe that, you are still ignorant, for all of your mother’s lessons.”
She found that charming, and so masculine in the touch of insult it revealed. “You have no idea how thorough my mother’s lessons were. You are speaking of pleasure being what a woman gains, I assume. But I know that I do not need a man to experience that, any more than you need a woman.”
Her insinuation appeared to shock him a little. Enough that she had to bite back a giggle. Her throat unaccountably burned in the next instant. It had felt so good, that urge to laugh, that its contrast with her mood pained her.
“Your mother did not only offer those men pleasure. They could have paid a woman a few pence and been done with it, if that was all they sought.”
“Ah. So I am wrong. Perhaps they wanted the story even more than she required it.” She made a face. “I am not sure that I want the silly dramas and pretense, although I suppose I can live the lie if necessary.” She certainly did not want the story of first and forever that Anthony expected. Which did not mean she could not play the role if required.
He appeared rather formal suddenly. The warmth turned shallow and the gaze distant. “I expect you are correct. Even with me, it would probably not just be.”
“With you? Goodness, are you propositioning me, Mr. Albrighton?”
She spoke in a flirtatious tease, but he did not take the cue.
“If you conclude that you are willing to entertain propositions, I could never afford you. You will do it the way she taught you. The smart way.”
Of course she would, but she did not think he had to say it so baldly. Whatever had started between them, it had not ended yet. Or had it, right now in this garden?
She pictured herself preparing for her first man. For Anthony. She could do it. She could even know pleasure, the way Alessandra had taught her. She would not experience excitement, however. Or joy. Whatever she felt, Anthony would not be a part of it, only its agent. She imagined what her heart and soul would feel waiting for Anthony, and it was the calm calculations of a very practical woman.
She set that boring speculation aside and considered the man in front of her now. Her blood hummed just on seeing him. He had aroused her that first night, and ever since. Their affair would have been brief and strangled with discretion, but at least it might have been an adventure.
She moved closer to Mr. Albrighton. To Jonathan. To his warm eyes and dark enigma. She wanted to bridge all of the distances he had created here in the garden, for a final moment at least.
He looked down at her, his expression hard now, maybe angry. She laid her fingertips, no more, on his cravat, very lightly.
“It can never just be, unfortunately,” she said.
He captured her hand against his chest, and held it there tightly. She felt his body beneath her palm, hard and pulsing with the heart within. She could not extricate her hand now even if she wanted to.
“It sounds as if your debate with yourself is well along. Far past the question of whether virtue is a virtue, Celia.”
The warmth of his gaze drew her in, as it always did. A warmth so in contrast to the brittle danger he could project. It was a world away from chilly practicalities concerning Anthony. Regret strangled her, and it was hard to respond.
“Yes, it is well along.” Further than she had realized until this instant.
“And you will go to that fool?”
“He is as good a fool as another, and will be more foolishly generous than most.”
“The hell you say.” The danger emerged in him, and the darkness.
She tried to remove her hand from his grasp. He clutched it tighter, so she could not. The hard heat of his body entered her through her touch. She could not ignore the arousal that flowed with it, teasing her like so many wicked licks.
She had been trained to feel such things to their fullest, not deny them. She ached for more contact, more pleasure, and for the happy melody playing in her blood to become a soaring aria. Once, at least once, before she chose any path forever, it would have been nice to know all that sensual pleasure could be when it was truly shared.
He was angry now. Coldly furious. “I’ll be damned before I see you do this.”
“The decision is mine alone. You have no say in it.”
“The hell I don’t.”
He looked at her darkly, intensely, but he said nothing more. She stretched up to kiss his cheek, in a gesture of friendship and to acknowledge what they had shared.
He moved his head away, so she could not. “A final kiss, Celia?”
“A friend’s kiss, Jonathan.” But, yes, a final one too. For herself, to remember.
“I told you it could never be one kiss again. Whatever your decision, that has not changed.”
He walked away. He left her alone in the garden, sadder and more dismayed than she had ever expected to feel.
Many men will think it is like a horse auction. You must make it clear that you will not merely award the prize to the highest bidder, and that any liaison will always be your choice.
Your choice. It appeared that she had just made hers, for good or ill, despite what Jonathan believed. It had been inevitable, once she acknowledged her place in the world, and the brand of her birth. Once she stopped fighting the rules of the world. Alessandra had always known she would reach this decision if she gave the truth a fair hearing.
She should be content, and confident in her choice. She should be anticipating the gowns and luxury, and the comforts of that fashionable house, and taking joy in being able to save this home for Marian and Bella and maybe others like them.
Instead grief burned her heart, and tears blurred her sight so badly that she had to turn away from the sun.
H
e had to leave the house. There was no staying there that day. He was too aware of her presence and her spirit and every distant sound she made. He was sure that his hunger and anger filled the whole building like an invisible mist. Every minute inside those walls was torture.
He went out and called on Summerhays. He barely heard what the man said during the hours they talked. As a result, however, Summerhays and Hawkeswell joined him when he met with Castleford for the boxing match.
The duke was not happy to see he was not alone. “Why in hell did you bring the two aunties?”
Summerhays laughed.
Hawkeswell did not. “We are not going to interfere with your fun. You can drink until you drop, and we will cheer you on.”
“It won’t be the same.”
“What ho? Are you saying that the presence of halfway responsible individuals makes your total lack of that quality embarrassing?”
“I am thinking that with two angels harping in Albrighton’s ear, it will drown out my speaking in his other one.”
They positioned themselves to see the match well. Standing among the other shouting men, they laid their bets with the roving keeper of the books, bought glasses of spirits, and lit cigars.
Summerhays flashed that smile of his. “Are we here as angels? Your invitation to come along was pointed, now that I recall.”
“Not angels. Excuses, perhaps, to prevent this being a party that lasts until morning.” He looked at Castleford, who had recovered from his pique and was busy explaining to Hawkeswell which of the pugilists would win. “Perhaps I was wrong in assuming that marriage sends you home before dawn.”
“Not always, but knowing what Castleford intends for those last hours, we will be taking our leave much earlier.”
“As will I. I told him so, but he did not believe I could not be swayed.”
“Do you need us to sway you?”
“Not at all.” These friends might keep him from leaving so early that the duke was insulted, however. He did not want to be here at all. Most of him wasn’t, but instead back in his chamber, suffering the titillation of the close proximity of a woman who had told him today that their passion did not fit with her plans.
If she thought he would accept that and just stand down, she was much mistaken.
“He does know his whores, if one is of a mind to have one. I daresay he could write a book on them,” Summerhays mused.
I don’t want one of his whores
.
Castleford overheard. “That is a splendid idea. You always preach that I should use my station for the greater good, Summerhays. I think you have hit on a way for me to do so.”
“Sort of a
Sites and Monuments of London
, only
Venuses, Abbesses, and Soiled Doves
?” Hawkeswell said.
“I would need a better title than that,” Castleford said. “Something less obvious and more poetic.”
“If you are too poetic, the average man coming up to town will not know the value of the tome.”
Castleford put his mind to it. “The title can wait. The form of the content occupies me most intriguingly, however. There is no point in including the most celebrated courtesans, since the men who would buy my book have no chance with them. To be truly useful, it must only be women accessible to anyone with the coin.”
Hawkeswell looked at Summerhays and Jonathan. “Damnation, he almost appears sober all of a sudden. I think he is seriously contemplating it.”
“Of course I am. Such a book would be a great boon to mankind. I wish someone had given one to me when I first went seeking women in this town.”
The notion distracted him all through the boxing matches. Jonathan wondered if Castleford was choosing the chapters despite his vocal cheers of the pugilists he had bet on. The duke’s eyes did appear more sober than earlier, as if the better part of his mind remained on this new literary endeavor.
Jonathan’s own remained on something other than the blows being exchanged in the center of the room too. As time ticked by he imagined the women in that house going about their normal routine. He saw Marian serving the dinner, then Bella cleaning the dishes. He saw luminous, beautiful Celia, presiding over it all and making them laugh.
The last match ended after midnight. Castleford cajoled him to play on, in the games waiting to fill the hours. He refused, and slipped away with Summerhays and Hawkeswell. They went home to the certain satisfaction waiting with their wives. Jonathan rode toward a woman he was determined to seduce.
Chapter Fifteen
C
elia put a little more fuel on the fire, then began folding the satin dresses strewn on her bed. Her examination of her scandalous wardrobe had been most practical. She had indulged in no sensual pleasure in the fabric’s feel this time. Instead she had scrutinized each garment for any need of repair, while reciting the lessons her mother had taught her.
A clean sheet of paper waited on the small writing table. An inkwell stood at attention beside it. She gathered her resolve, left the dresses, and sat down. It was time to write to Anthony.
She penned a simple note. She invited him to call on her, and signed her name. As soon as he saw it, he would understand that he had won.
She looked around her chamber. Would it happen here? He would not want to wait. Her mother’s voice chanted in her head. No, not here. Not yet. The arrangement must be settled before she gave him what he wanted. She would make him purchase that house in her name first, and furnish it. And when it happened
there
, finally, that indenture her mother had signed would be waiting on the mantel to be burned as soon as it was done.
Once all was agreed, there would be no turning back. There would be other letters to write then, to Verity and Audrianna, and probably even Daphne. They might still see her very privately and very discreetly once she did this, perhaps. She prayed they would. If not, those friendships would be the true loss and true cost.
An odd sorrow filled her heart. One too encompassing to be relieved by mere tears. Much like grief, it just sat in her, to be accommodated in the days ahead as she lived the reality of who she was and released the illusions of who she had tried to be.
She returned to the bed and finished folding the dresses. As she did, the silence of the house changed just enough to arrest her attention. Subtle sounds from below came to her softly. Movement. Steps.
Jonathan had returned.
She paused and listened to those sounds of his presence. They brought her comfort, although they should not. She closed her eyes and saw him in the garden today, angry. His image changed to his face before he kissed her the first time. So sweet that kiss had been.
She startled out of her reverie. The footfalls were not following the normal path up to the attic. They came closer, down the passageway on this level. Panic scattered her thoughts.
Boot steps, near her door. They stopped. Then, silence. No knock. No voice. She felt him through the wood. Felt that energy he exuded and that intensity.
She waited. Nothing. Perhaps he had rethought whatever his reason for coming here. She all but held her breath as the time pulsed.
BOOK: Sinful in Satin
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