Read The Devil You Know Online
Authors: Victoria Vane
back, his clever fingers freeing a breast from her stays. He closed his
mouth over it, his hand sliding between her bare thighs. He groaned
as his fingers entered her slick sheath, and she was lost to all brain
activity beyond the unadulterated need to join with him.
Diana’s frenzied hands moved to his breeches, caressing, squeez-
ing, fumbling, and finally freeing his engorged staff. Both his hands
were now under her skirts cupping her buttocks, his arms sliding be-
neath her thighs.
He tore his mouth away, his arms supporting her legs, guiding
them about his waist. “Hands on my shoulders,” he grunted and lifted
her against the wooden door panel. He slid home in one solid thrust,
pinning her to the portal. His tight buttocks began pumping a furious
rhythm, and her conscious reduced to the most primal instincts. She
squeezed her thighs tight, meeting each driving plunge with her own
grinding hips as he pounded into her, hammering her to the door in a
coupling that was both feral and sublime. Her orgasm came upon her
fierce, frantic, and forceful. Tears were streaming down her face when
he caught her cry in his mouth. She swallowed his own shuddering
groan as he withdrew and spent between her thighs before they both
collapsed to the floor.
***
Ludovic was in exceedingly good humor upon rejoining his
guests after the brief but torrid interlude with Diana, but his revelry
was curtailed by the interruption of his head groom.
“Pardon yer lordship, but ‘tis a matter most urgent.” The ashen-
faced jockey nervously twisted his cap.
“What the devil is it, Pratt?” DeVere demanded. “I’ve fifty some
guests at present. Are you certain it cannot wait?”
“I fear not,” Pratt answered his master with a grim face. “Mayhap
it be best you come to the stables, milord. ‘Tis sommat you must see
for yourself.”
DeVere made an irritated sound. “All right, then. Hew, pray see to
the guests. I’ll return as soon as I’m able.”
Pratt led his master down to the stable block housing his guests’
horses.
“Now what has my unflappable Pratt in such a lather?” DeVere
demanded.
“Here, my lord,” Pratt said, stopping in front of the oversized box
which had earlier housed Lord Reggie’s stallion.
DeVere frowned. “Where is the horse? And why did he not run
this morning?”
“The poor beast was in a great agitation when we found him, my
lord. Horses have an innate fear of death.”
“Death?” DeVere repeated. “What the hell do you yammer on
about?”
With trembling hands, Pratt slid the stall door open on its track.
“’Tis a most gruesome sight, but we durst not move the body wi’out
your express leave.”
“Sweet Jesus!” DeVere cried out at the gory spectacle, his stomach
lurching at the splattered blood and brain matter that clung to the
walls. Adjusting to the initial shock, he stepped inside, taking care
not to disturb the remains of Baron Reginald Palmerston-Wriothesley.
“There’s a pistol still in his hand.”
“Aye, my lord. One would think he’d have dropped it.”
DeVere was thinking the same thing. Something was horribly
amiss. He stepped out with an impatient wave of his hand. “For God’s
sake, man, close it! What more do you know of this?” he demanded of
Pratt as soon as the door slid shut.
“Almost nothing, my lord. His lordship’s horses was cared for by
his own groom, Johnson.”
“And what of Johnson?”
“He be in fair sad condition hisself. We found him beside the bar-
on. Looks like he was beaten senseless.”
“Yet he lives?”
Pratt shrugged. “For now.”
“Where is he?”
“Bedded down at me own cottage. Dr. Stone’s been sent for, but
little good t’will likely do.”
“Has anyone yet notified the magistrate?”
“Not yet, my lord.”
“Sir John Gooding is the Justice of the Peace, is he not? Pray locate
him for me, Pratt. And send some men out to make discreet inquiries.
I wish to know who was about during the races.”
“Aye, surely, my lord.” Pratt tugged his forelock.
“And Pratt, you know that the Baroness is amongst my company.
It is my particular wish to shield her ladyship from any word of this.
She had best not hear anything except from my own lips. Do you un-
derstand?”
“Aye. But what of the afternoon race, my lord?”
“Regardless of my personal dislike for the man, one cannot ignore
that a death has occurred under my own roof. There will be no further
racing this afternoon.”
Diana w
***
aited with fretful anticipation for DeVere after learning
of his departure and hearing Hew’s vague explanation. “There was
some commotion in the stables that demanded his attention, but I’m
sure my brother will return shortly.”
“But what of Reggie?” Diana asked. “He has not come back ei-
ther.” Wondering if her husband was the real cause of DeVere’s unex-
pected departure, her unease was rapidly increasing.
“I have seen nothing of Lord Reggie since this morning,” Hew
said. “If you will please pardon me now, my lady, it seems I must
dance attendance on our new arrivals.”
“Of course, my apologies for keeping you.” She gave him a nod.
Diana then took herself out to the back terrace where she would
have a view of anyone approaching from across the park separating
the house from the stables. She wondered if Reggie had confronted
DeVere and how he might perceive the situation. Would he believe
that she had set out deliberately to seduce him to give Reggie grounds
to sue? After all, it was she who had come to him in the dead of night.
Dear God, she was out of her depth!
After a half hour of restless pacing, she’d had enough. With her
skirts in hand, she sallied forth across the park with a distinct sense
of foreboding.
They came together near the yew maze. Although she wanted
nothing more than to throw herself into his arms, she halted in her
tracks at the grim lines that hardened DeVere’s features the moment
he saw her. They faced one another for an interminable moment, each
silently struggling to read the other. Her heart sunk. “You’ve seen
Reggie,” she said, certain now that he suspected her of conspiring
with her husband.
DeVere’s cobalt gaze bore into her. “I’ve seen him all right.”
“I told you earlier there was something you needed to know, but
you never gave me a chance to speak. Please believe me. It’s not what
you think.” She noted with dismay the sudden tension that gripped
his body and the distance he maintained between them.
“Not what I think?” He sounded like he would choke on the
words. “And what precisely am I to think, Diana?”
“That Reggie is a desperate and unprincipled man who would
use anything at his disposal to achieve his ends,” she answered.
“Yes,” he said with an accusing look that made her throat go dry.
“Desperation does, indeed, bring out the very worst in all of us.”
“Please, Ludovic.” She grasped his sleeve, praying he would be-
lieve her. “I have nothing to do with this. I came to you for reasons of
my own.”
“By God, but you’re good! I was completely taken in last night
when you played the reluctant seductress. You would be a credit to
the stage.”
“You accuse me unjustly!” she said.
“Unjust! It’s a bit late now to play coy, don’t you think? I thought
briefly in the beginning that you might have used the race as an ex-
cuse to lure me, to reclaim the deed, not that I really gave a damn
because I wanted my cock inside you so badly. But then another
better
alternative occurred to you, or did you have this planned all along? I
never would have suspected you of such duplicity, such ruthlessness.
Did you come to me last night purely for my protection, thinking I
might actually shield you?”
His harsh words struck her as a blow, yet she pressed on, deter-
mined to make him understand. “I hoped it would not come to that,
but then I imagined how I might never be free of him without your
help. I don’t believe he would ever agree to a divorce, Ludovic. Thus,
I did consider seeking your protection—if it became necessary to do
so.”His gaze hardened. “Then you take much for granted, Diana.”
She looked away with dismay. “After last night, I thought perhaps
you might wish...”
His gaze narrowed, his jaw twitched. “I wished many things after
last night, but matters seem to have taken a rather disconcerting turn.
I may be a libertine but
this?
This, madam, is far beyond even
my
level of tolerance.”
Her lips quivered. “Then I’m a fool.” She had felt such a connec-
tion, such intimacy with him last night, that it had never occurred to
her it wasn’t mutual. But now it was clear she meant nothing to him
beyond an evening’s entertainment.
He laughed, a harsh sound. “No, my dear. Fool is the
last
word I
would use to describe you. I would rather call your solution exceed-
ingly clever. The set up. The timing. The alibi. All of it is quite brilliant,
actually.”
Set up? Alibi
? Diana was baffled. “I don’t understand you, Ludovic.
Are you implying I had something to do with fixing the race? How
can you suggest such a thing when your own brother rode my mare?”
“The race?” It was his turn to look confused. “My dear, the race
is inconsequential at this juncture. I’m only concerned about how I’m
supposed to deal with the dead body in my stables.”
Diana felt the blood drain from her face.”D-dead body? Dear
God, Ludovic, what are you talking about?”
“Y
***
our dead husband’s body!” he snarled. “What the devil other
body could we be talking about?”
Diana looked stunned. “R-Reggie? Dead?”
“Yes, dead.”
“But how can that be? Was there an accident? Is that why the
horse didn’t run?”
“An accident? I suppose one might call it that
if
one could mistak-
enly place a pistol in one’s mouth and pull the trigger.” Her horrified
expression made him instantly regret the blithe remark. He feared she
might collapse.
“A pistol? In the mouth?” she repeated woodenly and sank to her
knees in the grass.
With a groan of frustration abetted by sheer confusion, Ludovic
squatted down beside her. “Do you mean to say you truly didn’t
know?”
“Know?” she whispered. “How could I possibly know such a
thing?”
He clawed a hand through his hair. “Then what the devil were
you saying just a moment ago?
Please believe me, Ludovic. It’s not what
you think.
Bloody hell! What
am
I to think when you just confessed to seeking my protection!”
“Protection as in becoming your mistress! Not as in shielding a
murder! You think I killed him?” she answered incredulously. “How?
How could I have done such a thing? I was with Edward and Annalee
the entire time.”
“Damn it, Diana!” he cried. “I thought nothing of the kind until
you began talking nonsense about secrets and things I should know.”
“I was trying to warn you that Reggie threatened extortion. That
he found out about you and me and intended to take you to the courts
of law.”
“That’s nothing less than I would have expected from that pusil-
lanimous pile of—” He caught himself. “I’m sorry.”
She waved the apology away, but her lips quivered, and her eyes
glistened. He couldn’t tell if it was with grief or rage. “How could you
think me capable of such wickedness?”
Rage then
. He groaned. “What the hell was I to think?”
“But to even imagine for a moment!” she argued.
“Look, Diana,” he retorted. “I’ve just seen a man’s brains splat-
tered on a wall. I may not be in the most lucid state of mind at the
moment.”
“Dear God!” she whispered. “What happened?”
“I don’t precisely know. In brief, my man, Pratt, found two bod-
ies in your stallion’s box. One was your unconscious groom, the other
was what remains of your husband after he took a bullet through the
mouth. The offending pistol was still in his hand.”
“Suicide?”
“A highly suspicious one, if you ask me, but there will, of course,
be an inquest. I have sent word to the J.P. I believe he will take charge
of the entire affair.”
“Reggie’s really dead, then.”
Was it shock or relief in her expression? “No man could survive
what I saw.”
“And Johnson? Has he spoken to anyone yet?” she asked.
“Johnson may never speak again. It’s doubtful he’ll recover his
senses.”
“Dear heavens.” She sat in a protracted silence, her fingers con-
vulsively ripping at the grass.
He gazed down on her with a feeling of puzzlement. “Are you all
right, Diana?”
“What?” she answered blankly. “Yes, thank you. I’ll be fine in a
moment or two. It’s just such a terrible shock.”
He took her hand. She looked into his face. “What now?”
“Now, I think it only appropriate to call an end to the festivities.”
Chapter Twelve