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The Lost Lords: Boxed Set Books 1-3 by Chasity Bowlin, Dragonblade Publishing (66)

Chapter Sixteen

Jane had luxuriated in a warm bath, attended to by a maid assigned at Lord Highcliff’s behest. The girl had been curiously skilled as a ladies maid in a house that was ostensibly devoid of ladies. It led her to wonder precisely what sort of guests Lord Highcliff entertained regularly.

She’d eaten her supper in her room, alone, while writing the article that essentially proclaimed Charles a traitor without saying it outright. It was a fine line to walk—providing enough information to identify him without naming him directly, indicating that he was guilty of treason without giving away what their evidence was. The goal, Marcus had explained, was to make Charles nervous, to make him anxious enough to want to know what was up their sleeves.

When at last she thought it was complete, she rose from the small writing table where she’d worked. Peering out into the corridor and seeing no prying eyes, she crossed the hall to Marcus’ room and knocked softly. After he’d bade her enter, she opened the door and stepped inside. She was unprepared for the sight that greeted her.

He’d just finished his own bath, it seemed. Dressed in borrowed trousers and nothing else, she was immediately transported to the events of the night before. His gloriously bronzed skin still glistened with beads of water and she wanted nothing more than to touch him and feel the heat of him once more pressed against her.

Hastily turning away, she stammered an apology. “Forgive me, I did not mean to intrude. I wanted to give you an opportunity to examine the article before I sent it off to the publisher. I’ll come back later.”

“Stay,” he urged. “I’ll look at it now.”

Still unable to meet his gaze, more because of her own wayward thoughts than his current state of undress, Jane stepped forward and handed him the sheaf of papers. She waited in uncomfortable silence as Marcus perused them. Seemingly against her will, her gaze continued to wander in his direction, stealing glances at the heavy muscles of his shoulders and chest. Memories of how it had felt to be held in his arms, to be crushed against the firmness of his body were wreaking havoc on her nerves.

After several minutes he looked up at her. “This will do nicely,” he said. “Perhaps it was my own response to your article about my fraudulent identity that prevented me from noticing, but you do have a way with words, Jane. It’s beautifully written even if the subject matter is somewhat difficult to bear.”

“I am sorry,” she offered. “I know it must be difficult for you to have been betrayed so cruelly by someone in your own family… that the betrayal has such far-reaching consequences—well, I just can’t imagine.” It was a weak and ill-worded statement of sympathy, but she found it difficult to think in his presence under the best of circumstances. When he was barely dressed, it was significantly worse.

“It has been difficult… but I’ve had time to accustom myself to Charles’ perfidy. I imagine it will be infinitely worse for those who have yet to ascertain just to what depths he is willing to sink,” he replied, sweeping away her concerns.

“He robbed you of five years of your life!” Jane protested. “Surely it is not so easy to just accustom yourself to that!”

He looked at her sharply. “No, Jane. That was not an easy thing to be accustomed to. Being imprisoned, having every thought and action guarded by others, with no privacy, very little dignity and a complete loss of everything that I am—up to an including my very name—was most assuredly not an easy thing to become accustomed to. But I daresay, you know exactly how that feels.”

“What on earth do you mean by that?” she demanded.

“Is that not what you’ve done every day of your life? Denied your true nature, pretended to be meek and subservient, given yourself over to the whims of someone like Mrs. Barrett… all in an attempt to keep the peace and avoid conflict or punishment?”

She frowned then. “I’m not entirely certain what you’re alluding to.”

“Not alluding, Jane. Stating. I fear that you have been just as much a prisoner as I was.”

Those words halted her protest. They robbed her of her very breath, in fact, because they rang with such truth. She had felt like a prisoner. She had felt as if every part of her was stifled and if not stifled, then indulged in only the most furtive of ways like her column or the countless novels she had been attempting to write for years. “I would hardly compare the two. I was not facing the threat of death,” she answered, though her words lacked conviction.

“And is there not more than one way to die?” he asked pointedly. “While I was locked in that tiny cell, Jane, I decided several things about myself. The first was that I would be a man of honor. That I would honor my commitments to the best of my ability and that I would not be the kind of man my father had been. In short, I would marry you and I would be faithful to you. It’s a concept the men of my family have little acquaintance with.”

“Why are you telling me this now?” she asked, wondering at his motives.

“Because in a few short hours, we will be making our vows before a clergyman. I think it behooves us to have an honest conversation about what we expect from one another.”

“I never expected fidelity from you,” she admitted. “I had always assumed that ours would be a typical society marriage. We would have a child and then you would have a mistress. That is typically the way of it, is it not?”

“I’ve no wish for us to be typical,” he said. Once again, his tone was sharp. “I offer fidelity, Jane, but I also demand it. I want us to be very clear on that front.”

Jane drew in a sharp breath, affronted at the very mention of it. “I realize that my behavior last night was hardly that of a lady, but if I’ve given any indication to you that I would ever behave in such a licentious—”

“I’m not accusing you, Jane. And as for your behavior last night, can you honestly imagine that I would think ill of you for it? Or is it that you think ill of yourself?” he asked.

“Why else would we be having such a conversation?” Her tone revealed her exasperation. “It was imprudent of me and impossibly forward. And I cannot image what you must think of me—”

“Because I’d rather have this conversation now than when it’s too late for you to back out,” he answered firmly. “I want to be very clear about what I’m offering and what I’m expecting. And if you have any demands or conditions, now is the time to voice them!”

“What possible conditions or demands could I make?” she asked, still uncertain as to his motives. “I offered myself to you last night… freely. I did so because I had made my decision. And I cannot understand why you would ask me to question it now! Unless you want me to back out… is that it? Do you want me to release you from your obligation?” Her heart felt as if it had sunk to her toes. Everything in her rebelled at the thought.

“That is not it at all, Jane! I would never think to abandon you after what we shared!”

“But that’s precisely what you’re doing,” she protested. “You’re offering up broad, sweeping statements about what our marriage should and shouldn’t be and telling me that now is my last opportunity to escape it! But why, after what occurred between us, should I want to escape an offer of marriage that includes the one thing most women in my position never receive—the promise of fidelity?”

“Because marrying me could ruin your life!” he shouted, clearly overcome by his own temper. After taking a calming breath, he continued. “I know that the scandal would be impossible, but I’m trying, Jane, against my better judgement and against everything that I desire for my own sake, to offer you a chance not to be permanently linked to a family marked by treason!”

Jane paused for a moment, collecting herself and trying to garner some sort of control over her own highly emotional state. “You truly wish to be married to me? Jane, who writes scandalous trash for a publication most people won’t even admit to reading and not simply the recognized daughter of William Barrett in order to fulfill the contract?”

He shrugged. “If it will set your mind at ease, your father will likely void the contract. Are you willing to marry a penniless marquess who will eventually be a penniless duke?”

“Yes,” she answered without hesitation. “I am… so long as that penniless marquess is you.”

It was true. In spite of their difficult and contentious parting before he left, in spite of the years since that she’d spent convincing herself she didn’t care for him at all and didn’t want to be married to any man, enough of the hero worship she’d had for him as a child remained. He would always be the most handsome of men in her eyes. And over the last days, she’d begun to see that he was also the most honorable. How that had occurred under the influence of the Duke of Elsingham would likely forever remain a mystery.

It was as if her capitulation had unlocked the very tides. He strode toward her, his long legs eating up the distance between them, until he could capture her once more in his arms. Jane went willingly, eager for his touch, eager to experience the passion he had shown her the night before.

“I cannot get enough of you,” he whispered. “I swore that I would not do this… that I would wait until we were married before having you in my bed again, but I cannot. I want you too much.”

“I don’t want to wait,” she insisted. “I want to feel what you made me feel last night.”

“And what is that, Jane?” he asked, kissing the side of her neck and biting it gently.

Breathlessly, she uttered, “Enough… you made me feel as if I were simply enough. That I was pretty enough, desirable enough, witty and smart enough… that if you had your preferences, there was nothing about me that you would change.”

He paused then, drawing back to look at her. “You are enough, Jane. You are everything that I have ever desired in a woman and more. It’s a crime that you’ve suffered under the care of people who would ever try to make you believe otherwise.”

“Can we really do this, Marcus? Can we marry and be happy together… or will we succumb to the same ennui and pettiness that all the couples of my acquaintance have?” she queried softly.

“I cannot promise you that we will not… I can only say that I will work every day to avoid that outcome,” he vowed. “We have both had enough unhappiness to last us a lifetime. Even though we’ve hardly led tragic lives, there is something to be said about the continual drain on one’s soul of being surrounded by people who will only ever serve themselves.”

“Take me to your bed,” she whispered. “I’ve no wish to spend another night alone.”

*

Marcus was helpless to resist that sweet plea. How any man could hold firm against the soft, seductive curves of her body or the delicate beauty of her upturned face would forever be a mystery to him. Of course, there was also the unfortunate truth that he had no real desire to resist her. Her request perfectly mirrored his own selfish needs.

Without any fanfare, Marcus took her hands and led her toward his bed. It took all of his patience to slowly undress her, to untie the laces of her gown with care and precision rather than simply tearing the garment from her. As each layer was removed, he kissed and caressed every inch of skin that was revealed. By the time Jane was clad only in the thin cotton of her borrowed chemise, she was shivering. But he knew from the rate of her breathing and the rapid pulse beating at her throat, that it wasn’t the cold that prompted her response.

“I want to see all of you,” he whispered hotly against her ear.

“You have seen all of me,” she replied.

“No. The dim light of a small fire and a hurried coupling in a cold room hardly counts,” he insisted. “All that remains to shield you from my gaze, Jane, is this chemise. Remove it.”

It was a challenge, a test of her confidence, her desire, her willingness to let go of what everyone else had said of her and, instead, see herself anew through his eyes. When her trembling hands lifted to the ties of the garment that rested just above the swells of her breasts, his breath caught. As she tugged the laces free and the garment fell, catching briefly on the curve of her hips before falling to the floor, that breath left him in a rush.

She was utterly perfect. Her soft, rounded shoulders, lush breasts and the gentle flare of her hips all reminded him of the paintings he’d seen by the masters of the Renaissance. Voluptuous, with a sweetness of countenance and a quiet beauty that would be overlooked by those who lacked the ability to see past the shy and subservient mien she’d adopted out of self-defense against her tyrant of a stepmother, she was his. He reveled in that fact, rejoiced in it as he had in nothing else for a very long time. If he’d possessed an ability to capture her beauty, he would have done so, but only to hoard it for his own pleasure.

“I wish you could see yourself as I do,” he murmured softly. “We will go to the British Museum one day and I will show you the glorious and scandalous paintings that only married women are allowed to view. And from those paintings, Jane, you will learn how perfect you are, for I haven’t the eloquence to tell you.”

“Then do not tell me in words,” she said. “Simply show me.”

Marcus stepped closer to her again, kissing her soundly as he bore her back onto the bed. After shedding his own breeches, he joined her there and did as she asked, worshipping her body with his own.

*

“Why didn’t you get rid of him on the road?”

Cassandra’s angry hiss roused Charles from the light doze he’d been enjoying as he luxuriated in the tub of hot water before the fireplace in his guest chamber and imagined the day when he occupied a much grander suite of rooms in the house. “It’s rather unwise for you to be in here given just how many prying eyes are in this house right now,” he warned.

“It was unwise of you to return with Barrett!” she retorted sharply. “You should have taken care of this problem, Charles. He’s insisting that the contract be voided, that Marcus’ questionable identity is a valid reason to demand a full account of all the moneys exchanged thus far! We’ll be paupers!”

“Then point him toward that ostentatious phaeton of yours… a goodly sum of it could be accounted for there,” he snapped. He was too tired for Cassandra’s scheming that night.

“Need I remind you that if Barrett succeeds… if he even goes to his solicitor and raises the question, it would make his death immediately suspect! My God, Charles, he’s a cit! How hard would it have been to knock him off his horse? A broken neck would have been easy enough to explain away!”

“You would know, my dear,” he replied menacingly. “Isn’t that how the duke’s second wife met her maker?”

Cassandra shrugged. “She was in the way. He had a title that I wanted and a son who was supposed to easily capitulate and marry a plain, little heiress to fill the family coffers! If I’d known what a catastrophe catching a duke would turn into, I’d have set my sights on an earl or marquess!”

“I will handle Barrett,” he assured her, more to shut her up than because he wanted to. Frankly, the entire scheme to get his hands on the title and on Jane Barrett’s fortune was turning into far more work than he had bargained for. “I have a plan to get rid of him, his mousy daughter and my inconvenient cousin in one fell swoop.”

“How will you do that?”

“Some bad meat at the wedding breakfast, I think,” he said. “We’ll take a little something to make us ill enough to be convincing… and they’ll all receive a very lethal dose of something else.”

Cassandra stopped short. “That will only work if Barrett agrees to the wedding breakfast.”

“I don’t plan to give him a choice, love,” Charles said. “Now either do something with that mouth of yours that doesn’t involve talking or go try to seduce your current husband into an already overdue grave.”

Cassandra shuddered with distaste as she began removing her gown. “I can’t stand the thought of touching him! He repulses me.”

Charles felt his body stir. “Then there’s a price to be paid for solace here.”

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