Free Read Novels Online Home

Any Old Diamonds (Lilywhite Boys Book 1) by KJ Charles (5)

CHAPTER FIVE

Saturday.

Alec hadn’t heard anything from Jerry in the intervening period, which had been mostly a relief, nor from his father, which was not. He’d harboured a tiny hope that the Duke or his secretary might send some acceptance that would make it unnecessary for Alec to arrive at a house to which he wasn’t invited, greet a host who hadn’t invited him, and play a role he hadn’t been told about to achieve an end he didn’t understand.

It was the stuff of nightmares, and Alec had no idea why he wasn’t paralysed by terror. Perhaps it was so much a nightmare he couldn’t believe he was doing it, and thus he could drift on as though it were all a fantasy. Perhaps it was Jerry, who seemed to walk in another world altogether, one in which theft and violence and gross indecency were casual diversions, and who’d put Alec so firmly under his thumb. Panicky helplessness merged with the sense of surrender to Jerry’s will until he wasn’t sure what was fear and what arousal.

He read the newspaper avidly but saw no reports of a death or even a serious assault under Waterloo Bridge. He also bought new gloves, had his clothes pressed, his shoes polished, and his hair cut, and at eight o’clock on Saturday he was ready and waiting in his room when Mrs. Barzowski announced his guest in tones of barely-suppressed excitement.

Jerry strolled in. He looked superb, impeccable from sleek hair to shoes, with a rosebud of vivid pink in his buttonhole.

“Elegant,” he said, looking Alec up and down appreciatively. “Very grand indeed. Finery suits you.”

“It suits everyone.”

“Not at all. Templeton in evening dress looks like a gorilla that fell into a tailor’s shop.”

Alec choked. Jerry grinned, strolling closer. “So. Ready?”

“I hope so.”

“What’s my name?”

“Vane. Gerald Vane.”

“Excellent. Shall we go?”

“No. Wait. Sorry, but what if I get this wrong?” Alec blurted. “I’m truly not sure what you want of me.”

“I want you to go to a party—you can do that, yes? To make pleasant small talk. And, when an opportunity arises, to greet your father and stepmother with respect and courtesy, and introduce me as your friend. That’s all. Well, almost.”

“What else?”

Jerry smiled again, slower. “I told you to remember something. Do you?”

“Yes, but right now—”

“What was it?”

Alec made a frustrated noise. Jerry came another step closer. “Bear in mind,” he said softly, “you are Lord Alexander this evening. My Second Villain. What do I want you to remember?”

Alec met his eyes. “You had me against a wall under Waterloo Bridge.”

“Like a cheap tart. Shall I do it again?”

“Not under Waterloo Bridge.”

Jerry stroked a finger across Alec’s jaw, trailed it down his neck, onto his shoulder, walking around him as he did it. Alec stood, still and straight, feeling Jerry come close behind him, the finger stroking up his throat again, under his jaw. “How about at Lady Sefton’s soirée?”

“You can’t!”

“I could,” Jerry murmured. “I’m very tempted by the possibility. It would be absurdly risky, needless to say, but you are so deliciously obedient, I feel almost obliged to abuse that. I think I could take any liberties I like with this lovely unresisting flesh. I know I could. Are you aware your breathing changes when you’re getting hard?”

“No,” Alec said, voice somewhat high.

“You may take my word. I can hear you wanting me.” His other hand was sliding up and down Alec’s arm. “Do you know what I want?”

“I don’t have the faintest idea.”

Jerry laughed, a breath of air against his neck. “I want to make you spend, again and again, until you’re whimpering. I want you aching for what will happen when I next put my hands on you. I want you so trained to my touch that your breathing hitches when I walk into the room. I want to wind up your anticipation until you’re quivering for my orders, begging for them.”

“You want a plaything,” Alec whispered.

Jerry’s hands paused. “If you choose to put it like that. Do you want to be one? No thought, no will”—his thumb slid over Alec’s lips, pushed in—“just responding?”

“God. Yes. Please.”

“Then there we are. A match made in heaven. Oh, I will make you beg to be played with, Lord Alexander.”

“What about you?” Alec said. “We’ve done this twice and you haven’t—”

“Please,” Jerry murmured into his neck. “Do I strike you as a philanthropist?”

Alec almost laughed. “I can’t say you do, no.”

“I will take my pleasure as it suits me, when it suits me. If it suits me, and not until.” He puffed a breath into the nape of Alec’s neck, making him shiver. “Now. You and I will attend this milling crowd of fools, and if your thoughts are three-quarters on what we’ll be doing afterwards, that is no bad thing. You won’t be afraid, because I am in control, and you won’t fear your own performance because I am in control of that too. Understand?”

Alec grimaced, unseen. “If you say so.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Yes. Yes, all right.”

Jerry’s hand tightened. “I’m in control, of everything. Understand?”

“You’re in control,” Alec repeated, and this time he felt a tiny loosening in his tight nerves. Of course Jerry knew what he was about. Of course he had a plan. He let himself relax into the feeling. “Carry on.”

“That is my very good partner in crime.” Jerry moved away as he spoke. “Take a moment, because the line of your suit is not helped by the stand you’re sporting. And then we will go, and we will enjoy this. Trust me.”

Alec stared forward. There were a number of things he wanted to ask: Why don’t you ever look in my face when we do this? Do you want me, really, or is this all to keep me up to the mark? What exactly are we doing?

Did it matter? This wasn’t the sort of affair that gave a chap a false sense of hope, the kind that even briefly made one think that there might be some kind of companionship and affection. Alec knew and hated that hopeful feeling because it so inevitably led to painful disappointment. No matter how hard he tried to expect nothing at all, he always found himself yearning for more, imagining that this time might be different, and simultaneously waiting on horrible tenterhooks for the withdrawal, boredom, excuses that he knew would come.

He couldn’t fool himself now. One would be a madman to hope for anything from Jerry Crozier. One couldn’t feel deceived when one knew from the start that the chap was up to his ‘long game’; one couldn’t be disappointed in an affair if one truly had no expectations of one’s partner. There was nothing here but the fucking. And if Jerry really wanted what Alec had to offer in that regard, if he wanted to take the reins that Alec wanted to surrender—well, it wouldn’t be safe, or sane, but it would meet a need he’d never been able to fulfil with more normal, less criminal men.

He was riding a tiger. He might as well enjoy it.

“You look lost in thought,” Jerry said. “Pleasant thought, too. Hold on to that, and let’s go.”

***

LADY SEFTON’S TOWN house in Belgravia was bright with electric light, spilling out into the evening. Alec and Jerry abandoned the cab two streets away and walked there, resplendent in black. They’d travelled in silence from Eastcheap. Alec didn’t have anything to say except “Are you sure this will work and we won’t be thrown into the street?”, and he already knew the answer he’d get. Whether he believed it was up to him.

There was a thin stream of men in black and women in bright colours making their way up the impressive outer stairs. Jerry joined them with a casual, confident stride that Alec concentrated on matching. Up the stairs, and to the open door where a butler stood, flanked by a dozen footmen to take overcoats—Jerry had told him not to wear one, or a hat—and a man in evening dress waited by a lectern. It was a visitor’s book, Alec realised, which was to say a courteous way of ensuring Lady Sefton knew who was coming in.

Jerry gave a nod. “Mr. Gerald Vane and Lord Alexander Pyne-ffoulkes. Thank you.” He didn’t pause, simply strolling in. Alec hurried after him, unable to believe the man at the lectern wouldn’t hold up a hand or call them back.

He didn’t. Alec caught Jerry up and they followed the sound of a string quartet drifting along the ground floor. A wind instrument playing something else was audible upstairs. He should have known this would be a musical evening: the Seftons were famous for their patronage of the arts. Alec was preparing, with no great enthusiasm, to make intelligent remarks about music when a hand landed on his arm.

The thought Police! erupted in his head with stunning force. He whipped round in a panic and saw a familiar, grinning, puzzled face.

“I say, Pyne-ffoulkes, isn’t it? Did I startle you? Romley, you recall, from school. It is you, isn’t it?”

“It is indeed,” Alec responded, trying to force his heart back down his throat. Jerry had vanished from the corner of his vision. “I do beg your pardon, I was in a brown study.”

“I’m not surprised,” Romley said. “Do you know, there’s no card room, and all this tootling is enough to drive a man to drink. And there’s an opera singer later.”

“Oh, there’s not.”

“At least the champagne’s cold. Come and take a glass, I haven’t seen you in an age. What have you been up to?”

Jerry had made him practise how he would deal with this. Deflection first. “Yes, it’s been an awfully long time. But what brings you here, if it isn’t your love of music?”

Romley snorted. “My fiancée, what else?”

“Oh, congratulations,” Alec said. “Who’s the lady, and does she realise the challenge that faces her?”

He didn’t actually remember a thing of Romley beyond his face and a vague impression he’d been good at rugger, but that kind of remark was obligatory, and got the obligatory laugh. Romley swept two glasses of champagne from a passing waiter, and proceeded to drink his own and two more while Alec sipped at his. He asked Alec twice what he’d been up to and why he hadn’t seen him around; Alec headed that off with mentions of his bereavement, which would naturally exclude him from parties for six months, and then a vague reference to keeping his nose to the grindstone.

“But ain’t your father a duke?” Romley demanded. He wasn’t slurring, but his face was going distinctly pink. “My old fellow’s a banker himself, insists a man should make his own living. Sitting on his moneybags and doling out a measly allowance.”

“It’s the new way,” Alec said. “Modern times. Work’s the thing for improving moral character and all that. I dare say there’s something in it.”

Romley snorted. “Nonsense. Let the fellows who want to get ahead work, and then hand on their earnings to the fellows who don’t, that’s what I say.”

Alec made a noncommittal noise that Romley could interpret as polite agreement and led the conversation off down a path of school reminiscence, a feat that proved surprisingly easy. He was, he realised, enjoying this rather more than he’d thought possible. He dreaded the few social events George or Annabel pressed him to attend, but when one treated the intrusive questions as a game, seeing how easily they could be turned away, their sting seemed less and their meaning more distant.

Romley introduced him to a couple more gentlemen. Alec found his role settling on his shoulders easily. He resisted any temptation to voice opinions that could be construed as critical of his father, smiled pleasantly, asked men about themselves and told them they were interesting (“never fails”, Jerry had said with an eye roll). He wasn’t sure if this was what Jerry had wanted, but he’d been told to make himself pleasant and in the absence of other instruction, he did it.

Perhaps ninety minutes into the evening, he heard the raised voices.

They weren’t that raised. He was in the hall and the speakers were in the main drawing-room. The hubbub of conversation through the house was quite drowning out the musicians’ efforts. But he still picked out the raised voices because he’d heard them so often before.

He excused himself from his little group, and headed towards the sound of the Duke and Duchess of Ilvar at war.

The drawing room was brightly lit and busy but less noisy, which was hardly surprising because naturally people were listening in. Alec made his way through the crowd of guests trying to pretend they weren’t watching, and couldn’t help but cringe as he saw what was going on. Lady Sefton, his unknowing hostess, resplendent in blue with a sapphire necklace, was facing the Duchess of Ilvar, and one didn’t have to be an aficionado of female fashions to know that Her Grace was overdressed. She wore a magnificent red silk gown that would have suited a ballroom if not a Court presentation, and a three-string necklace of glittering diamonds and rubies. Her red gloves were elbow length and adorned with rings, but no bracelet, and she had a hand raised in a demonstrative fashion, one pointing finger a little too close to Lady Sefton’s face for courtesy. Alec couldn’t hear what she was saying but the hectoring note was all too clear. Beside her Ilvar stood, bottom lip pushed out in the way he had when he was angry. It made him look like a petulant, bearded child.

They were older. Of course they were; it was eight years since he’d last seen them. The Duchess was now in her mid-forties, and statuesque in a way that suggested a dowager in the making. She would probably be a magnificent and intimidating older woman. The Duke, meanwhile, had become an old man rather than a middle-aged one to Alec’s eye: grey-bearded, bald-headed. He stood with her, both of them bristling with affronted pride. It was a very familiar pose.

Lady Sefton looked equally affronted. She was speaking at the same time as the Duchess—never a good sign—in a low, rapid voice. Alec hesitated, not sure what he was meant to do, and felt a tap on his shoulder.

“I say.” It was Jerry, looking as though he’d been hurrying. “Isn’t that your stepmother with our hostess?”

“It is. I don’t know what’s up.”

“I rather think I do. I’m going to have to interrupt the ladies. Could you introduce me, old man, so I don’t seem quite so much of a bounder?”

“What, now?” Alec asked, putting very real alarm into his voice at the prospect of getting involved in what looked like an almighty scene. It seemed the kind of thing one would say if innocent, and he was sure he detected a tiny glint in Jerry’s eye.

“Precisely now. Or I can brave the lionesses’ den alone, but I do really need a hearing, and at once.”

“I’ll take your word,” Alec said, sounding as dubious as he felt, and heard a couple of faint chuckles from around them.

They walked forward. The Duchess was saying, “I insist that you take action at once as to this disgraceful matter,” while Lady Sefton contradicted her in a low, icy undervoice. The Duke was red with insult, and he did not look pleased as he noticed intruders into the little space around the angry ladies.

“I’m sorry to interrupt,” Alec said. This entirely failed to interrupt anything; he was ignored except by his father, who swelled visibly. Alec made himself raise his voice and took a step closer to the warring women. “Excuse me, Lady Sefton, Your Grace, Father? I think my friend may be able to help.”

“I beg your pardon?” Lady Sefton said, turning.

She was about to say, Who are you and what are you doing here?, he was sure. He hurried on. “Her Grace the Duchess of Ilvar, Mr. Gerald Vane. Jerry has something important to say, madam.” He bowed as he spoke.

The Duchess said, through stiff lips, “What could this person possibly have to say to me?”

“It’s about this, Your Grace,” Jerry said, and pulled a glittering handful of light, red and white, from his pocket.

The Duke’s breath caught. Lady Sefton said, “Ha!”

The Duchess’s eyes widened, and she snatched at the jewels he held. “My bracelet! Where did you find this? How do you have it? Explain yourself at once!”

Jerry bowed. “Yes, ma’am. I picked this up in the gentlemen’s hat-room.”

“I beg your pardon, sir?” the Duke said, menacingly.

“I see,” Lady Sefton said, with immense satisfaction. “I suppose you dropped it, ma’am, and it was kicked by an unwary foot. I must regret that you chose to assign blame to unknown evildoers or my staff rather than your inattention. I do feel, if you will attend a simple evening event with jewels fit for a ballroom, it must be your responsibility to care for them.”

The Duchess reddened. She hated to be proved wrong, always had, would never forgive anyone who embarrassed her, and Alec could have sworn aloud. If Jerry had only told him what he’d meant to do—

But Jerry was speaking. “I’m extremely sorry to contradict you, Lady Sefton, but I’m afraid you’re not in possession of all the facts. The clasp has been cut.”

“What?” The Duke held out an imperative hand for the jewel.

“Nonsense,” snapped Lady Sefton. “Let me see at once.”

The Duchess handed the bracelet to the Duke with a triumphant glare. He was longsighted, like Alec, and wasn’t wearing spectacles; he held it at arm’s length and squinted.

Lady Sefton plucked the bracelet from his outstretched hand and gave it a cursory look. “Nonsense. I can see evidence of no such thing. It has simply snapped.”

“I beg your pardon,” Jerry said diffidently, “but I don’t think it can have snapped. I looked at it when I picked it up. The clasp is cleanly cut; the gold chain that ought to have secured it is broken as well, with no partially open link. I don’t see how that could have happened without a violent pull that the Duchess would have noticed.”

“Naturally I should,” the Duchess agreed. “Quite right.”

“Are you suggesting, Mr., er, Vane, that someone cut the clasp deliberately?” Lady Sefton demanded. “Do you imply a robbery took place? And if so, perhaps you would explain why they did not, in fact, steal this most valuable item?”

The Duchess drew herself up, inhaling sharply. Jerry replied to Lady Sefton with entire calm. “I do think your ladyship’s hospitality may have been abused, yes. As to why someone left the bracelet behind, I don’t know, but it was underneath an open window in the hat-room. Perhaps it was dropped in the course of escape? If you have a detective present, perhaps he ought to look, and enquire if anyone else has lost a jewel. That’s all I can suggest.”

Lady Sefton’s eyes narrowed. “You might have said this at once, sir.”

Jerry’s brows angled steeply in a silent expression of astonishment, but he bowed. “I beg your pardon. I do apologise I wasn’t more immediately persuasive.”

Lady Sefton opened her mouth at that, closed it, and swept away in silence. The Duchess gave a single nod of intense satisfaction. “Really, what is the world coming to? The insolence of accusing me of carelessness, with a thief loose on the premises.”

“Quite, my dear.” The Duke gave Jerry a very slight inclination of the head. “Your assistance is appreciated, Mr.—” He waved a hand.

“Vane,” Jerry said with the self-deprecating smile he’d used before. “I’m proud to have been of any small service to Her Grace.”

The Duke took that as his due. “The Cirencester family?”

“A very distant offshoot, sir.”

“Very well.” The Duke gave them both a nod of acknowledgement and dismissal, took his lady’s arm, and led her away.

Alec let out a long, shallow breath. Jerry took his elbow. “That was more excitement than one expects a musical soirée to offer. I fear I’ve landed myself in our hostess’s bad books, though. Shall we go? Nightcap?”

They strolled out. Alec felt a nervous fizz along his spine, as though he were about to hear a cry of “Stop, thief!”, but they sauntered down the stairs without incident, stopping to exchange goodbyes with a couple of Alec’s acquaintances, and strolled casually away, Jerry chatting idly about the merits of the string quartet. He led the way to a nearby public house—apparently they were indeed having a drink—and took a table.

Alec didn’t dare say a thing until he had a glass in his hand. He sipped rather than downing the lot, against all instincts, and said, “Well.”

“Well, indeed.” The room was noisy enough that Jerry had to lean forward a little; they wouldn’t be heard. “Very satisfactory, I thought.”

“I don’t have the faintest idea what happened. Except that my father scarcely looked at me.”

“Oh, tut,” Jerry said. “What happened materially was that I cut the bracelet off her wrist. Easy in a crush with a small cutter, especially when women wear them over gloves. More importantly, you and I helped the Duchess put one over on Lady Sefton. They loathe one another. Her Grace had the chance to upbraid Lady Sefton for having a house riddled with thieves, and she will enjoy that even more when the other women start shrieking.”

“Other women?” Alec said faintly.

“Temp was working too, did you not spot him? We’ll make a profit on the night. In addition to which, I got Her Grace out of a rather tight hole.”

“What hole?”

Jerry’s eyes were sparkling like the Duchess’s jewels. “The bracelet was glass. I’ll swear to it.”

“No!”

“I think so. Very good glass, must have cost a few bob to make, but nevertheless, glass. And she would not have wanted that made public, after her loud outrage at losing the thing; she’d have looked ludicrous. I wonder whether she’s hoarding the real things, or selling them.”

“Hoarding,” Alec said with certainty. “She insisted on having all Mother’s jewellery instead of letting it go to Cara and Annabel. She wouldn’t even give them a few pieces as mementoes, when Father was larding her with her own. Cara used to call her the Dragon, because she slept on her heap of treasure.”

Jerry nodded, apparently unsurprised. “Jewel mania. Or greed, perhaps, but jewel mania arises with remarkable ease. Some people will do anything to possess a glittering rock, or a bit of solidified oyster mucus. I’ve seen diamond merchants weep over stones, and thieves run their head into nooses in the lust to possess. Never stand between Templeton and an opal: he becomes emotional.”

“Do you have jewel mania?” Alec asked curiously. “Is that why you do it?”

“Good Lord, no. Or, at least, I haven’t succumbed yet, but I am not prone to obsession. I don’t set my heart on things.”

“Really? Never?”

Jerry smiled, rather sardonically. “I like to control my situation. One can’t do that if one is consumed by the lust to possess a bag of emeralds, or another man’s wife. If you can’t walk away, you’re in trouble.”

“But you can’t walk away from everything.”

“Watch me,” Jerry said. “Now. We’ve brought ourselves to their graces’ attention very nicely. Tomorrow you’ll write a brief note to the Duchess as politeness dictates, expressing your hope the experience wasn’t too distressing, and with no ulterior motive visible. After which, we’ll wait and see. I’m pleased with the night’s work.”

“It seems like rather a lot of work for very little, to be honest,” Alec said. “I’m sure you know what you’re doing, but my father barely glanced at me.”

Jerry was lifting a glass to his lips. He paused at the words, holding it in mid-air, then put it down. “Were you hoping he would? Alec, do you want to achieve something other than what I’m here for?”

Alec tried, very hard, not to react. He wasn’t sure if he’d succeeded. “How do you mean?”

Jerry’s brows tweaked in the middle, lifting towards his nose. “Bluntly, then, if what you want is your father’s attention, there are easier and more legitimate ways to go about that.”

“That’s not what I want. What would I do with his attention? He doesn’t care about me, or any of us, and that won’t change. I just meant that I thought we were bringing me to his notice this evening, and I didn’t feel he noticed me.”

“He had nothing to be displeased with. He will have expected to be outraged by you, and he wasn’t. That’s a significant achievement on which we’ll build.”

“Outraged?” Alec said blankly. “Why would he think that?”

“Because he’s wronged you, and we resent people we wrong. They say Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, but it’s not true. Hell hath no fury like the one who did the scorning, especially when they’re made to face up to their actions. Our challenge here is to persuade the Duke that you won’t embarrass him with reproaches, or force him to be conscious of his sins. He needs to know that you won’t be a problem.”

Alec took a sip of whisky and soda, contemplated the glass for a moment, then drained it. The spirit seared down his throat. He coughed.

“Steady.”

“I don’t want to be steady. I want—” Not to be negligible. To be more than an absence. To have someone look at him and see him and think something other than, Don’t embarrass me by your existence or offend me with your injuries.

He didn’t embarrass people. He didn’t complain about his father’s miserliness with love and money, or bemoan the jobs he didn’t get, or fuss when lovers gave him the cold shoulder. He never made a fuss. He tried to be as unobtrusive and inoffensive as he could, and even then he was found inconvenient simply for existing with a title and no unearned income. Meanwhile, Jerry was a walking insult to civilised rules, yet he sauntered into great houses and got waiters’ attention, and Alec was quite sure he never felt guilty about taking space any more than taking jewellery.

The hell with it. The absolute hell with it all.

Jerry was watching him. Alec put his chin up. “So, was our conversation before we left my rooms all talk, or do you mean to act on it?”

Jerry grinned, a smile with more teeth than was quite safe. “Why don’t you come with me and find out?”

***

THEY WENT TO A HOTEL Jerry knew, walking in silence. There were plenty of hotels in London where one could take a room and invite a friend up with no questions asked; still, Alec found his heart thudding unpleasantly as he waited, for fear of a spiteful maître d’ or chambermaid. Jerry showed no such concern.

They went upstairs. The boy opened the door, lit the gas, drew the curtains, took his tip, bowed himself out. Jerry fastened the door.

Neither of them had said a word since the cafe.

Jerry looked at him. Alec looked back. Jerry’s lips curved a little. “Lord Alexander.”

It was a name, a declaration, a question in its way. Alec said, “Yes,” to all of it.

Jerry took him by the shoulder and pushed. “Against the wall.”

Alec half-stumbled over to the wall, hands out against the patterned paper, feeling its tiny corrugations under his palms. Jerry’s fingers slid into his hair, then raked down his neck. Alec could feel breath on his skin.

A hand came round his waist, a thumb hooking into his waistband, then sliding out, over the front of his trousers, massaging there. Alec’s breath caught, and he heard Jerry chuckle softly. He leaned forward, bracing his forehead against the wall, and simply stood as a knee nudged his thighs apart and hands roamed his body. Fingers pulling across his face, pushing between his lips; fingers between his legs, cupping and squeezing him to hardness through the cloth; breath on the back of his neck from a man he couldn’t see. He was trembling with the tension.

Jerry leaned in, putting a lot of weight on Alec’s shoulders, making him gasp. “I want to fuck,” he said softly. “And since you’re here, I’m going to fuck you.”

“Oh God.”

A hand at his buttons, unfastening the trousers, shoving them and the drawers down. Alec stood, bare and undignified, waiting for a moment as cloth rustled behind him. He jerked as a warm hand cupped his bare buttock, feeling his muscle tense, and Jerry’s fingers slid along the curve that made.

He didn’t seem to be in any hurry. Fingers trailing up and down Alec’s thigh, over his arse, tucking up his coat- and shirt-tails, cupping his hip. Alec pressed his mouth against his forearm to stop himself asking for anything. He wished he could see Jerry’s face, and was glad he couldn’t. This way, the hands on him might have been a lover’s touch.

Jerry let out a breath, almost like a sigh. “Lord Alexander.” His finger was probing, slicked with something, warm and intrusive. “Look at you. My lord the duke’s son, quivering for it. What a sight.” His teeth grazed Alec’s neck gently, as much bite as kiss.

Alec swallowed hard. His prick was heavy, the blood throbbing in an uncomfortable demand for attention that Jerry wasn’t giving. The slick finger pushed in, crooked upward. Alec yelped into his forearm. “God. Jerry.”

“Uh-uh,” Jerry murmured. “You don’t like to talk, so I don’t want to hear a peep out of you. Not a word. Not a sound. Just silence while I do what I want.”

Alec inhaled hard, feeling the hairs on his skin prickle. Jerry’s finger slid out, and then, finally, there was that blunt pressure, and Alec tried to widen his stance, pushing ineffectually at the cloth trapping his ankles. Jerry was breathing hard, his cock well slicked but still impossibly too large for the space allowed. Alec bit down on his forearm against the burn, breathed out to release his muscles, felt his body give way to the intrusion. Jerry’s teeth were on his neck again. Alec tilted his head to offer more access, felt Jerry’s lips move, and the slow, steady pressure continued.

So slow. Jerry was taking his time, each thrust barely worthy of the name, pushing into Alec in fractions of an inch. He had one hand braced against the wall; he got the other round Alec’s chest, gripping tight, holding him up even as he invaded Alec’s body, each stroke a little further, until Alec was splayed helplessly against the wall.

“Christ,” Jerry rasped in his ear. “You titled tart.” He began to move more as he spoke, slowly at first, sliding steadily out and in. Alec’s shoulders were heaving. He clamped his lips together, felt Jerry’s teeth on his neck, his ear. “That’s right. Keep your mouth shut and take it like a gentleman. God. When I rob your father’s home I’ll pile jewels round your neck, and have you wearing nothing but diamonds.”

Alec couldn’t help a noise at that. Jerry almost snarled, arm tightening. “I said, be quiet while I fuck you.” He moved harder on the words, hips speeding up, and then it was all Alec could do to lock his knees and stand against the onslaught, Jerry taking him with savage command, the upward friction making his toes curl and his prick throb. He wanted to beg for relief but this was Jerry’s turn, Jerry’s pleasure. The thought almost brought him off by itself. He gasped into his arm as he was bumped against the wall by each thrust, and then Jerry’s hand slid down to grip his straining erection and Alec sobbed aloud at the prospect of relief. Fingers slid over his length, fast, sharp movements to match his thrusts, and Alec came, spread and impaled like a butterfly on the wall. Jerry made a breathless noise, and then he was slamming into Alec without regard, brutally hard, and panting as he spent.

They stood, locked together, chests heaving. Alec’s cheek felt hot against the wallpaper. He was suddenly very aware of the intruding presence in his body, and of Jerry’s face in the crook of his neck.

“Christ,” Jerry said at last. “Hold on, now.” He pulled out gently. Alec couldn’t help a wince. “Sorry. Just a moment, stay there.” He moved away. Alec leaned against the comforting wall—it felt like an old friend after all this—trying to calm his breath. Jerry returned after a moment, and Alec squeaked at the feel of a cool, wet cloth.

Jerry made a hissing noise between his teeth, like an ostler calming a horse. “Steady. God, you’re a pleasure. Was that as you wished?”

“You must have noticed,” Alec mumbled into his arm.

Jerry’s other hand settled on his hip for a moment, a touch that felt almost comforting. “I saw you liked it. I want to know how to make you love it.”

Alec lifted his head at that. Jerry blew lightly on his ear, startling a shiver out of him. “I can’t think of a better hold to have over a man than knowing his desires, every little odd turn of them. If I have your desires I have you in the palm of my hand, which is exactly where I want you.” He licked Alec’s neck, a deliberate scrape. “So, if there’s anything I can do to that end, I hope you’ll tell me for next time.”

Next time. No wonder people skipped happily down primrose paths to damnation. Alec could see everything that was terrifying about this, but all he felt was a quiver of anticipatory excitement and, undeniably, warmth. Jerry might be a manipulative criminal, but he was a manipulative criminal who cared what Alec wanted. Perhaps that was merely to serve his own desires; it didn’t matter at all.

He tried to turn and realised that, absurdly, his trousers were still around his ankles. He bent to hoist them up and turned then to see Jerry watching him. The thief looked sweaty and dishevelled, eyes bright, face flushed. He looked wild, in fact, as though his usual iron control had slipped, and Alec felt a twinge of satisfaction.

“That was wonderful,” he said. “Um...”

Jerry stroked a finger gently under his chin. “Spit it out. How do I bring you to your knees?”

“You didn’t need to bring me off,” Alec blurted. “Not right away. If you didn’t want to.”

“Ah-ha. I could take my pleasure and leave you whimpering for yours? What an extremely good idea. Oh, damnation. ‘Had we but world enough, and time’, I should be delighted to experiment, but not tonight; I must go. Soon.”

Alec had known they’d be leaving—it was one thing to take a room, quite another to both emerge in the morning in full evening dress. It was still a tiny disappointment. “Of course. Uh, what next?”

“Write that note to your stepmother and wait. I’ll be in touch soon enough. Keep a clean nose, too.”

“Sorry?”

“You’ve attracted your father’s attention. It would be wise to imagine his eyes on you when you’re not with me.”

Alec blinked. “You think he’d have me watched?”

“If I were him I’d ask questions. It’s merely a precaution. And don’t worry. The long game is going well.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, C.M. Steele, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Jenika Snow, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Mansplainer by Colleen Charles

Venom (Vampires of Hollywood Book 2) by Madisyn Monroe, Madisyn Ashmore

Sweet Promises: A Candle Beach Sweet Romance by Nicole Ellis

The Werebear's Unwanted Bride (A Paranormal BBW Shifter Romance) (Howls Romance) by Marina Maddix

Lord of Night (Rogues to Riches Book 3) by Erica Ridley

Caught In Flames by Banks, Natalia

That Song in Patagonia by Kristy Tate

The Promise of Jesse Woods by Chris Fabry

Cuffing Her: A Small Town Cop Romance by Emily Bishop

RUSE: Fake Marriage To The Single Dad by J.J. Bella

The Only Difference by Magan Vernon

Christmas With the Wrights: A Wright Family Holiday Short (Wright Brothers Book 4) by Christina C. Jones

Winter at The Cosy Cottage Cafe: A deliciously festive feel-good Christmas romance by Rachel Griffiths

His Mysterious Lady, A Regency Romance (Three Gentlemen of London Book 2) by G.G. Vandagriff

The Time King (The Kings Book 13) by Heather Killough-Walden

The Fortunate Ones by R.S. Grey

Chasing Taz by Khloe Wren

2-Cold Pursuit by Toni Anderson

A Mate for the Christmas Dragon by Zoe Chant

Destiny Of The Dragon Prince (Royal Dragons Book 1) by Selina Coffey