Sundown came late this time of year, and as Mrs. Audley kept country hours, it was well past supper by the time Amelia made her way to the gazebo. As she’d expected, no one made note of her departure. Her father had retired to his room directly after the meal; he was still rather cross over Jack’s proposal to Grace. The dowager had not even bothered to come down in the first place.
After their meal, Mrs. Audley invited Amelia to join her in the drawing room with Jack and Grace, but Amelia declined. She had spent an hour in the same place with the same three people before supper, and the entire conversation consisted of tales of Jack’s exploits in his younger days. Which were indeed amusing. But perhaps more so if one were in love with him, which she was not. No one was surprised when she said she was tired and would prefer to read in bed.
She took a book from the small library, climbed the stairs, reclined upon her bed for a minute to give the covers a properly rumpled look, then stole her way outside. If Grace went back to the room while she was out—which Amelia highly doubted; she’d been hanging on Mrs. Audley’s every word—it would appear that she had wandered out for just a moment. To the library, for another book. Or maybe to find something to eat. There was no reason anyone might suspect that she was planning to meet Thomas. Everyone had expressed their curiosity, of course, as to his whereabouts, but it was understood that he would wish for some time to himself.
The sun was sinking along the horizon as she made her way to the gazebo, and already the air was getting that flat quality to it—the colors less vivid, the shadows gone. She told herself that their meeting meant nothing, that she was simply doing him a favor, collecting his letter so she might leave it on a table in the front hall and then feign surprise with all the rest when it was discovered. And it probably was nothing. She was not going to be throwing herself at him again; her last attempt at passion had surely fulfilled whatever quota of mortification she was due for her lifetime. And Thomas had given her no indication that he wished to pursue their romance further. Not now that he’d lost Wyndham.
He was so bloody proud. She supposed that was what came of living one’s life as one of the twenty or so most powerful men in the land. She could tear her heart from her chest and hand it to him, tell him she’d love him until the day she died, and he would still refuse to marry her.
For her own good.
That was the worst of it. He’d say it was for her own good, that she deserved more.
As if she’d ever valued him for his title and riches. If this had all happened just last month, before they’d spoken, before they kissed…
She wouldn’t have cared.
Oh, she’d be embarrassed, she supposed, the next time she went to London. But there would be plenty who’d say she made a lucky escape, not to have married him before he lost the title. And she knew her worth. She was the reasonably attractive, intelligent (but not—oh, thank you, Mother—too intelligent), well-dowered daughter of an earl. She’d not remain on the shelf for long.
It would all have been perfectly acceptable if she hadn’t gone and fallen in love with him.
Him. Not the title, not the castle. Him.
But he would never understand that.
She hurried across the lawn, hugging her arms to her body to ward off the evening chill. She’d taken the long way around so she would not pass by the drawing room window. It occurred to her that she was getting quite experienced at sneaking around this house.
There had to be something funny in that.
Or at the very least, ironic.
Or maybe just sad.
She could see the gazebo in the distance, its white paint visible in the dimming light. It would only be another minute before—
“Amelia.”
“Oh!” She jumped a foot. “Dear heavens, Thomas, you gave me a fright.”
He smiled lopsidedly. “You weren’t expecting me?”
“Not here.” The gazebo was still many yards away.
“My apologies. I saw you and it seemed impolite not to make myself known.”
“No, of course, I’m just—” She took a breath, patting her chest with her hand. “My heart is still racing.”
There was a moment of silence, and then another.
And then one more.
It was awful. Awkward and empty and all those things she’d thought were normal back before she truly knew him. When he was the duke, and she was his lucky fiancée. And they never had anything to say to each other.
“Here you are.” He thrust a piece of paper at her, folded over and sealed with wax. Then he gave her his signet ring. “I was going to use it on the wax,” he said, “but then I realized…”
She looked down at the ring, emblazoned with the Wyndham crest. “It would have been funny, actually.”
“Painfully so.”
She touched the wax. It was smooth where it had been pressed down with a plain, flat stamp. She looked up and tried to smile. “Perhaps I shall get you a new one. For your birthday.”
“A new ring?”
Oh dear, that had come out wrong. “No, of course not.” She cleared her throat, embarrassed now, then mumbled, “That would be too presumptuous.”
He waited, then cocked his head forward to indicate that he was still wondering what she’d meant.
“A stamp. For sealing wax,” she explained, and she hated the cadence of her voice. Only four words, but she sounded all babblish. Silly and nervous. “You’ll still need to send letters.”
He seemed intrigued. “What shall you choose as the design?”
“I don’t know.” She looked down at the ring again, then put it in her pocket for safekeeping. “Have you a motto?”
He shook his head.
“Do you want a motto?”
“Do you want to give me one?”
She chuckled. “Oh, you should not tempt me.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning that given time, I could come up with something far more clever than Mors œrumnarum requies.”
His brow furrowed as he attempted to translate.
“Death is rest from afflictions,” she informed him.
He laughed.
“The Willoughby heraldic motto,” she said, rolling her eyes. “Since the time of the Plantagenets.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“On the other hand, we do live to very old ages.” And then, because she was finally enjoying herself, she added, “Crippled, arthritic, and wheezing, I’m sure.”
“Don’t forget gout.”
“You’re so kind to remind me.” She rolled her eyes, then gave him a curious look. “What is the Cavendish motto?”
“Sola nobilitus virtas.”
Sola nobili—She gave up. “My Latin is rusty.”
“Virtue is the only nobility.”
“Oh.” She winced. “That is ironic.”
“Isn’t it, though?”
She didn’t know what to say after that. And neither, apparently, did he. She smiled awkwardly. “Right. Well.” She held up the missive. “I shall take good care of this.”
“Thank you.”
“Good-bye, then.”
“Good-bye.”
She turned to go, then stopped and turned back around, holding the letter about level with her shoulder. “Should I assume this means that you do not plan to rejoin us at Cloverhill?”
“No. I would not be good company.”
She gave him a little nod, her lips in an awkward, close-mouthed smile. Her arm came back down, and she knew she should leave. And she started to, she really did, or at least she thought about starting to, but then—
“It’s all in there,” he said.
“I beg your pardon?” She sounded a bit breathless, but maybe he did not notice.
“The letter,” he explained. “I laid out my intentions. For Jack.”
“Of course.” She nodded, trying not think about how jerky the movement felt. “I’m sure you were very thorough.”
“Conscientious in all things,” he murmured.
“Your new motto?” She was holding her breath, delighted to have found a new avenue of conversation. She did not want to say good-bye. If she walked away now, it was all done, wasn’t it?
He smiled politely and dipped his chin at her. “I shall look forward to your gift.”
“Then I will see you again?” Oh, blast. Blast blast blast. She had not meant that to come out as a question. It was supposed to be a statement, dry and sophisticated and definitely not uttered in that tiny little pathetically hopeful voice.
“I’m sure you will.”
She nodded.
He nodded.
They stood there. Looking at each other.
And then—
From her lips—
In the most unbelievably stupid—
“I love you!”
Oh God.
Oh God oh God oh God oh God. Where had that come from? She wasn’t supposed to say that. And it wasn’t supposed to sound so desperate. And he wasn’t supposed to be staring at her as if she’d grown horns. And she wasn’t supposed to be shaking and she was supposed to be breathing and oh dear God she was going to cry because she was such a wretch and—
She threw up her hands. Shook them. “I have to go!”
She ran. Oh bloody bloody. She’d dropped the letter.
She ran back. “Sorry.” Scooped it up. Looked at him.
Oh, that was a mistake. Because now she was talking again, as if her mouth had done anything but make a fool of her this evening. “I’m so sorry. I shouldn’t have said that. I didn’t, well, I shouldn’t have. And I’m—I’m—” She opened her mouth, but her throat had closed up, and she thought she might have stopped breathing, but then, finally, like some horrifying belch, it came out—
“I really have to go!”
“Amelia, wait.” He put his hand on her arm.
She froze, closing her eyes at the agony of it.
“You—”
“I shouldn’t have said it,” she blurted out. She had to cut him off before he said anything. Because she knew he wasn’t going to say that he loved her in return, and nothing else would be bearable.
“Amelia, you—”
“No!” she cried. “Don’t say anything. Please, you’ll only make it worse. I’m sorry. I’ve put you in a terrible position, and—”
“Stop.” He put his hands on her shoulders, his grip firm and warm, and she wanted so much to let her head sigh to the side, so she could rest her cheek against him.
But she didn’t.
“Amelia,” he said. He looked as if he was searching for words. Which could not be a good sign. If he loved her…if he wanted her to know this…wouldn’t he know what to say?
“It has been a most unusual day,” he said haltingly. “And—” He cleared his throat. “Many things have happened, and it would not be surprising if you thought that—”
“You think I just came to this conclusion this afternoon?”
“I don’t—”
But she could not even begin to tolerate his condescension. “Did you ever wonder why I fought so hard against having to marry Mr. Audley?”
“Actually,” he said rather quietly, “you did not say much.”
“Because I was dumbfounded! Thunderstruck. How do you think you would feel if your father suddenly demanded you marry someone you’d never met, and then your fiancé, with whom you thought you were finally forming a friendship, turned and demanded the same thing?”
“It was for your own good, Amelia.”
“No, it was not!” She shook him off, practically screaming the words. “Would it really be for my own good to be forced into marriage with a man who is in love with Grace Eversleigh? I’d only just stopped thinking I was going to get that with you!”
There was an awful silence.
She had not just said that. Please, please, she didn’t just say that.
His face went slack with surprise. “You thought I was in love with Grace?”
“She certainly knew you better than I did,” she muttered.
“No, I wouldn’t—I mean, I didn’t, except—”
“Except what?”
“Nothing.” But he looked guilty. Of something.
“Tell me.”
“Amelia—”
“Tell me!”
And she must have looked a complete virago, ready to go for his throat, because he shot back with, “I asked her to marry me.”
“What?”
“It did not mean anything.”
“You asked someone to marry you and it did not mean anything?”
“It’s not how it sounded.”
“When did you do this?”
“Before we left for Ireland,” he admitted.
“Before we—” Her mouth dropped open in outrage. “You were still engaged to me. You can’t ask someone to marry you when you are promised to another.”
It was the most unbelievably un-Thomas action she could have ever imagined.
“Amelia—”
“No.” She shook her head. She did not want to hear his excuses. “How could you do this? You always do the right thing. Always. Even when it’s a bloody nuisance, you always—”
“I didn’t think I would be engaged to you for very much longer,” he cut in. “I just said to her that if Audley turned out to be the duke, that perhaps we ought make a go of it when it was all over and done with.”
“Make a go?” she echoed.
“I didn’t say it like that,” he muttered.
“Oh, my God.”
“Amelia…”
She blinked, trying to take it all in. “But you wouldn’t marry me,” she whispered.
“What are you talking about?”
She looked up, finally able to focus on his face. Sharply, on his eyes, and for once she did not care how blue they were. “You said you would not marry me if you lost the title. But you would marry Grace?”
“It’s not the same thing,” he said. But he looked embarrassed.
“Why? How? How is it different?”
“Because you deserved more.”
Her eyes widened. “I think you just insulted Grace.”
“Damn it,” he muttered, raking his hand through his hair. “You’re twisting my words.”
“I think you are doing a fine job of twisting them yourself.”
He took a deep breath, clearly trying to calm his temper. “Your whole life you have expected to marry a duke.”
“What does that matter?”
“What does that matter?” For a moment he looked incapable of words. “You have no idea what your life might be, stripped of your connections and your money.”
“I don’t need that,” she protested.
But he continued as if he had not heard her. “I have nothing, Amelia. I have no money, no property—”
“You have yourself.”
He gave a self-mocking snort. “I don’t even know who that is.”
“I do,” she whispered.
“You’re not being realistic.”
“You’re not being fair.”
“Amelia, you—”
“No,” she cut in angrily. “I don’t want to hear it. I can’t believe the level of your insult.”
“My insult?”
“Am I really such a hothouse flower that you don’t think I could withstand the tiniest of hardships?”
“It won’t be tiny.”
“But Grace could do it.”
His expression grew stony, and he did not reply.
“What did she say?” Amelia asked, her words almost a sneer.
“What?”
Her voice grew in volume. “What did Grace say?”
He stared at her as if he’d never seen her before.
“You asked her to marry you,” she ground out. “What did she say?”
“She refused,” he finally replied, his voice clipped.
“Did you kiss her?”
“Amelia…”
“Did you?”
“Why does it matter?”
“Did you kiss her?”
“Yes!” he exploded. “Yes, for the love of God, I kissed her, but it was nothing. Nothing! I tried, believe me I tried to feel something, but it was nothing like this.” He grabbed her then, and his lips came down on hers so fast and so hard that she did not have time to breathe. And then it didn’t matter. His hands were on her, pressing her against him—hard—and she could feel his arousal against her, and she wanted him.
She wanted this.
She tore at his clothing, wanting nothing so much as the heat of his skin against hers. His lips were on her neck, and his hand was under her skirt, moving up her leg.
She was panting with desire. His thumb was on the soft flesh of her inner thigh, pressing, stroking, and she wasn’t sure she could stand. She clutched at his shoulders for support, sighing his name, moaning it, begging him over and over again for more.
And his hand moved even higher, until it was at the crook of her leg, where it met her hip, so close…so close to…
He touched her.
She went stiff, and then she sagged against him, instinctively softening herself as he touched her. “Thomas,” she moaned, and before she knew it, he’d laid her on the ground, and he was kissing her, and he was touching her, and she had no idea what to do, had no thought at all except that she wanted this. She wanted everything he was doing and more.
His fingers continued to tickle, and then he slipped one inside of her in the most wicked caress of all. She arched beneath him, gasping at the shock and pleasure of it. He’d slipped inside so easily. Had her body been waiting for this? Preparing itself for this very moment, when he would settle himself between her thighs and touch her?
She was breathing faster, harder, and she wanted him closer. Her blood was pounding through her body, and all she could do was grab at him, clutch his back, his hair, his buttocks—anything to pull him against her, to feel the mounting pressure of his body on hers.
His mouth moved to her chest, to the flat plane of skin left exposed by her dress. She shivered as he found the neckline of her dress, his lips tracing it around…down…from her collarbone to the gentle swell of her breast. He took the fabric between his teeth and began to tug, gently at first, and then with greater vigor when it did not give. Finally, with a muffled curse, he brought his hand down and grabbed at the fabric that gathered over her shoulder, giving it a yank until it slid over her arm. Her breast slid free, and she barely had a chance to gasp before his mouth closed over the tip.
A soft shriek escaped her lips, and she did not know whether to pull back or push forward, and in the end it did not matter, because he was holding her securely in place, and judging from his growls of pleasure, she was not going anywhere. His hand—the one that had been delivering such sweet torture—had curved around her backside and was pulling her relentlessly against his desire. And his other hand—it slid along the soft, sensitive skin of her arm, stretching her up, and up, until their hands were both over their heads.
Their fingers entwined.
I love you, she wanted to cry.
But she didn’t. She couldn’t speak, couldn’t allow herself to utter a word. He would stop if she did. She didn’t know how she knew it, or why she was so certain, but she knew it was true. If she did anything to break the spell, to bring him back to reality, he would stop. And she could not bear it if that happened.
She felt his hands move between their bodies, fumbling with the fastenings of his breeches, and then there he was. Hard and hot, pressing her, then stretching her, and she was not sure if this was going to work, and then she was no longer so certain she was going to like it, and then—
He thrust forward with a primal grunt, and she could not help it—she let out a tiny scream of pain.
He froze instantly.
As did she.
He pushed himself up so that his head drew back, and she got the impression that he was only just now seeing her. The haze of passion had been pricked, and now—oh, it was everything she’d feared…
He regretted it.
“Oh my God,” he whispered. “Oh my God.”
What had he done?
It was a bloody stupid question, and an even stupider time to ask it, as he was lying atop Amelia, buried to the hilt, and they were in a field. A field. He’d taken her virginity without even a care to her comfort. Her dress was bunched around her waist, there were leaves in her hair, and good God—he hadn’t even managed to take off his boots.
“I’m so sorry,” he whispered.
She shook her head, but he could not tell from her expression what she meant.
He would marry her now. There could be no question. He had ruined her in the most debasing way possible. Had he even whispered her name? In the entire time he’d been making love to her—had he said her name? Had he been aware of anything besides his own unrelenting desire?
“I’m sorry,” he said again, but words could never be enough. He moved to withdraw, so that he could help her, comfort her.
“No!” she cried, grabbing his shoulders. “Please. Don’t go.”
He stared down at her, unable to believe her words. He knew that this had not been rape. She had wanted it, too. She had moaned for him, clutched his shoulders, gasping his name in her desire. But surely now she would wish to end it. To wait for something more civilized. In a bed. As a wife.
“Stay,” she whispered, touching his cheek.
“Amelia,” he said raggedly, and he prayed she could hear all of his thoughts in that single word, because he did not think he could give voice to them.
“It’s done,” she said softly. But then her eyes grew fierce. “And I will never regret it.”
He tried to say something; he made some sort of noise, but it came from deep within, from some elemental spot where he had no words.
“Shhh.” She touched her finger to his lips. “It’s done,” she said again. And then she smiled, her expression the culmination of a million years of womanly experience. “Now make it good.”
His pulse quickened, and then her hand crept up the back of his leg until it reached the bare skin of his buttocks.
He gasped.
She squeezed. “Make it wonderful.”
And he did. If the first part of his lovemaking had been all frenetic thrusts and mindless passion, now he was a man with a purpose. Every kiss was pure artistry, every touch designed to bring her to the heights of pleasure. If something made her gasp with delight, he did it again…and again.
He whispered her name…over and over again, against her skin, into her hair, as his lips teased her breast. He would make this good for her. He would make it wonderful. He would not rest until he’d brought her to the heights of ecstasy, until she shattered in his arms.
This was not about him. For the first time in weeks, something was not about him. It was not about his name or who he was or anything other than what he could do to bring her pleasure.
It was for her. Amelia. It was all for her, and maybe it always would be, for the rest of his days.
And maybe he wouldn’t mind that.
Maybe it was a good thing. A very good thing.
He looked down at her, his breath catching as he saw her lips part in a tiny sigh of desire. He’d never seen anything so beautiful. Nothing compared, not the most brilliant of diamonds, the most spectacular of sunsets. Nothing compared to her face in that moment.
And then it was clear.
He loved her.
This girl—no, this woman—whom he’d politely ignored for years had reached inside him and stolen his heart.
And suddenly he didn’t know how he’d ever thought he could allow her to marry Jack.
He didn’t know how he thought he could live apart from her.
Or how he could live just one more day without knowing that she would one day be his wife. Bear his children. Grow old with him.
“Thomas?”
Her whisper brought him back, and he realized he’d stopped moving. She was gazing up at him with a mix of curiosity and need, and her eyes…her expression…He couldn’t explain what it did to him, or rather how, but he was happy.
Not content, not satisfied, not amused.
Happy.
Lovesick, champagne in the veins, want-to-shout-it-to-the-world happy.
“Why are you smiling?” she asked, and then she was smiling, too, because it was infectious. It had to be. He could not keep it inside.
“I love you,” he said, and he knew his face must belie the surprise and wonder he was feeling.
She looked instantly cautious. “Thomas…”
It was imperative that she understood. “I’m not saying it because you said it, and I’m not saying it because I obviously have to marry you now, I’m saying it because…because…”
She went very still beneath him.
He whispered the last: “I’m saying it because it is true.”
Tears formed in her eyes, and he bent down to gently kiss them away. “I love you,” he whispered. And then he could not stop his sly smile. “But for once in my life, I’m not going to do the right thing.”
Her eyes widened with alarm. “What do you mean?”
He kissed her cheek, then her ear, then the graceful edge of her jaw. “The right thing, I think, would be to stop this madness right now. Not that you’re not properly ruined, but I really ought to get your father’s permission before continuing.”
“Continuing this?” she choked out.
He repeated his kisses on the other side of her face. “I would never be so crude. I meant the courtship. In the general sense.”
Her mouth opened and closed a few times, then finally slid into something that wasn’t sure if it ought to be a smile.
“But that would be cruel,” he murmured.
“Cruel?” she echoed.
“Mmm. Not to continue with this.” He pushed forward. Just a tiny bit, but enough to make her squeak in surprise.
He nuzzled her neck, increasing the rhythm between them. “To start something, and not finish it—that doesn’t seem like the right thing, does it?”
“No,” she answered, but her voice was strained and her breaths were growing ragged.
So he continued. He loved her with his body just as he loved her with his heart. And when he felt her shudder beneath him, he finally let go, exploding inside of her with a force that left him spent, exhausted…and complete.
Maybe it wasn’t the right way to seduce the woman he loved, but it had certainly been good.