Reading Online Novel

How to Tame Your Duke(59)



"It is."

"How . . . Oh!" She stopped in the doorway.

He came up against her back and put his arms about her. "Do you like it?"

"How did you . . . ? Oh, it's beautiful!"

She stepped forward into the bower of blooms, fragrant lilies and roses,  gardenias cut and overflowing their vases, sensuous orchids rising up  from planters.

"Some of them are your uncle's. I had a few men scour the florists for the others."

She turned in his arms. "Oh, but we can't! The ball!"

"The champagne is flowing. I daresay they won't even notice we've left." He lowered his lips to hers and tasted her gently.

Emilie's arms stole around his neck. "Ashland, you're a romantic."

"Bite your tongue. I am a gruff and taciturn Yorkshire duke." He lifted  her up and carried her to the chaise longue. The Ashland sapphires  glittered darkly at him.

"This is shocking. We really ought to behave more properly until the  wedding." She sighed dreamily and tilted her head back, as his tongue  explored the delicate skin at the hollow of her throat.

"Trust me. The wedding will take place as quickly as we can arrange it," he said.

"The sooner the better."

"I'm glad you've come around to my way of thinking." Ashland pulled down  the neckline of her dress. It was a tight fit, constructed exactly to  measure, but Emilie's breasts seemed extraordinarily full tonight,  nearly bursting from her corset, and with diligent effort he coaxed a  single dusky tip into the open air.

She made a gurgling laugh. "I had no choice, really."

He was busy suckling her tender nipple and couldn't answer. God, she was  luscious. Her back arched, feeding his greed for her, and his prick  swelled inside his trousers.

"Ashland, really. This is no time for that. My uncle's plans . . ."

"Bother your uncle's plans." He meant it.

"But there's something . . . I have to tell you both, about Miss Dingleby . . ."

Ashland raised his head and cupped her cheek with his hand. "We know all  about Miss Dingleby. Trust me. Your uncle is managing things as we  speak."

"Oh." Her eyes went round in the hint of moonlight.

He kissed the corners of her eyes, her lips. "Would I allow my guard  down for an instant if you were in danger? Of course not. Olympia  explained everything. You, Miss Dingleby, everything. He's taking care  of it all right now. You've nothing more to worry about."

"You know everything?" Her voice was anxious.

"Everything."

Her body relaxed in his arms. "And you're happy about it?"

"Entirely satisfied."

Her hands went to his shoulders. "Ashland, I'm so glad. You've no idea  how this relieves my mind. I've felt so trapped, these past weeks,  knowing I was leading you into danger, when none of this was your  choice. Not wanting to trap you, too. I didn't want to say anything  until I was certain . . ."

Her soft acquiescence was sending him over the edge. "It's all over now, sweetheart, or almost. Nothing but roses ahead."

She opened her mouth again, but he laid his finger over it. "No more  worries. Let me make love to you now. Let me give you pleasure."

Emilie took his finger away and smiled. "I only wanted to say, at least you won't need your handkerchief this time."

For an instant, he couldn't reply. It was as if the sun came out inside his chest.

He lowered himself back to her. "Yes."

Despite the urgent fire in his blood, he seduced her slowly, waiting  until she was slick and plump before unbuttoning his flies and sinking  himself into her. He thrust in a gentle rhythm. He worked her to climax  with ruthless self-control, mindful of her tenderness after last night's  frenzy. The passage of time relaxed around them; he was surrounded by  satin and stiff petticoats, by sapphires and soft skin, by the scent of  rare flowers and by Emilie's sheath clasping him snugly. The effect was  so delicious, so languorous, that when she spent around him, gasping and  shuddering, the instant ferocity of his own release stunned him.                       
       
           



       

He thrust his hips in a last urgent shove, everything else forgotten,  Olympia and Miss Dingleby and the musicians in the ballroom. There was  only Emilie and her sweet breath on his neck, her delicate body still  pulsing below him as he drained himself deep inside her.

* * *

Iam so glad," she whispered, moments later. He was lying alongside her,  both of them breathless and rumpled on the inadequate width of the  chaise; he was half atop her, half braced on his elbow, damp and flushed  and heavy lidded. Whether the ancient wicker could bear them both much  longer, she dared not consider.

"Very glad."

"It was so silly of me. Suspecting Miss Dingleby!" She laughed. "But  when she came up with that odd drink of hers, urging me on, I had the  strangest sense of dread. Bottoms up! she said, with that sharp look in  her eyes. I suppose I've been so anxious lately that . . ."

Ashland raised his head. "Drink?" His voice held an odd note, through the huskiness of arousal and release. "What drink?"

"Oh, one of her grapefruit concoctions, I suppose. And all I could think  of was that she had been there in the castle with my stepmothers, she  had discovered those drinks that made them miscarry, and since I'd just  admitted my suspicions about the baby . . ."

Ashland bolted upward. The crisp white bow under his starched wing tips had come shamefully undone. "The baby?"

"Well, she had suspected before, of course, but . . ."

"You're with child?"

A glacier seemed to have invaded Emilie's heart, sending off chunks of  ice into her bloodstream. She opened her mouth, which had gone suddenly  dry. "Why, yes. I mean, I . . . I might be. I think so. I thought you  knew. When you said . . ."

Ashland's shocked gaze went to her bosom, to her belly, and back up to her face. "You're with child? By me?"

Emilie gasped and sat up, dislodging Ashland. He scrambled to his feet. "Of course, by you! What the devil do you mean by that?"

"I'm sorry . . . Of course I . . . only shocked . . . Good God! A child.  Good God!" He raked his hand through his close-shorn hair. A square of  moonlight caught his face through the glass, rendering it nearly white,  the black mask like an abyss.

"Well, what did you think I meant?" Emilie realized her naked breasts  were spilling over her bodice in a most undignified fashion. She stuffed  them back inside. "What did you mean?"

"I certainly didn't mean that. I . . ." He shook his head. "What was that about a drink?"

Emilie stood up. "Miss Dingleby. She brought me a drink, a pink-colored drink, just before I went to see you."

"Did you taste it?"

"No! I told you, I had a strange feeling. I put it down and I went to  the library to find you and Olympia, to warn you of my suspicion. And  you told me it was all under control. Where are you going?"

"Back to the bloody ballroom, if it's not too late!" He staggered around  the flowerpots, working frantically at the fastening of his trousers.

She followed him. "What's happened? What's the matter?"

He spun around and took her shoulders. "What's happened is that we  thought Miss Dingleby was on our side. We thought she was a double  agent, pretending to be in with Hans's lot . . ."

"Hans!"

"Yes, Hans! He's your inside man. He's the one behind all this; he's  their operative. But Dingleby convinced him she was working with Free  Blood, when in reality she'd been setting up this grand event tonight,  to capture them in the act . . ."

"Good heavens!"

"Except that it appears she's been playing us instead!" He released her with an almost violent thrust and spun around.

"Wait, Ashland!"

"Stay here!" he ordered, over his shoulder. He threw open the conservatory door.

"I won't! I'm going with you! It's my country, it's my father and  sisters . . ." She strained against him, trying to fit around him and  through the door. The cold air of the garden hit her flushed skin in a  welcome gust.

He turned and cupped her face with his massive left hand. "You're carrying our child, Emilie. For God's sake, stay here."

"But I . . ."

Even as she said the words, he was in motion. With lightning speed, he  ducked through the conservatory door, closed it, and locked it with his  key.

"Ashland!"

He had already disappeared into the shadows. She rattled the knob, she  pounded the glass, she rattled the knob again. Her blood was racing  through her body in a live stream, shooting with energy. She paced to  one side, coming up short in front of a massive urn filled with pink  orange roses. She kicked it with her toe.