It took a moment for her eyes to adjust to the room’s gloom. Once they did, it was to behold a scene primed for seduction.
A fire crackled in the hearth, casting entrancing shadows on the plum papered walls. Pillows were scattered about the room on the chaises and sofas. A great lambskin rug lay invitingly before the hearth. The brilliant fabrics gleamed enticingly in the firelight, the colors more vibrant than anything that decorated her home. Home. For all the years she had lived at the Guthrie townhouse, she had never felt she belonged, had never felt permitted to make her own mark.
Shaking off her thoughts, she looked to the far wall—and her heart plummeted. There was no terrace door. A single large window looked out at the dark night.
Hurrying forward she fumbled with the latch, only to find it wouldn’t budge. With a small cry, she slapped her palms against the window, pushing against the thick panes of glass as if she could somehow will the night to open to her.
“Blast!” Biting her lip, she considered her options.
If she left the room, she risked running into Desmond. Yet she could not remain here to be discovered. Her gaze landed on a pewter figurine of Lady Godiva riding naked atop a stallion with impossibly large genitalia. She glanced back to the window.
Heat flaming her cheeks, she lifted the figurine off the small lacquered table. With a growl of determination, she clenched her fingers around the cold pewter, its weight a solid comfort in her hand. Hauling back her arm, she sucked in a breath, deciding to smash her way to freedom through the window.
A voice stopped her, rumbling over the air and sliding through her to spiral in her belly like an infusion of spiced rum.
“I happen to know that there is a perfectly good door to this room.”
Chapter 4
Whirling around, Jane let the figurine slide through her fingers to thud at her feet. Its heavy fall mimicked the drop of her heart to the soles of her slippers as she gaped at the shadow of the man who shared her sanctuary.
She opened her mouth to tell the stranger exactly what she thought of men who lurked in dark corners and announced themselves in a manner that only produced terror in unsuspecting ladies.
But the words died on her lips as he unfolded his great length from a chair tucked in the room’s corner and stepped from the shadows. Her gaze narrowed on his face.
The face of a ghost.
Her hand flew to her mouth, doing a poor job of stifling her gasp. Nerves taut as a harpsichord string, she stared. Not a ghost. A man.
He wore no domino, had donned no disguise. A white scar, stark and livid on his swarthy skin, slashed the left side of his face, cleaving his top lip and disappearing into his mouth.
Even disfigured, his was a face she would never forget.
Her lips moved, but no sound emerged. She watched, horrified—elated—as he advanced on her with slow, measured steps. An invisible hand squeezed her heart at the sight of a face that had once been too beautiful for mortal man, a face left to the realm of poets and dreams. A face her memory had refused to release.
She stared at this new face of his. Scarred, hard-edged, unsmiling. A tremble snaked over her.
His name whispered across her mind again. A name she had not spoken in years. A name she pushed from her thoughts daily, allowing it into her head only at night, in her dreams. Seth.
He bent and picked up the figurine she had dropped. Without a word, he set it back on the table, his intense gaze never wavering from her face. The hot look in his deep-set eyes gave her a jolt. He had never looked at her in such a fashion.
Then it struck her that he did not recognize her—not masked—and the tightness in her chest lessened as relief swept through her. Her hand flew to her mask. She drew an even breath at the feel of black silk stretched over stiff brocade. Still there.
Cocking his head, he gestured behind him and repeated, “There is a perfectly good door.”
She managed a quick nod, drinking in the sight of him. He was taller than she remembered. His skin darker, his shock of brown hair sun-streaked. There was a hardness to his mouth and eyes that had not been there before. Yet she would remember those molten brown eyes anywhere. The same eyes invaded her dreams to this day.
Broad of shoulder and lean of hip, he towered over the room’s dainty furniture, his carriage erect, rigid, as though he stood braced at the helm of a ship. His dark jacket and trousers contrasted sharply to the room’s plums and lavenders, heightening his masculinity.
She supposed she should have forgotten him over the years. Should not have followed news of the war in Canton so closely. Should not feel so shaken at the sight of him now.
“Can you not speak?” he inquired, his voice deeper, richer than she remembered.
She nodded, forcing her lips to form a whispered reply. “Yes.”
Gazing at him, old feelings stirred to life in the pit of her belly.
Her sister may not have wanted him—at least not within the bounds of matrimony—but Jane had. She had wanted him with every fiber of her being. Had looked at him every day for as long as she could remember and prayed that he would feel for her what he felt for her sister. She would have risked her parents’ wrath, risked anything, everything, for him to love her back. Only his love had been reserved for Madeline. Not Jane. Never her.
Not then and certainly not now.
She pressed a hand to her face, her skin disturbingly hot against her palm as she commanded herself to cling to that particular reality and not get swept away by the sight of him, ambrosia to her long-starved heart.
“Yes?” he echoed, his voice low, a drag of velvet against her overheated skin. “Then you merely choose not to?” His gaze prowled her face. “A woman with no wish to speak? How singular.”
Her throat constricted as he neared, stepping so close the smell of him filled her nose. Leather and some unidentifiable cologne, earthy and wild, reminding her faintly of nutmeg. Her eyes drifted shut.
A thousand images flashed through her mind. A youth spent with Seth. Riding, swimming, apple picking in the fall, holly gathering in the winter. He had been her life’s one pleasure. More constant than the parents who preferred her sister to her—and who reminded her of the fact daily.
The moment everything changed revived itself in her mind, fresh and crisp as yesterday. Over the years she had wondered if she could have done something, anything, to prevent it.
Madeline did not usually accompany them on their jaunts, preferring the indoors, but for some reason she had joined Jane and Seth as they wove through apple trees in full bloom, honeybees zipping amid the white, frothy blossoms, the kiss of spring on the air.
Seth and Madeline had lagged behind and Jane had glanced back, her heart surging to her throat at the sight of Seth climbing an apple tree with exceptional vigor, a foolish grin on his face, her younger sister giggling below.
He dropped down from a branch, landing hard on his feet with a sprig of apple blossoms in his hand. With great care, he secured the delicate bundle over Madeline’s ear. The most extraordinary look glowed in his eyes. Tenderness, devotion, and desire. All for Madeline.
Something had died within Jane then, a flame sputtering and extinguishing from that single look—a look she had one day prayed to receive, a look he gave to another, her sister.
A shudder washed through Jane and she pushed the unwanted memory to the shadows of her mind with a small shake of her head. Opening her eyes, she found Seth staring intently at her.
“Where’d you go?” he murmured, his eyes dark and probing.
She sucked in a breath and dipped her head, almost afraid he could read her thoughts, glimpse the dark roads her mind traveled. He placed a finger beneath her chin and forced her gaze back up with a single burning touch.
Unable to resist, she leaned into his touch, wanting to feel more than that one finger on her, hungering for what she had missed, what had never been hers.
Surprise flickered in his eyes. His gaze scanned her face, assessing, inquir
ing with a lift of his slashing black brows. His fingers slid beneath her chin, skimming the soft line of her jaw. A sigh escaped her.
He swallowed visibly, the tendons along his throat working.
Recalling herself, she pulled back before she did something truly foolish. Like forget herself entirely. With a man who would have nothing to do with her if he knew her identity.
Desperate to escape his nearness, his touch, his heat, she stepped back until she felt cold glass penetrating the fabric of her gown.
Only he followed, caging her in, the muscles along his square jaw knotting, rippling beneath the scar. A feverish gleam entered his eyes. He slid long fingers over her cheek, sparking a fire in her blood that forced the air from her mouth in a hiss.
The calluses of his palm rasped her skin as he gazed down at her, the dark centers of his eyes glowing. “Are you real? Or some enchantress?”
His hot look robbed her of breath, especially when her last memory of him contained no such looks. In fact, he had looked at her very little in the end. In the end, she had simply not existed to him.
“Why do you look at me so?” His hoarse voice scraped over her nerves.
Hysteria bubbled up inside her.
Because I loved you. Once. When I knew you. When you knew me.
She didn’t know what undid her more, the heat of his gaze or the way his touch made her come alive after years of living numb.
She didn’t know, but she didn’t dare let herself find out.
And why not? You’re no insipid virgin. Why not experience everything his hot look promised? Everything you’ve never had? Everything you ever wanted? Would that not be the ultimate exercise in freedom?
Her gaze dropped to his mouth, the lips wide and sensual despite the scar. She leaned forward, letting her breasts graze his chest, imagining tracing her tongue over that corner of his mouth. Her belly clenched.
He didn’t know who hid behind the scrap of satin—that she hid.
She could embrace anonymity…embrace him. One kiss.
One sample and she could experience what she had missed as a girl. And later as a woman. As Marcus’s wife.
A bolt of anticipation shot through her, followed by something else. A cold douse of fear. Fear of discovery, fear of stepping outside herself for even a brief moment and doing something so bold. For daring to make long-held dreams a reality.
Swallowing down the thickness in her throat, she gave herself a hard mental shake and let fear win.
Pulling back her shoulders, she stifled a cringe at the feel of cold glass against her bare shoulders and forced herself to resist the dark pull of his gaze.
In as stern a voice as she could manage, she ordered, “Step aside, sir.”
Chapter 5
Seth stared at the woman trapped between his chest and the window, commanding himself to move away, to respect her request. But he could not force himself to budge, relishing the feel of her soft curves far too much.
He had watched her with keen interest from the moment she burst into the room.
How could he not? Even if her odd behavior had not attracted his notice, her appearance would have.
He eyed the length of her now—tall, stately, full-bodied. Bloody hell, the woman had curves. More than enough to fill his hands and mouth. His gut tightened with desire.
In the room’s gloom, her hair gleamed dark as the night sea, and her eyes, an indeterminate color in her black domino, burned through him with a ferocity he felt in his blood.
He wanted her. Badly.
Even more astonishing, he felt certain she wanted him. Scar and all. Reason enough to keep her trapped in his arms.
His gaze slid over her, a ray of golden light in his arms. “Aurora.”
She blinked long lashes. “That’s not my name—”
“No? What is your name?”
Her plump lips compressed.
“Then I shall call you Aurora. Fitting, I think.” The Goddess of Dawn herself could not dazzle him more.
She gazed up at him with wide-eyed solemnity.
He had never seen a sadder pair of eyes, eyes that called to him, that seemed to…need him. Against his will, he felt himself sinking, falling under her spell.
Fired by whatever it was about her that moved him, he took her face in both hands and lowered his head, ready to claim her mouth for himself, to see if she tasted as sweet as he imagined.
Small hands pushed at his chest. He stopped, his lips a hairsbreadth from her own.
“Don’t,” she pleaded, her breath mingling with his, washing through him and thickening the blood in his veins. “Please.”
Stepping back, he dragged a hand through his hair. He didn’t know what aggravated him more—his irrational desire for a woman he had just met, a veritable stranger, or the fact that he had convinced himself that she could want him, that she could overlook his fierce countenance.
He gestured for her to pass.
She lowered her eyes and slid past him, the scent of apples rushing up to meet him. Apples.
Memories assailed him. Sweet memories. Before Julianne’s accident. Before Madeline. This woman smelled of home.
The instinct to stop her, to seize and possess her, warred intensely inside him.
She was halfway across the room when the door flung open. A man ambled into the room with a glass in his hand.
“Ah, there you are, my dear. I have your punch.”
She stopped abruptly.
Something dark and possessive coiled in Seth’s gut as the fop advanced on her.
She shuffled backward until she collided with Seth’s chest. His hands came up to close over the warm flesh of her arms. She glanced over her shoulder, her look one of surprise, as though she had forgotten his presence at the other man’s arrival.
Seth eyed the other man, vague recognition stirring in the back of his mind.
The fellow returned his stare. “Rutledge? By God, is that you?”
Seth gave a nod of greeting, recalling the man’s name. “Billings.”
“Heard you’d taken up the title. Didn’t realize you were in Town, though.” Billings stepped closer, peering closely at his face. “Ack, get that fighting in Canton, did you? Hard luck, that. You were always a favorite with the ladies.”
“Slave smugglers,” he replied, the point a matter of distinction for him. Taking a scar to impede the illegal trafficking of slaves was infinitely more honorable than taking a scar to enslave a nation to opium.
Billings nodded briskly. “Suppose I should congratulate you then, Lord St. Claire.”
“Congratulate me? On my brother’s death?” he bit out, suddenly recollecting what a bloody ass Billings had been. He and Albert had been in the same class at school, but Billings had been sulky, always voicing his discontent over his second son status.
Oblivious to any offense he may have given, Billings continued. “Lost my own brother not long ago.”
“Sorry to hear that.” Seth looked down at the woman who suddenly grew rigid as wood in his hands.
“I wasn’t so lucky as you,” Billings droned on. “My brother left an heir. Only one, though, so perhaps I’m not without hope.”
Seth stared at the weasel before him. Such jackasses abounded among the ton, making him wish he still fought on distant shores.
Billings glanced at the drink in his hand. As though suddenly remembering his purpose, his gaze shot back to Aurora.
“Pardon me, did not mean to detain you with idle chatter. Especially with so much more pleasant activities available.” Billings moistened his nearly nonexistent lips. “I’ll just collect this little tart and be on my way. We’ll find another room.”
Aurora drove back another step, heedless that she trod over Seth’s foot.
Without thinking, Seth flexed his hand around her arm and announced, “I’m afraid not. The lady is unavailable.”
“Now see here, Rutledge,” Billings blustered, puffing out his chest. “I found her first.”
S
eth cocked a brow. “And you’ve lost her.”
With a decided amount of force, Billings set the drink down on a marble-topped end table, sending the contents sloshing over the rim. “Fine. There are plenty of other light-skirts about to frig. No need to get proprietary.”
Even as he uttered the words, he scoured Aurora with a hungry leer.
Seth stroked her arm in lazy circles, and she shivered.
Quivering with anger, Billings bit out, “Enjoy yourself, Rutledge. I’m sure I’ll get another go at her when you’re finished.”
She flinched in his arms.
A growl rose up from the back of his throat. “I don’t think so,” Seth grated, wondering at the sudden and fierce protectiveness that surged through him.
With a flare of his nostrils, Billings stormed from the room. The door slammed shut behind him. And they were alone again.
“I take it he was the reason you were contemplating escape through the window?”
She whirled around, her eyes flashing. “I’m no light-skirt!”
“I never said you were,” he countered.
She pressed her lips into a mutinous line. “But I’m here. At this ball.” She waved a hand. “I’m sure that’s what you judge me to be.”
“And why should it matter so much what I think?”
She stared at him for a long moment before a nervous laugh escaped her. It was a wholly uncalculated sound that sent a lick of heat spiraling through his stomach. Which was insanity. He was waiting for Fleur to join him, yet he could not stop himself from thinking of ways to seduce the tantalizing creature before him.
“It doesn’t, of course.” Her chin went up another notch.
She edged back another step, reminding him of an exotic bird, ready to take flight. He sensed he had her for only a moment more. And for some reason, he found the notion intolerable.
Stepping forward, he grazed his knuckles over her cheek. Her eyes widened, but she did not pull away.
Watching her closely, gauging her expression in the event distaste should emerge at last, he trailed his fingers down her neck, tracing the delicate line of her collarbone.