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Forbidden to Love the Duke

Page 24

by Jillian Hunter


  She sat down on the bed, Lilac and Rosemary joining her a moment later. “We knew all along,” Lilac said. “I told you the night he put our dragon back on the door that he had eyes for you.”

  “Well, I didn’t know it would go this far,” Rosemary said. “If I had, I’d never have agreed to become a governess myself.”

  Ivy turned her head to Rosemary in disbelief. “You’ve done what?”

  “I can’t discuss it yet. It’s too distressing.”

  Ivy frowned. “Children, go play a game by the fire—but not in the fire.”

  “If we’d known you’d end up marrying the duke, Rue wouldn’t have taken a job and neither would Rosemary,” Lilac said with a sigh. “They might have met eligible gentlemen among one of His Grace’s friends.”

  “What about you?” Ivy asked curiously.

  “I’m waiting for Terence.”

  “Still?” Ivy said, biting her lip in concern.

  “Yes, still. And I don’t want to hear another word about him after what I went through today.”

  “You were quite brave to throw those geraniums,” Rosemary said, curling against her.

  “It only made the man angrier.” Lilac stared across the room. “Oliver is quite the marksman. He shot him straight in the heart. I know you didn’t want to see, Rosemary. But I did. Any other man might have shot me.”

  “That’s why I didn’t want to take the chance,” Rosemary said quietly. “You and that deranged creature were so close together, I knew I’d miss.”

  “I won!” Mary cried from the other room.

  There was a knock at the outer door. Walker ran to open it, and a voice announced, “Dinner is served, and His Grace is awaiting your company.”

  Chapter 31

  The farther that Fenwick dropped behind, the easier it became for Oliver to think clearly again. His master plan had failed. He felt a foolish affection for the manor. He had written some fine lines in that wretched gatehouse—and, what a preposterous thought, but he hoped someone remembered to feed the young dogs tonight. They had gotten loose in the melee today.

  For now he had to silence that idiot Ainsley for his bumbling attack on the manor. Who had told the ass about the treasure? Joseph Treadway, obviously. Until Oliver had killed him, Joseph had been one of Oliver’s casual acquaintances. Fortunately they had never been seen together except at an infrequent party or in a gambling hell. And who had told Treadway? The pawnbroker? Elora?

  Oliver took no pleasure in the thought of killing another man. Perhaps he could reason with Ainsley, explain to him that the duke would not look kindly upon the accomplice in the attack upon his future sisters-in-law. He didn’t think that Ainsley had recognized him. But one thing was certain—Oliver would be leaving England soon if the duke discovered the truth.

  Ivy to become a duchess.

  It raised the stakes. It changed the game, and Oliver didn’t like his odds any longer. Whatever fortune lay hidden in Fenwick, and he now doubted its existence, it would not be found before the duke put the premises under his protection.

  Oliver despised everything the bastard stood for. But at least in the Duke of Ellsworth the fair ladies of Fenwick had a genuine guardian, whereas Oliver had brought them nothing but woe.

  Chapter 32

  James congratulated himself on a successful dinner. He’d accomplished his goal. It had taken every drop of charm he could wring from the imaginary Book of Scoundrels to coax a laugh from Rosemary, but once she had started to entertain him with the history of Fenwick Manor, lustful ancestors and wrathful ghosts included, it seemed she wouldn’t stop. While she spoke of the past, he pondered the future.

  Rosemary would be the entertaining aunt his children would adore and beg to visit to escape their governess. Of course the current governess would have to give him children first. There would be the heir and the spare, then as many offspring as grace would grant. If Ivy wasn’t carrying his child, it wasn’t for lack of effort on his part. God knew he was more than willing to try harder. He’d been starved for her ever since she’d walked back into his life. He wanted to raise a family with her. This enormous house wasn’t made for one lonely man.

  Rosemary was coming to the end of her story. He glanced at Ivy, who, judging from her frown, had read his mind. Could he help it that he wanted her and couldn’t hide it? He was counting the minutes until he could be alone with her again. Even if only to talk, to hold her.

  He hadn’t come this far to stare at her across a table.

  “And then she lost her head,” Rosemary said, concluding her long-winded tale.

  James considered clapping, but in light of the fact that no one else at the table had raised a hand, he made do with a nod. “What a shame.”

  “It wasn’t a shame,” Rosemary said after a long amused silence. “The villainess sent twenty innocent people to the guillotine.”

  “Oh. Oh. Then she deserved what she got.” He paused. “Would anyone care for dessert?”

  The ladies looked at one another and laughed. At him. His fascination with Ivy hadn’t escaped anyone’s notice. He might have laughed at himself, too, had Carstairs not bobbed into the doorway, his silver hair disheveled, his usual aplomb replaced by an air of consternation.

  “Excuse me for a moment, ladies,” James said, leaving the table to lead Carstairs out into the hall.

  He heard Wendover scrape back his chair and make his apologies, catching up with James in the middle of Carstairs’s explanation.

  “Does this have something to do with what happened today at Fenwick?” James asked in a low voice.

  “God, I hope they caught the other bastard,” Wendover said.

  Carstairs took a breath. “I’m sorry to say that a messenger has just arrived with news of Your Grace’s brother. The courier is waiting in your study.”

  “Thank you, Carstairs. Wendover, I’d be grateful if you would discreetly explain to our guests why I left the table. I don’t think the children need to be told anything yet.”

  “We don’t know that it’s bad news,” Wendover said.

  James braced himself as he strode to the study. A messenger had not arrived this time of night to announce that his brother had received a promotion. He had just sat down when Wendover reached the room. They waited for the young courier to drink a pint of ale and wipe the travel dust from his face.

  “Your uncle Colonel Lord Merrit wanted me to reassure you that Curtis’s life is no longer believed to be in danger. He lost one eye at Vitoria, and I offer my sorrow for that. He’s expected to arrive in London the middle of this month. He’s eager to come home.”

  James dropped his head back against the chair. “He has nothing to come home to.”

  “He has his children,” Wendover said, beckoning the messenger to the door. “And he has you. We’ll leave you alone now. Shall I tell Ivy or do you want to?”

  “I’ll do it. But not for a while.”

  “Should I ask Carstairs to make plans for you to go to London?”

  James looked up. He couldn’t afford to brood. “Please. Ivy’s sisters have to stay here until we return, their servants, too. There isn’t time to make other arrangements. I’ll send some of the staff to Fenwick.”

  “Will you be married in London?”

  His brow furrowed. In a matter of days, the household had seen an impending marriage, a death at Fenwick, now his brother’s injury. “Her sisters will miss the wedding, but it will be a small affair. We could have a reception here when everything has settled down. Ivy and I will have to decide later.”

  “Things will settle down, James.”

  “Why do I have difficulty believing that?”

  “Perhaps because our lives have undergone such drastic changes this past year. We both lost our fathers and the chance to return as heroes. At least you’ve found love. The rest of your life will fall into p
lace.”

  James smiled. “Yes. I’ve found Ivy and I intend to keep her, even if it means I have to move Fenwick, brick by brick, and all those who reside within it, onto my land.”

  “You’re marrying into quite a family.”

  “You don’t need to convince me of that,” James said with a laugh.

  Chapter 33

  James intended to set out for London the next morning. Not wishing to cause the duke further distress during his crisis, Rosemary and Lilac agreed to remain at Ellsworth Park during his absence, although Lilac asked whether the servants and animals at Fenwick could also be granted shelter.

  “It’s more than kind of His Grace to offer to house us here,” Rosemary said to Ivy while they gathered outside to say their farewells on the front steps. “However . . .”

  Ivy embraced her. “However, what?”

  “I left everything unsettled at Fenwick. I’m not sure I can enjoy myself worrying about Quigley and the other servants.”

  “Of course you can,” Lilac assured her. “The duke sent five or six footmen over yesterday, and a half-dozen fit young men will be more helpful in a crisis than we were.”

  “That’s true, I suppose,” Rosemary said reluctantly. “But the manor needs a mistress. Quigley won’t leave his back gardens. I vow there are nights when he stays up just to catch a weed poking through his vegetable plot.”

  Ivy frowned, giving Rosemary another fierce squeeze. “Promise me you won’t return to Fenwick alone. As much as I’ve disapproved of him, Oliver at least defended you when you needed him.”

  “It was quite dreadful to watch,” Rosemary whispered.

  “We really ought to write Rue and inform her you’re to become a duchess,” Lilac said, her fair hair blowing in the breeze like thistledown.

  “Have either of you heard from her?” Ivy asked, remembering her last conversation with Rue in the garden.

  “Not a word,” Rosemary replied. “But then again you became engaged to a duke and didn’t bother to tell us, either. And she is traveling with the viscountess.”

  “Ladies,” a male voice said behind them, and Ivy looked past Captain Wendover to James, who stood waiting in a black silk hat and greatcoat.

  “You are leaving, too, Captain Wendover?” Lilac asked, her arm around Ivy’s waist.

  He glanced at the duke. “I believe I should.” He bowed. “It has been my pleasure to make your acquaintance.”

  “I’m sure it has,” Lilac said absently. “Oh, before I forget,” she added, “what about the dogs? Cook and Quigley never remember to feed them or let them out.”

  “What about my manuscript?” Rosemary asked in panic. “What if the house should catch fire?”

  “It hasn’t caught fire in three centuries,” Ivy reassured her. “It’s unlikely to happen in the next few weeks.”

  “Are we ready to leave or not?” James asked bluntly, turning on his heel in his polished Hessian boots.

  Ivy fell in behind him, giving her sisters a quick smile over her shoulder.

  Lilac glanced back at the house. “Where are the children?”

  “They’re waiting in my carriage with Sally,” Wendover said, walking backward to address her. “I thought to entertain them. Do take care of yourselves.”

  Lilac and Rosemary had disappeared into the duke’s house before Ivy reached the carriage. It was a shame they wouldn’t pass Fenwick Manor on their journey to London, but she wouldn’t dream of asking James to let her visit the house that would forever claim part of her heart. His brother needed him. He hadn’t told her everything, but she knew all the same. In fact, he had spoken but a few words to her since he received the news. It wasn’t necessary. As much as she loved James, yesterday she would have grown wings and flown to Fenwick had she known of the calamity unfolding there.

  “James.”

  He was holding his chin in his hand, so preoccupied he didn’t respond. She tried again.

  “James.”

  He turned his head.

  “I’m sorry,” she said, sliding closer to him. “I talked to the children this morning. They cried, but after a while they realized that their father was coming home, and he was alive. That’s what matters, isn’t it?”

  “If he’s a better man than I am.”

  She nestled against him. “No one’s better than you.”

  “You didn’t know me when I returned from war. I was sullen, angry at the world, disrespectful to my father, and a man you would have been well-advised to avoid.”

  Ivy wouldn’t have avoided him even then. Nor was she about to point out that he was still, at times, sullen, angry, and disrespectful, but not nearly as often as he was sensual, tender, and protective. “He’ll make it through, James. He has his family. You managed to return to yourself.”

  “But I have you, Ivy. Now I have a reason to stop behaving like a fool.”

  “The only reason you have me is because of the children.”

  “Yes,” he said wryly. “I wanted a governess to keep them from disturbing the arrangement I thought would bring me happiness.”

  “And aren’t we both glad that I arrived in time to rearrange the course of your life?”

  “You are my life,” he said, turning his face to hers.

  She stared up into his eyes and felt a flame kindle inside her. “Am I?”

  “Whether it is because I love you so deeply or dislike Sir Oliver as much as I do, I wonder if there isn’t more to the attack on Fenwick than what it appeared to be.”

  She frowned. “What more could there be?”

  “There are no valuables in the house?”

  “No.”

  “No more jewelry like the pearls you tried to pawn?”

  “Nothing.” She felt drowsy, her eyes closing as she answered him. “Perhaps I should have traveled with the children. You and Wendover probably have a few things to talk over.”

  “I can talk to Wendover when we reach London. It’s not often you and I are alone together.”

  “There was talk once that gold was hidden somewhere inside Fenwick,” she murmured.

  He stirred. “How long ago was this?”

  “Before I was born. The family decided it wasn’t true. The manor is almost bare to the bones. Wouldn’t someone in the family have found it in all these years?”

  “Not if it was hidden as well as you and your sisters were.”

  “It kept us safe for years,” she said ruefully.

  “Villagers were afraid to visit Fenwick,” he mused. “Even my coachman warned me about the dangerous women who lived inside the manor.”

  “Yet his warning didn’t stop you.”

  “An intruder being killed and hauled off by the magistrate for everyone to see might give the rumors credence.”

  “I wish I’d been there for them,” she whispered fiercely.

  “And I am grateful you were not.”

  “I’m tired, James.”

  “Rest, then.”

  She nodded, the rhythmic jolting of the carriage lulling her into a brief sleep. When she opened her eyes, she realized that it was twilight and her head was resting in James’s lap. He smiled at her. She smiled back, drowsy and relaxed until she realized he had undone her gown and was languidly stroking his knuckles across her breasts.

  “Help yourself,” she said with a laugh.

  “I need you, Ivy.”

  She sat up, one hand covering her breasts in an attempt at modesty. His wide shoulders shifted under his coat. “We’ll be apart again once we reach London. There is a stool under the seat on which you may kneel.”

  The tone of his voice made her blood tingle. She slid back onto the opposite seat and stared down at the floor in confusion. When she looked up again, it was to see that he held his heavy sex in one hand. His other hand reached around the nape of her neck. He
kicked out the tapestried stool before she descended in a submissive position between his outspread legs.

  “James—what am I to do?”

  “Make love to me with your mouth.”

  “I’ve no idea where to start.” This act was beyond anything Ivy had dreamt he would ask of her. Or perhaps it wasn’t. One could have an intuitive understanding of certain things without having actually experienced them.

  “I’ll show you what to do,” James said. “Do try not to bite me.”

  She blushed furiously as he nudged her face to his organ. She placed her hands upon his thighs for balance and parted her lips. The knob of his sex glistened with a bead of moisture. She pressed her mouth to it and then he flexed his hips, suggesting she was expected to do more.

  “James, I have no practice in this art.”

  “Take me into your mouth. Suck me.”

  Her heart sped up. She grasped the silken underside of his sex and guided it to her mouth, suckling gently.

  “My God.” His hips bucked. She withdrew slightly, letting her tongue glide in a circle around his shaft.

  “Was it that bad?” she whispered.

  “No. It was that good. Sit beside me and lift your skirts. I don’t want to spill my seed on your gown.”

  “I should hope not.”

  “Here.” She could barely see what he was doing over the pile of skirts, petticoat, and pelisse he had lifted to give him access to her body. She noticed that he looked out the window for a long time. “You don’t think anyone will see us, do you?”

  “No,” he said, smoothing his hands down the insides of her thighs. “I wanted to make sure we have no stops ahead for a while.” He reached up and drew down the leather curtains. “Does that make you feel better?”

  “Yes.”

  “Merciful God, Ivy, look at you. You’re sweet and pink down there. Did you like what you did to me?”

  “You’re the one who made me stop,” she whispered. “I would have done more. I would do anything for you.”

 

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