Book Read Free

The Mistress Diaries (Love at Pembroke Palace Book 2)

Page 16

by Julianne MacLean


  Though perhaps “without a hitch” was not the most accurate turn of phrase. True, there had been no arguments or disagreements since that day at Langley Hall, no improper flirtations or advances. But beneath all the courtesy and manners, she had been fighting against a new kind of desire that simply would not die.

  It was, in a word, admiration.

  Every time Vincent stepped out of his coach, dressed in his elegant black coat and top hat, smiling up at her with those dark, mesmerizing eyes, she melted. When he held her daughter in his arms, gently and with affection, she fell to pieces like a lovesick pup that did not know the meaning of restraint.

  But she did know the meaning of it, and she understood the consequences of giving in to temptation. She had already paid a handsome price for her impulsive transgressions in the past.

  She also knew that even if she did give in to her desires, she could never endure the heartache of sharing Vincent with another woman. She was simply not built that way. If she loved someone, it would have to be all or nothing. She’d need to give of herself completely and would require the same in return. She could not settle for less and was still not sure Vincent was capable of such a devoted love, for he was broken inside.

  Or was she wrong about that? she wondered as she stared out the window at the darkness beyond. She had been wrong about so many other things, and he had done nothing but surprise her with his integrity over the past few weeks. Perhaps he wasn’t completely broken. And what if what existed between them was real? What if it could be—if nurtured—the truest kind of love that existed in the world? What if they were meant to be together, against all odds, no matter what?

  If so, could she sacrifice her principles to be with him?

  A light knock sounded at her door, and she sat up in bed. “Come in.”

  The maid, Iris, entered the room. “Begging your pardon, ma’am, but you wanted a fire lit?”

  Cassandra’s brows drew together in confusion. “I didn’t ask for one.”

  “Pardon me, I thought you did.” She looked around. “If you don’t mind my saying, there is a wee bit of a chill in here.”

  Cassandra felt a shiver and smiled at Iris. “Indeed, you are right, there is. Since I am awake, a fire would be lovely, thank you.” She fluffed the pillows behind her and leaned back against the headboard. “I am having some trouble sleeping.”

  The maid moved to the hearth and knelt down, then set about her work. “I could bring you some brandy, if that might help.”

  “I doubt anything will help at this point,” Cassandra said. “I have far too many conflicting thoughts dashing around inside my brain. It is an exploding battlefield in my head tonight.”

  The maid laughed quietly. “I know what that is like, milady.” She swept the ash out from under the grate. “I don’t suppose it has anything to do with that handsome young lord who comes to visit every day. He would keep me awake, too, I dare say.”

  Cassandra couldn’t help but give in to a melancholy smile. “I suppose it doesn’t take a genius to see that we are...” How could she put it? “That we are friends.”

  Keeping her back to Cassandra, Iris laid out the kindling. “No, milady, it doesn’t, and if you don’t mind my saying, I understand how difficult it must be for you. I was in your shoes once myself, a very long time ago.”

  Cassandra tilted her head to the side. “May I be so bold as to ask the particulars?”

  “I loved a man I could not be with,” the maid replied without hesitation. “There were circumstances keeping us apart, which seemed impossible at the time. We had a child together.”

  Cassandra’s heart beat uneasily inside her chest. “I see.”

  Iris lit a match and sat back on her heels. Still, she did not turn around. “But then my love died, and I had to raise my son without him.”

  “I am so sorry,” Cassandra said.

  “It was a very long time ago.” She brushed off her apron and rose to her feet, facing Cassandra at last. “The good news is our son went on to accomplish great things.”

  “Where is he now?”

  “He is passed on.”

  Cassandra cleared her throat. “My deepest condolences, Iris.”

  “Thank you. That is very kind.”

  “Do you have any regrets about your...association with that man?” Cassandra asked.

  Iris shook her head. “Not about loving him, and if I could do it all over again, I would. I wouldn’t change a thing, except for the fact that I wasted so much time fighting it. Life is so very short.” She picked up her bucket and made for the door. “Maybe you should reconsider that glass of brandy. It might help you sleep. I just refilled the decanter in the drawing room.”

  “Thank you, Iris.”

  The maid left, and Cassandra lay for a long time staring up at the ceiling. Iris was right. A glass of brandy might ease the burden of her thoughts, and after hearing what her maid had chosen to disclose, she had even more to think about.

  She slid out from under the covers and touched her feet to the cool floor, then padded across the room to fetch her wrapper.

  A moment later she was in the drawing room lighting the lamp and tipping the crystal decanter over a glass. She raised it to her lips and sipped, squeezing her eyes shut as the drink blazed a searing path down her throat. She took another sip and strolled to the window.

  It was a beautiful night, brightly lit under a full moon and a star-speckled sky. She looked up and imagined herself at Langley Hall, far away from here, miles from Pembroke Palace.

  It would be less complicated then, she told herself, when she and June were not so convenient for daily visits from Vincent. It was less likely he would come so often, once the weather turned and snow blocked the roads.

  Just the thought of it made her feel lonely inside. She would miss him. She could not deny it.

  Oh, Iris was right, she admitted to herself at last. Life was short. And love was a rare and precious gift.

  She raised the glass to her lips and swallowed another mouthful of brandy. When she looked out the window again, however, a nervous fluttering arose in her belly, for she spotted a man. He was sitting under the tree on the bank of the river at the bottom of the hill. The moonlight was reflecting off the water, and he was silhouetted against the sparkling ripples. His horse was tethered to the tree, its long neck bowed down to the grass.

  It was Vincent—that much she knew, even though it was impossible to identify anyone from such a distance in the darkness.

  What was he doing there? She had heard him leave almost two hours ago. Had he been sitting there all this time, or had he left and returned?

  She set her glass down on the table. If she knew what was good for her, she would go back to bed this instant and forget she ever saw him. She would try to remember her principles and convictions.

  But that would require her to guzzle the entire contents of what remained in the brandy decanter, enough to knock her out until dawn, because the fact of the matter was—she cared for Vincent. She cared for him a great deal. And somehow she knew that he needed her.

  She watched him rise to his feet, pat his horse on the neck and wander along the river’s edge.

  Cassandra picked up her glass and finished what was left in it. Iris’s words kept repeating themselves over and over in her mind. Life is so very short.

  Cassandra could not fool herself. She wanted to go down there. Her heart was telling her it was the right thing to do.

  Perhaps it would be all right if she did. She could ask him why he was there and not at the palace. She could behave as she always did, with restraint and in a manner consistent with their newfound friendship. It was such a beautiful night, and she had come to trust Vincent not to behave dishonorably.

  But could she trust herself?

  That, perhaps, was the burning question of the moment, for she could a
lmost feel the slow and reluctant surrendering of her heart, which left her terrified.

  Chapter 14

  I believe I am doomed. Yet somehow, inexplicably, I am bursting with joy.

  —from the journal of

  Cassandra Montrose,

  Lady Colchester,

  June 25,1874

  Ten minutes later, Cassandra found herself standing on the riverbank in silence, filled with self-doubt and apprehension while she faced Vincent squarely. A warm breeze fluttered her white wrapper around her ankles, and her hair blew loose around her shoulders.

  “I thought you were a ghost,” he said, “when I saw you floating down the hill.”

  “I was hardly floating. I was wincing over all the thorns that were pricking my feet.”

  Amused, he looked down at her toes, which were peeking out from under her white nightdress. “Really?”

  “Yes,” she replied. “I am in great pain presently but doing my best to keep a stiff upper lip.”

  He laughed. “Cassandra, my dear, let me help.” He moved toward her and offered his hand. “Sit down. I shall take a look.”

  Slipping her hand into his, she lowered herself to the grass and stretched her legs out in front of her.

  He knelt down and took her bare foot in his hand. “No thorns visible. Where does it hurt?” He ran both his thumbs along her arch.

  “Everywhere.”

  He proceeded to massage her foot, rubbing his thumbs in small, slow circles, which was most decidedly outside the bounds of propriety and exactly what she feared would happen when she debated coming down here, but she could not bring herself to tell him to stop. It felt far too wonderful, as all the tension she had endured in bed drained from her mind and body.

  “I didn’t mean to disturb you,” he said. “Did the puppy bark?”

  “No, I simply couldn’t sleep. I was already up when I saw you down here.”

  He nodded and turned his attention to the other foot. His hands were warm, his fingers skillful as he stroked and probed in all the right places. Cassandra breathed deeply the fresh, spring fragrance of the night.

  “Does this feel good?” he asked a moment later, lifting his gaze.

  Her head was swimming in the pleasure of it, even though she knew it was terribly wicked and very, very dangerous.

  She blinked rather drunkenly at him. “Yes, but I wish it did not.”

  He continued to stroke her foot, and went so far as to slide a hand up the back of her leg and massage the muscle of her calf before he hesitated, stared fixedly at her for a moment, then drew his hands away and sat back on his heel.

  Folding his wrists over a knee, he said, “I wish the same thing, so I shall stop. I have been doing very well behaving myself over the past few weeks, wouldn’t you agree? I would hate to spoil it now.”

  They gazed at each other in the moonlight before he moved to sit beside her, leaning back on one arm and lifting a knee.

  “What a night,” he said, looking up at the stars.

  “It is perfect, isn’t it?”

  “Not quite perfect, Cassandra.”

  Keeping her eyes on the sky, she slowly exhaled. “Only seconds ago, you said you were going to behave yourself.”

  “I will if you want me to.”

  She looked at him. “Sometimes I don’t know what I want.” She turned her eyes to the stars again. “Tonight you said that we would be able to muscle through this, yet here we are only a few hours later, sitting alone in the moonlight when we should not be together like this. I should be inside sleeping, and you should be at the palace with your fiancée.”

  “I am aware of that,” he said, “and I promise I will not offend you by asking for more. No matter how soft and delicate your foot was in my hands just now, and no matter badly I want to touch you everywhere else. And I do, Cassandra. I cannot lie about it.”

  And she could not deny that his words filled her with pleasure and joy.

  “I should not have come out here,” she said. “I knew it would make things more difficult, but I could not help myself. How is it you have such power to crush my resolve to be good? I am drawn to you like steel to a magnet.”

  “I worry that I am eventually going to spoil what has become very comfortable between us.”

  “Comfortable in some ways, excruciating in others.”

  He leaned closer. “How is it excruciating for you? Tell me. I want to hear you say it. Perhaps it will be enough to satisfy me.”

  She shook her head. “I don’t want to say it. I want to deny it, hide it away and bury it.”

  “Burying it will not make it go away.”

  “Perhaps it will in time,” she argued.

  He sat back farther and sighed. “I don’t want it to.”

  All of sudden her eyes were filling with tears, and she could not believe she was in danger of losing this battle she had been fighting for so long. “I don’t want it to end either.”

  A gentle nighttime breeze blew her hair across her face.

  “You are so beautiful,” he whispered, inching closer on the grass and nuzzling her ear. The feel of his hot breath against her skin sent her spiraling into a very dangerous place.

  “Please,” he whispered, “let me kiss you. Just once.”

  Closing her eyes, she rubbed her nose against his cheeks and lips, even while a part of her was still fighting to resist. She should not let him kiss her. She should put a stop to this now by returning to the house. But she knew she was not going to do that. She had traveled too far down this tempting path.

  “Perhaps just one kiss,” she replied, touching her lips tentatively to his.

  His hands cupped her face and he tilted his head to the side. Suddenly there was nothing tentative about it. He was devouring her with his open mouth, caressing her with his soft, skillful tongue. Her body melted against his as passion pounded from her heart to the very edges of her existence.

  The next thing she knew, he was easing her down onto the cool grass and settling his body upon hers. Nothing could stop the desire burning through her veins and her need to touch him. She slid her hands into his jacket and ran them over his waistcoat, glorying in the firm muscles of his torso.

  It had been more than a year since she dashed out of a London ballroom with this man, was kissed senseless in the carriage as they drove across town, and lost her mind to ecstasy. She felt the same way now—wild and reckless and oblivious to her morals and values. All she wanted was to tear off his clothes, feel the heat of his body and his breath in her ear as he whispered her name.

  “I’m sorry, Cassandra,” he said, dropping hot kisses across her cheeks, her eyelids, her forehead. “I tried, but I cannot keep my hands off you. This madness I feel for you knows no bounds.”

  “I feel it, too.” She could barely breathe enough to speak. “It doesn’t matter how much I try to resist, or how much I once hated you, I am powerless.”

  “You don’t hate me now, do you?”

  “No. I suppose I haven’t hated you for quite some time. All I want now is to feel your hands on me.”

  He kissed her again and pressed his body tight against hers until they were both writhing with need on the riverbank.

  “I must have you,” he said.

  She threw her head back on the grass, giving him leave to press more kisses down her neck. “This is wrong. I should tell you to stop. I should run back to the house. I should send you home. Why can’t I do any of those things?”

  “Should, should, should.” He lifted his head. “Stop saying that word. What about what you want?”

  “It doesn’t matter what I want, nor what you want. There is duty and honor and decency to consider. You are betrothed to another woman.”

  “But it was my father who chose her, not me, and he is mad.” Vincent lowered his mouth to her neck again, and she
quivered at the sensation of his lips and tongue, probing hotly across her collarbone. “There must be a way we can be together,” he said.

  “Heaven help me,” she said, arching her back and looking up at the stars, “I cannot resist you.”

  “Then don’t fight it,” he said.

  He pushed her wrapper aside and reached down to lift her nightgown to her waist. He shifted his body and rolled onto her.

  “Vincent...” Barely able to breathe, she parted her legs for him.

  “Don’t say no.” He fumbled with the fastenings on his trousers. “Say yes for me,” he whispered, kissing her neck again. His knees in the grass provided the thrust for his hips. “We must be together, Cassandra.”

  “Yes.” The instant the word breezed past her lips, he was sliding into her with ease, slowly and torturously. Her body shuddered with pleasure.

  “God in heaven,” he groaned.

  Cassandra arched her back in response, grabbing hold of him and pulling him deeper. “You feel so good.”

  “I can’t live without this,” he said. “I cannot keep up the pretense of friendship...”

  She pushed forward with her hips against every thrust of his. “Nor can I.”

  He wrapped his arms around her waist, pulled her tight against him, held her bottom in his hands and lifted her clear up off the ground. He drove into her with insistent passion and groaned into the night, while her own pleasures mounted to impossible heights.

  The magnificence of her climax astounded her. It could not be matched.

  “I can’t hold back any longer,” he said.

  “Please, Vincent, do what you must to prevent another child.”

  After one last thrust, he withdrew.

  Afterward, the lay beside each other in the grass, gazing at the stars and contemplating the sounds of the night.

  “I don’t think I’ll ever be able to move again,” Vincent whispered. “I don’t want to leave this spot. You’ll need an ox and harness to get me up.”

  For Cassandra, however, playful smiles or laughter would not come. All she could do was stare up at the dark sky in dismay. “I cannot believe we just did that.”

 

‹ Prev