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Midnight Masqerade

Page 33

by Shirlee Busbee


  Leonie was unmoved by his statement, and her chin lifted mutinously. "I am so angry with you," she muttered furiously. "In fact, I am so angry with you I do not even want to discuss this distasteful subject any longer. In fact . . . " Her eyes narrowed and Morgan should have been on his guard, but he wasn't, and when she said vexatiously, "Oh, dear! I have dropped my reticule on the road. Will you get it for me?" he should have been warned that his sweet wife was up to no good.

  Cursing under his breath, Morgan handed her the reins, jumped down from the buggy and walked around to the other side. Reaching down to the ground, he found Leonie's beaded silk reticule and thrust it into her hand. "There, madam, your reticule," he growled exasperatedly.

  Leonie smiled coolly. "Thank you, monsieur, but I am still angry with you . . . and I don't want to see you anymore this evening." Before Morgan's dumbfounded gaze, she gave the horse a smart slap with the reins and left him standing alone in the middle of the road.

  Turning the night air blue with curses, Morgan swore long and loud, promising himself that when he laid hands on his wife ...

  Since Leonie had left him a scant quarter mile from Dominic's place, and uncomfortably conscious of his wife's temper, Morgan deemed it wiser to seek other accommodations for the night. Grumbling all sorts of reprisals, he began to walk down the way he had just come.

  He and Leonie had been the last of the evening's guests to depart, and he consoled himself with the knowledge that at least he wasn't going to have an audience to watch his ignoble return.

  The cottage came into sight in just a few minutes, and Morgan was further relieved to discover that Dominic had not yet retired for the evening. As he walked up the steps, he spied Dominic sitting on the gallery, a full crystal decanter of brandy at his elbow, a half-filled snifter in one hand and a black cheroot in the other.

  At the moment, Dominic bore little resemblance to the nattily attired host to whom Morgan had bidden farewell only minutes before; his cravat was gone, his jacket had also disappeared and his white cambric shirt was open nearly to his waist. He evinced no surprise at his brother's unexpected arrival, merely cocking one eyebrow, gesturing to a nearby seat and saying mockingly, "Leonie kick you out, did she?"

  Morgan grinned, not at all abashed. "Yes, she did, the little devil! But I can't say that I exactly blame her, although I intend to take full revenge for her antics."

  Without further ado, Dominic rang for a servant, requesting another snifter, some more cheroots and that a bed be prepared in his study for his brother. Within seconds, Morgan was leaning back in a chair, his own jacket and cravat dispensed with and a snifter of brandy in one hand.

  There were a few minutes of silence as the two men contemplated their fate. It was not pleasant. Morgan might have grinned and made light of his disagreement with Leonie, but he was not looking forward to the next few days. He knew full well that Leonie was not about to let things lie. He didn't fear that she would tell Melissa what they had discussed, but she was sure to meddle ... and make life miserable for him! As for Dominic, he was grimly aware that until he could detach himself from Deborah, any hope of mending the ever-widening chasm between him and Melissa was impossible. It was a bleak future that faced both men, and almost simultaneously, they burst out, "Goddamn Jason Savage!"

  Chapter Twenty-one

  THE WORDS hung for a second on the night air and then, both men aware that their thoughts had been following the same path, laughter suddenly erupted between them. Shaking his dark head, Morgan remarked, "Jason's ears must be burning, and I can hardly wait for Leonie to divulge to Catherine all that has transpired. Then he'll be the one banished!"

  Good humor restored, they sipped their brandies in relative quiet until Dominic began to tell Morgan what he had learned from Deborah this evening. Morgan listened intently, whistling softly when Roxbury's name was mentioned. "That old fox!" he said half admiringly, half disgustedly. "I had never considered his fine hand in the scheme of things, but I am not surprised and I doubt that Jason will be when he hears that his wiley old uncle is behind Latimer's trip to America." His face thoughtful, he added, "I am a bit surprised, though, that Roxbury chose a rascal like Latimer-usually his tools are men of character. "

  Dominic grinned. "Like you and Jason?"

  Morgan smiled sweetly. "My point exactly."

  They continued to discuss the matter for several more minutes, but eventually, having exhausted the subject, and neither in a particularly jovial mood, they sought out their lonely beds, each wishing he were somewhere else-in the warm, welcoming embrace of his wife, to be precise.

  If Melissa found it strange to be greeted by her brotherin-law in the morning, when she could clearly remember bidding both Morgan and Leonie good-bye and watching them disappear down the carriageway together, she gave no sign. She smiled politely and did all the usual things that a good hostess would do. As for her husband ... well, she treated him in the same impersonal manner.

  And no one, least of all Morgan, was a bit surprised when Leonie, a half-defiant, half-contrite smile on her lips, drove up just as they finished breakfast and were enjoying a cup of rich black coffee on the gallery. Graciously allowing her husband to help her from the buggy, she murmured lightly, "Ah, good, you are all awake. I did not want to arrive too early and rouse the household."

  Shooting a skittish glance at her husband and being met with a bland smile that, after years of marriage, she knew promised retaliation for last night's prank, Leonie sat down in a chair next to Melissa's. Leaning across, she patted Melissa's hand and asked brightly, "And how are you this morning, my dear? Worn out from your first party?"

  Ignoring the gentlemen, the two women proceeded to spend the next half hour in a moment-by-moment dissection of last night's dinner. Aware that he was still in his wife's black books, but growing tired of her antics, Morgan suddenly said, "Leonie, I'm sure that you and Melissa wrill have other times in which to discuss this fascinating subject, but I for one would like to leave." Sending her a look that brooked no argument, he explained, "As you can see, I am still in last night's clothing, and before the day is much older I should very much like to be wearing something else."

  It was a somewhat subdued Leonie who sat beside her huband as they waved good-bye once again to Dominic and Melissa. They rode in silence for several moments until Leonie said nervously, "Are you very angry with me? -

  "Should I be?" Morgan asked.

  Leonie gave it some thought. "Probably," she finally admitted. "But you must admit that I had just cause. It is despicable what you and Jason are doing to Dominic's marriage." Growing incensed once more, she crossed her aims over her chest and muttered, "And I am not sorry ' for what I did either! No matter what you do to me!"

  Morgan pulled the horse to a stop and turned to face his wife. At the slightly apprehensive expression that crossed her face even as she raised her chin defiantly, Morgan burst out laughing. "I should beat you, you little witch! But since I adore you and would not harm one hair on your head, I suppose that I shall have to simply love you to death!"

  The sea-green eyes suddenly dark with emotion, Leonie threw her arms around Morgan's neck and kissed him soundly. "Oh, Morgan, mon amour, it was so lonely without you last night ... I very nearly came back after you. , , Chuckling, one arm securely around his wife's waist, his chin resting on the honey-colored curls beneath his chin, Morgan slapped the reins on the horse. It was a very slow trip back to Oak Hollow.

  While Morgan and Leonie might have resolved their differences, the same could not be said for Dominic and Melissa. And as the day passed and Melissa continued to treat him with all the cool courtesy of a hostess unexpectedly called upon to entertain a less-than-welcome guest, Dominic's sense of umbrage grew.

  It didn't help his frame of mind that Melissa was in particularly glowing looks this day either. There was a faint flush to her cheeks and her eyes were unusually bright, and the gown that she had selected to wear just happened to be, of all the gowns he had ord
ered for her, the one he liked best. It was a frivolous confection of apple-green silk trimmed lavishly with laces and flounces, and even as unjustly treated as he felt, he couldn't help admiring how lovely she appeared. Nor could he help noticing the way her tawny hair curled about her shoulders, the glowing strands brushing across her cheeks and tumbling about her neck . . . precisely in the places he would have liked to put his mouth.

  Annoyed with the train of his thoughts, he forced himself to dwell blackly on her unfair behavior to him. She wouldn't even listen to him-if he had been at liberty to explain things to her. That was a subject he and Morgan had touched on last night, and they had come to the conclusion that the less said the better, Morgan pointing out with a great deal of indignation Leonie's reaction to his explanation-and they had been married for almost ten years! Melissa's ability or inability to keep her mouth shut was an unknown factor to be considered also, and while Dominic didn't think that she was a loose-tongued gossip, they couldn't take any chances. All in all, Dominic was thoroughly disgusted with the entire situation, the prospect of ever sharing an even remotely normal marriage with Melissa fading with every passing moment.

  That he wanted a normal marriage was quite an admission for him. And it wasn't just the normalcy of sharing his wife's bed that he wanted; to his growing dismay and horror, he very much feared that he wanted precisely what his brother Morgan had-a marriage filled with love and trust.

  After Morgan and Leonie had departed, Dominic had moodily watched Melissa as she flitted about the small house, suddenly seeming to suffer an attack of housewifely zeal. She and Mrs. Meeks spent an inordinate amount of time discussing and reviewing the work of the new housemaids and making certain that all signs of last night's festivities were erased and the household back on a more normal schedule. Seeing that the house and grounds were in immaculate order appeared to absorb Melissa's complete interest, and Dominic idly considered tracking in a trail of horse manure just to get her attention.

  But he soon gave up such petty thoughts and amused himself simply by staring at his wife, taking sardonic pleasure when she became aware of his unblinking gaze and lost her thread of conversation with Mrs. Meeks. With interest he watched the blush in her cheeks deepen and travel down her throat and chest, and he caught himself wondering how far the scarlet color went . . . to her breasts? Was their creamy hue now faintly pink? Did her berry-sweet nipples darken in color too? A decidedly sensuous smile played across his mobile mouth, and this time when his thoughts strayed into forbidden territory he made no attempt to stop them. .

  Melissa might have appeared indifferent to his presence, but that was far from the truth. To her chagrin, she was unbearably conscious of his tall, lean body sprawled so nonchalantly in one of the chairs in the salon. He was dressed today with an attractive casualness, his white shirt partially undone, his buff breeches, an old pair, fitting his long legs superbly. The black hair was carelessly tousled, curling rebelliously just near the collar of his open shirt, and Melissa was unhappily aware that she had never seen a man she found half as devastatingly handsome as she did her despicable husband.

  Deciding that she could concentrate better without Dominic's disturbing presence, she suggested to Mrs. Meeks that they move into the breakfast room to continue their absorbing discussion of whether it was time to apply another coat of beeswax to the banister which led upstairs or if they should wait a week or two. Dominic, for some unfathomable reason, followed them, and Melissa was all too aware of him as he leaned negligently against the doorjamb, apparently avidly interested in their conversation. And so it went all day, no matter how she tried to ignore him or escape from him, he was always there watching her, listening to her, making her exceedingly nervous hour by hour. And if she could have known of the erotic images that chased themselves through his brain, he nervousness would have increased tenfold.

  It didn't help matters either that as the day progressed, Dominic began to consume large quantities of fine French brandy, his speech becoming slightly slurred as darkness fell. Peeking a covert glance at him as they supped in the cozy dining room at the rear of the house, Melissa was amazed at how unintoxicated he looked, only that slight slur to his words and the extraordinarily precise manner in which he moved giving any indication that he was more than just a little foxed.

  The meal was quiet, the only sounds the clink of silverware against china and the faint tinkle of crystal as Dominic refilled his snifter with brandy time and again. Suddenly their eyes met, and smiling mockingly, Dominic asked, "Would you care to join me in a snifter? I am told that brandy is an excellent sleeping draught."

  Melissa sent him a haughty glance where he sat at the other end of the table, his chair turned sideways, his long legs stretched out in front of him. "I believe," she said stiffly, "that you might find a clear conscience a far more effective anodyne."

  "A clear conscience?" he drawled, the gray eyes glittering brightly in his dark face. "Now why should you think I have a guilty conscience? I have done nothing to be ashamed of lately. As a matter of fact, I believe that most people would think that I have acted quite nobly considering the circumstances." His mouth twisted. "I did marry you, after all."

  Thoroughly incensed, Melissa jumped to her feet, and throwing down her white linen napkin, swept around the table. "Well, thank you very much!" she said furiously, standing in front of him, her bosom heaving from the force of her anger. "It is a pity that your nobility didn't last longer than it took you to say your vows!"

  Fascinated by the rise and fall of her chest, Dominic couldn't tear his eyes away from the soft flesh so temptingly near, and without conscious thought he reached up and pulled her urgently into his arms and onto his lap. Blindly he buried his face between her sweet-scented breasts, his mouth pressing hotly against the yielding flesh. "Is it a noble husband that you want, Lissa? A noble man, full of fine thoughts and virtuous works?" he muttered thickly.

  Lifting his head, he stared into her stunned features and then, taking advantage of her momentary astonishment, he shifted her slightly until she lay in his arms, her head almost resting against his shoulder, her legs dangling from the floor. His mouth mere inches from hers, he demanded huskily, "If I were to seek to do worthy deeds in your name . . . would it soften your cold heart? Would noble works be the key that would unlock and release all that wild passion we shared on our wedding night? Would it?"

  Breathless, her skin tingling from the touch of his mouth, her body all too aware of the warmth and hardness of his so close to hers, Melissa could think of nothing to say. Every instinct urged her to embrace him, to wind her arms around his neck, to hungrily kiss those firm, pleasure-giving lips so near to her own, but the memory of Deborah's smug smile last night floated nastily through her brain, and in one violent movement she disentangled herself and leaped to her feet. Unshed tears gleamed in her golden eyes, and more in sadness than in anger, she cried, "Stop it! Don't toy with me this way! I cannot bear it!" And with that she fled the room, her silken skirts flying behind her.

  His expression utterly stupefied, Dominic stared in the direction in which she had disappeared. Toy with her? The woman was mad! She had done nothing but turn his world upside down and inside out; had calculatingly trapped him into marriage; had taken his poor, unsuspecting heart and torn it from his breast, trampled it cruelly beneath her feet-and she dared to accuse him of toying with her!

  He sat there in brooding silence for some time, nursing his grievances, hardly aware of the advent of the butler into the room until that gentleman coughed delicately and asked, "May I begin to clear, sir?"

  Absently Dominic stared at the man. "Oh, of course," he replied after a-moment and stood up. The impact of all the brandy he had been drinking hit him, and feeling a bit fuzzy, he added, "Have a large pot of coffee sent out to the gallery. I believe that I shall sit there for a while before

  "

  Several cups of strong black coffee and a few hours later, Dominic was more himself, although there were s
till enough brandy fumes swirling through his brain for his thoughts to be considerably less than rational. Actually, they were quite irrational, an unrelenting desire to prove to his wife that he was not toying with her taking strong hold of his senses. He hadn't been the one to banish her from the bedroom; he hadn't been the one who had broken off their promising embrace last night, nor had he been the one who flaunted a nearly irresistible body in front of the other! Oh, no, it wasn't he who advanced so tantalizingly and then at the last moment retreated. And, by God, he wasn't going to put up with it any longer!

  A stubborn set to his chin, he went inside and ran up the stairs two at a time. In his bedroom, he stripped and, more out of habit than anything else, swiftly sluiced his body with the tepid water waiting on the washstand.

  He hesitated for just a moment in front of the door that connected their bedrooms, the faint light spilling beneath the door revealing that Melissa had not yet retired for the night. Was she in there longing for him? he wondered. Or was she thinking of some other man? Latimer?

  Giving an angry shake to his dark head, he deliberately dispelled that ugly image. He would not consider the possibility that his wife really wanted another man-he didn't want another woman, so how could she want another man? That his logic was twisted did not occur to him, nor did it seem to dawn on him that with the situation between them the way it was, his wife was not likely to look kindly on his appearance in her room. But none of that bothered him. In the brief time that he and Melissa had been married, he had done nothing but rack his brains trying to understand what had happened between them, baffled by her incomprehensible decision to deny them both the pleasures of the marriage bed. But no longer. His reasons for doing what he intended to do weren't even clear to him. It wasn't just the need to relieve the hungry passion her mere presence aroused within him; it was something much deeper, more elemental. Perhaps it had something to do with the way Latimer had looked at her last night, the way she had seemed to respond to the other man's attention. Or it might have to do with the need to show her with his body what he had not yet fully admitted to himself-that he loved her and wanted her in all the ways that a man wants the woman he loves. Mayhap in his confused thinking he wanted to show her that by making love to her, no other woman held any allure to him; that while he might seem to flirt and encourage another woman, she was the one in whose arms he wished to lie; it was her kisses he wanted, her body he claimed. Only hers. And last of all, perhaps he wanted to prove once and for all that every time she spurned his advances, every time she scorned his touch, she lied....

 

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