Read A Private Gentleman Online
Authors: Heidi Cullinan
if I didn’t allow it?”
Ignoring the wail of protest from his prick and balls, Ian transferred his
grasp to Nicky’s wrist to still the motion of his palm. “I am well aware that many
now consider me less a man, but with all your protestations, I would have
thought—”
Nicky laughed. “Christ, Ian, try not to be more of an ass than the good Lord
intended you to be. You couldn’t best me even when you had four inches and
two-stone advantage.”
“I’ve never had two stones on you, you country-fed beast.” The retort came
unbidden to his lips, their long habit of verbal sparring impossible to amend.
“By God, how I’ve missed you.” Nicky chuckled and yanked Ian’s cravat
free.
Ian felt his own lips curve in answer. There had always been so much
laughter between them. For years, that absence cut as keenly as the loss of
Nicky’s touch.
Shoving away bolster and counterpane, Nicky flung himself onto the bed.
“Now. Kindly divest yourself of those clothes and get up here before I am forced
to seek other amusements.”
Nicky arranged himself in a gloriously naked display, familiar laugh and
cornflower-blue eyes at odds with the strangeness of a body more heavily
muscled, more thickly pelted, but no less enthralling than the one that had filled
Ian’s dreams as he slept in tents on the edges of battlefields. Longing clawed
deeper hollows than all those years of denial, until again Ian was deprived of
sufficient breath.
Such was the assault wrought on his senses by Nicky’s sprawl across the
mattress that Ian had stripped away waistcoat and shirt and unfastened his
breeches before Nicky’s last words attached themselves to a meaning. The haze
of lust clouding Ian’s mind took on a red veil of anger.
“Other amusements?”
Nicky sighed and leaned forward, taking Ian by the arm. “I swear to provide
you with a detailed history of the past five years in writing and affix the bloody
Carleigh seal to my testimony. But if I don’t have you right now, one of us will
end up dead.”
Nicky pulled him with a force too gentle to be compelling, but it was easier
by far to let Nicky drag Ian onto the bed than to make the decision himself.
Nicky rolled, trapping Ian beneath, the press of hard warm skin such a shock
Ian had to close his eyes against the sensation. When he opened them, there was
Nicky, the achingly familiar blue eyes and full lips all Ian could hope of
heaven“Which of us?”
“Does it matter?” Nicky rocked against him.
Ian thought again of Aristophanes and Phaedrus and their tales of separated
lovers. Of Achilles’ terrible grief for Patroclus. “No.”
Nicky kissed the word from his mouth in a gentle press of lips, but Ian
brought his hand up to tangle at last in those curls and pinned Nicky tight, an
upward thrust of hips to feel the harder, wetter kiss of Nicky’s cock on Ian’s
belly.
Nicky wrenched free and reared up, hands working to finish his duty as
substitute valet, shoving away Ian’s breeches and small clothes until at last their
pricks slapped together. Ian thought he had exorcised it from his memory, but
there was no forgetting that sensation, the silky heat of Nicky’s cock against his.
Adding his spit to slick the way, Nicky held them together, rubbing the thick
ridges against each other, washing the whole shaft with heat and pressure. Sweet
enough to die from but not enough. God, not enough.
Trusting a psychic flash might solve a mystery…and lead to love.
The Psychic and the Sleuth
© 2011 Bonnie Dee and Summer Devon
Inspector Robert Court should have felt a sense of justice when a rag-and-
bones man went to the gallows for murdering his cousin. Yet something has
never felt right about the investigation. Robert’s relentless quest for the truth has annoyed his superintendent, landing him lowly assignments such as foiling a
false medium who’s fleecing the wives of the elite.
Oliver Marsh plays the confidence game of spiritualism, though his flashes
of insight often offer his clients some comfort. Despite the presence of an
attractive, if sneering, non-believer at a séance, he carries on—and experiences a
horrifying psychic episode in which he experiences a murder
as the victim
.
There’s only one way for Court to learn if the young, dangerously attractive
Marsh is his cousin’s killer or a real psychic: spend as much time with him as
possible. Despite his resolve to focus on his job, Marsh somehow manages to
weave a seductive spell around the inspector’s straight-laced heart.
Gradually, undeniable attraction overcomes caution. The two men are on the
case, and on each other, as they race to stop a murderer before he kills again.
Warning: Graphic language and hot male/male sex with light BDSM themes.
Despite “Descriptions of Murderous Acts” perpetrated by an unhinged killer, resist the
temptation to cover your eyes—you’ll miss the good parts!
Enjoy the following excerpt for
The Psychic and the Sleuth:
Court walked with his shoulders hunched, head bent low and hands jammed
into his coat pockets as he strode toward Oliver Marsh’s flat. The afternoon mist
had turned to a steady drizzle, and he’d left his umbrella at home. He should’ve
taken a cab, but he’d decided to walk, since he was already so close to
Northhampton Square. Ironic that the scene of Lily’s murder wasn’t many streets
away.
He’d visited the site today as he had so many times before, staring at the spot
and examining every cobblestone, every brick in the surrounding buildings,
every lamppost, doorway and window frame as if the location would give him
the clue he needed to find her killer. But now, nearly a year later, the rusty stain
that marked the pool of blood beneath her body had long ago washed away.
There was no indication a murder had even taken place in that quiet back street.
Superintendent Hardy would’ve told him he was spinning his wheels in a
quagmire of mud, searching for something that wasn’t there. Inspector Childs
would’ve reminded him the killer had been found, tried and hanged, and he
should allow Lily to rest in peace. Recently Court had nearly begun to believe
them. It had been some weeks since he’d even looked into his investigative file.
But Lily
wasn’t
resting in peace, was she? If Marsh wasn’t a scam artist, then Lily was rattling around inside the medium’s head and trying to send Court a
message.
Marsh. He took a moment to dwell on the man who’d turned his life upside
down in more ways than one. In addition to reigniting Court’s fire to find a
killer, Marsh had ignited other things inside him—attraction, heady lust, the
desire to touch…
Court prided himself on keeping his appetites firmly under control,
satisfying them only very occasionally and with utmost discretion. He did not
like the way Marsh sent longing racketing through him. The mere thought of
Marsh’s bowed upper lip, his soft brown waves of hair, the soothing tenor of his
voice and those damned unearthly blue eyes was enough to make his cock rise.
Court willed it to calm. Damned if he’d let this young man have such control
over him. He must be clearheaded tonight as he observed Marsh channel Lily—if
Marsh even
could
channel Lily. He must be wary and clever, not ensnared in a
web of lust.
Rain dripped off the brim of his bowler. A few drops landed on his nose, and
he brushed them away as he entered the door of Marsh’s building. His heart beat
faster as he climbed the narrow staircase leading to the man’s apartment. The air
was dank and musty-smelling, and it was nearly as cold and damp inside as out.
Court knocked on the door and listened to the thud of footsteps crossing the
floor. He caught his breath just before the door opened. Marsh’s fine-featured
face was as he remembered it—pretty. If he was a girl, Court would’ve described
him as winsome, for there was something inherently charming in Marsh’s
manner. His eyes and smile drew one to him.
Marsh dipped his head. “Mr. Peeler.” He held out his hands to take Court’s
dripping hat and coat.
Court glanced around the room, comparing it to the previous evening,
wanting to see if Marsh had removed anything he thought might be
incriminating. It looked the same, though perhaps slightly neater. His gaze swept
over Marsh, taking in the sharp cut of his gray coat, the muted colors of his
paisley waistcoat. He still dressed the dandy but more subdued than in
yesterday’s eye-burning checked coat.
Marsh hung his coat, then handed him a bit of toweling to dry off with. “The
afternoon is damp,” he remarked.
“The rain’s diminishing.” Court moved past him to the chair his host
indicated, the same he’d occupied last night. A small table with a lit candle on it
sat between the chair and the sofa.
“I’ll pour you a cup of tea to warm you up.” Marsh removed his jacket before
going into the small kitchen. When he returned a few moments later with the tea
tray, his shirtsleeves were rolled up to the elbow. The muscles in his forearms
flexed slightly as he set the tray down, and Court couldn’t stop watching his deft
hands as he poured them each a cup and presented one to Court.
Fragrant steam rose from the cup, bathing his icy face. He sipped the
scalding brew, then placed the cup on the edge of the table. “How do we begin?
No tricks of the trade or setting an atmosphere. If you can really commune with
the dead, show me.”
Marsh nodded and put his own cup aside. “First we must be honest with
each other. If you wish to hear from your dead relative, you must at least give me
your true name.”
“Why is that necessary? I told you, the more facts I feed you about either
myself or Lily, the more likely you’ll invent some fiction to appease me.”
If Marsh was irritated, he didn’t betray it by more than a slight tightening of
his lips. “Shall I continue to call you Robert Peeler, then?”
Court hesitated. There was still the fraud investigation to consider, but his
undercover persona was already destroyed with Marsh. He should stick with the
pseudonym, yet he suddenly found himself blurting, “Court. You may call me
Court.”
“Mr. Court.” Marsh looked at him with a small, grave smile. He inclined his
head as if accepting the name. “And I’m still Oliver Marsh. I don’t have a hidden
identity or a hidden agenda. The service I provide to my clients is real—I comfort
them about the afterlife. I reassure them. There is no harm in what I do.”
Court bit his tongue. There was plenty he could say about taking money
from grieving people for pretending to pass on messages from their departed
loved ones, but tonight he was here as a believer himself. Or mostly a believer. It
seemed apparent
something
otherworldly had happened at that séance. “I’m
ready to see if you are the genuine article. We should find out if you can make it
happen again.”
“I’m not sure.” Marsh blushed.
“Go on,” Court said. “You don’t know how to establish a true connection to
the dead, do you?”
Marsh ignored him. “It would be good if you had some personal possession
of the girl’s I could hold. I should’ve asked you to bring something.”
“I brought a photograph.” Court went to where his greatcoat was hung and
took the tintype from the pocket. He returned to his seat and handed it to the
medium. “My cousins, Lily and her older sister, Rose. She’s the one on the left.”
Marsh studied the photo. “Lovely girls.” He glanced up at Court. “If I forgot
to say it last night, I’m dreadfully sorry for your loss. A death in the family is
hard enough, but murder…”
“Yes. Thank you.” Court cut him short. “So, will that help? Can you begin
now?”
Marsh set the photo on the table beside the candle. He nodded at Court’s
teacup. “Could you set that on the side table, please, and then take my hands.”
Court obeyed, removing the cup and hesitating only a moment before
grasping the other man’s hands. They were warm and dry and slender in his
grip. Long fingers wrapped around the backs of his hands, palm slid over palm,
and Court fought back the tingle of excited anticipation that shot through him.
His body reacted beyond his control, imagining he was there for some other
purpose. He steadied his breathing and concentrated. “Now what?”
Marsh’s lashes shielded his eyes. “We wait,” he murmured.
Is there room for love in a heart full of secrets?
Scrap Metal
© 2012 Harper Fox
One year ago, before Fate took a wrecking ball to his life, Nichol was happily
working on his doctorate in linguistics. Now he’s hip deep in sheep, mud and
collies. His late brother and mother had been well suited to life on Seacliff Farm.
Nichol? Not so much.
As lambing season progresses in the teeth of an icy north wind, the last straw
is the intruder Nichol catches in the barn. He says his name is Cam, and he’s on
the run from a Glasgow gang. Something about the young man’s tired
resignation touches Nichol deeply, and instead of giving him the business end of