Read How to Dazzle a Duke Online
Authors: Claudia Dain
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
Pity, that.
A drunken Dutton was quite, quite entertaining, purely as a
subject of ridicule, you understand. Whatever had happened to
turn him from that profi table path?
“Your sister needs you,” George Grey said, pulling
George Prestwick’s chair practically out from under him. “Go to
her. Now.”
“Oh, bother it,” George Prestwick said, rising to his feet. “I
ask you to excuse me,” he said to the players.
Dutton barely looked at him as he was so very busy staring
heatedly into Antoinette’s wide green eyes. She was a remarkably
beautiful woman. Anne felt positively dowdy, and she was dressed
most prettily in a modestly cut muslin gown with a simple silver
cross at her throat. Lady Lanreath was spectacularly arrayed in
a low cut gown of white silk with an absolute fountain of pinked
topaz around her throat and dangling from her ears.
“It is a lovely thing you do, Mr. Prestwick,” Anne said. “A
woman does require so very often to be protected from men who
are too casual in their address and too fervid in their manner. I
can assure you that Miss Prestwick will be most glad of your
assistance.”
“Do you think so, Mrs. Warren?” Mr. Prestwick asked.
“I’m quite certain she does,” Dutton answered in her place,
vile man, “as Mrs. Warren feels very much put upon by the
slightest attention paid to her.”
“How very unusual,” Lady Lanreath said softly. Lady Lan
reath had a very soft, very calm demeanor that was quite excep
214 CLAUDIA DAIN
tionally attractive. It was hardly possible for Lord Dutton to resist
her. “I so very seldom meet a woman who is as shy of attention
as I, Mrs. Warren. Perhaps you will come and visit me some af
ternoon so that we may discuss it?”
Lord Dutton looked ready to pop.
Anne felt better than she had in an hour. What a lovely
woman Antoinette was, how astute and how supremely generous.
Perhaps she would not tumble into Dutton’s bed after all. Anne
nearly sighed with satisfaction. But she didn’t, for that would
satisfy Dutton too readily and she had determined weeks ago
that Dutton should, for as long as possible, be starved of satisfac
tion. Perhaps for as long as he lived. It was possible, wasn’t it? He
might even deserve it.
“I should love to, Lady Lanreath,” Anne said, smiling.
“Your sister,” George Grey said again, though he was staring
at Dutton and looked very close to smiling.
It was rumored that George Grey had struck Dutton a blow
to the belly not over a week ago. What delicious fun that must
have been.
“Yes,” George Prestwick said with a sigh. “If you’ll excuse
me?” and with a bow, he and Mr. Grey left them.
“May I join you?”
Anne looked up to see Lord Ruan standing with his hand
upon the chair previously occupied by Mr. Prestwick. Dutton
looked entirely comfortable with the notion. Lady Lanreath, on
the other hand, did not. How very interesting.
Seventeen
“I think you should know that I’m not going to find this at all
enjoyable,” Penelope said as Iveston escorted her out of the draw
ing room and into the wide and well-lit stair hall, “but I might
find it excessively interesting. As an experiment, you understand.
A sort of comparison study. I do find it logical to assume that all
men kiss very much alike, allowing for differences in the shape
of the mouth, but once that is accounted for, how different can
one man be from another?”
“I quite understand,” Iveston said cheerfully. “I’ve come to
quite the same conclusion about women, and given the fact that
I’ve kissed more than a few, I can assure you that your supposi
tions are, in general, correct. One woman is very much like an
other. Nearly indistinguishable, actually.”
“More than a few? How many?” she asked.
“I haven’t counted.”
“Why not? That lacks a certain precision, doesn’t it?”
“I suppose it does. There simply have been too many.”
Penelope felt the shock of that statement, which could cer
tainly have been a lie and most likely was, penetrate her bones.
216 CLAUDIA DAIN
Too many? How on earth had Lord Iveston kissed even one girl?
He never left the house!
He was peculiar in the extreme. Everyone thought so. There
was not even any dispute about it. Every rumor of him, and she
had listened to every one, naturally, as he had been on her very
informal list of possible husbands, was firmly and resolutely clear
that he was both odd and excessively retiring. How could he have
kissed a girl?
Of course, if she were being honest, and she was always scru
pulously honest with herself, he had kissed rather well. It did
imply some small bit of practice on his part. Perhaps he had
kissed a distant cousin once. Or a harlot. That made sense. He
had more money than manners. He would have to pay to attain
any female attention at all.
She felt immeasurably better.
And then felt profoundly worse.
A jade? He had paid to be kissed by a woman of the town?
What had that been like? And could she do any better?
Of course she could. She was better than any strumpet. Every
strumpet. She was completely certain of that.
But she eyed Iveston as he pulled her along, her hand clasped
in his, barely taking notice of her as he decried the stair hall as
too peopled, the servants hurrying up and down in their duties to
the Lanreath guests, then pulled her without due care down the
stairs and out a rear door to the small garden behind the house.
It was raining, lightly, but still raining.
Iveston was clearly an imbecile at this sort of thing. Her
groom had been much better suited to an out of doors rendez
vous; at least it had been warm and dry with a solid roof over
head. What sort of seduction was it to be in these conditions?
A very brutal one, apparently, for Iveston, without another
word to ease her into it, or a gentle caress to announce his inten
tions to approach her, turned upon the flagstones, caught her in
How to Daz zle a Duke
217
his arms, and kissed her with all the delicacy of a . . . of a . . .
well, she couldn’t think what. Couldn’t think at all, actually, as
his kiss quite swept her up and out of all thought.
How had that happened?
Before she knew what she was about, and she wasn’t com
pletely sure she’d ever know what she was about again, she’d
lifted herself up onto her toes, clasped her hands to his head, and
was returning his kiss in full measure.
Tongues were fully involved.
Heated breath.
Smooth lips.
Hands that held her against him with such force and such
determination that she could do nothing but respond in kind. To
be polite, most likely. Just meeting him halfway, really, that’s all
it was.
It was a kiss. She was supposed to be kissing him, showing
some warmth about it. That had been the bargain.
And she was going to be found fully as accomplished at it as
any common doxy.
Yes, that sounded ridiculous and completely off point, but it
felt entirely on point and that’s all she cared about at the moment,
how she felt.
She felt glorious.
He was quite good at it, kissing, that is. Holding, too.
It was quite astounding.
She was responding quite . . . enthusiastically, and it might
not have all been to do with their bargain, not that he needed to
know that. The only thing she was determined that he know was
how well she kissed.
This ought to do the trick nicely.
Just for a bit of variety, and to show him she knew her way
around a man’s mouth, she moved his head in the other direction
with her hands, lifted him off her a bit, and nibbled his lower lip.
218 CLAUDIA DAIN
He made a noise very much like a growl, which was very nice
indeed, and clasped her more firmly against him and kissed her
very much more deeply than before.
It was very nice. She might have moaned. She did hope not.
The rain, a heavy mist of cool water, drifted over them. The
droplets tangled in his golden hair, a shimmering veil of glisten
ing beauty. His cheekbones stood out, his nose, the arching ridge
of his brow, all illuminated in a silvery sheen. He looked nearly
magical, otherworldly, and so very beautiful. His skin was cool
beneath her fi ngertips, his hair slick beneath her palms. She felt
hot and pulsing, a fire against his watery smoothness, her breasts
aching, her breath ragged and thin, like upward fl ying embers
struggling against a downpour.
He pulled away from her, slightly, only slightly, and whispered
against her mouth, “You did not learn this from a groom.”
She snickered lightly and licked her way down his throat,
nibbling the pulse point on his neck, pushing aside his cravat
with her nose. “Have you ever kissed a groom? Don’t be so dis
missive.”
He let out his breath and pushed her down on her feet, step
ping back a half step. Was any more proof needed that he was
peculiar?
She grabbed his lapels and pulled him to her, staring at his
mouth. “I insist on meeting the conditions of our bargain, Iveston.
You shan’t make me default.”
And then, pulling at his coat, she made him kiss her.
In truth, it wasn’t that difficult. She clearly had a knack for
this sort of thing. One could only hope Iveston was intelligent
enough to realize it.
He didn’t have much strength to resist her to judge by his
response. He grabbed her round the waist, pulled her against
him, and kissed her quite savagely.
It was quite wonderful.
How to Daz zle a Duke
219
Her groom hadn’t been savage in the least. Timid and curious
would be the best words to describe his lessons. Iveston was quite
utterly ruthless.
Who would have thought it?
Not only regarding Iveston and his apparently instantaneous
transformation, but she would never have suspected that ruthless
savagery would be at all appealing to her. Yet it was. Very.
“What else did you learn, Pen? Did you learn this?” and so
saying, he ran his hand up the side of her body, the heel of his
hand just brushing the side of her breast. It was most alarming.
Her heart almost thudded right out of her ribs. She wanted more
of it, immediately.
“Oh, naturally. He was very thorough. A natural tutor,” she
lied, her breath against his cheek, her mouth caressing his face,
his jaw, his throat. He had such a lovely throat, so long and
cool, his pulse pounding against her lips. It was quite extraordi
nary, what that did to her. She felt completely unlike herself.
Certainly that must be a bad thing, yet it did not feel bad in the
slightest. How very odd. She hadn’t thought a thing about her
groom’s throat, once she’d seen it fully. Perhaps there had been
something wrong with it. She ought to examine Iveston’s more
thoroughly, just to determine what it was that was so fascinating
about it. “You aren’t shocked, I hope.”
She slipped her finger inside his cravat and pulled it down,
exposing his throat more fully.
He slipped his hand over her breast, fully, and squeezed.
She thought she might faint, if fainting meant lurching into his
hand and moaning in the most outrageous manner imaginable.
“Don’t,” she gasped. “Don’t. Don’t. Don’t stop.”
“Can’t,” he whispered, nibbling her lower lip, the heel of his
hand rubbing over her throbbing nipple. “Won’t.”
The rain had turned to mist, weightless and cold, yet it did
nothing to cool her. Her skin ached for his touch. Could he
220 CLAUDIA DAIN
feel that in her? Had his doxy taught him how to feel a woman’s
longing?
His mouth captured hers again, open and wet, cool mist and
hot breath, his lips sliding against hers, his tongue tangling with
her own. His hands swept up her back, his fi ngertips grazing
over her bodice ties, snagging them, pulling at them, pressing her
to him in silent demand.
Silk had never before felt so thick. She might as well be wear
ing three layers of wool. She wanted his hands on her, skin to
skin. She wanted more, everything, and she wanted it in the
dark, with her eyes closed, with everything but the feel of his
mouth and his hands washed from her thoughts. There was no
thought to this, no reason, no explanation. There was only
Iveston.
No, not Iveston. She’d ruined it. She’d broken the spell of his
hands.
Not Iveston.
It was Edenham she wanted. Edenham was the right choice.
Edenham’s name was a bell in her mind, dulling and distract
ing from the impact of Iveston and his wicked mouth.
And then Iveston grabbed her by the arms and pushed her
away from him. She gaped, her mouth still reaching for him, her
hands plucking at his shirt. He pushed her again, more forcefully,
and turned his back to her.
It was everything she could do not to press herself against the
long, straight line of his back.