Read Maiden Lane [6] Duke of Midnight Online

Authors: Elizabeth Hoyt

Tags: #Historical Romance

Maiden Lane [6] Duke of Midnight (36 page)

BOOK: Maiden Lane [6] Duke of Midnight
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“Yes.” She sat up. “Did you truly expect anything else?”

“I expected you to obey me when I told you that he must remain locked up.”

“Obey.” Her face had gone white and blank, save for the blaze within her eyes.

She was withdrawing and he couldn’t let her. “
Yes.
I would’ve found a safe place for him—a place away from people he might hurt. You—”

She made a scoffing sound and threw back the covers. Underneath she was nude, her skin rosy and delicious from sleep. “You want me to obey like all your other minions. To fit neatly in the box in which you decide to place me. Can’t you see? I’ll rot in that box. I cannot be contained by your expectations of me.”

He felt the argument spiraling out of his control. He was adept at debate within the House of Lords, but this was no logical political argument—this was emotions laid raw between a man and a woman.

He looked at her helplessly, knowing somehow that this argument encompassed far more than the difficulty of what to do with her brother. “Artemis—”

“No.” She rose, as martial as any Greek goddess, and grabbed her chemise. “This is my brother we’re talking about, Maximus.”

“You’ll take his part before mine?” Oh, he knew it was a mistake even before the words left his lips.

Her shoulders squared. “If I must. We shared a womb. We’re flesh and blood, tied together forever, both physically and spiritually. I
love
my brother.”

“As you don’t me?”

She stopped, her chemise in her hands before her. For a moment her shoulders slumped and then she raised her head. His goddess.

His Diana.

“When you’ve tired of me,” she said softly, precisely, “Apollo will still be my brother. Will still be there for me.”

“I’ll never tire of you,” he said, knowing with every thread of his soul that he spoke the absolute truth.

“Then prove it.”

He knew what she asked with such an open and vulnerable face. Something within him shriveled and died. She deserved this. Deserved a husband and a home and
children
. His children. But he’d been on the rack too long for a penance he wasn’t sure he could ever entirely pay. The dukedom… his father.

“You know…” His voice was hoarse, the croaking of a dying man. He licked his lips. “You know why I cannot. I owe him my life, my service, the duty of being the duke.”

She shrugged one delicate, bare shoulder. “Well, I do not owe your father’s memory anything.”

He staggered as if she’d slapped him. “You cannot—”

“No,” she said. “I
cannot
. I thought I could do this, truly I did, but I’m not brave enough, you see. I can’t hurt everyone around me, can’t hurt Penelope, can’t hurt
me
any longer.” She held out a trembling hand. “I don’t fit into the pretty little box you’ve made for me. I can’t watch you rise from my bed knowing you’ll visit another woman’s. I’m not a saint.”

“Please.”

He was pleading. He who had never bowed before anyone before.

She shook her head and he broke, grasping her hand, pulling her body against his. “Please, my Diana, please don’t go.”

She made no spoken answer, but she tilted her face
up to his, parting her lips so sweetly when he pressed his mouth to hers. He cradled her face in his palms, holding her like the precious thing she was as he sipped from her lips. She was
his
, in this world and the next, and if he could only convince her of that one, immutable fact, then he could still save this.

Could still live and breathe with her by his side.

So he slid his fingers into her hair, resting his thumbs at her temples as he licked into her mouth. He claimed her, gently, slyly, using all the sexual wiles that he’d ever learned.

She moaned and arched her neck and he crowed inside, even as he moved his mouth to her throat, licking down that slim column, tasting woman and need.

She tried to break away, to turn her head, groaning. “Maximus, I can’t—”

“Hush,” he whispered, his hands shaking as he slid them down to her waist. “Please. Please let me.”

He walked backward, making no sudden, jarring movement as he drew her with him, until he found a chair and lowered himself into it.

“Oh, Maximus,” she sighed as he pulled her down, holding her tenderly across his lap.

“Yes, sweet,” he murmured as he opened his mouth over her nipple.

“Darling,” she said and caught his face between her hands, making him meet her eyes.

He didn’t want to. He didn’t like the look in her eyes—a grim determination.

“I love you,” she whispered and his soul soared until she uttered her next words. “But I must leave you.”

“No.” He clutched at her hips as if he were a child of three refusing to give up his toy sword. “No.”


Yes,
” she replied.

Something cruel rose in him then, born of grief and rage. He caught the back of her head and brought her mouth to his. Would she deny
this
? How could she find it possible?

She twined her arms about his neck and let him ravish her mouth, sighing as he parted her legs, settling them on either side of his hips. His cock pounded, a crude symbol of his desires, between them. He thumbed the head, pressing it toward her until he rubbed against her pretty cunny with the base thing. She was wet on the back of his fingers, open and hot, and his soul sang with vicious joy when she moaned helplessly.

He’d have this, by God, if nothing else of her.

She arched, a graceful bow of eroticism, and ground her hips against him.

He ran his hand up over her soft belly to her lovely breasts, tweaking each in turn, mindful of any way to drive her to her point.

But she foiled his intentions. She rose up above him and opened determined gray eyes before tangling her fingers with his on his cock. Even that small touch made him grit his teeth. He watched with half-lowered lids as she brought him to herself, his crown wet and sensitive, and notched him in her cunny.

“Maximus,” she whispered, all moonlight and strength. “I love you. Never forget that.”

And she impaled herself on him.

Ah!
He closed his eyes. It was sweet to the point of agony. He grabbed her hips, preventing any movement so that he might not spill too soon. Her depths were hot and tight and
home
.

He opened his eyes. “Never leave me.”

She shook her head, breaking free from his rein and rising like the huntress she was. She let his poor cock slip to the very mouth of her before slamming herself back down. She rode him. Her thighs were strong and lithe, her brows drawn down in resolute purpose, and her lips were parted wide in something very like wonder.

It was the last that made him move. Dear God, if he couldn’t have anything else, if she was determined to hollow him out and leave him a husk, then he would remember this:

Artemis riding him like the goddess of the hunt.

He drew her face to his and covered that wondrous mouth, seeking her heat with his tongue, and tried not to break like a green lad. And he held out, until her rhythm faltered, until she gasped against his lips, until her sheath clutched at his cock in the throes of release. He let himself go then, bringing her damp and limp body into his embrace, holding her hips as he lunged up once, twice, as deep as possible.

As if he could stay within her forever.

He spilled his seed.

She lay against him, sweet, sweet weight, until she turned her head a little. He rose then, with her cradled in his arms, and brought her to the bed, gently laying her there.

“I need to see what Alderney has come about,” he murmured to her. “I won’t be a moment. Stay here until I return.”

She merely closed her eyes, but he took that as assent, quickly dressing and running down the stairs.

Alderney was bent nearly in half, examining a curio
on an Italian marble table, but he straightened with a jerk when Maximus entered the sitting room.

“Oh! Ah, good morning, Your Grace.”

“Good morning.” Maximus gestured to a settee. “Will you sit?”

Alderney lowered himself to the settee and sat fidgeting for a moment.

Maximus raised an eyebrow impatiently. “You wanted to see me?”

“Oh! Oh, yes,” Alderney said as if startled out of a reverie. “I thought it best to come and tell you at once because you seemed to think it so important before.”

Here he stopped and blinked expectantly at Maximus.

“Tell me what?”

“That I’d remembered,” Alderney replied. “Who gave me that pendant you showed me. Well, he didn’t really
give
it, now did he? More like I won it from him. You see, he said that the tabby cat that came ’round the kitchens of our house would have three kittens and I said rubbish, there were at least
six
in there, and when the cat finally let us see her kittens—wary little thing she was, she’d hidden them under the porch—it turned out that I was quite right, there were six and so he had to give me the pendant.”

Alderney took a deep breath at the end of this recitation and beamed.

Maximus inhaled very carefully. “
Who
gave you the pendant?”

Alderney blinked as if surprised that Maximus hadn’t worked it out for himself. “Why, William Illingsworth, of course. Now, where he’d gotten it, I haven’t a clue. Came back from the hols with the thing and was showing all the boys and the next night after I got it off Illingsworth,
well, then I went to play a game of dice with several of the boys and that’s when I lost it to Kilbourne.” Alderney looked sad. “Poor Kilbourne. I quite liked him at school, don’t you know, though we called him Greaves back then as his father was still alive and he hadn’t yet inherited the courtesy title.”

Maximus stared. “Illingsworth.”

“Yes,” Alderney said brightly. “It only came to me last night because my wife said that the ginger cat our children keep in the nursery is expecting, and then naturally I thought of that wager I made with Illingsworth.”

“Do you know where William Illingsworth is now?” Maximus said without much hope of a positive answer.

“Right now, no.” Alderney shook his head gravely. “But if you go ’round to his house his servants might have an idea.”

“His house,” Maximus repeated.

“Why, yes,” Alderney replied. “Lives over on Havers Square. Not the nicest address, but then he lives off a limited income. His pater was something of a gambler.”

“Thank you,” Maximus said, rising at once.

“What? What?” Alderney looked startled.

“My butler will see you out. I’ve an appointment.”

Maximus barely waited until the man had left the room before bounding back up the stairs. There was still time. If he could just make her listen to him…

He opened the door to his bedroom and saw at once that he’d run out of time after all.

Artemis was gone.

Chapter Nineteen

The burning coal in Lin’s hands turned into her own dear brother, Tam. He jumped from the phantom horse he rode and as his feet touched the earth he once more was mortal.

Tam grinned up at Lin. “Sister! You’ve saved me, but now you, too, must leave the wild hunt in order to live once again.”

Lin looked from her brother’s joyful face to that of the Herla King, but he avoided her gaze, his eyes already set on a ghostly horizon, resigned to his eternal chase.…

—from
The Legend of the Herla King

Artemis slipped out the back door of Wakefield House, what few belongings she had clutched in a pathetic soft bag in her hands. She hesitated, panic beating at her breast. She had to leave—leave right now while she could, when Maximus wasn’t before her, tempting her with everything she hoped for and could never have—but she had no idea where to go. It didn’t seem right to seek Penelope out—not after what she’d done with Maximus. And she certainly couldn’t ask Lady Hero or Lady Phoebe.

The door opened behind her and she braced herself.
Not again. Oh, dear God, she wasn’t sure she could go through this all over again with Maximus. She felt as if a part of her soul had been torn out, the wound bleeding, slow and steadily, somewhere internally.

But the voice that addressed her was feminine.

“My dear.”

She turned to see Miss Picklewood regarding her with deep compassion. “Can I be of help?”

And for the first time in her life Artemis Greaves burst into tears.

M
AXIMUS STRODE FROM
the front of his house and called for a horse. This was all he had left, it seemed: revenge. Well if that was so, then he intended to complete his task quickly and with the most amount of blood possible.

In minutes he was trotting down the street.

Havers Square was indeed not in a very fashionable area of London. The house itself was an old half-timbered affair, though not nearly as broken down as something found in St. Giles. Maximus dismounted and gave a small boy a shilling to watch his horse. Illingsworth apparently rented only the top two floors of the house, and luckily he was at home. Maximus was shown up the stairs and into a cramped sitting room by an elderly maid who simply left him there without a word.

BOOK: Maiden Lane [6] Duke of Midnight
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