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Authors: Lisa Kleypas

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Reaching into his coat pocket, he extracted a small book bound in dark red leather. “Have a look at this,” he said curtly, placing the volume in her hands.

“What is it?” she asked warily.

He didn’t reply, only stared at her with a restless gaze that conveyed his impatience.

Carefully she opened the book, discovering page after page of neat feminine script. There were lists, names, dates…It took a half minute of reading before she encountered a passage so explicit that she snapped the volume shut with a mortified gasp. Her shocked gaze lifted to his. “Why in heaven’s name would you show me such a thing?” She tried to hand the book back, but he did not move to take it. Casting the object to the floor, she
regarded it as if it were a coiled snake. “Whom does it belong to, and how does it pertain to me?”

“It’s yours.”


Mine?
” An icy feeling crept over her, and she pulled the length of cashmere more closely around herself. “You’re mistaken, Mr. Morgan.” Her voice was clipped and cool with outrage. “I didn’t write those things. I couldn’t have.”

“How do you know that?”

“Because I couldn’t!” Startled and offended, she gave him a look of rebuke.

When he spoke, his voice was flat and quiet. “You’re a courtesan, Vivien. The most notorious one in London. You’ve garnered a fortune from your talent.”

She felt her face turn stark white. Her heart pounded frantically in her chest. “It isn’t true,” she cried. “The book must belong to someone else.”

“I found it in your terrace house, in your bedroom.”

“Why would I…that is, why would any woman write such things?”

“A tool for blackmail,” he suggested gently. “Or perhaps it was just the only way you could keep track.”

Vivien left her chair as if she had been jolted out of it, letting the cashmere lap robe drop to the floor. Wincing as pain shot through her bound ankle, she hobbled backward a few steps, needing to put some distance between them. “I didn’t do any of the things in that book!”

To her chagrin, Morgan’s gaze swept over her, and she realized that the firelight shone through
the muslin, illuminating every detail of her body. Hastily she pulled handfuls of the loose gown in front of herself, clutching the folds to her midriff. “I’m not a prostitute”, she said vehemently. “If I were, I’m certain I would know it in some part of myself, but I don’t because
it’s not there
. You’re absolutely wrong about me. If this is an example of your investigative abilities, I am not impressed! Now…now go out and ask more questions and do what is necessary to find out who I really am.”

Morgan rose from his own chair to follow her. “I can’t change the truth just because you don’t like it.”

“Not only do I not like it,” Vivien said, breathing hard, “I reject it entirely. You are
wrong,
do you understand?” To her humiliation, she wobbled off balance, her weak ankle refusing to support her.

“Would you like me to parade you in front of witnesses who will swear on the Bible that you are Vivien Duvall?” Morgan asked harshly. “Would you like to go to your house and see the nude painting of yourself on the bedroom wall? I brought back some of your clothes—would you care to try them on and see how they fit? I can dig up mountains of proof for you.” He caught her as she tried to stumble away from him, his arm locked firmly behind her back.

Vivien whimpered as he brought her against his massive body. She wedged her arms between them, her head falling back as she stared into the face so high above hers. His ribs were as sturdy as frigate timbers beneath her cold hands. He imprisoned
her between his powerful thighs, holding her steady.

“Even if I am Vivien Duvall,” she said stubbornly, “you can’t prove that I did all the things in that book. They are made-up stories.”

“It’s all true, Vivien. You sell your body for profit.” He didn’t seem any more pleased about the idea than she. “You go from one man to another, taking what you want from each of them.”

“Oh, really? Then who, exactly, is supposed to be my latest protector? Where is he, and why haven’t you sent for him?”

“Who do you think he is?” Morgan asked softly.

The words sent Vivien reeling. She was openmouthed, dazed, suddenly limp in his grasp. “No.”

“We’ve been lovers ever since you left Lord Gerard. I’ve visited you in your town house on several occasions. We’ve kept things discreet, but we were on the verge of drawing up a proper contract.” Grant told the lies without a shred of guilt. The deceit would hardly hurt her, after the sordid life she had led, and it served his purpose. He wanted her, and this was the most expedient way to have her.

“Then you and I are…” She choked on the words.

“Yes.”

“You’re lying!” Vivien strained against him, pushing, twisting, but his arms were like steel bands. Soon she was exhausted by the fruitless struggle. She couldn’t help but be aware that her movements had aroused him. The hard protrusion of his masculinity pressed high against her stomach,
branding her with its aggressive heat. How in God’s name could she have been intimate with this man and not remember?

Trembling, she collapsed against him, leaning full into the long, muscled length of him. She was too exhausted to move. A pleasant mixture of linen and spicy shaving soap clung to him, and she breathed deeply of the fragrance. Her head fell to his chest, her ear pressed to the resounding beat of his heart. “You’re wrong,” she said, too bewildered to cry. “I’m not that kind of woman. I just can’t be.”

He did not reply, and she realized that he was so convinced on the matter that it didn’t merit arguing. A flicker of fury intruded on her confusion. Very well. She would not further exhaust herself by denying the accusation…Time would certainly prove him wrong.

“What do you want from me now?” she asked in a thick voice. A shiver chased down her body as she felt his hand move over her back, the heat of his palm sinking through the muslin.

“I’m going to keep you here,” he replied, “for your protection and my convenience.”

His convenience? That could only mean that he intended to continue their previous arrangement, regardless of her memory loss. She glanced over her shoulder at the oversized bed that had seemed such a haven until now. If he planned to take her tonight, she wouldn’t be able to stand it. She would flee the house and run screaming through the streets in her nightgown. “I can’t oblige you tonight, if that’s what you’re planning,” she said rebelliously.
“And not tomorrow night, either. And not—”

“Hush.” For the first time a note of amusement entered his voice. “I’m not such a bastard that I would inflict myself on you while you’re ill. We’ll wait until you’re well enough.”

“I won’t want to ever again! I’m not a prostitute.”

“You’ll want to. It’s in your nature, Vivien. You can’t change what you are.”

His matter-of-fact statements infuriated her. “I won’t want any man from now on. Especially not you.”

Her defiance seemed to trigger something inside him, unleashing a grim determination to prove something to her…and to himself. Swiftly he pulled her into his arms, before she had time to think or react. He carried her to the bed and deposited her on the neatly folded-back covers. His dark face obliterated the glow of the fire as he leaned over her.

“No,” Vivien gasped.

There was a cruel edge to his mouth, but when he fitted his lips over hers, the kiss was soft, slow, utterly consuming. He placed his hands flat on the mattress on either side of her head, not touching her with any part of his body except his mouth. Had she wanted, she could have rolled away from him easily. But she stayed beneath him, transfixed by the sweet, hot flowering of sensation that spread rapidly and made the downy hairs all over her body rise.

She lifted her hands to his face in a halfhearted
gesture to push him away, but he angled his head and kissed her harder, and any thought of resisting him disappeared. His tongue ventured inside her mouth, teasing, stroking. He tasted of coffee, and some pleasant masculine essence that lured her own tongue to respond timidly. The feathery touch seemed to excite him. Breathing deeply, he twisted his mouth over hers in long, searching kisses, each one more tender and intimate than the last. Vivien relaxed helplessly beneath him while a heavy, delicious ache formed in her breasts and low in her stomach and between her thighs. Her dazed mind no longer comprehended what was happening, or even cared. All that existed was sensation, every part of her focused on the consuming heat of his mouth.

With a suddenness that stunned her, Morgan tore his lips away and pinned her with a simmering gaze. “You see?” he said hoarsely. “Now tell me what kind of woman you are.”

It took a moment for Vivien to understand what he had said. Ashamed and furious, she rolled to her side. “Go away,” she gasped, pressing her hand over her exposed ear, blocking out any words he might utter. “Leave me alone.”

He obliged at once, leaving her curled on the bed in a silent huddle.

 

Barely aware of where he was going, Grant made his way downstairs, his mind overtaken by questions, sensations…“Vivien,” he muttered more than once, the name alternately a curse and a prayer.

He found himself in the library, a haven of leather and oak, fitted with comfortably worn chairs and specially designed bookcases. The cases were fronted with beveled glass, and brass grillwork on the bottom shelves. He collected books obsessively—anything between two covers would do. The stacks of newspapers piled on desks and tables often moved Mrs. Buttons to complain that the house was the greatest fire hazard in London.

Grant never sat for a quiet moment without a book or paper close at hand. When he wasn’t working or sleeping, he read. Anything to keep himself from thinking about the past. On the nights when regrets lingered in his head like ghosts, driving out all possibility of sleep, he came to the library and drank brandy and read until the words blurred before his eyes.

Prowling past the shelves of leather-bound talismans, Grant sought something to divert his attention. His fingers trailed lightly over the cool, shining glass doors, opened one, brushed over a row of books. But for once, the touch of leather repelled him…His hand ached for soft female skin, for silken hair, for round breasts and hips…

He caught sight of his reflection in the glass, his face set and miserable.

Turning away with a groan, Grant went to the sideboard fitted between a pair of small matching cupboards. One of the cupboards was used as a cellarette for wines. He rummaged in the cabinet until his hand closed around the flattened lozengeshaped body of a brandy bottle, sloshing with dark liquid. Uncorking it, he drank directly from the
bottle, the fullness of expensive French brandy rolling down his throat. Waiting for a familiar warmth to spread in his chest, he felt only emptiness.

His mind returned to the image of Vivien, the sweetness of her mouth, the innocence of her response. As if she weren’t used to kissing, as if she were an awkward but willing pupil in the hands of an experienced teacher. All an illusion.

“Innocence,” he muttered with an ugly laugh, and poured more brandy down his throat. Vivien was prime quality goods to be sure, but she was a whore nonetheless. And he was a fool for feeling protective of her, wanting her, and worst of all,
liking
her.

He sat in an armchair and braced his feet on the edge of his desk, and silently acknowledged the mortifying truth. If he didn’t know who and what Vivien was, he would be mad for her. What man wouldn’t? She was lovely, intelligent, and seemingly vulnerable. Her response to the news that she was a courtesan had been a perfect blend of anger and bewilderment. The way an innocent woman would react. His instincts and his brain had rarely given him such opposing messages, and the few times they had, he had been inclined to trust his instincts. But not in this case. He knew all about Vivien’s unique brand of faux innocence. It didn’t matter how she behaved at present, she would sooner or later revert to character.

Therefore, he couldn’t let himself be taken in by her.

But hell and damnation…it wasn’t going to be easy.

V
ivien curled up in one corner of the acre-wide bed, fuming and worrying until she finally drifted into a fog of oblivion. But there was no peace to be found in sleep, only a bizzare dream that became increasingly sinister.

She hurried through a shadowed street, pursued by faceless strangers. Occasionally she paused to laugh and taunt them, then turned and ran just before they reached her. Approaching a bridge, she climbed onto the embankment wall, surmounting a pier topped with a bronze statue of a river deity. The men below her clamored to reach her, climbing after her, but she laughed throatily and kicked them away. Suddenly, to her horror, the massive bronze statue beside her began to move. Huge metal arms wrapped around her, imprisoning her in a cold merciless embrace.

Crying out in terror, she fought the statue, but it clutched her, turned toward the river…and plunged into the black, bitterly cold depths. Its weight pulled her down quickly, the surface receding far above her. She screamed beneath the water, but no one could hear her, and the choking liquid filled her mouth and throat—

“Vivien. Dammit, Vivien, wake up.”

She started awake, still fighting the arms around her…then saw Morgan’s face above hers. He wore an anxious scowl as he hauled her into his lap, one hand smoothing the damp hair back from her face. His upper torso was covered only by a thin linen shirt, open at the neck to reveal the hollow at the base of his throat.

Disoriented, Vivien fought to catch her breath. She glanced at their surroundings, realizing they were on the floor.

“You fell off the bed,” Morgan said.

“I-I had a nightmare.”

“Tell me,” he said softly. As she remained silent, he stroked the ruffled arc of her eyebrow with the pad of his thumb. The intimate gesture somehow moved her to speak when words would have failed.

Vivien gnawed her lower lip nervously. “I dreamed I was drowning. It was so real…I couldn’t breathe.”

A gentle, sandpapery sound came from his throat. He patted her back in a soothing rhythm, rocking her as if she were a child. The heat of his body permeated the layers of clothing between them, warming her. For a moment she was
tempted to push him away, the memory of his distasteful accusations still fresh in her ears.

But she stayed motionless against him. Although he was hateful and arrogant, he was also large and safe. At the moment there was no more appealing place in the world than his arms. A delicious scent clung to him, a blend of brandy and salt and linen…smells that reminded her of something…someone…whose comforting image was locked deep in her memory. A father or brother, perhaps? A lover she had held dear?

Confused and frustrated, she chewed harder at her lip as she strained to remember.

“Don’t do that,” Morgan said, touching her mouth with gentle fingers. “Try to relax. Would you like a drink?”

“I don’t know.”

He held her for a moment longer, cradling her in his lap, until the frantic jerking of her heart slowed to a normal pace. His hand slid over her leg and hip and settled at the curve of her waist, and in a despairing flash, Vivien sensed that his touch was somehow familiar and natural. As if she belonged in his arms, against his body…as if they had indeed been lovers. She moved her face, blotting her tear-dampened cheek against his shirt, and she felt his mouth brush over her hair.

Carefully Morgan lifted her from the floor and placed her on the bed, and busied himself with straightening the tangled mass of sheets and blankets. Going to the bedside table, he poured a small quantity of liquor into a verriere glass etched with leaves. “I had a feeling you might need some of
this during the night,” he said. “You’ll have dreams about it from time to time. Occasionally one of them will be so damned vivid you’ll wake with a scream in your throat. It happens after one comes close to dying.”

He sounded quite knowledgeable on the subject, Vivien thought, accepting the verriere. She sipped the rich, slightly fruity beverage. “Have you come close to death before?”

“Once or twice.”

“What happened?” she asked.

“I never discuss my exploits.” A self-mocking smile touched his lips, softening the angles of his face. “It’s tempting for a Runner to develop a habit of boasting, and then we tend to spend all our time spinning elaborate tales…so it’s better not to talk of work at all, or nothing gets done.”

“I’ll find out anyway,” Vivien said. She took a larger swallow of the brandy, the pleasant fire spreading through her veins and restoring her shattered nerves. “Mrs. Buttons told me there have been a few ha’penny novels published about your adventures.”

“Trash only fit to use as kindling,” he said with a snort. “You won’t find those in my house.”

“Yes, I will. Some of your servants collect them.”

“The devil they do,” he muttered, clearly surprised at the information. “Crackbrains. Don’t believe a word any of them tells you.”

“I’ve embarrassed you,” she said with a trace of satisfaction, and buried a fleeting smile in the verriere glass.

“Whom have you been talking to? Mrs. Buttons?
One of the maids? I’ll have someone’s head if they’ve been gossiping.”

“The servants are all quite proud of you,” Vivien said, delighted at having found a way to needle him. “It seems you’re a legend. Rescuing heiresses, tracking murderers, solving impossible cases—”

“Legend, my arse.” Morgan looked as though she had mocked him instead of complimenting his reputation. “Mostly I recover stolen property for banks. I have a great fondness for banks and the reward money they offer. Sir Ross and any of the Runners can tell you there’s a cash box where my heart should be.”

“You’re trying to tell me that you’re not a hero,” Vivien said with a questioning lilt.

“Based on your acquaintance with me during the last twenty-four hours, wouldn’t you agree?”

She considered the question and answered thoughtfully. “Obviously you are not a perfect man—as if there could be such a thing—but you have done good for many people, sometimes at the risk of your own life. That makes you heroic, even if I don’t approve of you.”


You
don’t approve of
me,
” he repeated blankly.

“No. I think it very wrong of you to pay for the services of a woman like me.”

The comment seemed to simultaneously amuse and puzzle him. “Why, Vivien,” he mocked, “you don’t sound like yourself.”

“Don’t I?” She fiddled awkwardly with the edges of the bed linens. “I have no idea what I’m supposed to sound like, or what I should say. All I know is that the more you tell me about myself,
the more I wonder why you or anyone else should desire my company. I’m not a very nice woman, am I?”

A stiff silence descended on them. Morgan’s stare was searching, critical, like that of a scientist examining the unexpected results of an experiment. Wordlessly he turned and headed toward the door, and Vivien thought he was leaving. However, he picked up a tray that had been set on a side table, and returned to the bed with it.

“Your supper,” he said, setting the tray on her lap, straightening a piece of silverware that had slid to the edge. “I was carrying this upstairs when I heard you fall.”

“You were bringing a supper tray to me?” Vivien asked, wondering why he had not had one of the servants do it.

Morgan read the unspoken question in her expression. “I intended to offer it with an apology.” His voice turned brusque as he added, “My manner with you earlier this evening was uncalled-for.”

Vivien was rather taken by his charming gruffness. Her instincts told her that he was sincere. Although he surely did not respect or esteem her, he was willing to apologize when he believed himself to be in the wrong. Perhaps he wasn’t quite the ogre she had thought him.

She tried to meet his honesty in equal measure. “You were only relating the truth.”

“I should have been far more gentle in the telling of it. I’m not what anyone would call a diplomat.”

“I shouldn’t have blamed you for what you said.
After all, it’s not your fault that I’m a—”

“A beautiful and fascinating woman,” he finished for her.

Flushing, Vivien fumbled with the napkin and laid it over her midriff. She didn’t feel beautiful and fascinating, and she certainly didn’t feel like a worldly-wise courtesan. “Thank you,” she said with difficulty. “But I’m not the woman you think I am…at least, for the present I’m not. I don’t remember anything about myself. And I don’t know how to behave with you.”

“That’s all right,” Morgan interrupted, sitting in the bedside chair. He seemed relaxed and casual, but his gaze didn’t leave her for a moment. “Behave however you wish. No one is going to force you to do something you don’t want, least of all me.”

Difficult as it was, she took a deep breath and returned his gaze. “Then you won’t want me to—”

“No,” he said quietly. “I’ve already told you that I won’t bother you that way. Not until you desire it.”

“And if I never desire it?” she forced herself to ask in a mortified scrape of a whisper.

“The choice is entirely yours,” he assured her. A crooked smile tugged at his mouth. “But be forewarned. My attractions may grow on you.”

Abashed, Vivien swiftly dropped her gaze to the dainty meal before her. The plate contained slivers of chicken, a dab of pudding, a spoonful of vegetables in cream. She picked up a bread roll and bit into it. It seemed to take an unusual amount of effort
to chew and swallow the morsel. “This is your room, isn’t it? I would like to move to the guest room as soon as it’s convenient. I don’t wish to deprive you of your own bed.”

“Stay here. I want you to be comfortable.”

“It’s very grand, but the bed is too large for me, and…” Vivien hesitated, unable to tell him that she felt surrounded by him in this room, even when he wasn’t here. His smell and his distinctly masculine aura seemed to linger in the air. “Have I been here before?” she asked suddenly. “In your house…in this room?”

“No. This is the first time you’ve been a guest in my home.”

On the occasions when they had been intimate, she guessed they had trysted in her bed, or some other place. She was too embarrassed to ask for details. “Mr. Morgan—Grant—there is something I want to ask…”

“Yes?”

“Promise you won’t laugh at me. Please.”

“All right.”

She picked up a silver fork and toyed with the prongs, focusing all her attention on the utensil. “Was there any love between us? Any affection? Or was it merely a sort of business arrangement?” She could hardly bear the thought that she might have sold her body only for money. Her face burned hot with shame as she waited for the answer. To her relief, he didn’t jeer or laugh.

“It wasn’t all business,” he said carefully. “I thought you would offer some ease and enjoyment I needed badly.”

“Then one could say we’re friends?” Vivien asked, grasping the fork so hard that the prongs left scarlet marks on the flesh of her palm.

“Yes, we’re—” Breaking off, Morgan took the fork from her and rubbed the sore spot on her palm with his thumb. He cradled her hand in his large one, frowning at the little red marks. “We’re friends, Vivien,” he muttered. “Don’t distress yourself. You’re hardly a cheap wh…prostitute. You’re an exclusive courtesan, and few people think the worse of you for it.”

“I do,” Vivien said painfully. “I think very much the worse of me for it. I wish I were anything else.”

“You’ll get used to the idea.”

“That’s what I’m afraid of,” she whispered.

Something in her woeful gaze seemed to bother him. Letting go of her hand, he muttered an imprecation and left the room, while she stared morosely at the cooling food on her plate.

 

“Oh, I couldn’t wear that,” Vivien said, staring at the gown that had been laid out for her. It was one of four that Mr. Morgan had brought from her town house, and while she had no doubt that the gown was hers, she very much doubted its tastefulness. Although the garment was beautifully designed and well made, the color, a dark velvet that captured the intense tones of a ripe plum or black cherries, would prove a jarring clash with her hair. She added ruefully, “Not with this carrot top. I’ll look a fright.”

Mrs. Buttons surveyed her critically as Mary helped her from the bath and began to dry her off
with a thick length of white toweling. “I think you might be pleasantly surprised, Miss Duvall. Won’t you try it on and see?”

“Yes, I’ll try,” Vivien said, shivering as the cool air chased over her exposed skin, raising gooseflesh from head to toe. “But there’s every chance I’ll look ridiculous.”

“I assure you, such a thing isn’t possible,” Mrs. Buttons replied. Over the last three days, the housekeeper’s manner with Vivien had changed from distant politeness to warm kindness, and the rest of the household staff had promptly followed suit. Sincerely grateful for the help they offered her, Vivien praised and thanked the servants whenever the opportunity presented itself.

Had Vivien been a high-ranking noblewoman, she supposed she would have accepted their service as her due, and taken care not to become familiar with them. However, she was far from an aristocrat, and in light of what she knew about her own dissolute past, she thought the servants of the Morgan household were more than kind. There was no doubt they all knew what she was, and what she had been, and still they treated her with the deference they would have accorded a duchess. When she remarked on this fact to Mrs. Buttons, the housekeeper had explained with a wry smile.

“For one thing, Mr. Morgan has made it clear that he values you, and wishes you to be treated as a respected guest. But more than that, Miss Duvall, your character speaks for itself. No matter what is said about you, the servants can see that you are a kind and decent young woman.”

“But I’m not,” Vivien said. Unable to look into the housekeeper’s face, she bent her head. There had been a long silence, and then she had felt Mrs. Button’s gentle hand on her shoulder.

“We all have mistakes to overcome,” the housekeeper said quietly. “And yours aren’t the worst I’ve heard of. Thanks to Mr. Morgan’s profession, I have seen and known some of the more wretched characters imaginable, who have no bit of goodness or hope left in them. You are far from that desperate state.”

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