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Authors: Jane Feather

Velvet (11 page)

BOOK: Velvet
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His roused body sprang free from constraint. Smiling, Gabrielle touched him and then, obeying the pressure of his hands on her hips, slowly lowered herself astride his lap, guiding his body within her own.

“Ahh,” she whispered. “Why do you feel so good … so right?”

“Why do you?” he whispered back, closing his eyes.

The carriage jolted in a rut and his grip tightened, his fingers pressing into the flesh of her hips. The
movement of the carriage slowly insinuated itself into the rhythm of their joined bodies as Gabrielle moved herself over and around him and he lifted his hips to meet her.

“I read somewhere that cossacks make love galloping on horseback,” Gabrielle murmured, lowering her head to brush his lips with her own in a fleeting caress. “Maybe we should try it later.”

Nathaniel groaned. “How much stamina do you think I have, woman?”

“Limitless,” she replied with a smile of utter confidence.

“Your faith is touching.” Smiling, he gripped her more tightly as he felt the internal movements of her body, the little ripples that told him she was nearing her pinnacle.

Gabrielle drew breath sharply, her head falling back, the pure white column of her throat arched. He thrust upward, his fingers biting into her flesh as she convulsed around him. She fell forward with a moan of joy, her forehead resting on the top of his head, and he held her as he fell slowly from his own peak and the carriage swayed and rocked beneath them.


Mon Dieu
, I think we’re going through a village,” Gabrielle gasped with a weak chuckle as she raised her head, glancing toward the window. “Do you think anyone can see in?”

“Don’t tell me you’re worried about appearances!” Laughter, wonderful and carefree, bubbled in his chest. He couldn’t remember when he’d last felt so lighthearted, so unrestrained, so much in charity with his fellow man. Distantly, it occurred to him that the true seductive power of Gabrielle de Beaucaire lay in her ability to create this feeling.

“Get off, you wicked creature.” He lifted her off his lap and deposited her on the seat opposite. He shook his head, taking in the wonderful untidy sprawl of her naked limbs, the unruly tangle of that dark red hair as
she smiled her crooked smile, her eyes languorous with satiation.

“For God’s sake, put some clothes on,” he directed, his voice a husky rasp. “You’ll catch your death.”

“And whose fault would that be?” She made no move to obey, just continued smiling at him.

Nathaniel pulled the cloakbag toward him and opened it. “You’re not, I trust, going to have the unmitigated gall to imply that I have any say in your actions.” He riffled through the contents of the bag.

“Only to the extent that you’re the cause of them,” she responded. “I seem to find you irresistible. My riding habit’s in there somewhere.”

Nathaniel looked up, his eyes simply appraising. Then he shook his head in resignation. “The feeling is reciprocal, it seems. Are there undergarments in here, or do you always go without them?”

“Only when they might be a hindrance,” she said with a serene smile. “I couldn’t see much point wearing them last night, and your departure was so precipitate, I didn’t have time to change my clothes this morning.”

There was a hint of reproof in her voice as she said this.

Nathaniel pulled out a silk chemise and a pair of pantalettes. “Put these on.” He held them out to her. Then he said with some constraint, “I felt I’d yielded sufficiently to temptation. Perhaps I should have said something—”

“Running off like that was distinctly ungentlemanly … not to put too fine a point on it,” Gabrielle interrupted as her head emerged from the neck of the chemise.

“Perhaps so.” Nathaniel leaned forward and began to do up the buttons at her throat. “But you made it very clear that you were responsible for your own actions. I didn’t feel it necessary to tell you of my plans. They were made well before you arrived in my bed.”

She took the drawers he handed her and slipped
them over her feet, raising her hips to pull them up. “Well, have you agreed to amend them?” She pulled on the stockings he held out.

Nathaniel lifted her right leg and slipped a lace-trimmed garter up to her thigh, and then served the left leg similarly, his hands smoothing over the muscled roundness of her calves, the satin softness of her inner thighs.

“It would seem so,” he said with a wry smile, handing her a clean shirt and the skirt of her habit.

“Good,” Gabrielle declared with a nod of satisfaction. She fastened the buttons of the shirt and slipped into the skirt, buttoning the waistband. “We shall have a game of passion … an interlude. No promises.”

“And where will people think you are?”

She shrugged into her jacket. “Georgie knows. She’s the only person who needs to know. And she’s no prude. I’m no virginal innocent, Lord Praed. And I rule my own life.”

“I don’t question it,” Nathaniel said. “My neighbors will look askance, however, at a woman sharing my roof so flagrantly.”

Gabrielle grinned. “Somehow, Lord Praed, I don’t believe you give a tinker’s damn what your neighbors think. And I certainly don’t. They don’t know me from Eve and never will.”

It was perfectly true. Since Helen’s death, Nathaniel had as little to do with his county neighbors as possible. He didn’t encourage callers, and paid no calls himself. He had a reputation for being a somewhat surly recluse. There would be gossip, of course, but it wouldn’t worry him.

But what of Jake? Oh, the boy was too young to hear the tittle-tattle, and certainly too young to speculate on his father’s visitor. He’d be in the nursery and the schoolroom most of the time anyway.

Gabrielle said suddenly, “What of your son, though?”

It was as if she’d been in his thoughts. “What do you know of Jake?” he demanded sharply.

She shrugged. “Nothing, really. Miles simply mentioned him in passing.”

“And did he tell you of Helen?” His tone was still sharp.

“Only that she’d died.” She decided against telling him what Miles had told her of Nathaniel’s grief and his difficulties with fatherhood. It was no concern of hers anyway. “It was a word in passing. I wasn’t particularly interested, and in fact, I’m not now. Interludes should have no attachments to the past and no strings to the future. Don’t you agree?”

“You’re an extraordinary woman.” Nathaniel frowned. “You have none of the softnesses of your sex.”

How could you know? I saw my mother in the tumbril on the way to the guillotine. How much softness can survive in the soul of an eight-year-old after that? And what was left was leached from my soul with Guillaume’s blood as he died in my arms
. She turned her head away with a sudden movement to hide from him both the grief and the fierce anger in her eyes, and she spoke lightly, revealing nothing in her voice.

“One reason you might reconsider the question of employing me, Sir Spymaster,” she said. “Since it’s the softness of women you object to.”

“Is that what this is about?” His voice was cold and flat as he suddenly suspected manipulation.

She shook her head. “No.” She said this with so much conviction that she realized with dismay that a part of herself meant it. The seduction had taken on a life of its own, and she was as much a victim of her plan as Nathaniel.

She rested her head on the squabs and regarded him through narrowed eyes. “No, I’m as much taken by surprise as you are. But that doesn’t mean I’m going to give up trying to persuade you to change your mind, sir.”

Nathaniel’s expression was inscrutable, showing nothing of his thoughts. A wise man recognized when to drop his prejudices. Gabrielle de Beaucaire had courage, ingenuity, nerve, and audacity—everything essential for a good spy—except that she was a woman. For several years he’d been trying to place someone in the inner circles of Napoleon’s government. This woman could be the perfect answer.

But was she genuine? She had convinced Simon, but Nathaniel ultimately trusted no one’s judgment but his own when so many lives were at risk. She could be a plant. Her contacts in France were every bit as strong as her contacts here. She was as much French as she was English. And seduction and betrayal were the oldest tricks in the business.

If she was genuine, then she was a gift that only a stubborn fool would refuse. At Burley Manor he would have all the time he needed to test her out.

Deliberately, his expression lightened and a glimmer of amusement appeared in his steady gaze. “Your powers of persuasion are fearsome, madame. I can see I shall have my work cut out to withstand them.”

“I’ll make a small wager that you won’t succeed,” she said with a mischievous grin.

“Stakes?”

“Oh …” She pursed her lips, considering. “Let’s say at the end of two weeks the loser puts him or herself entirely at the disposal of the winner for twenty-four hours.”

Nathaniel smiled slowly. “Now, those are stakes worth winning.”

“They might even be worth losing,” she murmured with a lascivious chuckle that sent the blood coursing hot and swift through his veins.

“You have a wager, my wanton brigand.”

So far so good
. Gabrielle inclined her head in silent acknowledgment as the chaise came to a halt in the yard of the Black Cock in Horsham.

6

Jake sat on the bottom step of the stone flight leading up to the front door of Burley Manor. He was scratching with a stick in the gravel at his feet. A square box of a house with rectangular windows appeared beneath the point of the stick as he frowned over his artwork.

The mid-morning sun highlighted the almost white streaks in his blond head and his lower lip was caught between his teeth. He was a slight child who had not yet lost the round face and dimpled hands of babyhood.

At the sound of carriage wheels on the driveway, he looked up. His father’s chaise bowled around the corner onto the gravel sweep before the house. Jake dropped the stick and slowly stood up, wiping his hands on the seat of his nankeen trousers. A wary look appeared in the round brown eyes, but he remained where he was, standing with his hands behind his back as the carriage came to a halt and the door swung open.

He watched as his father kicked free the footstep and jumped lightly to the ground. Then he held out a hand and to Jake’s surprise a woman stepped out beside him.

His father often had visitors although Jake was never presented to them. They usually arrived at night
and left at night, remaining closeted in the library with his father throughout their visit. He only ever met with his godfather, Miles Bennet. And he didn’t come very often. Jake never remembered a lady arriving at Burley Manor before.

This one stood smiling in the sunshine, looking up at the graceful weathered facade of the Queen Anne house. She was hatless and her hair was pinned somewhat carelessly in a knot at the nape of her neck.

Then Nathaniel saw his son and tiny frown lines appeared on his brow, his mouth stiffening in the way that Jake knew so well. The child felt his stomach tighten. He always hoped for something different, although he didn’t know how to put such a wish into words, but his father’s response to him never changed.

“Jake.” Nathaniel stepped toward the child, extending his hand in greeting. Solemnly, the little boy shook it. “Why aren’t you at your lessons?” His father released the small hand, his frown deepening.

“It’s Sunday, sir. I don’t have lessons on Sunday.” Jake’s voice was a little tentative as he wondered if that had changed and no one had told him.

Nathaniel looked down at his son, remembering the Sundays of his own boyhood. During those wonderful hours of liberty, he would have been in the stables or down by the river fishing, or climbing the big beech tree at the entrance to the park, or …

Anything but sitting in unimaginative idleness on the steps of the house.

“How do you do, Jake?” The lady came toward him, smiling. “Have you been drawing pictures in the gravel? I used to love to do that.” She bent to examine the scratchings. “I always put two chimneys on my houses, one in each corner. May I?” Laughing up at him, she reached for his discarded stick and deftly added a second chimney pot while Nathaniel stood staring and Jake’s eyes grew ever rounder.

He thought she had to be the most beautiful
woman with her smiling dark eyes and her hair glowing in the sunlight and her white white skin. He loved Primmy, his governess, with a fierce love and he tolerated the fussing attentions of Nurse because they made him feel warm and comfortable even when they were irritating, but he didn’t think of those two as women. His father’s companion was unlike any lady he’d ever seen. He thought of Mrs. Bailey, the housekeeper, but she was like Primmy and Nurse, really. Mrs. Addison, the vicar’s wife, was more like this lady, and yet not at all like her. Mrs. Addison was stiff with bombazine and held her nose in the air and she had a sharp chin.

“Where are your manners, Jake?” His father spoke sharply. “Make your bow to the Comtesse de Beaucaire.”

Blinking, Jake complied.

“Oh, you must call me Gabby,” Gabrielle said, taking his hands in a warm clasp. “All my English friends do.”

BOOK: Velvet
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