Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 75705 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 379(@200wpm)___ 303(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 75705 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 379(@200wpm)___ 303(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
“She’s pale enough. But then, she does walk about during the day. Perhaps she’s a wandering evil spirit who possessed the reanimated corpse of a virgin beauty.” Hammond stalked away, scrubbing both hands through his silvered hair.
Gabe stared after the man. A virgin beauty? Burns?
If one looked past her gloomy attire and perpetually dour expression, Gabe supposed the woman might not be unattractive. But a beauty? Maybe she truly did have Hammond bewitched.
Light footsteps approached from the corridor. “A ball? You’re hosting a ball? Were you planning to tell me about this?”
Penny. Speaking of enchanting beauties.
Gabe turned to greet her—but he found himself without words.
God above, she was lovely.
Over the brief course of their acquaintance, they’d been systematically destroying her frocks—first rescuing Bixby from the coal store, then chasing after Hubert in the river . . . After the masquerade, even her black mourning dress would never be the same.
As a result, she’d been reaching further and further back into her wardrobe, drawing out frocks she likely hadn’t worn for some time. Each one painted a portrait of a different, younger Penny. In a strange way, he was growing acquainted with her in reverse. There was a year she’d chosen brighter hues and lower necklines, and a year she’d preferred demure lace, and a year when a modiste must have talked her into an absurd number of flounces.
Today’s frock must have been made several years ago, when she was not merely younger, but slighter in form. Her figure had matured since, and now the muslin clung to her body the way limewash gripped stone. Praise heaven, he could make out nipples.
His conscience niggled at him. There was something he’d been reminding himself of a few minutes ago. Something about selling this place, leaving Mayfair behind—and Lady Penelope Campion with it. He was supposed to remember it.
He remembered nothing. Nothing, that was, except for her silky thighs wrapped about his hips and the coarse saddle blanket chafing his knees when he’d taken her in the hayloft above the mews yesterday. He’d breathed in so much dust, the sneezing had kept him awake half the night.
He had no regrets.
“I’m up here, Gabriel,” she said tartly, yanking his gaze away from her breasts. Her brow wrinkled with concern as she held up a folded newspaper for his view. “And we need to talk about this.”
Chapter Eighteen
“What’s the meaning of this? You’re hosting a ball?” Penny waited on Gabriel’s explanation.
He offered none.
Instead, he strolled across the room to her, took the paper from her hand, and read through the notice of his impending ball.
“I see little to discuss. The Prattler has captured the details. In fact, it’s shockingly accurate, considering the publication.” He returned the paper.
“Yes, but—”
“While you’re here . . .” He left the room, glancing back in a manner that invited her to follow. “I want your opinion on some wall coverings.”
He mounted the stairs, and Penny followed. She hated trailing after him like a pup, but she wasn’t going to let him get away. “According to the paper, you’ve sent invitations already. Perhaps mine was lost in the post?”
“Hammond likes the periwinkle blue,” he went on. “But I don’t trust his opinion on current fashions. Not for a lady’s suite.”
Penny growled behind clenched teeth. Wasn’t he paying attention to her at all? Apparently not, or else she would have warned him that this ball scheme was a terrible idea.
He led her into a mostly empty bedchamber. The few pieces of furniture had been pushed to the center of the room and draped with Holland cloths, and the walls were stretches of blank plaster. Three strips of silk damask had been tacked to one wall, each a different shade of blue.
“You’ve seen my house. I don’t know anything about current fashions in wall coverings. Mr. Hammond’s opinion is surely—”
He shut the door and pushed her up against it, crushing his mouth to hers in a possessive kiss. As his tongue found hers, a needy sigh rose in the back of her throat. The newspaper slipped from her grasp and fell to the floor. She couldn’t recall why she’d been holding it in the first place. It didn’t matter.
All she wanted to hold was Gabriel.
She took his face in her hands, sanding her palms on the delicious scruff of his whiskers before twining her fingers into his hair and holding tight. His hands roamed her body, claiming handfuls of her hips and skimming over her breasts.
“I need you,” he murmured between kisses. “It’s been ages.”
“It’s been”—she thought on it—“seventeen hours.”
“Like I said. Ages.” He bent to kiss her neck.
“We can’t,” she gasped. “Not here. There’s no bed.”
He grinned wickedly. “Love, we don’t need a bed.”
“Oh.”
One of his hands caught the hem of her frock and hiked it above her knee, bunching her petticoats between their bodies. He swept his palm up her thigh, and pleasure rippled in the wake of his touch. While he nuzzled at her neck and licked at her breasts where they overflowed her bodice, his touch explored her intimate places. Her breathing quickened. Her nipples pulled to hard, aching peaks.