Lady Folbroke's Delicious Deception

Free Lady Folbroke's Delicious Deception by Christine Merrill

Book: Lady Folbroke's Delicious Deception by Christine Merrill Read Free Book Online
Authors: Christine Merrill
have not seen him in some time. And I suspect he would make sport of my search for him, just as you do.’
    ‘I am sorry. I did not mean to remind you of unhappiness. I only wished to ascertain that we would be alone for the whole evening.’ To cover the awkwardmoment, he went back to his meal. As unobtrusively as possible, he touched the food on his plate to learn its location, then wiped his fingers on the napkin and reached for a knife to cut the chop he had found. He could hear the scrape of her cutlery as she began to eat as well.
    Then she spoke. ‘We need have no fear of interruption. This is not actually my home. It was let so that I might entertain in private. And tonight I am expecting no one else.’
    So she had ample funds, and took scrupulous care of her reputation. He could not help trying to guess her identity from the clues she was giving him. ‘Have you brought many admirers here?’
    ‘There have been no others. Only you.’
    His pulse quickened.
    ‘Do not think that I have not had offers,’ she added, as though she did not wish him to think her unworthy of masculine attention. ‘But they know that I am married. And that I will not allow them to do the things they hint at when they are alone with me.’
    ‘And yet you invited me here?’ He smiled at her. ‘I am truly flattered. What is the reason for my good fortune?’
    ‘You are different.’
    The way she said that word felt wonderful and strange, as though she thought it a good thing to be unlike one’s fellows. Perhaps it was, if it attracted such a woman to him. ‘I spend much of my timewishing I were not. But you seem to deem it an advantage.’
    ‘I am not talking about your sight.’
    ‘What then?’
    ‘You are more handsome than the others, for one thing. And more brave.’ Her voice still had the solid, matter-of-fact quality of the previous evening, but he could almost feel the warmth of her blush on his own skin.
    ‘And what would make you think that?’
    ‘The way you protected me last night. I doubt that the men who normally seek me out would have the courage to do that with two good eyes. But you did not think twice.’
    ‘Which proves me a foolish drunkard, more than a hero.’
    ‘I think it may be possible to be both.’
    And he felt the little puff of pride, along with the desire coursing in his blood. ‘And you wish to reward me for my gallantry with dinner?’
    ‘I told you before that it was more than that. I invited you here because you seemed to desire me. But I was not sure, when you were sober, that you would wish to come. I thought it would be better, should I be wrong, to enjoy a nice meal, than to sit alone,
en deshabille,
waiting for a man who did not want me.’ The need in her voice was evident, though she’d tried to disguise it with a light tone. Without thinking, Adrian reached out for her, almost knocking over his water goblet in the process. She steadiedit effortlessly, meeting his hand with hers on the stem of the glass.
    ‘I think I have had quite enough to eat,’ he said, guiding the glass to his lips for a sip of water before kissing the fingers that rested beside his on the goblet. ‘If I had known that you were dressed to seduce me when I entered, I doubt we would have made it as far as the table.’ He put down the glass again and stood. Then he took a step closer to her, listening to see if she moved away.
    There was a faint hitch in her breathing as she rose. ‘I had not expected it to be so easy to trap you. Should I take it as a compliment? Or is it that you are none too particular about your conquests?’
    Was that bitterness he heard? ‘Are you angry with me for coming when summoned?’
    ‘Perhaps I am angry at myself for doing the summoning.’ There was another pause. ‘Or perhaps, now that the moment grows close, I cannot maintain a facade of sophistication. While I might wish to pretend otherwise, to be with you like this frightens me.’
    There was that hint of vulnerability

Similar Books

Scorpio Invasion

Alan Burt Akers

A Year of You

A. D. Roland

Throb

Olivia R. Burton

Northwest Angle

William Kent Krueger

What an Earl Wants

Kasey Michaels

The Red Door Inn

Liz Johnson

Keep Me Safe

Duka Dakarai