MISTRESS TO THE MARQUIS

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Book: MISTRESS TO THE MARQUIS by Margaret McPhee Read Free Book Online
Authors: Margaret McPhee
Tags: Romance - Historical
another, and tables for vingt-et-un, hazard and piquet in between. In the furthest corner a whist table catered for the more elderly gentlemen or the few ladies who ever dared enter this hallowed place. Women of the demi-monde were a different story.
    Alice stood with Sara looking over the men seated round the vingt-et-un table. Razeby was not here and Alice felt a curious mix of both relief and disappointment at his absence.
    ‘Do you play tonight, ladies?’ drawled Monteith.
    ‘I’m here only as Fallingham’s good-luck charm,’ said Sara, stepping up close behind the chair at which Fallingham was already seated and resting her hands upon his shoulders in an intimate fashion. Alice watched while the viscount lifted one of her hands to his mouth and kissed it. The display of charm and affection reminded her too much of Razeby, making her feel awkward. The smile felt stiff upon her mouth.
    ‘Somehow, gentlemen, I feel my luck is in tonight whatever chances to happen upon this table,’ Fallingham said in a playful tone.
    Sara’s smiled deepened and Monteith and several of the men smiled in that knowing way.
    Alice swallowed her discomfort and glanced away.
    ‘And what about you, Miss Sweetly?’ Monteith raised an eyebrow. ‘Which one of us lucky gentlemen will be fortunate enough to have you act as our charm this evening?’ There was speculation and interest in his eyes, in Frew’s, and too many of the other men’s. She knew what playing the part of any of their lucky charms in this place would entail and she would be damned if she would do that, no matter that she wanted to prove that Razeby meant nothing to her. Flirtation was one thing, an illusion of sparkling enticement, but an illusion just the same. She could not go so far as to let any of them actually touch her.
    ‘Oh, I’m my own lucky charm,’ she said smoothly. ‘I play tonight, Your Grace.’
    She saw the stir of interest around the table, the way they liked that idea.
    Monteith smiled, as if amused by both the double meaning of her words and her challenge. ‘Do you need anyone to...refresh your memory as to the rules?’ He put it so delicately, but she knew what he was thinking, that she had no idea how to play a serious game of cards.
    ‘No, thank you, Your Grace. I think I can remember them.’
    They smiled at her indulgently.
    As if she could ever forget. Razeby had taught her the trick behind stacking the odds in your favour of winning in vingt-et-un —the way to count and memorise the cards. It was a game that they had liked to play often. A game that they had played not for money, but for the removal of their clothes. Razeby always said that the excellence of her memory made her a natural at it—either that or a desire to have him stripped naked before her.
    The last time they had played it had been only three weeks ago and they had ended up making love on the dining-room table on top of the forgotten scattered cards. The memory made her heart skip a beat and brought a slight blush both of anger and embarrassment to her cheeks. She thrust it away and took her seat beside Fallingham.
    The vingt-et-un dealer, dressed in the smart black-and-gold livery of the gaming house, sat in the middle of the other side of the table. There were empty chairs on either side of him, one of which would not have been empty had Razeby been here. She felt a slight sense of pique at his absence, part of her wanting him to see this proof of how little he had affected her.
    ‘The house rules apply. Are you ready to begin, gentlemen...and Miss Sweetly?’ The dealer smiled politely at her.
    There was common agreement.
    ‘Then we shall commence.’
    Alice kept her eyes on his hands as he dealt a card to each of them and himself last of all, before dealing a second card in a repeat of the process.
    ‘Not too late, am I, gentlemen?’
    The smooth velvet voice stroked all the way down her spine. A voice she knew too well, which the mere memory of could set her

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