The Princess and the Peer

Free The Princess and the Peer by Tracy Anne Warren Page B

Book: The Princess and the Peer by Tracy Anne Warren Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tracy Anne Warren
she looked at Nick’s mother. Kind and lovely with a delicate beauty that seemed to glow from within. In that moment, Emma knew exactly where Nick came by his humor, happy delight shining outward from the soft smile and gentle grace that had been captured with finesse by the artist.
    “She was beautiful,” Emma said quietly.
    “Yes. Inside and out.”
    She could see why he’d remarked that his older brother favored her, their coloring and the general shape of their faces merely masculine and feminine versions of the same.
    “You must miss her a great deal,” Emma said. “My mother died when I was twelve, and I have often wondered what my life might have been like had she lived.” Although given the war-torn nature of the Continent, she would likely have been sent abroad to school no matter her mother’s wishes or survival. Perhaps in the end she would have known her no better than she did now. Still, what she wouldn’t give to have her back.
    Nick laid a hand on her elbow. “I suppose I am lucky to have had my mother into adulthood, then. But come, before the both of us fall into the dismals. Let me show you the rest of the collection of colorful Gregory ancestors and relations.”
    By the time their tour was finished, he had her laughing again, telling her one absurd—and likely exaggerated—story after another.
    “What do you say to that cup of tea now?” he questioned, placing the candelabra on a nearby side table. “I know I could do with a brandy after dealing with this checkered lot.”
    “You are far too harsh on your own relations, my lord. I found them most fascinating.”
    “That’s because you haven’t met any of them in person, except Aunt Felicity, of course, and she’s in a class all by herself.”
    Emma laughed again. “She is at that.”
    “The drawing room again, or shall we venture somewhere less formal and take our nightcap in the library?”
    Just then, the clock rang out in the hall, announcing the hour with a series of bass chimes.
    Eleven o’clock.
    Early for city hours, she supposed, but not for her. She was still accustomed to the hours she had kept at school, where she was normally in bed by ten and drifting off to sleep by now. She yawned at the thought, her body reminding her of how little rest she had enjoyed of late.
    “Or perhaps you would prefer to retire for the evening,” he said, as she lowered the hand she’d raised to cover her open mouth.
    “Forgive me, my lord, but it has been a long day.”
    “Nick,” he said gently. “Surely we can dispense with the formalities, at least when we are alone.”
    Emma wasn’t sure that was a wise idea. Yet in that moment, she couldn’t seem to deny him. “Very well. Nick.”
    He smiled. “Emma.”
    Before she knew what he intended, he reached out and skimmed the back of one knuckle over the curve of her cheek and across her temple, pausing to tuck a stray wisp of hair behind her ear.
    Fire blossomed in a sizzling arc across her skin, her lips parting on a sharp, swift inhalation. She shivered and lost herself in the silvery depths of his eyes.
    “Loose curl,” he murmured.
    “What?” she whispered, wondering if he could hear the erratic thrumming of her heart where it pounded beneath her breasts.
    “You must have lost a hairpin,” he explained. “No doubt it will turn up eventually.”
    “Oh.”
    His mouth turned slowly up at the corners, showering her with one of his most charming smiles, made even more devastating in the low, champagne-colored light from the candles.
    Honestly,
she thought, as her toes arched against the leather soles of her shoes,
he oughtn’t be allowed to smile like that. There really should be a law.
    Then, as suddenly as he had reached out, he lowered his hand to his side and stepped back. “Shall we return to the main part of the house?”
    “Yes, of course.”
    In silence, they proceeded slowly from the room. He accompanied her through the house, pausing briefly in the front hall to

Similar Books

The Hero Strikes Back

Moira J. Moore

Domination

Lyra Byrnes

Recoil

Brian Garfield

As Night Falls

Jenny Milchman

Steamy Sisters

Jennifer Kitt

Full Circle

Connie Monk

Forgotten Alpha

Joanna Wilson

Scars and Songs

Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations