A Spring Deception (Seasons Book 2) (16 page)

BOOK: A Spring Deception (Seasons Book 2)
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But there was something in his tone that belied his words. Something in his expression, as well. Still, it wasn’t Celia’s place to push him or advise him.

“Now, as your friend, I suppose it is my turn to ask after you,” Stenfax said. “What’s this I hear about the Duke of Clairemont courting you?”

“Seems like your siblings are more a spy for you than me for them,” Celia teased.

“It is in the grapevine, my dear,” Stenfax said, holding up his hands. “
Everyone
is raring to tell me how you have found yourself a duke.”

Celia’s lips parted and she turned toward him. “Oh, Stenfax, I didn’t even think how the two situations might look alike to others.”

He shook his head. “No one who matters thinks you threw me over for a duke. I’m certain they would be crowing to me just to see my reaction if you were being courted by a baronet or a shopkeeper, too.”

“Well, if
anyone
is so bold as to suggest that I threw you over for a higher title, they will get an earful from
me
in retort,” Celia said.

“What do you think of your duke?” Stenfax asked.

She lifted her brows. “Why do you ask?”

“I suppose curiosity as your former fiancé. And some concern as your friend.”

“I-I like him, Stenfax, I really do,” she admitted softly. “You and I, it should have worked, but neither of us felt that attraction, that connection that we should have as intendeds. But with him…” She trailed off with a blush.

“You feel it,” Stenfax said, finishing her sentence. “You needn’t feel badly about that, Celia. It is what I wanted for you when we parted. To find the love you richly deserve. If you have discovered it with Clairemont, then he is the luckiest of men.”

Love
. Celia let that word sink into her soul. She’d been avoiding thinking it, saying it, admitting it, but now that Stenfax had, it was like a seal was broken over her heart and she could see the truth.

She loved Aiden.

A thrill worked through her at the realization. One tempered by icy terror. She loved him but she had no idea if he felt or ever could feel the same. Oh, he wrote romantic words to her, he held her gently, he did all the things he should do and that had drawn her in and allowed her to fall in the most wonderful way possible. And yet she still felt a chasm between them she feared she’d never cross.

What if she risked herself and received nothing in return? What if they married and the feelings ultimately only rested on her side of the pillow?

“Why do you look so worried?” Stenfax asked gently.

Celia faced him, trying to keep the fear from her face and the tremble from her hands and voice. “It is…
complicated
with him,” she said slowly. “Sometimes he withdraws and I’m not certain what he thinks.”

“I watched him dancing with you earlier,” Stenfax said. “If it helps, his body language reminded me of Gray’s when he is with Rosalinde. It’s like he’s always looking for a way to lean into you. Or searching for a reason to touch you. He’s been out of Society a long time. Rumor says he kept almost no company during that time. His hesitance may be uncertainty in how to behave, rather than a lack of feeling toward you.”

She leaned forward, catching his hands as relief flowed through her. “Do you think so?”

“But certainly you must discuss this with him. You deserve to know what is in his heart long before you link your life to him forever. You
deserve
to be happy, Celia.”

“Thank you,” she whispered. “So do you.”

He turned his head a little, and she frowned at his wordless denial that he could ever be loved or love again. But her worries about him were tempered by what he’d said about Aiden. The man might very well care as much as she did.

And that made her future look far more bright than it had when she exited the ballroom just a short while ago.

 

Chapter Thirteen

 

 

Clairemont hurried down the stairs away from the terrace and the prying eyes that watched him there. He needed air, he needed to think, he needed a break from pretending.

His dance with Celia had not gone as he’d hoped. Looking into her eyes, seeing her give of herself so freely, see all her hopes for their future, it was like a dagger to his heart. And he’d reacted by trying to reach out to Danford. Ending the case was the only way to save her from even more pain. The only way to save her from him and all the things he wanted and couldn’t have.

But Danford had been busy with his wife, spinning around the dance floor, laughing together. When Clairemont had a moment to talk to him, Danford had looked him in the eye and told him to enjoy himself,
not
talk about their situation for tonight wasn’t the time. Of course the man was right, but Clairemont was frustrated, not just by his inability to investigate but by his growing connection to Celia. Her joy only brought him terror. Her drive to care for him even if he didn’t deserve her made him hate himself.

This was all an act. A lie. She was not his. She never would be.

He heard voices in the distance, a man and a woman. He looked toward the gazebo and saw the outline of two figures sitting there.

“Damn,” he muttered. He’d hoped for a bit of privacy in the garden where he could strip off the mask of Clairemont and take a few breaths as himself until he could pretend again. But now he would have to…

He stopped in his tracks as the woman in the gazebo laughed at something her companion said. That was Celia’s laugh. He knew it too well. He had been obsessing over it of late. Dreaming of it.

Who was she with, alone in the gazebo? Some man.

He moved toward them, keeping to the shadows, watching his step so he didn’t make a sound. As he got closer, his chest began to ache. He couldn’t yet make out their words, but he could see then better in the dim light.

Celia was with the Earl of Stenfax. Her former fiancé.

He held back in the shadows and watched the man. Stenfax was handsome, there was no denying that. He probably had a head in height over most men in the ballroom. Certainly half a head over Clairemont.

He and Celia sat next to each other, though they weren’t touching. That didn’t mean there wasn’t an intimacy to their proximity. From time to time they looked right at each other, as if what they had to say required eye contact.

Clairemont’s hands began to shake. He’d just been reminding himself that his courtship of Celia Fitzgilbert was a lie, an act, a game. But in that moment, as he watched her with the man she had once pledged to spend her life with, it didn’t
feel
fabricated.

It felt all too real. Celia was
his
.

Exactly as that thought torched through his mind like a wildfire, Celia caught both Stenfax’s hands with her own. Possessive desire coursed through Clairemont at the sight. A primal need to stake a claim on this woman, to show this rival, to show
her
, that he was first in line for her affection, her touch, her attention.

It was wrong, so wrong, and yet he found himself coming out of the protection of the shadow and up the gazebo steps in one long step.

“Am I interrupting?” he asked, surprised by how calm his voice was when he was bubbling with the need to grab her and scream out, “Mine!” right into the face of the earl.

Celia released the other man’s hands at once and got to her feet. “Aiden,” she said. “What are you doing here?”

Stenfax stood, too, a bit slower than Celia had. There was a wariness to his expression, as if he recognized the true feelings in Clairemont’s heart.

“He’s come looking for you, Celia,” Stenfax said softly. “And
that
is my cue to leave you. Good night.”

He walked toward the stairs, and for a moment Clairemont considered not moving. He wanted to butt this man’s chest with his own and wrinkle the earl’s perfect cravat, his perfect face.

It took everything in him to step aside and let Stenfax pass. As he did so, the two men locked gazes, and Stenfax inclined his head like he was acquiescing a point before he strode back toward the house.

Celia remained standing, staring at him. There was confusion on her face as she observed him, apparently waiting for him to speak.

But what would he say? He knew the truth as she didn’t. It should have mattered and it didn’t. In that moment,
all
that mattered was the rolling tide of desire that cascaded over him like a wave on a rocky shore.

“Aiden?” she whispered, using that other man’s name to address him. Once again, it didn’t matter. Aiden, Duke of Clairemont, John Dane, abandoned son of no one…what they wanted was the same.

Her.

He reached out and took one of her hands. She had held Stenfax’s hand in this one. He tugged her forward gently, down the gazebo stairs. In the dark he’d noticed a small gardener’s shed in the corner of the garden, toward the back. Someplace with tools, but more importantly for him, privacy.

He wanted privacy to be able to reveal some part of himself. Not all, but part.

She let him take her across the lawn. She didn’t hesitate, not until they reached the door of the little shed.

“Aiden?” she whispered again.

He shook his head as he tried the door and sighed in relief when he found it unlocked. He pulled her inside, into the darkness, and shut it behind them. It was dark inside, but through the small windows a sliver of light from the house above, the moon above and the lamps on the path just a short few paces away gave it
some
illumination.

Enough to see the hesitation on her face. She looked around at the tools hanging from hooks, the narrow open space, the door behind him. Perhaps she should have been afraid to be in such a position.

She didn’t look like she was afraid. She licked her lips slowly and his cock began to ache.

“I didn’t like seeing you with him,” Clairemont whispered at last.

She caught her breath at that admission, her pupils dilating in the dim light and her chest rising with her reaction. She was surprised, but he could see there was some small part of her that liked this barbaric possessiveness.

“We—we ended our engagement months ago, Aiden,” she whispered, her voice catching slightly. “Whatever you think you saw, Stenfax is nothing but a friend to me. It isn’t like that between us.”

He moved toward her in the small room, close enough that he caught a whiff of her honeysuckle scent and felt the warmth of her body heat. “How is it?” he asked. “Between you and him?”

She blinked up at him. “It’s nothing,” she whispered.

“And how is it between you and me?”

She caught her breath, and then she lifted trembling hands to cup his cheeks. “Everything,” she murmured.

He crushed his mouth down to hers in response to that powerful declaration, and she didn’t resist. She opened to him, mewling out a soft sound of pleasure and surrender. Blood rushed in his ears, his heart pounded out of control, his hands shook as he dragged her against him so he could feel every inch of her body pressed to his.

He wanted her so much. He wanted to strip her bare and make love to her, to claim her. But he couldn’t do that. If he did that, he would utterly destroy her, and that was wrong.

But he had to do something to mark her as his. More than that to mark himself as hers. Something to give them both pleasure. Something neither of them would forget.

He pulled away from her mouth, panting as he looked around the tight space. Along one wall was a small portable bench, perhaps something the grounds staff sat on when working on maintenance. It wasn’t big, but it would do for what he desired.

He kissed her again, backing her toward the bench. When they reached it, he let her go.

“Sit down,” he said softly.

She blinked at him in confusion. “Wh-why?” she asked.

He smiled. “Because I want to touch you, Celia. I want to give you such pleasure. And it will be much easier to do that if you sit down.”

 

 

Celia was shaking as she slowly lowered herself onto the bench behind her. She looked up at Aiden, uncertain what to do. Uncertain what she wanted to do. When he’d come into the gazebo and interrupted her and Stenfax, she hadn’t been able to read him. He’d seemed angry with her, but now…

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