Jack (The Jaded Gentlemen Book 4) (32 page)

BOOK: Jack (The Jaded Gentlemen Book 4)
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When she hung over him, dazed and panting, he stroked her hip, slowly, soothingly, maintaining a connection when Madeline wanted to hide beneath the bed.
She climbed off of him, and scooted under the covers.

“I can’t believe that just happened.” Madeline went unresisting into Jack’s embrace, which seemed as good a place to hide as any.
The best place, at the moment. The only place.

“I can’t believe it took this long for that to happen, when you so clearly enjoy it. I do well with some direction—my skills are rusty,
and leaving me to guess isn’t… I want to please you, Madeline.”

If that was a demonstration of rusty skills, Madeline was in bed with a terror. “How can I give direction when you’re familiar with terrain I
didn’t know existed?”  

He kissed her temple. “The landscape is beautiful. We’ll explore it together.”

No, they would not. Not after tonight. Rather than begin that explanation, Madeline gave in to cowardice, and let sleep claim her.

* * *

The hour was nearing midnight, and Jeremy lingered at the card table and wallowed in melancholy rounds of solitaire.
She
had touched these cards,
his Lucy Anne who wasn’t his.

The nasty trick about solitaire was that winning was possible, in theory. That theoretical dream of victory kept the cards turning by the hour, and hope
remained, despite defeat after defeat.

The door opened with a soft click, and Jeremy anticipated a nightcap with Jack. That’s what brothers did late on a winter evening—shared a
drink, a hand of cards, a few observations about the politics of the day, a manly grumble about the upcoming assembly.

Jeremy was almost sure that’s what brothers did, most brothers. Jack was too busy being a magistrate to indulge in much fraternal socializing. Jeremy
didn’t resent his brother’s devotion to duty, exactly, but a fellow—

“Reverend Jeremy, I didn’t expect to find you here.”

Lucy Anne—to blazes with the Miss—stood near the door in a nightgown and robe, her feet clad in thick wool stockings.

Jeremy rose from the card table. “At this hour, do you suppose I might be just plain Jeremy? I’m playing solitaire, continually vanquishing my
own aspirations to victory. Would you care to play a hand or two?”

She was not properly dressed, and Jeremy was fascinated with those wool stockings. Where were the lady’s slippers? And yet, she was in every way
modestly covered, and if she married Jack, Jeremy would have to fortify himself against future holidays spent in close proximity to his brother’s
wife.

Jack might not be interested in the lady, but when had the groom’s preferences signified, if the groom’s mama and the bride were intent on
getting him to the altar? Jack was the dutiful sort, while Jeremy was the… sort to be fascinated with wool stockings.

Nowhere in the Commandments was a fascination with a lady’s stockings prohibited, and yet, the way they revealed the contours of Lucy Anne’s
feet condemned Jeremy to purgatory. Slender feet, narrow, graceful, and Jeremy speculated that her toes—

“I came for my embroidery,” she said. “We’ve been playing so much whist lately, I haven’t had a chance to work on my
stitching.”

“One could say we were whist-full.”

Lucy Anne stalked across the room. “One could say I’m exasperated. How am I supposed to court a man who isn’t even home much of the
day?”

Jeremy had wondered if Jack was avoiding Lucy Anne. What mattered an old leather satchel likely misplaced by its owner, or a few lumps of coal turning to
mud?

“Lucy Anne, did Mama instruct you to court Jack?” This point had been troubling Jeremy, because Mama was not shy about hurling thunderbolts of
opinion—at the servants, her friends, her matched chestnut geldings, or her children.

“She most certainly did. Mrs. Fanning said to make myself agreeable to her offspring, and she’d look with favor upon any resulting offers of
marriage.” Lucy Anne paced before the hearth, her hems swishing such that Jeremy was tormented with a view of more than her wool-clad feet.
“I’ve been cheerful, I’ve been charming, I’ve been patient, I’ve been as perishing agreeable as I know how to be, and Jack
Fanning could not be less interested.”

A man who studied Scripture by the hour was attuned to the nuances of language. Nothing in Mama’s edict had singled out Jack as the only eligible
party. Had that been by design?

“I’m interested, Lucy Anne.” Fascinated, besotted, top over tail, intrigued. Let the reputation of the great hero compete with those
sentiments, or try to.

She came to an abrupt halt, her skirts swinging about her ankles. “Interested in…
me
?”

“In you.” In her bare toes, her kisses, her smiles, her laughter, and her determination. Jeremy was very interested in her determination.
He’d not been a monk at university, and a determined woman had a charm all her own.

“I’m not…” Lucy Anne turned toward the fire. “I’m not pious. I’m not… churchy. You’re such a perfect,
dear, kind, compassionate, tolerant… I’m not like you. I’m frivolous. Harmless. Your brother could use a cheering influence, but
you’re… you don’t need a woman for that.”

Harmless, she was not. Not beneath the mistletoe, and not late at night, swathed in frustration and honesty.

Jeremy came closer, the better to see her features when he was honest too. “I’m not pious either. The bit with the vestments and singing is all
fine, but it’s the churchyard part I truly enjoy. Hearing how people have been getting on, whose heifer had twins, which young sprout has lost his
front teeth. I think you’d excel at taking an interest in people. It matters more than you’d think.”

She stared into the fire, which had burned low owing to the lateness of the hour. “Friendliness isn’t piety, Jeremy. I know how people can be
about a vicar’s wife.”

What was this fixation on appearances? “May I kiss you, Lucy Anne?” 

“You’ve kissed me before. For a man of the cloth—”

Hearing no objection, Jeremy pressed a soft kiss to the lady’s cheek, and she turned into his arms with gratifying alacrity. For long, sweet moments,
he explained—kiss by kiss—that love took many forms, and the love of a man for his prospective wife was one of the most enjoyable
manifestations, provided the lady was similarly enthralled.

“My profession isn’t complicated,” Jeremy said, gathering Lucy Anne close. “I’m to help people be kind and honest, and part
of that is being kind and honest myself. I like being a vicar, but it can be lonely. I will be better at my calling, and happier, if you will be my beloved
companion. Will you do me the great honor of becoming my wife?”

  Lucy Anne drew in a long, shuddery breath, which didn’t bode well for Jeremy’s future. He kept his peace, though, because no wife at all
was better than a reluctant wife. Women had little enough choice in life, for the most part, and this one decision must not be wrested from them.

“I’ve been sick,” Lucy Anne said, “sick to think that I’m supposed to resign myself to a life as Jack Fanning’s
invisible wife. He’s all business and duty and haring about. He doesn’t sit and play cards with the ladies because he enjoys our company. He
tolerates us when he’d rather be on the king’s business. I can’t help but think he’d rather be back in India, wearing strange
clothes and riding elephants. I’m boring, and he’s…”

“The hero of Parrakan,” Jeremy said. “You aren’t being entirely fair to Jack, but don’t let me stop your tirade. I hope you
will consider my suit as something more than a consolation for Jack’s lack of interest.”

Jeremy would insist on that, for everybody’s sake, including Lucy Anne’s.

“You will think me wicked,” Lucy Anne said, stepping back. “Do you recall when I asked you for kissing lessons?”

Jeremy would recall those kissing lessons into doddering old age. “I do.”  

“I sit across from you at the card table, hour after hour, trying not to stare, Jeremy Fanning. Your eyes are so kind, and your hands… I have
the naughtiest thoughts about your hands. No man was ever a more perfect height. No man ever had a more charming smile or a more sonorous voice. You will
love me when I’m old and querulous. You will be the sort of papa every daughter should have. You will—”

“I will be the sort of husband you’ve dreamed about,” Jeremy said, feeling a bit heroic himself. “I promise you that. Jack can be
our wealthy relation who spoils our children, but we’ll be the family who treat him like family, not like some visiting nabob. I wish we could make
an announcement at the assembly, but I must speak to your father.”

Lucy Anne wrapped her arms about Jeremy’s waist. “I wish we could be married right now.”

So did Jeremy. He settled for kissing his intended, because truly, no words could come close to the sense of joy and well-being Lucy Anne’s
acceptance sent beating through his veins.

Jack would be happy for them, by God, or Jeremy would instruct the hero of Parrakan in the basics of brotherly love.

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

Jack held Madeline while she slept, as if keeping his arms around her might anchor him in the midst of an emotional gale. To love her to exhaustion, to
show her pleasures previously denied to her, left him prouder than had any feat of diplomacy or victory in battle.

Despite her confident airs and competence in all household tasks, Madeline Hennessey was uncertain, shy, and in a sense, inexperienced.

He’d remedy
that
oversight.

Madeline stirred, her hand brushing over Jack’s belly. Arousal went from simmering to boiling with that single caress.

“Go to sleep,” Jack murmured. She was weary, after all.

Madeline lifted her head from his shoulder. “You don’t want to go to sleep.” Her insight came by virtue of her hand wrapped about his
cock.

“I want you to have the rest you need, Madeline. Too many people have been selfish where you’re concerned.”

Madeline let go of him, and Jack mentally cursed gentlemanly scruples for the wretched inconvenience they were. Then a single finger traced his most
sensitive flesh.

“I’ve had a lovely nap, thank you, Jack. I’m ready to conclude what you so inventively started. Shall I put my mouth on you?”

He’d last about two shakes of a lamb’s tail, and have half as much finesse as Charles II on a frisky day.

“Let’s save that pleasure for another time, when I’m not mad to be inside you.” Though when would such a time be? Jack’s
interest in sex had never overly troubled him, but his interest in Madeline Hennessey was unrelenting.

“You’re mad to be…?”

“Inside you,” Jack said, shifting over her. “Desperate, crazy, mad. Have been for days and nights. You think I’m off chatting up
the lending library patrons for my health? I see you, and I want to put my hands on you. My mouth, my anything.”

Madeline wrapped her legs about his flanks. “So why don’t you?”

He obliged, joyously, exuberantly, with an abandon he’d thought he’d left in India. Madeline met him kiss for kiss, sigh for sigh, and caress
for caress, until Jack was nearly incoherent with need.

“Madeline?”

She rubbed her breasts against him. “Hmm?”

“Now?”

Such were her reserves of self-possession that for a moment, she traced the scars on Jack’s back, an odd there-and-not-there sensation.

“You know I esteem you greatly, Jack Fanning? I’ve never respected a man, never liked a man, never desired a man as much as I do you. I want
you to know that.”

Jack eased forward, a consolatory pleasure, because respect, liking, esteem, and desire fell short of his own sentiments.

He’d been held prisoner under dire conditions. He’d walked between warring parties unarmed. He’d defied orders and risked court martial
when honor demanded it. Surely, for the woman in his arms, he could show some courage?

“I love you, Madeline,” he said, sinking into her heat. “With everything in me, I want to be close to you, protect you, grow old with
you, raise children with you. I want to pleasure you until you scream, share your laughter, and dry your tears.
Marry me.

Her answer was to lift into his thrusts, to lock her ankles at the small of his back, and move with him in a harmony so close, Jack felt the lovemaking
throughout his being. This wasn’t simply pleasure, this was… love. The physical and the metaphysical in an oscillation of emotion and sensation
that transcended time and even identity.

He wasn’t Jack Fanning, he was simply Madeline’s lover, the perfect complement to her, and she to him. For a sweet, luxurious eternity, he
remained joined with her, until Madeline increased the pace, and asked more from him.

He gave it to her, lavishing pleasure upon her until his own control teetered, and Madeline took the initiative away from him entirely. He tried to pull
back, but she was strong, and held him to her with her legs.

“Madeline, I can’t—we mustn’t.”

“Stay with me.”

Madness, but Jack hadn’t the wits left to refuse her. Never had he felt such an intense
union
, of all parts of him joining with all parts of
his lover, until what remained was pleasure, wonder, and a sense of having glimpsed an experience beyond the earthly realm.

When Jack could push thoughts through his mind again, he and Madeline lay cocooned beneath the covers, panting in synchrony. Madeline kissed his cheek.
Jack rested his forehead on hers.

She might not be entirely his, but he was absolutely and forever hers. “Marry me, Madeline. Please.”

If she refused him, he’d love her all over again, though it might kill him. Her refusal would deal a worse blow than death.

“I’ll marry you,” she said, easing her legs from around his waist. “But you might have to arrest me first.”

* * *

Madeline could not lie to a man who made love like… like
that
. With everything in him, wholeheartedly, unreservedly. Jack didn’t
swive, fornicate, shake the groundsels, dance the mattress hornpipe.

He’d
made love
with Madeline. Broken her heart and mended it all at once. Now it was her turn to break his.   

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