Rose (Flower Trilogy) (25 page)

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Authors: Lauren Royal

Tags: #Signet (7. Oktober 2003), #ISBN-13: 9780451209887

BOOK: Rose (Flower Trilogy)
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But Lord Almighty, he wanted her.

He lowered his head, suckled her through the filmy material. She arched, and his arms clenched tighter to support her. She smelled of roses and passion, a heady scent that almost had him breaking his promises and asking for more.

If he didn’t miss his guess, she was willing to give more.

“More,” she murmured as she had in the square. “More.”

Easing down the neckline of her night rail, he licked at a breast, nibbled greedily. She thrust herself closer to his mouth, responding to his attentions with an eagerness no other woman ever had.

That innate responsiveness, that unschooled sensuality, was one of the things he loved about her. One of the many, many things.

She pressed herself against his body until he feared he’d lose his mind. She worked her hands into the front of his robe, hesitating only a moment when she realized he wore nothing beneath it.

“Gemini,” she whispered. Warm and smooth, her fingers maneuvered their way around him. His muscles jumped under her brazen exploration. When her arms completely encircled him, her hands flat on his back, she moved closer, molding her curves to fit him. “You feel entirely too good.”

“So do you, sweetheart,” he murmured.

“Touch me,” she said.

His breath lodged in his chest. “I don’t think—”

“Please.” She slid a hand from under his robe, grasped one of his, and guided it to that place he wanted to touch more than anything. Through her night rail, he felt her heat.

Searing heat.

“Touch me.” Her voice was a husky rasp.

It took a stronger man than Kit to refuse such a heartfelt request. He inched up the fabric, thinking he’d never get enough of this enchanting, forward creature. Steeling himself to maintain control, he slipped his hand beneath the hem, skimmed the warm smoothness of one bare thigh.

Teased circles on her delicate, silky skin.

“Touch me.”

Finally, finally, he did.

Kit cupped her like he had before, and Rose surged against his hand, quivering with need. She thought, for one fleeting moment, that ’twas madness asking for this, but oh, the madness was sweet. He moved his hand, his fingers sliding, tormenting, until she squirmed against him, her dampness turning to an exquisite slickness. Desire spiraled through her. The heat built; her skin prickled. Then he slipped a finger inside her, and her world tilted.

Sensation flooded her being, stealing her breath, making the blood surge through her veins and pound insistently in her ears. He drew out of her and plunged back in, again and again, playing her body until she teetered on the edge of awareness, until she suddenly shattered, shuddering both without and within with pleasure she’d never known.

“More,” Kit murmured, borrowing her word, wanting more than anything to give her more than she’d ever dreamed.

Nothing would make him happier than to make
her
happy day and night. He wanted her so badly, the need was a physical ache in his chest.

As her tremors abated, he kissed her, taking her long, sweet languid sigh into his mouth. “A thing of beauty,” she whispered, echoing his thoughts. Writhing in ecstasy, Rose had been the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen.

Has she refused your proposal?
Rand had asked.

No, and Kit couldn’t imagine her doing so now.

When her eyes fluttered open, looking dazed, he gave her a gentle smile. “I love you, Rose.” Watching her lips curve in response to those words, he drew a shaky breath.

“Will you marry me?”

“Marry you?” Her eyes filled with pain and confusion, the pleasure turning to panic. “No. I . . . no. Good God, what have I done?” She shoved her night rail down and closed her dressing gown, fumbling with the sash, then giving up and hugging herself miserably. “I’m sorry. I must go.”

She pushed past him and ran from the chamber, her bare footfalls pattering all down its long length. At the other end, he heard the door slam shut.

And then he was alone with the flickering candles and his tight throat and his pensive thoughts.

And his aching heart.

He’d known all along that she’d refuse him, so why was he so crushed and demoralized? Damn Lady Trentingham for encouraging him. He’d always known that, as matters stood, he wouldn’t be considered good enough for an earl’s daughter. Not by the daughter herself, in any case. And just his luck, he’d chosen the one woman in England whose parents let her choose her own husband.

The candlelight that had seemed so intimate earlier now seemed too bright, too revealing. He slowly moved to douse the many small flames. He burned to tell Rose of his pending knighthood, but with his project deadlines approaching and all the problems, he was no longer confident of his chances. And for all he knew, a knighthood might not be enough for her, anyway. The Deputy Surveyor post was only a first step—it could be years before he raised himself further. By then it would be too late for him and Rose.

Too late.

Rose spent a restless, tormented night. When she awakened, the note she found slipped beneath her door did nothing to ease her distress. ROSE, it said in the neat, all-caps printing she’d seen on Kit’s architectural renderings: MUST CHECK PROGRESS AT HAMPTON COURT.

PLEASE GIVE YOUR FAMILY MY THANKS AND

ASSURE YOUR FATHER THAT THE GREENHOUSE

WILL PROCEED ON SCHEDULE AS PLANNED.

K

There was nothing more. No “Dearest Rose.” No “I love you, Kit.” Did he hate her now? Had she lost his friendship along with her innocence?

True, she was still a virgin, but her whole body heated just remembering the liberties she’d allowed Kit last night.

A hot, tingling ache spread, centered in that place between her legs where he’d touched her. Where he’d made her feel things she’d never felt. Never even imagined.

She washed and slowly pulled on her clothes, so lost in her thoughts she couldn’t bear conversation with Harriet.
I
love you.
She supposed she had no right to expect Kit to declare so in a letter when he’d said the words out loud and been met with her silence. And then gone so far as to propose and been met with a
no.

Her first proposal.

The look on his face had nearly killed her. His words had taken her completely by surprise. She supposed, on reflection, that they shouldn’t have . . . but she’d been expecting her first proposal to come from a duke.

Confusion was a weight in her chest. Did she love Kit?

In the heat of the moment, it had been on the tip of her tongue to echo those three words. But she hadn’t, because she wasn’t sure, and in any case it wouldn’t matter.

He wasn’t the right man for her.

He’d had no right to expect a different answer. She might have reached the advanced age of one-and-twenty, but she was not yet desperate enough to marry a commoner. She’d be a fool to do that when Bridgewater, a lofty peer of the realm, was likely to offer for her hand. She squared her shoulders as she headed down to the dining room for breakfast.

Happy as bees in a bed of flowers, her sisters and their families were already eating, having risen early to prepare for their journeys home. The elder Ashcrofts were conspicuously absent; after a homecoming, they often slept late.

Rowan and Jewel chatted cheerfully, so focused on each other that the rest of the room might as well have been empty.

Everyone in this house—everyone but Rose—was in love.

The conversation died as she scraped back a chair and plopped onto it. A footman offered a cup of chocolate, and she clenched it so hard her knuckles turned white.

“Where is Kit?” Lily asked.

Rose felt her jaw tightening. “What makes you think I should know?” she gritted out, repressing a vision of herself biting her sister’s head off. She gulped the hot liquid, scalding her tongue. “He left a note. It seems he’s gone on to Hampton Court.”

“Oh,” Lily said.

“Did you hear a ghost last night?” Rowan asked.

Rose imagined biting his head off, too. “There is no such thing as ghosts.”

“Rose is right,” Ford put in.

He could live.

“I heard tapping,” Rowan insisted.

“Me, too.” Jewel nodded, gazing at him worshipfully.

That pixie-faced girl had fallen in love at six. Six! Off with her pixie head.

“We heard tapping
and
scratching,” Rand said. “Lily and I both.”

“And I heard terrible scraping.” Violet turned to Rose.

“Did you not hear anything at all?”

A whoosh. But she’d never admit it. She didn’t believe in ghosts. Or marrying beneath her expectations, either.

Chapter Twenty-six

The sun was setting upon Hampton Court’s red brick when Rose and her mother arrived three days later. As they stood in one of Base Court’s covered galleries waiting for a palace warden to open their lodging, a woman came out of the apartment next door.

“Oh!” she exclaimed, one hand to the pillowy chest revealed in the low neckline of her orange brocade gown.

Rose couldn’t recall her name, but she remembered seeing her in the ladies’ attiring room at Windsor. “Lady Rose! I’m so glad you have followed us. I hope we’ll be seeing you at Court this evening.”

“Yes, you will,” Rose said, pleased. Court was going to be so much more pleasant now that the women liked her.

“And will you be bringing the translations?”

“Gemini!” With all the turmoil surrounding Ellen, she’d completely forgotten to work on any more of them. “I’ve done two,” she hedged, not mentioning that she didn’t have them with her.

“Excellent,” the lady said before walking off, the little train of her fur-trimmed cloak dragging behind her.

“What translations?” Chrystabel asked.

“Some poetry. Italian. Nothing important.”

“Oh, I see,” Chrystabel said as though she didn’t see at all. “Come along, then, let us ready ourselves.”

Their lodging was again just a sitting room and one bedchamber, no fancier than the one they’d been assigned at Windsor Castle. But at least the rooms were larger. In no time at all, Chrystabel was settled at a creaky wooden dressing table with Anne working on her hair, while Harriet helped Rose into the new emerald gown she’d chosen to wear.

When a knock came at the door, Harriet went to answer and came back with a vase full of colorful fall flowers. “For you, Lady Rose.”

Rose rushed to take them. “Lovely!” She rearranged the greenery more evenly and moved a yellow bloom from the right side to the left before reaching for the card. “They must be from the duke.”

But they weren’t.
For dear Lady Rose,
it said in a heavy, dark hand.
I wished for red roses to match your lips, but
alas, ’tis not the season. Please accept this small token of
my affection with my hopes of spending some time in your
company this evening. Yours, Lord Somerville.

“How did he know I was here?” she wondered.

“News travels fast at Court,” her mother said.

Harriet’s pale green eyes looked wistful in her freckled face. “Oh,” she sighed. “How I would love for a man to send me flowers.”

She’d barely finished lacing the back of Rose’s gown when another knock came at the door. This time she returned with a small wooden box.

Inside was a dainty pearl bracelet. “It goes well with my earrings,” Rose said, wondering if she should wear the rubies tonight even though they didn’t match her green dress.

“How very thoughtful of Gabriel.”

But the bracelet wasn’t from him, either. The creamy sheet of vellum that had arrived with the box was lettered neatly in fine black ink.
For Lady Rose, though pearls cannot match the luster in your eyes. Passionately, Baron
Fortescue.

“Passionately?” Rose held out her wrist so Harriet could fasten the bracelet’s clasp. “I barely remember the man.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, “how I would love for a man to give me jewelry.”

A third knock on the door brought a platter of delicate sweetmeats and another note:
No sugar can match the
sweetness of your demeanor.

No one had ever called Rose sweet. “I vow and swear,”

she declared, popping a marzipan swan into her mouth, “I have never heard such ridiculous comparisons in my life.”

Her mother moved to give her a turn at the dressing table. “They are just trying to impress you, dear.”

“If any of them could kiss half decently, I would find that a lot more impressive.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, “how I would love for a man to kiss me.”

By the time Rose was ready for Court, she had two new bracelets, a sapphire stomacher brooch, and four bouquets of flowers in addition to the half-eaten platter of sweets.

None of it was from Gabriel.

Hampton Court had no keeps, no crenelated curtain wall, nothing like the huge central mound of earth at Windsor with its tall Round Tower. Instead, the palace was a virtual rabbit warren of buildings surrounding courtyards large and small. Rose walked from Base Court through Clock Court with her mother, the pearls on her beautiful new gown gleaming in the light from torches set on the walls at intervals. As they were crossing the cavernous blue-ceilinged Great Hall on their way to the Presence Chamber, a lord walking the other direction stopped and doffed his plumed hat.

“I hear you have a copy of
I Sonetti,
my lady.”

Rose couldn’t remember having met him, and the man had a distinct gleam in his eye; one that made her uneasy.

“I do,” she told him cautiously.

“I should enjoy a private viewing.”

“I think not,” she said and swished past him.

“I Sonetti?”
Chrystabel asked when they reached the other end of the chamber.


The Sonnets.
The Italian poetry.”

“Why should you not want to show it to the man?”

“I don’t even know him!” Rose burst out, and then added in as calm a voice as possible, “Besides, I am here to see the duke. If he has plans to make me his wife, I do not think he’d appreciate me sharing any book with another man privately.”

The Presence Chamber was stunning, with great tapestries on the walls and a gilded ceiling. The King and Queen sat under a canopy fashioned of cloth-of-gold. After the tedious ceremony of presentation, Chrystabel wandered off and Rose decided to look for Gabriel. But she’d barely scanned the chamber when Baron Fortescue appeared and made a bow. “My dear Lady Rose, I am most honored to see you wearing my bracelet.”

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