Authors: Brothers in arms 9 -Love's Surrender
ladies and gentlemen standing nearby rushed over to help her
unsteady aunt. “Oh, I’ve torn your hem, Vanessa,” Aunt Grace
said sadly. “I’m so sorry.”
Vanessa wanted to applaud her masterful performance. Instead
she smiled warmly. “I’m fine, Aunt Grace. As long as you are al
right?”
Her aunt was glancing around the floor. “I’m fine, dear. I just
can’t fathom what I must have tripped on,” she mused. By now
there were at least ten people searching the floor in vain for the
offending article. “Run along and get your hem fixed, Vanessa,”
offending article. “Run along and get your hem fixed, Vanessa,”
Aunt Grace begged. “I shal be wel cared for, I’m sure.” A
chorus of assurances came from her aunt’s rescuers as Mrs.
Crusher pressed a glass of lemonade into her aunt’s hand and
she was led to a chair.
Vanessa didn’t answer. Instead she slipped out without anyone
noticing.
She had almost reached the relative seclusion of the retiring room
when a smal noise to her right made Vanessa stop. It had
sounded a little like distress, but not quite. Was it a man or
woman? Again, Vanessa wasn’t sure. It might have been a cat,
even.
The noise came again and Vanessa turned her head slowly until
she gazed into the dark shadows of a smal halway, partialy
hidden by a chest of some sort. She couldn’t immediately discern
what was happening. There appeared to be a couple, or perhaps
more? They were hiding in the shadows, and a gentleman was
holding a woman up. The dark material of his coat sleeve stood
out in stark relief against the lady’s pale dress. Vanessa took a
step toward them, stil silent. The man raised his head from the
woman’s shoulder and his eyes met Vanessa’s.
Her heart stuttered and then beat erraticaly. His eyes were
black, one speck of light burning in each, mesmerizing her. She
black, one speck of light burning in each, mesmerizing her. She
was frozen in place by the heat and intensity of his stare.
The moment was broken when the woman in his arms squirmed
and sighed. The sound was the one that had caught Vanessa’s
attention. Breaking eye contact with Vanessa, the man bent over
the woman’s shoulder, one hand cupping the back of her head to
hold her steady. Then he licked her neck.
Vanessa’s breath caught in her throat. It was an assignation.
She’d stumbled upon lovers, it seemed. Embarrassment burned
in her cheeks. Only the man was aware of her. Vanessa was
uncharacteristicaly flustered. Should she turn and hurry on to the
retiring room, probably alerting the woman to her presence? Or
should she quietly back out the way she’d come? That seemed
somehow like a retreat, a surrender to the chalenge she’d seen
gleaming in the gentleman’s dark eyes.
When a second man stepped out of the shadows and took the
woman’s hand from the first man’s shoulder, Vanessa gaped like
a green girl. He, too, was watching Vanessa as he kissed the
woman’s hand. His hair gleamed in the faint light from the
halway sconce; it was obviously golden, though light or dark she
couldn’t tel. He was taler than his companion. The woman
giggled and it was then Vanessa recognized who it was. Miss
Dorsett. Not a woman then, but a girl too young to understand
the trouble that had found her. With a sigh, Vanessa realized it
was up to her to rescue the foolish chit.
was up to her to rescue the foolish chit.
Before she could make her presence known the blond gentleman
spoke quietly. “We must return you to the drawing room before
you are missed, Melinda.” His voice was a deep whisper, a mere
rumble that carried across the hal to Vanessa, and she shivered.
The dark-haired man smiled at her as if he’d seen the teltale sign
of her discomfort and it amused him.
“Oh pooh,” Melinda said, sounding like a spoiled child. “I was
told you two were dangerous, a threat to my virtue. A few kisses
and a pinch or two and you’re sending me off? That hardly
signifies. I shal have to tel everyone your reputations are much
exaggerated.” Vanessa could picture her pouting, though she
faced away from Vanessa.
The dark-haired man laughed quietly. “So now you know our
secret. We are truly saints in disguise.” He untangled her arms
from around his neck. “Go now. We shal folow after so no one
suspects your virtue was threatened.”
“Wel, it wasn’t,” Miss Dorsett declared testily. “I was hoping
for some fun with you two this season before I must settle into a
staid marriage with someone appropriate. God knows I can’t
encourage you as suitors, but I thought at least you could satisfy
me in private. I begin to think I shal have to find a different lover to do so.” She patted her hair. “Don’t ask me to dance again.
Mama had a fit when I agreed earlier. You are not marriage
material, after al.”
material, after al.”
Miss Dorsett turned toward the drawing room and Vanessa
swalowed a gasp and stepped back quickly, pressing against the
wal behind her as if she could blend into the garish oriental print
on the paper there. Even though Miss Dorsett faced the opposite
end of the halway from where Vanessa stood, she feared the girl
would detect her presence. She needn’t have worried. It was
apparent the young lady was quite put out and too self-interested
to notice her surroundings.
“I shal send for you if I want you,” Miss Dorsett said
dismissively. “Until then, stay away. I won’t have you two ruining
my chances at a briliant match. Mama says I am the catch of the
season.”
The dark-haired gentleman bowed over her hand as if in
agreement, keeping her attention focused on him while the taler
one moved to stand between Vanessa and Miss Dorsett as if to
help her hide from the girl. “Of course,” he said in reply. Vanessa
recognized the amused disdain in his voice. It was quite
confusing as to who had been using whom in their little
assignation, for there was clearly no love lost between the three.
Without a word or look in Vanessa’s direction the two men
ushered Miss Dorsett between them down the halway, leaving
Vanessa feeling like an eavesdropping fool as she hurried to the
retiring room.
retiring room.
Once they were out of sight of the blonde beauty, Nick watched
as Oliver grabbed Miss Dorsett’s hand, slowing her retreat to
the drawing room. “Melinda, my dear, a question, if you wil.”
Miss Dorsett turned to Oliver, her look smug and self-satisfied.
Nick almost laughed at her misconception. Oliver had never
been interested in her at al. Nick had been randy, and Miss
Dorsett obviously wiling. Though she had preferred Oliver’s
blond good looks, it had been Nick playing at seduction while a
bored Oliver looked on. But someone else had clearly caught
Oliver’s attention.
“There was a blonde woman, tal and rather cool, talking with
your aunt earlier. Who is she?” Oliver asked. He placed a tender
kiss upon Miss Dorsett’s palm, as if the question was merely
meant to delay her and not the only reason Oliver hadn’t walked
in the opposite direction when they parted ways.
“A cool blonde?” she asked with a frown. Then she laughed, and
there was a wicked gleam in her eye. “You must mean Lady
Vanessa Carlton-Smythe.” The way she said the name clearly
indicated she did not care for the quiet, blonde beauty.
When Nick heard the name his heart sank. Even he had heard of
the Carlton-Smythes. Lady Vanessa, the daughter of an Earl,
the Carlton-Smythes. Lady Vanessa, the daughter of an Earl,
was as out of reach as the moon to felows like him, no matter
what Nick had seen in her eyes as she’d watched him. His
sinking heart turned to an acute pain in his stomach as he
recognized the look on Oliver’s face. Oliver wanted a new toy,
and he wasn’t going to take no for an answer.
“Don’t bother,” Miss Dorsett said dismissively. “She won’t grant
you an audience. The high and mighty Lady Vanessa is too good
for the likes of you. She thinks she’s too good for the likes of
just about everyone.” Her look turned spiteful. “But I’d like to
see you try. Wouldn’t that set everyone’s tongues wagging?”
She laughed. “Lady Vanessa, unwed at twenty-two, reduced to
accepting you two as suitors. How rich!”
Nick didn’t care for her tone. Actualy, he didn’t care for her at
al. When she kept her mouth shut she was only tolerable. When
she spoke she became completely intolerable. With a sigh he
realized he wouldn’t have wanted to go any further with her than
he had, even if they hadn’t been interrupted. He’d lost interest in
her almost immediately. That had been happening more and
more lately to both him and Oliver. It was the reason they’d
come back from the continent after almost three years abroad.
Nick was beginning to think there wasn’t a woman alive who
could hold their interest for more than an hour.
“Yes, how rich,” Oliver agreed in a pleasant tone. “Now, off to
the drawing room with you.” He dismissed her lightly with a little
tap on the bottom, as if she were a naughty child. With a huff,
Miss Dorsett turned and stalked out of view.
“I hope you don’t come to regret that rather cavalier dismissal,”
Nick observed, leaning his shoulder against the wal.
“What could you have been thinking to choose that one out of al
the women here tonight?” Oliver asked, exasperated. “A ready
quim is one thing, of course, but I know for a fact you are not
that desperate. I distinctly remember sharing a rather nice fuck
just the other night.”
Nick shrugged with one shoulder. “I wanted to fuck tonight. I
wasn’t aware there were limitations on that particular pastime.”
“There aren’t.” Oliver leaned his back flat against the opposite
wal and crossed his arms while he regarded Nick. “But you
aren’t one to indiscriminately fuck when the urge strikes. Care to
tel me why tonight was different?”
“It wasn’t.” Nick looked away, toward the drawing room. “I
was very discriminating. I determined that this party was a
crashing bore and the only thing that could save the evening was
a nice, clandestine fuck. With my best friend, of course,” he
added, bowing slightly in Oliver’s direction. “And I chose the
most wiling, and likely, candidate in the vicinity.”
Oliver bowed back. “I thank you for the thought. But next time,
Oliver bowed back. “I thank you for the thought. But next time,
let me choose the candidate.”
“Oh no,” Nick said, standing up straight. He pointed at Oliver
and glared. “I choose young ladies with loose morals and absent
chaperones. You choose wide-eyed, innocent, wel-bred young
ladies who get us shot.”
“I got shot. Not you. And you have never been disappointed in
any of my choices.”
“I was greatly disappointed in Mathilde, since she got you shot.”
Oliver sighed. He sounded so long-suffering that Nick had to grit
his teeth against his annoyance. “Before I was shot, you were not
disappointed,” he pointed out, irritatingly patient. “And I readily
admit she was an il-conceived choice, but how was I to know
her ancient husband was such a good shot? Spaniards aren’t
known for their accuracy, after al.”
“But they are wel-known for their passionate tempers,” Nick
ground out. He shook his head. “I knew that too, and should
have said no.”
Oliver grinned conspiratorialy. “She was worth it, no?”
“No.” Nick’s reply was flat but adamant. “And neither is this
one.” He pleaded, his hands outstretched. “Please, Oliver, not
again. There are plenty of merry widows who would gladly share
our bed. Please leave this Lady Vanessa alone.”
“She looked so…isolated,” Oliver mused. “As if she lived
separate from the world.” He looked at Nick then, and Nick
was frozen by the desolation in Oliver’s face. “I know that
feeling. She’s very lonely.”
And that was that, wasn’t it? If Oliver wanted Lady Vanessa,
then Nick would help him get her. For both of them.
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“May I have this dance?”
Vanessa turned to the unfamiliar voice, relief warring with
trepidation. Trepidation won out when she saw it was the tal,
blond gentleman whose ilicit interlude she’d interrupted not long
ago.
“We have not been introduced, sir,” she staled politely. She was
franticaly trying to find her wayward aunt without appearing the
least perturbed. From the knowing look on the gentleman’s face
she’d failed miserably.
“Mr. Oliver Gabriel, at your service,” he replied with a smal
bow.
There was nothing untoward in his speech or manner, and yet
Vanessa felt as if her defenses were being assailed. How she
hated being unsure in these situations, her hands tied by polite
manners and societal mores.
manners and societal mores.
She sketched a slight curtsey. “How do you do?” she murmured.
“And you are?” he asked, amusement written in his devastatingly