Read Southern Seduction Online
Authors: Brenda Jernigan
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #Historical Romance
“I assure you,” Travis took a deep breath, “I have little trouble finding a woman when I want one,” he muttered, his male pride wounded.
A slow grin spread across Jeremy’s features. “The problem is you don’t want one,” he said. “And for a man who doesn’t want a woman at all, you now have two.”
“My father chose Brooke,” Travis answered tersely between clenched teeth.
“Why the hell he did such a foolish thing, I cannot imagine. My father might have been many things, but a fool wasn’t one of them.” Sarcasm lay heavy on his tongue. “I guess it was his going away present.”
“Well, your mother chose Hesione,” Jeremy pointed out.
“Your parents must have figured it was time you got married and each had their own idea of who it should be. I should know.” He laughed. “My parents have done the same thing with me in the past. I’ve just been lucky and avoided taking the plunge yet. However, I do believe your father’s choice is far superior to your mother’s, and a hell of a lot better than my mother’s last choice,” he said with a wry chuckle.
Travis quirked his brow and answered sardonically, “That is my fiancée you are insulting.”
Jeremy paid no heed to Travis’s warning. It was no secret that Travis didn’t have feelings for Hesione. “And if you were honest, you’d agree with me. Do you love her?”
“
Who?”
“Hesione of course,” Jeremy said with a smile.
A number of emotions flickered across Travis’s face as he tried to formulate an answer, “What I feel for Hesione has nothing to do with the matter. She’s agreeable, so she will suit. Hesione will make a perfect hostess for Moss Grove because she comes from one of the finest families in New Orleans.”
“Perhaps, once you marry her
it will put you back in good standing with your grandfather?”
“My grandfather . . .
.” Travis actually winced at the truth though he tried to hide it. Was there any pleasing his cruel grandfather? Hadn’t Travis heard more than once how his birth had ruined his mother? “I don’t give a damn what the old bastard thinks. It will please Mother and that’s enough.”
“And that’s a reason to get married?
What if Hesione is cold? Who will warm your bed? From my observation, I believe the woman has ice in her veins.”
“
I appreciate your concern, Jeremy, but a mistress will always supply what a wife cannot. And I care for Hesione. She was the best choice.”
“
Should I remind you that your last mistress has left New Orleans?” Jeremy leveled his gaze coolly on Travis. “Perhaps you can talk your new partner into filling the role.”
“
It was Travis’s turn to chuckle, knowing full and well that would never happened. “I consider that an exceedingly slim possibility. As you just said, she is different from the other women I’ve known. The only thing I want from Mrs. Hammond is for her to sign her portion of the plantation over to me, then she can be on her way.”
“Have you asked?”
“Yes.”
“And?”
Travis shrugged. “She told me that I would never be rid of her.”
Jeremy couldn’t resist a wry grin as he slapped Travis on the shoulder.
“I’m sorry, but I can’t feel unhappy for you, my friend. The last thing I’d want to do is get rid of her. She is one of the most stunning women I’ve ever seen.” A wicked smile touched his lips. “My blood raced from the moment she spoke. Now there’s a woman to die for. Perhaps I should try for her.”
Travis scowled.
“You need to get control of yourself,” he warned. “The woman is lethal.”
Jeremy could see how tight Travis’s jaw had gotten.
“You mean you don’t want to share?”
“I’ve nothing to share,” Travis snapped. “And I’m damn tired of this conversation.
Don’t you have a plantation to run?”
Instead of being insulted, Jeremy grinned.
“My, my. You certainly are getting angry over the woman you claim not to care about.”
“I’ve been angry since she arrived.”
Jeremy saw right away that Mrs. Hammond had gotten under Travis’s skin, something no other woman had ever been able to do. “Then maybe you should ask yourself why,” Jeremy pressed as he mounted his horse, “because I think that Brooke makes you feel something you haven’t experienced before.” He turned his horse to the side. “And do send over a sugarmaker if you can spare one,” he said, looking back over his shoulder.
“Get the hell out of here before I change my mind about helping you at all,” Travis gritted out.
He smacked Jeremy’s horse on the rump, causing him to bolt. “I’ll send Ben over tomorrow.”
Travis needed to do something to work off his aggravation.
Jeremy had done a good job of needling, and it had done nothing to ease his simmering anger. Turning, Travis gazed at the mill. Maybe heat from the cane house could make him sweat the woman out of his system . . . he could always hope.
When Brooke returned to the main house, Mammy greeted her with the news that Prosper, the cook, had returned and would like Brooke’s input for the upcoming party.
Brooke forgot her irritation with Travis. Finally, she was going to meet the famous cook whose cooking she’d yet to taste. “Lead the way,” she said with a sweep of her hand.
Mammy wrinkled her nose.
“What’s dat smell? Smells like smoke.”
“I almost forgot.
I singed my ridding habit,” Brooke said, pulling up her skirt for her to see the singed material. “Perhaps I should freshen up. I will be back in half an hour.”
After Brooke had changed, she and Mammy went to the kitchen, located at the very back of the house.
The moment Brooke entered the hot kitchen, she saw the cook acting like a petty dictator, giving instructions to one of his kitchen staff who was stirring a big, black pot hanging over the fireplace.
Prosper was tall and thin, and his skin was a little darker than Mammy's and gray streaked his hair in the back.
He wore a white apron tied over his black and white clothes. After a few moments, he turned and Brooke saw that he had a kind face. His hair was completely white on both sides of his head and his eyes were a rich brown . . . eyes that seemed to be studying her as much as she was him. He held a wooden spoon in his right hand, whether it was used for stirring or for smacking hands was yet to be determined.
“Mademoiselle,” Prosper said with a slight French accent.
“I am Prosper Ernest Fournier at your service,” he said with a sweeping bow. His stern expression was all business as he added, “I understand that you, Mademoiselle, are now in charge of the household staff.”
Shocked, Brooke realized that Prosper was the first to acknowledge her place at Moss Grove.
“I am now part owner of Moss Grove along with Mr. Montgomery,” Brooke said. “It is a pleasure to finally meet you.”
Prosper nodded.
“I am the cook extraordinaire,” he said, waving his spoon. “I have been trained in France by the finest chefs, and have cooked for the Montgomerys for the last ten years.”
Brooke smiled.
He sounded as if he were trying to impress her.
“My requests are simple -- the kitchen is mine to rule, and the dinner hour of seven is strictly enforced.”
Brooke’s first response was to answer, ‘Yes sir.’ But, she reminded herself, wasn’t he supposed to be asking what she would like for him to do? Who was working for whom here? She wondered. “Thank you so much, Prosper, for explaining the
rules.
I hope you cook as well as you issue instructions. If so, every meal will be perfection I’m sure.” Brooke saw a smile sneak across Mammy’s face before she could hide it.
Prosper stiffened,
eyes widened, and his face might have turned red, but Brooke couldn’t tell.
“You will see, Mademoiselle, I am an
excellent
chef. I would like final approval on the menu for the gala this Friday.” He yanked a slip of paper from his pocket and handed it to her.
Brooke scanned the list.
Everything appeared in order and the dishes he had selected sounded heavenly. “You have excellent taste, Mr. Prosper.” She looked toward Mammy. “Have you seen the list?”
“
Oui.”
Turning back to Prosper, Brooke said, “If Mammy approves, then it is fine by me.
Thank you for your help.” She returned the menu to Prosper.
“As you wish, Mademoiselle,” he said with a stiff nod.
Then he turned and went back to the stove. Brooke knew when she’d been dismissed, so she left the man to his kitchen.
No wonder Travis liked the man.
They both had the same kind of sour dispositions.
Once in the hallway, Brooke turned to Mammy and asked, “Is he always so pleasant?”
Mammy gave her a sideways glance.
“Well now -- dat’s a question.” She chuckled. “You see Prosper don’t want nobody messin' in his kitchen.”
“Oh, he made that perfectly clear,” Brooke said with a smile.
“He’s always been uppity, not associatin’ wit de others,” Mammy said, stopping once they were in the foyer. “It’s not his fault, yes. Sometimes folks are not as they seem. Prosper worked under a great chef in Paris. Dat is w’ere His Grace first sampled Prosper’s cookin’, yes. Montgomery persuaded Prosper t’ come and work fo’ him. So he worked fo’ His Grace in England fo’ a year, yes, until Montgomery purchased Moss Grove and broug’t Prosper wit’ him.”
“
I wonder why Jackson didn’t take Prosper back to England?”
“Mebbe ‘cause d
e duchess didn’t get alon’ none wit’ Prosper. An’ Prosper he liked it in Nawlins.” Mammy shrugged, then added. “I always t’ought His Grace would make Moss Grove his home, yes. He loved dis place,” she finished with a sigh as she looked off. It was as if Mammy were talking to herself and forgetting that Brooke stood near. “Somet’in’ went wron’. Shouldn’t have been messin’ with Miz Margaret--” Mammy stopped short.
Brooke reached out and touched Mammy’s arm.
“I understand. I think you were fond of Montgomery, and so was I.”
She nodded.
“He was always good t’ me. Den he sent me his fine son, t’ be sure.”
“You mean he has another son?”
Both women looked at each other then burst out laughing.
That’s how Travis found them when he strolled in through the front entrance.
“Have I missed something?” he asked.
“Not really,” Brook replied.
“Just something between the two of us.” She gestured between herself and Mammy, then turned abruptly and left him in the foyer, wearing that peculiar expression of his. She might still have work to do on Travis, but Brooke felt that she and Mammy had reached a new understanding, and that cheered her. Finally, Brooke felt that Moss Grove was truly her home.
Travis remained in the foyer wondering what the two women had been talking about before he walked in on them.
It bothered him that Brooke seemed much too comfortable in
his house.
Rubbing the back of his neck, Travis leaned on the newel post as he watched Brooke climb the stairs.
Her long blond hair, having escaped most of its pins, swayed across her slender back, and that is where his gaze should have stopped, but it didn’t.
She’d changed out of her sooty clothes and wore a green day dress without her crinolines.
His eyes shifted to her perfectly rounded derriere. He found himself extremely conscious of her virile appeal. He wanted to reach out and touch her, and that was one thing he knew he must not do. His feelings for her had nothing to do with reason.
Brooke’s luscious body was made for love and there was something
provocative about her that made his loins tightened at the mere thought of entering her soft flesh, and feeling her warmth surround him.
Travis jerked straight up as if he’d been slugged in the stomach.
And to tell the truth, he wouldn’t care if somebody beat the shit out of him right now. Evidently, he needed some sense knocked into his thick head. They could beat the thought of Brooke out of his system and make him forget how much he wanted her.
The woman was poising his mind.
“Where you at?” Mammy said from behind him.
Travis swung around, feeling much like a child being caught doing something he shouldn’t.
“What makes you ask a question like that?”
“Well, now,” Mammy said, tilting her head to the side and placing her hands on her hips.
“I’ve already been t’ de dinin’ room and back here t’ fine you in exactly de same spot starin’ up those stairs. Did you forget t’ tell Miss Brooke somet’in’?”
“Of course not,” Travis responded his embarrassment quickly turning to annoyance.
“I’m tired and my mind was wondering.”
Mammy’s eyebrow rose as she said, “Un huh.”
And then she left him.
Travis started up the stairs, thinking Mammy only thought she knew more about him than she really did. “What I need is a good stiff drink and a hot bath.”
Yes, that was exactly what he needed to get his head straightened out, he decided. On second thought, what he really needed was a woman. But that wasn’t going to happen anytime soon. He was too damn busy with the plantation.