The Marriage Bed (11 page)

Read The Marriage Bed Online

Authors: Laura Lee Guhrke

Tags: #Guilty Book 3

BOOK: The Marriage Bed
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On Friday, Viola prayed for rain. Since
John
had said they would go on a picnic, she hoped for inclement weather. God, however, seemed as indifferent to her wishes as her husband had been. Unlike the day they'd gone to his house in
Bloomsbury Square
, this particular day was bright and beautiful, the April afternoon warm and pleasant. It was the perfect day for a picnic.

Going on such an outing with him filled her with dismay. Picnics had been one of their favorite activities years ago, and there were too many memories associated with them, memories of when their life together had been good. She never went on picnics anymore. And when he told her where he planned for them to have this picnic, her reluctance to go multiplied tenfold.

She froze, hand poised to take her gloves from the maid who stood beside her in the foyer, and she stared at her husband, horrified.
"Where?"

He gave a shout of laughter, his amusement inexplicable to her under the circumstances. There was nothing amusing about this as far as she was concerned.

"You needn't look as if I've asked you to run naked along the Mall," he said.

"
Hammond
, really!" she admonished him, and shot a pointed, sideways glance toward the maid and footmen who stood by the front door.

"We are only going to
Hyde Park
," he said, still laughing.

"That means a carriage ride on the Row." She was appalled, and showed it. "Together."

"I fail to see what you find so distressing."

"You and I out riding together in an open landau?"
She began to feel sick. "On a day such as this, half the ton will be there," she pointed out. '
'Everyone
will see us together."

"We are married, Viola. It isn't as if we need a chaperone."

Unimpressed, she glared at him as she took her gloves from the maid and yanked them on. "You are the reason chaperones were invented. You always were."

He grinned at that, looking so pleased by her words that she wanted to take them back at once. "I did think of all sorts of ingenious ways to get you out from under your brother's eye, didn't I?"

"I do not want to go out on the Row with you."

"Why not?
Afraid people will see me kissing your neck?"

That was exactly what she was afraid of. Viola felt her neck begin to tingle. "
Hammond
, stop saying things like that," she ordered with another, even more pointed glance at the servants nearby. "It is not decorous. Besides, that doesn't concern me in the slightest."

"No?"

"No.
Because I'm not going."

"What's wrong, Viola? You don't want to show all our acquaintances we have reconciled?"

"We have not reconciled! And I am not going to go gallivanting around
Hyde Park
with you, giving people the impression that we have."

"Since we are not living together yet, that is hardly a concern."

"If you meant what you said about making certain we receive the same invitations, the gossip will spread fast enough, I daresay. I have no desire to fuel it in this manner. I am not going."

"If you do not come with me…" He paused and glanced at the servants, then leaned close to her ear and murmured in a voice too low for anyone but her to hear, "If you do not come with me, I will drag you out and put you in the carriage myself. Any of the duke's
neighbors
walking in the square will see me do so, and since I can only assume you will fight me every step of the way, they will know our reconciliation is not going well. Does that suit you better?"

"You gave me your word you would not use force," she reminded him in a fierce whisper.

"No, I gave my word I will not use force to get you into bed," he murmured in reply. "To my mind, anywhere else is fair game."

"1
am
now able to add brute to my list of descriptions for you."

"Yes, well, as I told you before, brute strength does come in handy from time to time."

Viola had no doubt he would follow through on his threat, and she reminded herself that waiting him out was her strategy. After a while he would tire of this game and go away.

"Let's be on our way, then," she said, and turned to the door. When a footman opened it, she stepped outside, adding, "The sooner we go, the sooner it will be over."

"There's the Viola I remember," he said, following her out the front door.
"Spirited, adventurous, ready to try anything."

His landau was standing at the curb. He assisted her into the open carriage, then followed her, settling himself beside her on the seat of roll and tuck red leather. On the floor at their feet were a picnic basket and a leather sack.

They used to picnic all the time in their courting days. Chaperones present, of course, but as he had reminded her earlier, he had always managed to steal her away for a quick, passionate kiss or two,
fueling
her awakening desire for him with those precious, stolen moments. It had worked like a charm, and he thought it would work again.

He was attempting to bring back their courting days, hoping it would renew her affections for him, but with the added luxury of being able to touch her and kiss her without having to spirit her away from watching eyes. They were married. He could be as bold as he liked, and he knew it.

Just as she had predicted,
Hyde Park
was crowded. Carriages and people on horseback crowded Rotten Row, and the slow traffic made their journey into the park seem excruciatingly slow to Viola. She could see people leaning closer together, whispering,
no
doubt speculating about the sight of Lord and Lady Hammond out together side by side.

She hated being the subject of talk, and she had endured more than her share of stares, whispers, and rumors over the years. There was some scrutiny that came with being the sister of a duke, but it was
Hammond
's mistresses and exploits that had made her one of society's favorite targets. She knew there were many who viewed her as responsible for his lack of an heir. Through years of quiet, restrained living and impeccable, decorous behavior in response to the gossip, she had finally succeeded in becoming such a dull topic to society that they had ceased to discuss her, much to her relief. Now, t
hank
s to
John
's absurd desire to reconcile, her name was once again being spread all over the scandal sheets.

Both of them nodded greetings to their acquaintances as they passed them, for politeness demanded that sort of acknowledgment, but
John
did not stop the carriage at any point, much to her relief. It was not until they reached a less crowded part of the park that he had his driver pull the carriage over and come to a stop.

The pair of footmen who had accompanied them carried the picnic items and followed behind as
John
led her to a grassy, shaded spot beside a small pond. "Will this do?" he asked her.

They did not have any real privacy, for there were still many people strolling by, and any who knew them would stare and whisper, but it was as quiet as any spot in the park was likely to be on a day like this. It would do well enough.

When she nodded, the pair of footmen laid out the blanket for them. She sat down, her ivory-white silk skirt billowing out around her. She tucked it in a bit to make room for
John
, and he sat down on the blanket opposite her as the servants laid out plates, silver, and linen.

Viola stared down at her hands and took a great deal of time pulling off her gloves as these picnic preparations were made.

"Viola?"

She forced her gaze up.
"Hmm?"

"It doesn't matter what people think."

"It does matter."

"Well, it doesn't do to show it."

She took another look around. "By tomorrow, the odds at the clubs will no doubt be in your favor. And everyone will applaud you," she added, galled by the notion, "for finally making your shrewish, disobedient wife do her duty."

"If that's what they'll be saying, then they don't know you very well, do they?"

"Because I'm going to win our little war?"

"No.
Because you're not a shrew."
He began to laugh. "Disobedient is a whole other story."

Damn him and his self-deprecating charm. He could say anything, do anything, and yet there were times when he could make her want to smile. She looked away and did not reply.

After the footmen had placed the picnic basket and the leather sack beside
John
, he waved them away, and they stepped back a respectful distance, far enough to be out of earshot but still close enough to respond promptly should they be needed for anything.

John
untied the drawstrings on the leather pouch and pulled out a bottle of wine, a bottle dripping with water from the melting ice in which it had been packed.

"
Champagne
?" She raised an eyebrow. "Laying it on a bit thick for me, aren't you,
Hammond
?"

"Very," he agreed as he pulled a champagne glass from the basket. He popped the cork on the bottle and poured some of the sparkling liquid into the tall crystal flute.

"What else did you bring?" she asked as he handed the glass to her, too curious about the contents of the basket to pretend she wasn't. "Oysters, perhaps?" she guessed. "Or, since we have champagne, did you bring chocolate-dipped strawberries?"

He shook his head and set the champagne aside. "No, no, something much better, something you love more than either of those.
Scones."
He reached into the basket and pulled out a bowl of the round, golden brown pastries and set them on the blanket. He then brought out a small pot of jam.

She adored scones and jam.
Another of her favorite things.
John
seemed to remember so much about her, and she realized that was his biggest advantage. There were too many things about her he knew—how hungry she always got at this time of day, what foods she loved, how delightful it used to be when he kissed her neck.

"I have no doubt," she murmured with a sigh, "that the jam you brought is blackberry?"

He opened the tiny pot, peered inside with a thoughtful glance, then looked back at her, a smile curving one corner of his mouth. "You know, I believe it is blackberry," he said, trying to act surprised by the discovery.
"Your favorite kind.
What a coincidence."

"This is a blatant ploy to soften me," she accused. "To make me like you again."

To make me fall in love with you again.

"True," he agreed lightly as he set aside the jam and poured champagne for himself. He leaned back opposite her, his weight resting on one arm, his legs stretched out beside her own, his pose one of complete indifference to the fact that she found him utterly transparent. "Is it working yet?"

"Yet?"
She frowned at him and took a sip of champagne. "You are assuming that your victory is only a matter of time? Awfully cocky of you to think I can be won over with such ease, especially when you employ such shallow tactics as picnics and champagne."

He paused, giving her a look of pretended bewilderment. "Does that mean you don't want any scones?"

She pressed her lips together, head tilted to one side, pride wavering as she glanced at the pastries in the basket. "Did you bring the cream?"

"Of course."
He set aside his glass and produced another jar.

She capitulated. "Pass me a scone," she said, and set her glass of champagne on one of the plates beside her lap.

He sliced the round pastry lengthwise for her and handed her both halves along with a spoon. "I knew bribery would win out."

"On the contrary," she said as she used the spoon to slather clotted cream onto the pastry in her palm. "I am not fooled.
The scones, the jam.
The champagne."
She took a hefty bite of her scone. "None of it will do you a bit of good."

"Viola, take pity on me," he said as he prepared a scone for himself. "Look at what I am forcing myself to endure in order to win you over."

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