Read The Reluctant Governess Online

Authors: Maggie Robinson

The Reluctant Governess (13 page)

BOOK: The Reluctant Governess
8.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

She stared up at him for a second, then dropped her lashes. Nick knew he was not at his most attractive, but the bruise was fading and the light dim. If he did his job, her eyes would be closed soon anyway. He leaned in and took her exposed earlobe in his mouth.

Eliza sucked in a breath but didn't pull away. Nick gave a gentle tug, then released it, licking down her throat to her rumpled collar. She tasted sweet and salty. Smooth. She was cream and gilt and entirely at his mercy. He nuzzled, careful not to mar the sanctity of her skin. Nick felt her tremble at each nip and worked his way back up to her jaw.

Eliza was delicately made, though he'd seen signs of a stubborn chin. He pressed against it with a finger, turning her lips to his. And then his careful seduction became complicated as he quite forgot who was seducing who. Whom? No time for grammar when her warm tongue curled with his, playing at a pace that was both perfect yet too slow.

Nick wanted to devour Eliza Lawrence and her lemon trees, fall onto the coverlet and explore her body. Could he convince her?

He could try.

Chapter 18

Eliza felt the starch leaching out of her spine as Nicholas held her, kissed her, drove her relatively mad with desire. She wondered if her hair was on fire or her lips flamed, as urgently as his hands and mouth soothed them. Eliza reminded herself to breathe, unknotting her hands and moving them from her lap to his shoulders. The fabric of his jacket was as lush as his kiss. Everything about Nicholas Raeburn was polished and diamond-bright, matching the stone in his ear.

She could kiss him there as he had her, but with her luck she'd swallow the earring and spend the rest of the night in hospital. Best just to concentrate on the usual kind of kiss, the sweep of tongues, the softness of inner cheeks, the occasional click of teeth. His mouth slanted over hers in complete possession, and for once Eliza did not want to get the last word in—or any words at all.

She could see why women would toss away their virtue to a man like Nicholas Raeburn. He was so very good at what he was doing, easing her against him, peppering her throat with tiny kisses, touching her with mere fingertips that made her toes curl. Who knew that her scalp was so sensitive? She'd brushed her hair every day for over twenty years, and never had she expected to shiver.

Her linen blouse was hot and itchy against her awakened skin, and any moment she might choose to pull it over her head and present her corseted torso for Nicholas's delectation. No—she couldn't go that far, but how she wanted to. This kissing business was all very fascinating. No wonder girls were warned against it, for one thing certainly seemed to lead to another.

Eliza was too dizzy to sit up, and it was such a relief when Nicholas tipped her onto the feather mattress. Her head hit the pillow, but the kiss was uninterrupted. Nicholas lay at her side, taking care not to crush her. Crushing her did not seem like such a bad idea to Eliza, but he was displaying remarkably gentleman-like behavior, merely stroking her bare shoulder. He'd managed to release the rest of the hooks on her blouse. She'd had nowhere near the trouble with his shirt and waistcoat, which, unfortunately, he was still wearing, along with his jacket. There were altogether too many layers of fabric between them, but Eliza recognized that as her fault.

She had said she wouldn't take her clothes off, but had made no similar demands to Nicholas. Idly, she wondered if she could pull his sleeves down from this position. Doubtful.

She would take what she could get, and right now she felt inordinately greedy. His chest was smooth and warm, his nipples intriguing.

Kiss.

Kiss.

Kiss.

Was it three kisses, or just intensity, a variation and deepening of the first? Eliza forgot to count. Her breasts strained against her chemise. She yearned for Nicholas to do something about them, but his attention was fixated on her wool skirt. He was bunching it up—

She came to her senses through a thick veil of regret and pushed him away. “No! You mustn't.”

He blinked. “I'm just going to kiss you, Eliza.”

“You can't mean to kiss me
there
.”

“Oh, can't I?” He wore a wicked grin, looking even more piratical than usual. He folded back her skirt and petticoat with neat precision, edging his way down the bed.

“Lift your bottom, Eliza.”

She was too shocked to do anything but obey. He untied her drawers and tugged them down to her knees. “Lovely,” he murmured, his breath tickling her belly, and began to kiss her as promised.

This could not possibly be correct. Or proper.

Wasn't that what she wanted? One night of impropriety? Tomorrow she would be—

Gone. Gone. Completely, utterly gone.

Eliza had no clear idea what he was doing but she had never in her life felt anything like it. His mouth was hot and decadent, his fingers infallible. He held her in place as if she would want to escape. Not bloody likely.

There was no sound in the room save for the hiss of the coals and her own ragged breaths as a coil within her tightened. Every inch of her was affected by his ministrations. Her nipples peaked and calves clenched—even her nose tingled. This was unbearable. All the languor from the original kiss was gone and now Eliza was on the cusp of destruction. Her temples throbbed, the blood crashed like ocean waves in her ears. This wasn't right—she feared she would disappear in a cloud of brimstone any minute.

Nicholas chuckled at her agonized cry and continued to twist his tongue around her center until Eliza thought she couldn't bear another second. This torture had to stop. Her curiosity was more than satisfied and now she knew what was possible between a man and a woman beyond the usual.

And then his thumb—or some finger—pressed into her pubic bone, circled, and the hated tension miraculously snapped. Eliza was vaulting, pulled up to unsuspected heights. Nicholas forced her again and again to lift upward, riding on endless waves of pleasure, his wicked kiss continuing as she sobbed her relief. Heat flowed beneath her skin until she longed to tear every item of clothing from her body and his.

So
this
was what the girls whispered of in school. This flying, this rapture. This incomprehensible joy that crackled within, danced in her blood, rushed through her limbs. Eliza was smiling. Not an ordinary smile to be sure—she knew she was showing far too many teeth for a lady.

Perhaps she wasn't a lady after all.

It had already been established that Nicholas Raeburn was no gentleman.

Thank goodness.

But goodness had nothing to do with what he'd just done.

For a fleeting second, she tried to imagine the Honorable Richard Hurst, Esquire, in such a position doing such a thing and failed. The thought was disloyal to Nicholas anyway—she should not be thinking of any other man.

Right now there
was
no other man for her. Probably never would be. Eliza would live out her life as a dutiful spinster, caring for her mother without complaint. She would go back to the Evensong Agency and forget about ever working for Sir Thomas and his artists' colony. She would never be able to meet the man's eye, for surely he would know what his friend Nicholas had done to her this night. Men discussed their conquests with one another, didn't they?

Beasts.

Her smile evaporated. Nicholas Raeburn had ruined her even if he hadn't quite finished the job.

“What is it? What's wrong?”

He had slithered back up the bed, his lips slick from their recent work. He looked damned pleased with himself. Eliza shuddered at what she'd allowed him to do and how stupid she had been. Like Pandora, she'd gotten much more than she bargained for.

Her throat was dry. “Nothing.” She tried to pull up her drawers but his hand came down over hers.

“Don't. I want to look at you.”

He must have gotten an eyeful when he was down there already. A hot blush swept over her.

“You are so beautifully made—plump ivory thighs, golden curls, a perfect pink pussy. You taste like heaven itself.”

He sounded sincere, but Eliza was mortified. She struggled up. “Be quiet!”

“Don't be ashamed. This is what women—what
you
—are meant for. A man's pleasure and your own. Did I not satisfy you? I could swear I did.”

Satisfy was too weak a word. Her body was useless to her, her brain scattered, her nerves jangled. What was she supposed to do, thank him? She couldn't, for then she would admit to her wantonness. Her complicity. Her desire to do this all over again no matter the cost.

She could not meet his searching brown eyes, looking instead at his twinkling earring. The diamond was the size of her pinkie fingernail. “This has been . . . a mistake.” She unfolded her skirts. She had been inspected thoroughly enough.

“I can't agree.” What was Nicholas doing? Shucking his jacket and waistcoat, tossing them to the floor with the rest of his cast-off belongings. His tanned chest was now framed by his wrinkled white shirt and she stopped herself from touching him again with difficulty.

“Don't shrivel up for me, Eliza. You were magnificent. Alive. In touch with your womanhood, meant to be kissed in all your secret places. You cannot tell me otherwise.”

Well, she could
try
to tell him otherwise, but her words would have a hollow ring.

“I have to go. Sunny will miss me.”

Nick shook his head. “I know my daughter. She sleeps like the dead. After all, she actually slept right through poor Maria's last moments and never knew a thing. Does Sunny still kick? When she first came to me two years ago, I was black and blue for weeks.”

“You—you slept with her?”

“Don't make it sound prurient. She was inconsolable to leave her mama. Even Maria couldn't get her to stop crying. For some reason, I could.”

Of course he could. Nicholas Raeburn had a way with females, even if they were three years old.

“You said ‘leave,' not ‘lose.'”

The muscle in his jaw leaped. “Barbara was dying. She didn't want Sunny to see. The end was . . . not kind to her. I took Sunny away so her mother could protect her from the pain of it. Maria wanted to stay, but Barbara insisted she go, too, for Sunny's sake. It was not a happy time. Why are we speaking of it now?”

Eliza didn't know. They'd gone from bliss to tragedy, but every word out of Nicholas's mouth made her like him a little more. He was every bit “Naughty Nicky,” yet there was a side of him the press would never see.

It was pointless for her to be swept up in his heroism. She would leave as soon as the new governess was engaged, and let that woman moon over her employer. Eliza was returning to her practical, prudent self. She was no longer the woman split apart by Nicholas Raeburn's talented tongue. Now if only she could figure a way to pull her drawers back up and leave the room with some dignity.

“You need to put another bed in Sunny's room. Your future governess deserves space of her own.”

“Noted.”

He sounded annoyed, but Eliza forged ahead. “And you also need to engage some day servants. Mrs. Quinn is overworked.”

“I've already thought about that, Miss Lawrence.”

Miss Lawrence
. That was better, wasn't it? They were getting back to firmer footing. Eliza was no longer a mindless imbecile, even if there was a faint ringing in her ears and her heart still thudded.

Chapter 19

What had he expected? Eliza was all business, snapping her thighs shut and talking about his servant problem. Where was the girl who moaned and writhed beneath him? Not here. Apart from her rippling golden hair, she had covered her legs and folded her hands on her lap, looking like she was ready to take dictation.

Nick wasn't sure where things went wrong. He didn't expect to receive his own satisfaction, but sure she should be softer, trembling, grateful for his introduction to orgasm. He doubted she'd ever touched herself from the wonder in her cries. But somehow the conversation had turned to Barbara and death and responsibility, souring what was between them.

Well, really,
nothing
was between them. She'd be gone in a few hours and he'd forget about trying to defrost her.

Feeling irked, Nick tore his shirt off and threw it on the floor with the rest of his clothes. He'd have to wait until Eliza left to shed his pants—his erection was painful, despite her sudden primness.

“What are you doing?”

“Getting ready for bed. It's been a long day, and it's not as if you haven't seen me in undress before.” He flexed his bicep, causing the snake to jump. It had been a favorite party trick, but he doubted Eliza even noticed.

“I'll—I'll leave, then.”

“Suit yourself.” Nick knew he sounded churlish, but it couldn't be helped. Any thought he'd harbored of kissing her anywhere else had evaporated. He still didn't know the color or size of her nipples, but that would give him artistic license when he painted her.

Eliza was attempting to stand, and Nick bit back a laugh—her drawers had fallen to her ankles. She surprised him by deftly stepping out of them and folding them over one arm.

“You've left a mess for poor Mrs. Quinn,” she said, bending over to bundle up his discarded clothing. “You really must—”

“I know, I know. Arrange it when you go back to the Evensong Agency.”

“I shall.”

She was spending an inordinate amount of time fussing with his clothes and she organized them on a chair. Nick wanted her to leave. His need to masturbate was excruciating.

Who would he picture as he did the deed? One hardly needed to ask. He could still taste Eliza on his tongue, remembered her sighs and gasps and exquisite responsiveness.

“Good night, Mr. Raeburn,” Eliza said from the doorway.

“Good night.” The words came out as a growl, as Nick felt bearish indeed.

As soon as he heard the click of the door, he unbuttoned his trousers with impatient fingers and turned out the lights. Throwing himself into his endeavor with some desperation, it took him no time at all to reach satisfaction, if satisfaction it could be called. He would much rather have buried himself into Eliza's wet core and watched her come apart again, but beggars could not be choosers.

Nick was not ordinarily a beggar when it came to women. Eliza Lawrence's rejection unsettled him, and it would be a good thing when she left him in peace. Let her deny her nature as long as she wished, delude herself. Nick knew her better than she did herself.

With another growl, he punched the pillow down and tried to sleep. The scent of lemons tickled his nose, and he pitched it to the floor. He would pick up the offending pillow tomorrow so as not to inconvenience Mrs. Quinn any more than he was doing already.

Sleep was elusive, even though Nick was exhausted from the idiocy of his recent days. Why shouldn't he begin Eliza's portrait tonight? There were enough electric lamps in the studio. Oil lamps and candles, too. He stumbled across the carpet to his jacket and reached into the pocket for his little notebook.

The minx
. No wonder she'd been so long dealing with his cast-off clothes. Well, let her steal his sketches. He had a perfectly good memory, and Eliza was unforgettable anyhow.

Nick pulled on a paint-spattered pair of loose linen pants and climbed the stairs in the dark. His vision appeared totally restored, and the faint headache could be worked around. Dinner had not disagreed with him, so he must be cured. He felt rather . . . potent.

His lip curled. Nick was far from being Naughty Nicky tonight. Instead he'd turned into a weak domestic creature, plagued by his servant problem, with Eliza Lawrence heading the list. Thank the gods the turpentine trumped the smell of lemons and her sexual arousal and he could concentrate.

Setting a large stretched canvas on an easel, Nick picked up an oil pencil. In a few fluid strokes, he captured the curve of her breasts and hips as she lay recumbent on a chaise. He might paint out her face in the future, but tonight her head was thrown back in ecstasy, her teeth biting into a swollen lower lip, her lashes casting shadows on her cheeks—just the way he'd seen her less than an hour ago. This Eliza was not defending her virtue, but inviting ravishment.

Some devil in him placed her hand between her thighs. Now that she knew what could be done, Nick had no doubt she'd be experimenting at home in her mother's flat. True, she'd have to restrain her cries of delight, but Eliza was a restraining sort of girl. She was burying her sensual nature behind the barriers of desks and ledgers and filing cabinets.

Poor girl, even if she was a thief. Nick felt sorry for her with her rules and regulations. Her punctuality and conformity. He supposed this evening was the most spontaneous thing she'd ever done, never to be repeated.

Damn it.

Nick squeezed some tubes, hoping to get Eliza's fresh color just right, but was displeased with the results. She was very fair, yet not so white that she resembled marble. There were peony and rose blossoms under her translucent skin. Maybe he should wait until sunrise to mix his paint, when the room was flooded with light if the London weather cooperated.

But if it didn't, that would suit him almost as well. The newspaper vultures would not want to subject themselves to rain on his doorstep, and his potential governess would not be accosted with his infamy. Nick would have to dress conservatively tomorrow, behave in a sober, responsible manner. Face Eliza as if nothing untoward had happened.

That might be a touch difficult.

Abandoning the unmatchable beauty of her flesh, he set to filling in the background—lush blue velvet drapes to match her eyes, twisted gold fringe to echo the curl of her waist-length hair. The pillow behind one shoulder he faceted with tiny mirrors, the better to add gleam to the background. Nick roughed in jewel-like patterns of carpet and wallpaper, but the true gem would be Eliza, surrounded by color, as yet undefined.

Nick stepped back and squinted at this hour's work. Not bad for a man with blue balls again. Eliza didn't even have to be in the same room with him to cast her spell.

Would she be amused or repelled at his condition? She really was an innocent, and had given her first kiss to him, a kiss long overdue for a young woman of twenty-four. Nick knew he wasn't especially worthy, but he'd tried to take care of her in the best way he knew.

Eliza hadn't thanked him—in fact had filched his notebook and left. What would she do with it? Tuck it in her underwear drawer as a souvenir of her stay on Lindsey Street? Burn it? He hoped not. He'd captured something of her in the brief lines and squiggles.

Maybe he could steal the notebook back before Eliza packed. He'd have to wait until she went downstairs to breakfast with Sunny. That would teach her to try to trick a trickster.

Nick gazed up at the skylight. Clouds scudded across the night sky, obscuring the few stars that dared to breach the smog of a London night. If he were at Raeburn Court, the stars would be impossible to count.

One didn't go to Scotland just to count stars in a clear sky, because after a while, that would become supremely boring. But Sunny might benefit from being with his family and seeing all the wild beauty the Highlands had to offer. All the fresh, clean air.

All the snow, he reminded himself. Impassable roads. Train tracks covered for miles. What would he do for models? Borrow sheep?

Nick couldn't see his sister-in-law holding still long enough to become one of his subjects. She was a bit of a whirling dervish, always inserting herself into trouble according to Alec. The servants as Nick remembered them were a dour lot, full of piety and resistant to modern conveniences. Alec had refurbished the house but Nick suspected the old place was still . . . old.

He had a month to decide what to do. Alec and Mary wouldn't be back until mid-November, planning to spend time with one of Mary's former clients in New York and travel through New England to look at leaves, of all things. Nick could almost admire that. Eliza had been dismissive of the leaf issue earlier. Perhaps if she saw the distinctive foliage of the New World, she might change her tune.

Eliza Lawrence was going nowhere but back to her job on Mount Street. She would live her quiet life and never let the secret Eliza out to play, which was a pity.

Nick stuck his brushes in a jar of turpentine and wiped his hands on a rag. He'd done all he could tonight, and was too tired to stay up for the dawn. He padded down the staircase barefoot, avoiding the loose step before the landing. If he stayed on Lindsey Street, he'd have to get someone in to repair it or risk waking the new governess with its squeak. He'd spent many a night painting, though so far the muse hadn't moved him to do so here. Of course he'd been busy and sick since his return. When things got back to normal—

Hell. What was normal in Nick's world? He didn't even know anymore. Eliza had knocked him sideways. Would she permit him to court her once she was no longer his employee?

Court?
By the gods, he was exhausted. Witless. Nick Raeburn didn't court girls; they more or less fell at his feet as if they'd tripped on his loose stair tread. Dropped from heaven. He had no interest in behaving himself long enough to impress someone's invalid mother.

Everything was quiet. Now all he had to do was fall asleep and stop himself from dreaming of a most unsuitable woman.

BOOK: The Reluctant Governess
8.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Lives of Things by Jose Saramago
Unreasonable Doubt by Vicki Delany
Lively Game of Death by Marvin Kaye
The Godfather's Revenge by Mark Winegardner
Soul Song by Marjorie M. Liu
The Alien's Captive by Ruth Anne Scott