Authors: Michele Jaffe
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical, #Romance, #General, #FICTION/Romance/General
The March sun streamed in through the half-open drapes of the bedroom, dappling the couple lying on the bed with its rays.
Ian, sitting up and leafing through a book, nudged at the small lump lying beside him. “Come on, Bianca. You don’t want to be late for your own wedding.”
“
Hmfph
,” was the lump’s reply.
“Bianca. Don’t make this any harder for me than it already is.” Ian’s voice lacked even the faintest emotion as he continued to flip through the volume.
“
Mlmfeh
,” said the lump. It moved to resettle itself in the crook of Ian’s arm.
He tried a new tactic, though still studying to sound preoccupied. “Roberto and Francesco will never speak to either of us again if you let the dress they had made go to waste. Not to mention Nilo. He’s probably pacing up and down the aisle already.”
“
Sphhhhln
,” the lump began, then decided to give in. “All right,” Bianca said lazily. “If you are so eager to have me married off, I’ll get up and out of your hair.”
“Excellent,” Ian said with the air of a man who does not know what he is saying.
Bianca scowled at him and then at the book he was holding or rather, which was holding his attention from her. She moved around behind it and scowled at the cover, hoping for some clue to its identity, but all she saw was FOSCARI stamped in large gold letters on the spine. Ian was sitting distractedly reading a family history? That certainly had to be stopped. She moved and popped up over the top of the book to face him.
“Hello. I am going now. Leaving. To be married. This is your last chance to take me before I become an honest woman. Forever after I will be someone’s wife.”
“
Mmmm
,” Ian said, not moving his eyes from the page he was studying.
That did it. If he was already heedless of her propositions before their wedding, she shuddered to think what he would be like afterward. A vision of their life together—side by side, in bed, never talking, with Ian reading some big tome or another and her struggling to revive his interest—stretched before her like the road to Dante’s inferno.
“Ian, since you seem to be more fascinated by the author of that book than you are by me, perhaps you should marry him.”
“Her,” Ian corrected. “The book is by a woman.”
Bianca, spurred on by a mixture of jealousy and interest, pulled herself up next to Ian to get a better look.
“See,” Ian said, flipping to the title page and allowing her to study it.
“
De Corporis Feminae Fabrica
,” she read aloud, her eyes wide. “Why, it’s a book of the female anatomy. Someone did it before I could.” Bianca sounded momentarily sad, but then her tone brightened again when she added, “At least it is by a woman. What is her name?”
Ian was having trouble holding the book, not to mention his voice, steady. “You may know her.” He paused, as if searching the title page for the name, then read out clearly, “The Most Reverend and Illustrious, Bianca Salva Foscari, Contessa d’Aosto.”
Bianca looked at the name for a moment, confused. She repeated it to herself silently, then let out a cry. “Oh! Oh, my! That is… Ian, you have… Oh! That is me! This is my book!”
Ian’s smile stretched from ear to ear. Her reaction to his surprise was even better than he had expected. “Do you like it? Is it all right?”
“I…Oh, Ian…I really…I’m speechless.” Bianca threw her arms around his neck, pulling him close as tears quivered in her eyes. “This is the kindest, most generous thing anyone has ever done for me. Santa Agata’s finger, to have my book published!”
“Breast,” Ian corrected her.
Bianca pulled away slightly to look at him. “What?”
“Breast. Santa Agata’s breast. I learned that from your manuscript.” Ian was beaming at her like a schoolboy proud of his erudition. “Besides, my act was not completely selfless. The idea of rendering you speechless was rather appealing.”
Bianca’s smile turned to a smirk. She returned her attention to the volume, flipping lovingly through the pages. “How did you get my manuscript back from the judges? I thought they were going to keep it until they caught Mora and Angelo and they could hold a proper trial.”
“I have connections,” Ian said mysteriously. “Besides, the evidence against those two is plentiful enough to convict them without your drawings. If they are smart, they will stay well out of the Venetian Empire for a good long time.”
Bianca moved her eyes from her precious book to the scars still visible on Ian’s wrists. “They had better. I am well tempted to try my next anatomical experiments on them.”
Ian raised one eyebrow suggestively. “I’d rather you tried them on me.”
“Really?” Bianca’s smile was fiendish. “Fancy having your heart cut out?”
Ian grimaced. “Maybe nothing quite that severe, to begin with.”
Bianca nodded knowingly. “Actually, there is one theory I’ve been meaning to explore. I hear that complimenting a man on his adorable ears is the best way to his heart.”
Ian groaned. “Have you been taking lessons on seduction from Cecco again?”
“I think you are jealous,” Bianca declared positively with a playful grin. “You’d be amazed at some of the tips he’s given me.”
“Like what?” Ian was not sure he wanted to know what his diminutive new steward and his devilish fiancee spent so much time together talking about.
“Come here.” Bianca beckoned. Ian moved closer to her, carefully setting the volume on the floor. She pulled his head down to hers and began whispering something in his ear.
With dismay Ian felt his member growing hard, bucking against the sheet for attention. “I hope this isn’t what you are thinking of trying on Angelo,” he managed to get out with difficulty.
Bianca laughed, her breath tickling his ear. She moved her hand to his thigh and then up it, tickling him gently, without stopping her suggestive whispering. Ian groaned, willing her to stop talking or start caressing his beleaguered organ, but she did neither. He was on the point of begging for either mercy or extreme unction when she pulled away slightly.
Bianca studied her fiance with an appraising eye. “You’re performing very well as a subject,” she complimented him. “Better than I would have expected. I’ll have to use you in all my projects. I hope your wife won’t mind.”
“My wife?” Ian countered. “What about your husband? What if he objects to your experiments?”
Bianca shook her head. “There’s no chance of that. I am sure he will understand that, as a published scientist, it is my duty to devote myself entirely to the pursuit of knowledge.” As she spoke, she undertook a new experiment involving the tips of all ten fingers and the gardenia-scented oil she kept next to the bed. “Wouldn’t you agree, my lord?”
Ian, selfless crusader in the quest for scientific advancement, managed only to groan his approval.
>>
In Renaissance England, love is the most dangerous gamble.
Crispin Foscari, one of Queen Elizabeth’s most trusted spies, leaves nothing to chance. So he’s surprised when he’s informed he has two weeks to clear his name of an accusation of treason, or face the executioner’s noose.
Sophie Champion is a hero to women of London, dedicating her seemingly endless resources to helping free them from bondage to men. But when her investigation into the death of her beloved godfather brings her to the attention of Crispin Foscari, known as “The Earl of Scandal”, under precarious circumstances, she is suddenly the one who needs liberating.
Even as his mind warns him to stay away from the the seductive siren, Crispin proposes a wager. Working together they pit their wits against a calculating enemy by day, and fight their searing attraction at night. As they inch closer to identifying the killer they grow closer to one another. Until finally their passion explodes—with deadly consequences.
It’s a race against the clock—and natural law—when a murderer seems to return from the dead, hellbent on killing again.
Clio Thornton’s interest in solving the mysteries plaguing 16th-century London has put her at odds with her wealthy family. Stumbling upon a grisly murder, she’s determined to investigate it, even when all of her discoveries point to an impossible killer: the Vampire of London, vanquished by Viscount Miles Loredan, the soon-to-be husband of her cousin.
Miles Loredan killed the Vampire of London three years ago. When Clio comes to him with her theories, Miles finds them impossible to believe. But intrigued by her passion and her beauty, Miles agrees to hire her and support her investigation. What starts as a professional relationship soon becomes personal—and dangerous. Because Miles is betrothed to another woman. And Clio is the Vampire’s next target.
She’s got murder in mind.
Lady Tuesday Arlington has always used her painting as a refuge from the nightmares that plague her sleep. When her husband is murdered in a setting that uncannily resembles one of Tuesday’s paintings, the young widow becomes the prime suspect.
Lawrence Pickering, the Earl of Arden and an investigator in service of Queen Elizabeth I, begins to follow Tuesday’s every move, certain of her guilt—until Tuesday becomes a target herself. Intrigued by her knowledge of the crime scenes as well as her stunning beauty, Lawrence vows to protect her. But how can he stop a killer who appears capable of the impossible—invading Tuesday’s mind?
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