Viscount of Vice (2 page)

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Authors: Shana Galen

BOOK: Viscount of Vice
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“I beg to differ. Come to Bath and meet the man. Then make your decision.”

Flynn rose. “I'm not going anywhere. I have no interest in meeting a charlatan who claims to be Robert Flynn. He's looking for money, that's all. In which case, he should go to my mother. She might be fooled, but I am not.” He turned and almost stumbled. Righting himself, he lurched toward the exit. The men who'd waited for him turned in his direction, but when they saw his face, they made way. Flynn walked blindly through the club. He could not breathe, and when he stepped onto St. James's Street, the cold night air revitalized him. He gulped in air, leaning on the building for support.

He heard the door of the gentlemen's club open behind him. “Damn you, man! Will you not leave me in peace?”

Derring stood beside him. “I'd like nothing better, but if you will not come, I fear there is no saving him.”

Flynn looked up. “Are you saying if I stay here, he dies?”

“It's far worse than that.”

“What's worse than death?” A stupid question. He'd wished for death many times.

“You'll find out.”

Two

Lady Emma Talbot, sister to the widely known Duke of Ravenscroft, daughter of one of the most treacherous spies in history, and sister-in-law to perhaps one of the most notorious courtesans to have graced the London social scene, stifled a yawn. The ball at the assembly room in Bath was well attended and had promised to be a diversion from the long day she'd spent doing charity work, but now she wished she had not come. Seeing all the happy, newly engaged couples reminded her that she was not newly engaged, despite everyone's high expectations. The orchestra was in tune, the lemon water not quite so tepid as some she'd tasted, and there had even been champagne. Still, she was miserable.

The source of her misery stood before her. Lord Ihle was not altogether unattractive, but he was boring her to tears. As hard as she tried to turn the conversation to something—anything—other than cattle breeding, she was unsuccessful.

No wonder he was yet unmarried. At age forty, he was young for a peer, but she had already determined she would not settle. Her brother had told her she would settle for whomever he chose. He'd said this with a smile, and considering he was no tyrant, she was not overly concerned. Still, her sister Katherine, her chaperone for her first Season, and in whose rented house she now resided in Bath, had tried valiantly to impress upon Emma that it was her duty to marry a man who would bring honor to the family and be worthy of marriage to a duke's daughter. Katherine said it was
her
duty, as Emma's chaperone, to find Emma a good match. How Emma detested being anyone's duty.

“And did I tell you about my Lincoln Red bull?” Lord Ihle asked.

Emma blinked and attempted to concentrate. “I…”

“I can trace his lineage back six generations. His grandsire was called Monty, and he was born on the fifth of August in the year of our Lord, seventeen hundred and ninety-nine.”

“Really?” But her comment was unnecessary. Lord Ihle continued unabated. Oh, why did Katherine not come and rescue her? When was supper? Would no man approach and ask for her hand in the next dance?

But of course no man was going to approach her. She'd rejected half a dozen offers for her hand in her first Season. And those men had been the ones brave enough to look past her questionable family connections. Emma glanced about for Katherine and found her chatting with an old school friend across the room. Their gazes met, and Katherine looked pointedly back at her friend.

So that was how it would be. Katherine was not going to save her, because she was still annoyed that Emma had rejected four perfectly acceptable suitors (two of the six had not been deemed acceptable). But what Emma hadn't told her sister—what she hadn't told anyone—was that there was only one man she wanted to kiss, one man she wanted to touch, one man she wanted to marry. And, as luck would have it, he was not looking for a wife. And even if he had been, he would not have looked at her.

To Flynn, she was just a girl. His friend's little sister. She was finally eighteen, but she wasn't now, nor had she ever been, a little girl. She'd always seen what others were hiding, understood complex relationships those older than her didn't. Her friends often joked that she was wise, but Emma knew if she were wise, she would forget Lord Chesham. Flynn would only break her heart. He broke everyone's heart. If she were wise, she would be content to smile and chat about cattle. Instead, she wanted…well, she did not know what she wanted. Something
more
.

“If you'll excuse me,” she said to Lord Ihle, interrupting his monologue. He blinked in surprise. Poor man. He had no idea he was perfectly boring; he was the lead actor in his personal play. She curtsied and made her way through the assembly room.

When was her play going to begin? Not any time soon, now that she was away from London. Of course, it was late summer. Everyone was away from London, and many of them were here in Bath to take the waters or enjoy the amusements. But Flynn wasn't the sort to come to Bath. He was fixed firmly in Lon—

The back of her neck prickled, and Emma slowed and rubbed it. She looked about the crowded assembly room. Several people, men and women alike, met her gaze. She was in public. Of course she was being observed. Her gaze drifted across the room, and then she turned her head quickly back and focused on the far corner.

She drew in a breath and felt her legs wobble. She reached for something to steady herself, but there was nothing nearby except an elderly woman who probably teetered more than she. She should have listened when Katherine cautioned her to eat something at dinner. She should not have drunk that second glass of champagne when Lord Ihle cornered her. She should not have stayed up so late reading the night before. Because now she was imagining things. She was imagining
him
.

She opened her eyes again and stared across the room. He was still there. He lounged negligently against a decorative pillar, his cravat askew, his hair down about his face, his jaw unshaven, and his coat rumpled. He cocked a brow at her in question, and it was as though she had just downed an entire glass of sherry. Heat burned a path from her throat to her belly, making her legs weak and her skin tingle with pleasure. She closed her eyes again. If it really was Flynn…if she was not imagining him, she had to ignore him. His eyes might be hazel rather than burning red, but he was Lucifer all the same. He was a temptation she could not resist.

“It is not he,” she murmured. “You are tired and out of sorts. It is not he.” She opened her eyes again.

It was Flynn.

She was halfway across the room before she knew what she was about. “This is a bad idea,” she told herself.

No good would come of meeting with Flynn, but perhaps some bad might. Her belly fluttered when she thought of all the
bad
things he might have in mind. Flynn would not talk to her of Lincoln Red bulls.

“Lady Emma,” Flynn said as she neared him. The orchestra was playing, and she stood close so they could converse. Close enough that she could smell the fragrance of sandalwood she associated with him. Close enough that he could have touched her. The exposed skin between her gloves and the puff of her sleeve tingled.

“Lord Chesham.” She gave a small curtsy, pretending she hadn't noticed that he didn't bow. It seemed strange to think of him as Lord Chesham, but he had been the viscount for over a year now—as his sobriquet reminded her. The Viscount of Vice was still looking at her, his hazel eyes hooded under his lowered lashes. He had the sort of eyes that changed color subtly. She liked to think the color depended on his mood. Right now they were more golden brown than green. Did that mean he was pleased or displeased to see her? She needed to think of something to say. “I am sorry for the loss of your father.”

A long moment passed. She knew it was a long moment because she counted the beats in the music, and there were at least twelve.

“Aren't we all?” he drawled.

That was a strange comment to make. “How is your mother? I spoke with her briefly at the charity hospital last week, but I have not seen her since.”

“She is fine. Out of mourning.”

Emma narrowed her eyes. “You
did
call on her when you arrived, did you not?”

Perhaps he'd only just arrived in Bath, and that was why he hadn't taken the time to shave or straighten his cravat.

“Where is your brother?”

“Andrew?” she stammered. She'd forgotten how jarring conversing with Flynn could be.

“Do you have another?”

“No.” He knew she did not. Why did she always sound like a fool when she spoke to him? With anyone else she sounded perfectly intelligent. “I-I believe he is still in London. They will wait a few more weeks, I think, before returning to Ravenscroft Castle. Lily—rather, Her Grace—is in no hurry to travel with a baby.”

“Ah, that's right. He said he was not sleeping,” the viscount said almost to himself. He ran a hand through his hair, thick and light brown with hints of sunlight. It was unfashionably long, but she doubted he cared a whit for fashion.

“Did you call on him?” she asked.

His gaze focused on her again, and she could not help but shiver.

“He would not like the two of us to converse without a chaperone. Where is your chaperone, Emma?”

She should have insisted he call her Lady Emma, but she didn't. “I don't need a chaperone to converse with a family friend in a public assembly room. But if you must know, my sister is just over there.” She indicated the direction with a wave of her hand, but he did not look away from her. “I'm no longer a child,” she said, sounding exactly like a petulant child. “I am out now. I am eighteen.”

His brow rose mockingly. “Eighteen? So elderly?”

She huffed out a breath. She might find him fascinating, but she still had enough self-respect to walk away when she was being made fun of. “Give my regards to your mother,” she said, turning away.

“But we haven't danced.” He didn't touch her, but his words felt as though they were ropes restraining her. She paused and looked over her shoulder.

“Are you asking?”

“Hell, yes.” He grabbed her hand and led her to the center of the room. The orchestra was not playing a waltz, but he began to dance one anyway. Emma thought it to her credit that she tripped only once before she realized what he was about and followed him. But from the corner of her eye, she saw Katherine step forward, her sister's features etched with concern.

“This is not a waltz,” she informed him as he swept her into a turn.

“I know.”

“And you are not supposed to curse in front of a lady.”

He grinned at her and spun her until she was dizzy and gasping for breath. She held onto his shoulder, desperate for something solid to support her. “I know.”

She looked up at him, thinking she had never been so close to him. She could feel the power in his body. The way he moved, the way he held her—lightly but possessively—the way his body felt under her fingers fascinated her. From the blondish brown stubble on his cheeks to the way he seemed not to care whether he was praised or damned, she wanted to know everything about this man. She nodded to the room. “You do not care that everyone is talking about you right now?”

“They should be talking about me. I'm dancing with the most beautiful woman in the room.”

She almost stumbled. She didn't want to believe it. Surely it was some oft-given compliment he tossed out to every lady.

“If you spend much more time with me,” he continued, “I'll ruin your reputation.”

“I don't care about that.”

“You should.” He sounded like an older brother talking to his younger sister. That was not at all how she wanted him to see her.


You
don't.”

“No,” he said, turning her. “I don't. Mine was ruined long ago, but scoundrel that I am, I still care enough about innocent young ladies not to ruin theirs.” He began to pull away, as though he might end the dance and return her to the safety of her chaperone and Lord Ihle and his bulls.

“You haven't ruined me yet,” she said. “In fact, you've made me more interesting.”

He continued dancing, and she noticed their turns were taking them closer to the edge of the ballroom.

“I should hardly think you were lacking in that arena.”

“I might have scandalous relations, Lord Chesham, but I am perfectly ordinary.”

He laughed, and the sound startled her. He had expertly maneuvered them off the dance floor and out of Katherine's sight.

“If you were ordinary, Lady Emma, I would be able to resist doing this.” He turned her, catching her in his arms and drawing her close. She felt the heat of him through her thin silk gown. Her hands clasped his shoulder and slid down to his arms, which were hard and sculpted as marble. She looked up into eyes that had darkened to a warm brown. She could see every eyelash and the fine smile lines at the corners of his eyes. “You should not have turned eighteen,” he said.

“I had little choice, my lord.” Her voice was breathless and husky. Was he going to kiss her?

“Would you allow me to kiss you?”

She nodded. “Yes.”

“Here?”

“Anywhere,” she breathed. She looked at his lips. They were pink and curved slightly in a wicked smile. They looked soft, and she had the urge to trace them with her finger. Oh, why would he not hurry?

“Lady Emma, you do tempt me.” He stepped back. “But I would not dare defile you with the touch of my lips.” His voice was mocking, as though he found the words amusing.

“You are walking away?” she asked incredulously. The man should have been called the Viscount of Vexation. If she was going to have to suffer through another of Katherine's lectures, she should at least be kissed for her trouble.

“Do you wish me to stay?” His brow winged upward. The gesture charmed and annoyed her. Especially when his mouth curved as well. That look she knew. It meant he had thought of something particularly mischievous. “Then why don't
you
kiss
me
?”

Her jaw dropped.

“Shocked you, did I?”

“No!” But he had.

“Then do it.” He braced his feet and put his hands on his hips in challenge. “Kiss me.”

“I'll do it,” she threatened.

He did not appear concerned. He spread his hands in open invitation.

The music went on, though she could tell the dance was ending. The couples dancing the correct forms bowed and turned and promenaded. All she had to do was take three steps, rise up on tiptoes, and press her lips to his. She didn't know what to do after that, but he would.

Of that she was certain.

She only need move her feet. But those feet, which had been so eager to move toward him only a few minutes ago, now would not budge. She took a deep breath and tried to gather her courage. She was not a ninny. She saw and did things every day at the charity hospital that were far more terrifying than kissing a handsome rogue. She was not afraid.

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