My Last Duchess, стр. 14
The duke nodded, his eyes dark. “After Marie died, I thought I’d never kiss another woman.”
“But you did.”
A rueful look crossed his eyes. “In the second year, I got drunk one night, and found myself in the arms of a cheerful barmaid.”
Ophelia couldn’t help her spurt of laughter. “The barmaid and the duke!”
“Oh, she had no idea who I was. I dropped into a public house with friends. She was friendly and warm, and she coaxed a frozenman back into life.”
“I’m not frozen,” Ophelia said.
“We men are stupid,” he said, his shoulders shifting, uncomfortable with the subject. “I couldn’t bear the pain of it whenMarie died. I . . .” He sighed. “I was very young and passionate. I vaguely wanted to be Romeo to her Juliet—though she hadn’ttaken her own life but succumbed to a chill—but I had children. And a ferocious will to live. What I did instead was turnmyself to stone.”
“Stone?”
Ophelia leaned against his shoulder so she could see his eyes.
“Walking about, not really alive.”
“Ah.”
He shook his head. “You weren’t nearly as mad, were you?”
She took a deep breath and decided to tell the truth. “It sounds as if you loved Marie in a different . . . as if you hada . . . Peter and I were enormously fond of each other.”
His eyelashes closed for a moment, and the sound that came from his chest sounded like—like relief? Surely not.
“I loved him, of course,” she added. “He was Viola’s father and he would have adored her. I see him in her every day.”
“I tell myself that if Marie hadn’t died, I would have been a good father to the three boys she and I had together,” His Gracesaid thoughtfully, “but I’m not certain. I might have followed the path of least resistance, like my parents and all my friends,and just seen the boys a few times a year.”
The snowy silence felt as if it compelled truth. “I might have done the same. I know that Peter would have insisted on attendingsocial functions every night as soon as I was in full health.”
“Mourning sent me into the nursery,” Hugo said, nodding.
Ophelia lifted up her face and finally remembered what she meant to do when she silently asked him to stop the horse in themidst of a snowy forest. “A kiss,” she whispered huskily.
His eyes lit.
“Not marriage,” she reminded him. But her lips had reached his, and the slow slide of her tongue against his made her shiver,her hand closing around the chilly wool of his greatcoat.
The snow had no intent; it fell here or there without volition. But the two bodies straining together, warm mouths, clingingarms . . . There was a ferocious intent in them.
Ophelia felt her limbs weaken and desire riot through her until she whimpered into his mouth and moved restlessly on the horse’sbroad back, her legs tingling, her flesh tender and longing for caresses.
“I want you,” the man kissing her growled.
Peter never growled. He wouldn’t have known how. But somehow, she found herself kissing a man whose growl came naturally fromhis broad chest. She was in uncharted territory, Ophelia thought dimly.
If she stayed with this man, this duke, her peaceful, quiet life would never be the same. The cheerful tenor of days spentin the nursery would change.
He would want her with him, during the day. During the night.
She and Peter hadn’t shared a bedchamber; the idea was inconceivable. She had the strong feeling that this duke wouldn’t considerliving any other way.
His mouth slanted down over hers, hunger speaking to her in the brush of his chilly cheek against hers.
“Getting cold,” she murmured sometime later. It wasn’t true. She felt like a torch in his arms, as if she were burning inevery pore. She could tumble into the snow and it would all melt beneath her.
She didn’t know what she wanted from him: but she did know one thing. In the wake of Peter’s death . . . this warmth was precious.
Worth chasing, preserving, exploring.
That low sound he made?
She wanted more of that.
“Did you say you’re cold?” he asked suddenly, a kiss later. His voice grated like gravel underfoot.
“Mmm,” Ophelia said. He pulled back, but that was all right. There was the enticing smooth skin of his neck, a powerful neckwith a man’s sinews and a man’s strength under her lips.
He shifted, said something to the horse, and they were off again.
“Your hat is covered with snow,” she said, giggling.
Even with only the light from the dim lantern, she could tell that his eyes were burning hot.
“It’s too cold and snowy for you to go home tonight,” she added.
She felt his reaction in his body, through her dress and cloak, and his shirt, waistcoat, coat, greatcoat . . .
He jolted.
“You could stay at my house if you wished,” she whispered. Between them, a snowflake spiraled down twisting in the air, meltingas it reached their warm breaths.
“I do wish,” he stated.
Their eyes locked. She was unnerved by the invitation she had issued. Unnerved by the kisses she had given him. Unnerved bythe images going through her head: the duke without clothes. Those broad shoulders bending over her as she lay on her back,quivering all over. This desire was scorching.
It was madness.
Blissful madness.
“My invitation does not mean marriage.”
Silence.
Then, “In that case, I’m not certain I should stay the night, Ophelia. To my mind, bedding means marriage.”
“The barmaid?” she asked, eyebrow raised.
“I didn’t bed her. She sat on my lap, kissed me a few times, and ran off to take care of other tables.” He lowered his headand brushed his lips past hers. “Even drunk, I managed to remember that I had a family waiting at home.”
She dragged her hands down over taut muscles, thinking about men she’d seen working in fields of wheat. Men who weren’t peers.Men who had brawny chests and muscled thighs.
The idea of going to bed with him was terrifying. And fabulous.
“I’ll spend the night with you, Ophelia, but I won’t make love to you until