Marcus moved up her body, dropping a light kiss on her mouth, brushing her closed eyelids with his lips, and she opened her eyes, giving him a dazed smile.
"You work miracles, sir."
"One of my minor talents," he said with a smug grin, holding himself over her on an elbow, while fumbling one-handed with the waistband of his britches, pushing them off his hips. Reaching above her, he pulled loose the silk tie that bound her wrists. "I think you're sufficiently tamed now to have your hands back. You might need them for the next stage."
"I might," Judith agreed. She brought her hands down, slipping them around him, grasping his buttocks, as he eased himself into her. "Ah, that feels wonderful."
Marcus sighed in agreement, moving with gentle rhythm within the smooth, warm quiver of her body. "Sometimes," he murmured, "I think you were made to hold me as I was made to fill you."
"You only think it sometimes?" She laughed up at him, an exultant spark in her eyes as she tightened around him, glorying in the feel of him, in the light in his eye, in the absolute knowledge of the pleasure they found in each other. She lifted her hips to meet him.
"Ah, Judith, don't move again unless you're ready to be with me."
"I'm ready," she said breathlessly.
She touched his lips fleetingly, then with wicked intent moved her hand to his belly. The muscles jumped against her flattened palm and he surged against her. Their cries mingled, redolent of a primitive exultation,
and his body fell heavily upon hers, sweat-slick skin melding with sweat-slick skin.
They lay for long minutes in deep, satiated silence, before Judith stirred beneath Marcus. Her legs were still sprawled around him, her arms spread out as they had fallen in the aftermath of that climactic explosion.
"Was I crushing you?" Marcus murmured, rolling away from her. He propped himself on one elbow, looking down at her, smiling at the wanton sprawl of her body.
"Only pleasurably." Her eyes opened lazily.
"Now," he said, trailing a finger down between her breasts, "to return to the vexed question of perch phaetons…"
Judith pushed his hand away, sat cross-legged on the bed, and regarded him. "Now, listen to me," she said calmly. "You are an old stick-in-the-mud, Marcus Devlin… No, don't interrupt. When, since we've been married, have I ever caused you the slightest embarrassment?"
"Never, to my knowledge," he conceded. "And you'd better not."
Judith patted his knee. "I'm not about to. I'm going to set a new trend. I'm not about to race at Epsom, or charge down the London-to-Brighton post road at full gallop. I'm simply going to do something different-a little daring, perhaps. But you just see… In a week, I'll wager any odds that there'll be quite a few others driving perch phaetons. And," she added, "you'll see that none of them exhibits anything like my style and expertise."
"Conceited baggage," he said.
"Just wait and see," she responded stoutly.
Marcus didn't immediately answer, his thoughts having taken a new direction. "How did you learn to drive so well, Judith?"
"Oh," she said vaguely, "a friend taught me two years ago."
"A friend?".
"Yes, in Vienna. He drove a team of magnificent grays and was most obliging as to teach me."
"In exchange for what?"
"Why, for my company," she said, as if it were self-explanatory.
"One of your flirts, in other words."
"I suppose you could say that. He was a very respectable flirt, though. An Austrian count of some wealth."
"Of which you and your brother relieved him, I assume."
"A few thousand," she said with cheerful insouciance. "He could well afford it, and he enjoyed my company as compensation."
"And you wonder why I sometimes question your judgment."
Judith bit her lip hard. "This is different. Why do you always throw my past in my face?" She turned her head away, blinking back tears.
Why did he? He looked at her averted profile, saw the shimmer of a teardrop on her cheek. Perhaps he wasn't being fair to her. No matter how their marriage had come about, he couldn't help but take pride in his beautiful, elegant, intelligent wife. Maybe it was time to bury the past.
He leaned forward and smudged the tear on her cheek with his finger. "If you can satisfy me that you can handle in every contingency a spirited pair between the shafts of such a vehicle, then you may keep your perch phaeton."
She swallowed her tears and swung out of bed.
"We'll put the matter to the test immediately." Bending over, she playfully tugged at the coverlet. "Come along, lazy, get up. We'll drive to Richmond in your curricle with your grays and I'll show you how I can handle a four-in-hand. I promise you I'll prove to you that I can drive to an inch."
"Yes, I rather imagine you will." He stood up, then said consideringly, "By the way, I believe you owe me twenty guineas."
"Why, yes, sir, I believe I do," Judith replied in dulcet tones.
16
"I don't know what to do now." Charlie looked up from the cards in his hand, his expression baffled.
Sebastian, standing behind Charlie at the table, glanced down at the young man's hand of cards and grinned as he felt his sister's surging impatience. Judith was a good teacher, but she was short on forbearance. She looked up and caught Sebastian's eye. Taking a deep breath, she struggled for patience. "Do you think you want another card, Charlie?"
"I don't know exactly." He frowned. Judith was trying to explain how one could reduce the element of chance at macao. "I have eighteen points."
"Then you don't want anything higher than a three," she explained carefully. "That means there are twelve possible cards."
"Ten," Charlie said. "I already hold an ace and a two."
"You're getting there," Sebastian approved. He thrust his hands into the pockets of his buckskin britches, watching the lesson with amusement.
"All right," Judith said, gesturing to the dummy hands on the table. "We've had five rounds, two hands have folded, three are still left. What does that tell you about the three left?"
Charlie frowned. "That they have mostly low cards?"
"Exactly," she said. "Therefore, your chances of drawing one of the ten low cards that you don't have are…?"
"Slim," he said with a grin of comprehension. "So I stay as I am."
"It's simple, isn't it?"
"I suppose so. What card would have been dealt me if I'd asked for one?"
Judith drew the top card from the depleted pack in front of her and slid it across to him. Charlie turned it over. It was a three.
"I never said it was an exact science." Judith smiled at his disconsolate expression.
"I always thought the fun with gaming was the risk."
"So it is, but doesn't it give you any satisfaction to overcome pure chance?"
Charlie looked puzzled. "Yes, it does, but it's not as thrilling as when luck smiles and I get a winning streak."
Sebastian gave a shout of laughter as his sister threw up her hands in frustration.
"Well, at least Marcus hasn't packed you off to Berkshire," she said, gathering up the cards.
"No," he agreed. "In fact, he's being deuced decent about things at the moment. I wanted to go to Repton with Giles Fotheringham for the hunting, and it was Marcus who said I needed a second hunter. He accompanied me to Tattersalls and helped me pick out a magnificent animal." He grinned slightly. "Of course, he said if he hadn't advised me, I'd have been seduced by a showy hack with no bottom, but that's just Marcus."
Judith laughed at Charlie's accurate imitation of his cousin's invariable bluntness and began to deal the cards again.
"I must love you and leave you," Sebastian said, bending to kiss his sister. "Are you going to the rout at Hartley House this evening?"
"Yes, the rest of the gaming school are going to try their wings for the first time. Cornelia and Isobel are going to play macao, at separate tables of course, and Sally's all set to try her hand at quinze."
"How're they doing?"
Judith chuckled. "Pretty well, on the whole. Cornelia has the most difficulty. It's strange, because she's so clever in so many other areas. She plays the pianoforte beautifully and composes her own music, you know. And reads Latin and Greek."
"Very bookish," Sebastian agreed. "And completely cow-handed."
"Oh, that's unkind." But Judith couldn't help smiling. "Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing how they do. They're all absolutely determined to succeed."
"Heaven preserve the husbands of London," Sebastian teased. "How will they ensure their wives' loyalty if they can't ensure their dependence?"
Judith grimaced. "That may be a quizzing observation, Sebastian, but it has an unpleasant ring of truth. If you could hear Isobels description of the humiliating performance…" Remembering Charlie's presence, she stopped abruptly. Such details were not for his tender ears.
Sebastian nodded in instant comprehension. "I take it back… I must be off. I promised to escort Harriet and her mother to the Botanic Gardens." He pulled a comical face.
"Whatever for? I'm sure Harriet would prefer to visit the lions at the Exchange."
"And so would I, but her revered mama does not consider it edifying, so the Botanic Gardens it is."
"Well, make sure you have a plentiful supply of sal volatile, in case Lady Moreton becomes overcome with excitement among the orchids."
"You are a disrespectful wretch," Sebastian declared.
"Yes, I'd noticed that myself," came Carrington's voice from the doorway. "How do you do, Sebastian?" He tossed his riding whip onto the sofa and Jrew off his gloves.
"Well enough, thank you." Sebastian grinned at his brother-in-law and picked up his hat from the side table. "Perhaps you could cure m'sister's lamentable tongue."
"Oh, I've tried, Sebastian, I've tried. It's a lost cause."
"I suppose it is. Pity, though."
"Would you two stop talking about me as if I weren't here?" Judith demanded in half-laughing indignation.
"I'm away." Sebastian blew his sister a kiss and went to the door.
"Oh, there's something I need to discuss with you, Sebastian," Marcus said. "But I can see you're in a hurry."
"Orchids await him," Judith murmured as the door closed behind her brother.
"What?"
"Orchids. He's gone to dance attendance on Lady Moreton."
"Good God, why?"
"Because he intends her for his mother-in-law."
"Hell and the devil," Marcus said. "The daughter's a considerable heiress, of course."
"What has that to do with it?" Judith demanded, bristling.
"Why, only that all sane young men with barely a feather to fly with are on the lookout for heiresses," Marcus responded casually. "What are you playing, Charlie?" He strolled over to the card table.
Charlie didn't immediately reply. He could see Judith's face and he was wondering why Marcus hadn't noticed the reaction his words were causing.
Judith said stiffly, "You know nothing about Sebastian's circumstances."
"No, but 1 assume he supports himself at the tables. I doubt the Moretons will look kindly upon his suit." Marcus turned to pick up the sherry decanter from the pier table.
"Well, I trust you'll be in for a surprise."
"I'd be happy to believe it, but you must face facts,}udith." He poured sherry, blithely indifferent to the effect he was having on his wife. "People like the Moretons would look kindly on an impoverished suitor only if he brought a significant title."
"I see," Judith said icily, and firmly closed her lips. Rapidly, she finished dealing the cards.
"So what are you playing?" Marcus inquired again, casually sipping sherry.
"Macao," Charlie said, eager to change the subject. Judith was looking very dangerous, and he could detect the slightest tremor in the long white fingers. "You see, I'm not very good at gaming-" he began.
"No, you're abominable," Marcus agreed, interrupting. "A baby could beat you… which is why you're
in the trouble you're in," he added. "I'd have thought you'd do better to find some other way of amusing your-self."
"But once I learn how to win, I won't have any debts," Charlie explained eagerly. "So Judith's teaching me."
"She's what" Marcus exclaimed, his cheerful insouciance gone. Sebastian had been in the room too, and the memory of another macao table in a ballroom in Brussels filled his mind and chased away all rational thought. How could he ever have thought he could bury the past? "And just how is she teaching you to win?"
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