elaborate deception.â
âThen leave off. Find someone else to fleece.â
She hadnât half considered it. âNo. Iâm enjoying the challenge of it, of him. Besides, he is too intrigued with me to simply walk away if I appeared to have lost interest. He wants me too badly.â
âSounds as though itâs your pride thatâs being puffed up here.â
Did Merrick have the right of it? She couldnât deny that Avendaleâs pursuit was a balm to her wounded soul, but it wasnât affecting her decisions. They were as theyâd always been: calculating and made without emotion. âMy pride has nothing to do with it. As I said, he wonât give me up, but when the time comes we need to be able to move with urgency and to a location quite far away. Iâm thinking Scotland, especially if Iâm able to gain enough so we can live comfortably for a while without worrying about creditors or obtaining more funds. If you donât like the way I keep food in your belly, clothes on your back, and a roof over your head, youâre welcome to leave.â
He scowled. âYou know I wonât find anything better than this. Least you give me respect.â
âI ask only that you do the same of me.â
An hour later she was sitting astride LilyâÂthe name sheâd decided on for the horseâÂas the mare trotted along Rotten Row. It was a gorgeous afternoon. A slight breeze in the air, the sun warming her face. So many Âpeople were about. She recognized a few from her sojourns to the Twin Dragons. Three gentlemen tipped their hats to her. A Âcouple of ladies smiled.
But she needed more.
Patience, she cautioned herself. The key was patience.
Then she saw him. He was here, trotting toward her on a large black horse. Magnificent. Avendale, not the horse. Although the beast was a beauty.
The thrill of his presence, the excitement of his nearing nearly toppled her from her saddle. Here was the more she wanted, the more she could never possess.
She wished circumstances were different, wished she were different. But if she were, she wouldnât be here now, would have never met him. He was a duke and she was completely undeserving of his time and attention. But it didnât stop her from craving it.
Slowing Lily to a walk, she gave no pretense that she was doing anything other than what she was: waiting for him to catch up to her. As he came closer, she pulled back on the reins, stopped.
Bringing his horse to a halt, he swept his hat from his head. âRose.â
She loved the shortened version of her name on his lips. One syllable, but he said it in a way that was both provocative and sensual. Whatever was wrong with her, to be so affected, when others had called her that for most of her life? But no one else made her want to sway toward him. No one else made her heart patter against her ribs. No one else made her seriously consider adding fornication without benefit of marriage to her lengthy list of sins.
âBenjamin.â
He growled. âI knew I shouldnât have shared that with you.â
âIf youâre going to be familiar with me, it seems I should be equally familiar with you.â
âIf you canât call me Avendale, call me Whit.â
âYour mother calls you that. The last thing I want is for you to think of me as your mother.â
âThe things I want to do with you . . . trust me, my mother will be the farthest thing from my mind regardless of what you call me.â
The blatant sexual yearning in his eyes nearly had her sliding to the ground in a pool of heated desire. How was it possible that he affected her so with little more than a gaze? Never before had she wanted to run her hands up a manâs arms, over his shoulders, along his chest and back. Never had she wanted to see exactly what lay beneath his clothing, how it might be sculpted and shaped, how the lines might fan out and
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