Whereas chess had been her dearest companion in the years of their separation, and it would be so now. What she needed to do was turn the chess to her advantage by distracting him.

The slow smile on Jemma’s lips would have given Elijah pause, had he seen it.

“Brigitte,” she said.

“Yes, Your Grace?”

“There are a few other things that I will need for the evening, if you would be so kind.”

Chapter Eighteen

Jemma was curious about one thing in particular: what would Elijah wear when he appeared at her door? On reflection, she decided he would be fully dressed. To appear in a dressing gown would lack a gentleman’s discretion, given the household’s focus on their chess game.

For her part, she put on an utterly delicious nightgown. It was made of delicate silk in a cream color, lined with lace and covered by a matching wrapper. It was only when she was lying down, and the neckline shifted in a certain way, that one suddenly had a glimpse of a gorgeous cherry silk lining. That was something she had learned from a circle of Frenchwomen, years ago.

“Surprise him!” an older woman had laughed.

“Wear a sweet-natured gown, and underneath, a harlot’s scarlet. Play the innocent and then the rascal.” She followed that advice with a few earthy suggestions involving the male anatomy, none of which Jemma had tried…but none of which she was opposed to trying.

Her face paint was so artfully applied that only a man of Corbin’s perception would have known she wore any. Her hair didn’t have a speck of powder. It fell over her shoulders, gleaming like bottled sunshine.

“His Grace will be a happy man,” Brigitte said, pausing before she left for the night.

Jemma looked up, surprised. “Thank you! Though you and I know better than he how much of my beauty comes from Signora Angelico’s brilliant designs, not to mention my favorite lip rouge.”

“I don’t mean that,” Brigitte said. “I mean because you—you are interested in this evening, no? You—”

Jemma sighed inwardly. Could life become yet more embarrassing? “Yes.”

Brigitte smiled brilliantly. “He is lucky.”

Elijah appeared precisely at ten, which Jemma thought showed a healthy level of enthusiasm for the game, as well as—no doubt—what would likely follow it.

He was fully dressed. Naturally.

She opened the door, well aware that the candles placed around the room cast an extremely flattering light on her skin.

Being Elijah, his eyes didn’t drop from her face. Instead he strolled into her room as if they were in the drawing room. He looked at the delicate little table set up by her bed, the delicious morsels Mrs. Tulip had sent up, the carefully draped scarves she’d chosen to serve as blindfolds.

To her utter surprise, he started laughing. “I feel as if I just happened into one of the great courtesan’s apartments.”

Jemma bit her lip, and then smiled swiftly. “Should I demand a payment before, or trust on your gentleman’s honor to provide payment after?”

“Oh, before,” he said gravely, walking toward her. There was something in his eyes that cured the hiccup in her heart, the pulse of shame she felt at his first comment.

“May I kiss you?” His question was so simple, and so—so Elijah.

She swallowed hard and said, “Only if I might return the favor.”

He bent his head then, and gave her the kind of kiss that no man gives a courtesan. Or a mistress. Or anyone who is paid for the most intimate of pleasures. It was a kiss that started with a brush of the lips and a silent question.

A courtesan couldn’t have answered, because she wouldn’t have been able to read all the hundreds of ways that the question came to Jemma: through the touch of his hands on her shoulders, through the controlled stillness of his mouth, through the very tilt of his head.

“Yes,” she said, telling him silently as well, brushing his bottom lip with hers. “Yes.”

He pulled back and looked in her eyes and then just folded her into his arms. It was as if they could try their wedding night all over again.

That first time, they hardly knew each other. She was terribly infatuated with him; he seemed barely to have registered her first name.

It was all different this time.

He let her go without another word. She took his hand and asked, “Will you blindfold yourself…or would you like me to do it?” She hesitated. “And Elijah, if this reminds you too much of your father’s predilections, we could simply skip the blindfold. It was a silly idea anyway.”

“Never,” he said, and the grin on his face had nothing to do with the sorry fate of his father. He picked up a swath of pink silk that she had chosen for its exquisite match to her gown. “I’ll just put this on, shall I?”

A moment later it was tight around his eyes and she was laughing helplessly, watching as he bumped into the end of the bed and stretched his arms out, trying to catch her.

It wasn’t until he accused her of unfairness that she picked up the unadorned white scarf she’d chosen for him. He had caught her by then and was laughingly trying to pull her toward the bed.

The world disappeared once she tied the scarf around her head. “Goodness,” she said.

“It’s odd, isn’t it?” Elijah’s lazy, happy voice came from somewhere to her right.

“Are you on the bed?” she asked uncertainly.

“Yes. Lying here imagining you stumbling about the way I did.”

“Wretch!” she scolded, turning and walking toward his voice, hands outstretched. She bumped into the bed and fell forward.

Strong arms scooped her up and placed her next to him. “I should have taken off my boots,” he said thoughtfully. “Would it be cheating to start over? I’m not sure I can manage that with the blindfold.”

“Yes,” she said, wiggling about until she was fairly sure she wouldn’t fall off the bed.

“You forgot something too.” There was a thump that sounded like a boot hitting the ground.

“Not the Champagne,” she said. She knew exactly where she was—on the left side of her bed at the head—and that meant the little table with the glasses of Champagne was just at her hand. Which it was. She just managed to touch a stem with her fingertips and then wrap her hand around it.

She realized that she could even sip Champagne.

“You forgot the chessboard,” he said, amusement dark in his voice. “Dear me, we’ll just have to think of something else to do.”

“We don’t need a chessboard! Are you—” She put out an arm. “Are you returning to the bed?”

The mattress sagged a bit, answering her question. “Yes.”

“I shall give you a glass of Champagne.”

“We can always move to my bed after this one is drenched,” Elijah said cheerfully.

She managed to put her own glass back on the table and pick up his. Their hands bumped, but the glass was saved.

“I shall drink the whole glass right now,” he said in her ear. “Otherwise I can’t answer for its safety.”

“I should like to see you as tipsy as the marquise,” she said, trying to find her glass again.

“What are you doing?”

“I’m just—” There was a tinkle, then the sound of shattering crystal. “I was just trying to find my glass,” she said sadly.




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