Lady Killer (28 page)

Read Lady Killer Online

Authors: Michele Jaffe

Tags: #FICTION/Romance/General

“Actually, Crispin is lying as well,” Ian, the elder statesman, told Miles. “We came to make sure you had not run away. And that you would be attending the baby animal ball tonight.”

“I am not sure that is a good idea,” Miles said in a curiously taut voice. He appeared to be addressing his sheets.

Ian frowned. “I beg your pardon?”

“Oh God,” Miles gasped, gripping the covers in his hand. “Oh God.”

“None of us are thrilled about going either,” Ian said, “but I don’t think you should be quite this alarmed.”

Miles would have liked to differ with him, would have liked to say that he was feeling something so sublime, so different from anything he had ever felt before, that he knew it was cause for serious concern, but any ability he had to speak left him when, timidly, Clio circled the tip of his shaft with her tongue and then covered it with her mouth.

“Ahhllgooohh!” Miles groaned.

“What?” Crispin asked.

“I—” Miles gulped as Clio planted teasing little kisses along his length—“think”—she curled her fingers around him—“the ball”—her palm slid up his shaft—“tonight”—her thumb rubbed back and forth against his tip—“will be”—she sucked him entirely into her mouth—“remarkable.”

The last word came out more as a sigh than a word, but Sebastian, who was standing closest to Miles, caught it. “Remarkable. Are you planning something we do not know about?”

“Yes,” Miles said. “Oh yes.” Clio’s mouth roved up and down him now, the fingers of one hand following, the fingers of the other gently caressing him from beneath. He gasped.

“Are you all right, Miles?” Crispin asked, leaning closer.

Miles panted slightly as her thumb ran up the entire length of him. “No. I am in a bit of agony. I think you should all leave.”

“You really are ill. Do you want me to send for a doctor? Or for Bianca?” Ian asked.

“No,” Miles replied quickly, gasping again despite himself. “I will be fine. In a moment. It will pass soon. I will come to see you then.”

“You are sure?” Tristan asked, hovering near the threshold.

“Yes!” Miles shouted, but not at them. As soon as the door was closed, Miles threw back the covers. That was a mistake. Because as marvelous as what he had been feeling had felt, seeing Clio’s small form curled between his legs, her hand on his shaft, her lips wrapped around him, utterly undid him. Looking at her, feeling her, he hovered on the edge of his release for less than half a second and then plunged over it, exploding into her mouth in wave after wave after wave of sparkling passion.


Clio!
” he shouted with exaltation, panting and moaning her name. It was the sweetest sound she had ever heard.

When he could move again, he pulled her up his body and held her against his chest and kissed her on the lips. Those lips.

“Clio Thornton, what have you done to me?” Miles asked. His body was tingling, his mind was reeling, his ears were ringing, and he was lying in bed with the most beautiful woman in the world.

“I’m not sure,” she answered candidly. She opened and closed her mouth a few times, experimenting with the slight ache in her cheeks. “I read about that once in a book, but I do not know what to call it.” She blushed slightly. “Did I do it right? Was it pleasant?”

Miles shook his head. “It was most definitely not pleasant.”

Clio looked alarmed. “I did it wrong. I am sorr—”

“Definitely not pleasant,” Miles interrupted. “More like extraordinary. Sublime. Spectacular.”

“Really?”

“Yes. And a bit excruciating. As a matter of fact, I think it is time for me to retaliate.”

“What do you mean?”

Miles did not answer, but used his body to tip her onto her side. He stretched himself out behind her, his chin resting on the top of her head, his chest pressed close to her back. Sliding one arm underneath her, he let the other trail along the curve of her waist, to her hip, then let it rest there. “Look in front of you,” he whispered in her ear.

Clio’s eyes had been closed as she reveled in the sensation of his body pressed against her back, and when she opened them she inhaled sharply. In the mirror that had been propped against the wall, she could see herself, naked, extended to her full length, amidst the tangle of white linen sheets. Behind her rose the planes of Miles’s body, his cheek leaning now against her cheek, his arm possessively draped over her stomach. As she watched, he let his tongue slip out and trace the curve of her ear, then turned his eyes back to the mirror and held her gaze. She felt the heat of his hand moving down her stomach, the soft caresses of his fingers as they combed through the brown curls between her legs.

“You are so beautiful, Clio,” he whispered to her, kissing her forehead, her cheekbones. “Look at how lovely you are.”

Clio could not answer, could barely even moan, as, her eyes locked on his, she felt his fingers enter her. She sighed with awe as his thumb and pointer finger pulled her taut, while his middle finger snaked over the glistening surface of her rose-colored bud. Each move he made echoed wildly in the cavern of her body, and she felt as though inside of her a spring were being coiled tighter and tighter.

“Put your hand over mine,” Miles commanded her, and she did, her fingers lying over his, over the fingers that were touching her. In the mirror she saw only his eyes, but she felt his hand on her, her hand on his. The rhythm of them both caressing and stroking her body, the feel of his fingers under hers, of her fingers touching herself, too, was driving her wild. Her fingers slipped off of his, so that she was touching herself while he held her open, but her glance never left his. She stroked herself tentatively at first, then more forcefully, stunned by the exciting feel of her fingers on her slick wetness. She grew hotter and bigger under her own touch and she felt her nipples turn to hard points. All the while his eyes did not leave hers in the mirror but watched from behind, incinerating her with their heated gaze. She could feel his body growing hard behind her, could tell that looking at her aroused him as much as having him look aroused her. This awareness of him observing her as, for the first time, she brought herself to a climax, wound the spring of her self-control to its limit. Looking only at him, only into his gaze, she felt herself let go, felt pleasure twist and curl in wild eddies through her body, springing along every sinew, filling her with warmth and joy and finally almost painful pleasure. Her release came not once but three times, first by her hand, then with the additional pressure of one of Miles’s fingers on her very tip, then with his whole hand pressed over hers, with their fingers twined together, together pressing and stroking and buffing at her until she hollered his name and shuddered against him.

Miles held her tightly against him, waiting for whatever strange burst of insight she was going to share with him in the aftermath of her climax. He heard nothing but felt her lips move against his chest and strained to make out the words.

“I love you,” he thought he saw her say. But of course, that was just his imagination.

What she had really said, what she said again a few moments later, was “Food.”

“Food?” Miles repeated. “What does that have to do with the vampire?”

Clio tilted her head so she was looking at him upside down. “Nothing. I am hungry.” Her expression altered and she flipped onto her stomach so she was facing him. “But I am wrong. It does have something to do with the vampire. Because, you see, I feel fine. And if I were the vampire, and if I had not killed anyone since we found Flora, I would not feel fine at all. I would be ill.”

“Does this mean that you will believe me now? Or rather, believe that you are not the vampire?”

“Probably,” Clio answered cautiously. “It would be good to know if a body was found last night.”

Miles slipped out of the bed. Without bothering to pull on a robe he crossed to the door, opened it, and summoned Corin. Clio meant to listen to their conversation, but she could not drag her eyes from his body, from the curve of his bottom, the muscles that rippled in his back as he leaned against the door frame, the way his thighs and calves looked like the models for an antique sculpture. He was spectacularly beautiful, and even more so when he turned around and sauntered back to the bed.

“No new bodies have been found,” he reported, then, feeling her eyes on him, asked with amusement, “What are you looking at?”

Clio swallowed hard. “I felt it last night, but I did not realize how big and thick it was.”

“You really should not say things like that, Clio, not if you want me to stay sane,” Miles whispered, acutely aware of the fact that he was growing hard.

“What do you—oooh,” Clio said as the direction of her gaze changed. “I was talking about your scar.”

“My scar,” Miles repeated as if the words had no meaning. “Oh. My scar. On my stomach.”

“You got that three years ago. In pursuit of the vampire,” Clio said. “When you caught him sucking that woman’s blood. You almost died.”

“Yes,” Miles nodded.

“I am glad you didn’t.”

She had sounded so sincere when she said it, as if it really made an important difference to her whether he lived or died, and Miles had been thrilled. But that had been seven hours ago. Now, seven hours and five carafes of wine later, Miles knew better. Now, thanks to Justin Greeley’s kind visit to him, he saw it all with piercing clarity.

Late that morning, when he had come back from reassuring his cousins that he was fine, he had found her pacing his room, brimming with excitement. She had shown him the news sheet that reported her arrest, assuming the vampire had planted the story and seeing it as evidence that the fiend was getting desperate to get rid of her.

He should have gone along with it. He never should have told her the truth. But he had been convinced that she would see his plan was the best. He had been positive she would understand that faking her arrest and having every person who came to the jail to see her watched was the best way to identify the vampire. Surely the vampire would come, just to be certain. And surely he would give himself away by some look, some sign, when he found that the person in the cell was not Clio Thornton at all.

But she had not understood. All she had understood was that it meant she was confined to his house, to his room. And that he had kept a secret from her. Well damn her, who the hell was she to berate him for having secrets? She had secrets, too. Such as the name of that man she was in love with. Who the hell was he?

Of course, he had learned that soon enough. Miles dragged the sixth decanter of wine toward him and, not bothering with a glass, emptied it directly into his mouth. He was glad he had given Corin the night off so he would not have to tolerate his subtle, calculating glance at the pile of empty wine bottles that told the story of his debauch. He had already endured it once, when he asked Corin to bring in twelve decanters, and he did not think he could stomach it again.

He had given the order immediately after Justin Greeley’s charming call on him. Justin had gained access to him by saying that he came at Clio’s behest. Silly foolish Clio, he explained as Miles’s guards unhanded him, had asked him to visit the viscount, and tell him that she wanted no more to do with him. She had just used the viscount for retaliation when her lover ran off to France, but with Justin back her need for revenge was at an end. Personally, Justin confided, if he had been a woman he would have preferred the viscount, but there was no accounting for taste, and Clio was adamant on the fact that she loved Justin. Justin averred as how women like Clio might be interesting at the beginning but palled in time, and wondered aloud if he would be clever enough to evade her watchful eye. He sighed and said he envied the viscount’s near escape from Clio’s snares, and was glad to be the instrument of his deliverance. Miles had nodded to everything Greeley had said, and kept nodding until the hateful house-hound excused himself and left. Measured, steady nodding, like the regular rotation of the gears on a timed bomb.

Justin’s story had not felt quite right, but Miles realized he no longer knew what right was. Clio had felt right. So right it hurt.

Miles gulped the contents of decanter number seven and turned to assess his untapped supply. Five decanters left. Five days until his wedding. Five days he intended to spend well and truly drunk.

Damn Clio Thornton.

The messenger came just after midnight. He was more a boy than a messenger, scraggly and underfed, but he refused to take any food.

“Give the message to the lady and leave, them’s my orders,” he told Snug four times, and finally if unwillingly, Snug showed him into the study where Clio was working.

Or rather, fuming. Toast and Inigo were sitting at the far end, away from her, instinctively avoiding the waves of rage that were emanating from her without her realizing it. Even the puppy, who lay curled at Toast’s feet staring up at him adoringly, was strangely subdued by her mood. She had been poring over her version of
A Compendium
all night, into which she had copied all the strange underlining from Miles’s copy earlier that day, but the words
‘E’en rises and die else young fatter is every moon hide can then and comely’
refused to resolve themselves into any reasonable sentiment no matter how hard she glowered at them. She did not know why she had bothered; Miles had disclaimed any knowledge of how the underlinings got into his book, and they could be as old as the text itself, but at least it was something to do. Or not do, since her eyes kept wandering from the page. The truth was that her mind was distracted, which made her glower harder. As Snug and the boy entered, she looked up and transferred her glower to them.

Other books

The Romance Report by Amy E. Lilly
Ponga un vasco en su vida by Óscar Terol, Susana Terol, Iñaki Terol, Kike Díaz de Rada
Forget Me Never by M J Rutter
Sing Fox to Me by Sarak Kanake
Time Patrol by Poul Anderson
Sacrifice of Fools by Ian McDonald
Doing Time by Bell Gale Chevigny
Silent Time by Paul Rowe
The Beam: Season Three by Sean Platt, Johnny B. Truant
Demon From the Dark by Kresley Cole