After listening to her footsteps fade, he returned to the bedroom, and his bed. Settling beneath the covers, sensing her warmth lingering beside him, conscious of her subtle perfume wreathing all about him, he folded his arms behind his head and fixed his gaze on the window across the room.
So what now? Hed made progress, real and definite progress, but then shed stymied him in a way he hadnt been quick enough to foresee. While henceforth he could, and would, have her in his bed, he could no longer simply
ask
her to be his bride. There was no argument that stood any chance of convincing her hed wanted to marry her
before
hed taken her virginity. That he hadnt known she was a virgin meant nothing, and no matter how long he waited, she would still view his proposal as the insult shed warned him not to offer her.
And shed refuse. Adamantly. And shed only grow more stubborn the harder he pressed.
Admittedly he had, for one foolish moment, considered using the age-old argument based on virginity and honor as a possible supporting reason for their wedding. He should have guessed how she would react.
He lay staring into space as his household slowly awakened, juggling possibilities, assessing tacks. If hed asked her to marry him when hed first set out to, rather than letting her distract him with her challenge into seducing her first, he wouldnt now be facing this complication, yet there was no point dwelling on what couldnt be changed.
He could see only one way forward. He would have to keep silent over his intention to marry her, and instead do everything in his considerable power to lead her to conclude of her own accord that marrying him was her true and natural destiny. More, her greatly desired destiny.
Once shed realized that, he could offer for her hand, and she would accept.
If he applied himself to the task, how long could it take? A week?
The grandes dames had accepted the week hed originally stipulated readily enough. That week had now passed, but he doubted any of them would hie north to castigate himnot yet. If he dallied too long, someone would turn up to lecture him again and exhort him to action, but he probably had another week up his sleeve.
A week he would devote to convincing Minerva that she should be his duchess.
A week to make it clear she already was, but just hadnt realized.
His lips curved, just as Trevor looked in from the dressing room.
His valet saw his smile, saw the bed. Raised his brows inquiringly.
Royce saw no reason to keep him in the dark. My chatelainewho will shortly be your mistress. He fixed his gaze on Trevors face. A fact she doesnt yet know, so no one will tell her.
Trevor smiled. Naturally not, Your Grace. His expression one of the utmost equanimity, he started to pick up Royces clothes.
Royce studied him. You dont seem all that surprised.
Straightening, Trevor shook out his coat. You have to choose a lady, and all things considered I find it hard to imagine you could do better than Miss Chesterton. He shrugged. Nothing to be surprised about.
Royce humphed, and got out of the bed. I will, of course, wish to know anything and everything you learn that might be pertinent. I take it you know her maid?
Folding Royces waistcoat, Trevor smiled. A young person by the name of Lucy, Your Grace.
Belting his robe, Royce narrowed his eyes on that smile. A word to the wise. I might bed the mistress, but youd be ill-advised to try the same with the maid. Shell have your balls on a stickthe mistress, not the maid. And in the circumstances, Id have to let her.
Trevors eyes opened wide. Ill bear that in mind, Your Grace. Now, do you wish to shave?
Minerva awoke when Lucy, her maid, came bustling into the room.
After leaving Royce, shed slipped back to her room without seeing anyone; shed undressed, put on her nightgown, brushed out her tangled hair, got into bedand to her surprise had fallen deeply asleep.
She yawned, stretchedand felt twinges where she never had before. She watched Lucy open the curtains, then shake out her gown; when Lucy turned to the armoire, she surreptitiously peeked down the front of her nightgown.
She blinked, then looked across the room. The black with the buttons up the front, Lucy. Just leave it over the chair. Ill get up shortly, but you dont need to wait. I can manage that gown by myself.
And innocent Lucy didnt need to see the telltale marks on her breasts. She didnt want to think what she might discover farther down.
Ive brought up your washing water. Do you need me for anything else, maam?
No, thank you, Lucy. You can go and have your breakfast.
Thank you, miss. With a cheery smile and a bobbed curtsy, Lucy took herself off. The door closed behind her.
Minerva exhaled, sank deeper into the mattress, and let her thoughts range over the previous night, and its entirely unexpected events. That Royce would act so directlyand that she would respond so definitelyhad never entered her head. But he had, and she had, so where were they now?
Shed always assumed hed be a vigorous lover. In that, hed exceeded her expectations; her untutored self had never even imagined much of what, at his hands, she had now experienced. Yet despite her inexperience, she knew himshe hadnt missed the hunger, the real need that had had him carting her off to his bed, that had driven him as hed ravished her.
Possessed her.
Repeatedly.
When shed woken before dawn, just as, from behind, hed filled her, and proceeded to demonstrate yet another way he could possess herher body, her senses, and her mindutterly and completely, with his lips in the hollow below her ear rather than on hers, she, her senses, had been freer to absorb the nuances of his loving.
That he wanted her, desired her, she accepted without question.
That that want ran deep, she now understood.
Shed never imagined being the focus of that degree of
desire, having so much male passion concentrated on her; the recollection sent a delicious shiver through her. She couldnt deny shed found it deeply satisfying; shed be lying if she pretended she wouldnt be happy to lie with him again.
If he asked, which he would. He wasnt, she knew, finished with her; that had been explicit in their final moments that morning.
Thank God shed had sufficient wit to seize the chance and make it plain that she neither expected nor wanted to receive an offer from him.
She hadnt forgotten that other offer he was due to maketo the lady hed chosen as his duchess. Not knowing if hed made a formal offer yet, shed needed to ensure he wouldnt, in some Machiavellian moment, decide to use her virginitythe taking of itas cause to marry her instead.
While hed toed the grandes dames line, he wasnt happy about it; he might well seize an opportunity to take a different tack. And to him, marrying her might be preferable to having to deal with some unknown young lady who would know very little about him.
SheMinervawould be a more comfortable choice.
She didnt need to think to know her response to that. He would be a sound husband to any lady who accepted the loveless partnership he would offer; just as long as said lady didnt expect love or fidelity, all would be well.
For herself, love, real and abiding, was the only coin for which she would exchange her heart. Extensive experience of Varisey unions had bolstered her stance; their type of marriage was not for her. Avoiding, if necessary actively resisting, any suggestion of marrying Royce remained an unaltered, unalterable goal; nothing on that front had changed.
And, to her immense relief, spending the night in his bed hadnt seduced her heart into loving him; her feelings toward him hadnt changed all that muchor only on the lust side, not in terms of love.
Thinking of how she now felt about him
she frowned. Despite her resistance, she did feel something
more
for
himunexpected feelings that had developed since his return. Feelings that had driven her panic of yesterday, when shed thought he would die.
Those new feelings had grown through seeing him with his people, from his attitudes and actions toward those he deemed in his care. From all the decisions and acts that distinguished him so definitively from his father. The physical pleasure hed introduced her to hadnt influenced her as much as all those things.
Yet while he might differ from his father in many ways, when it came to his wife and his marriage, he would revert to type. Hed demonstrated as much in his approach to his prospective bride.
If she let herself be bullied into marrying him, she would risk falling in love with himirrevocably, irretrievablyand then like Caro Lamb she would pine, wither, and eventually go mad when he, not at all in love with her, left her for another. As he inevitably would.
She wasnt so foolish as to believe that she might, through loving him, change him. No; if she married him, he, indeed everyone, would expect her to stand meekly by while he indulged as he wished with an endless succession of other ladies.
She snorted, threw back the covers, and swung her legs out of bed. Thats not going to happen.
No matter what she felt for him, regardless of what evolved from her infatuation-obsession, no matter
what
new aspects of attraction developed over the however many nights she might spend in his bed, she would not fall in love with him, ergo she wouldnt marry him.
At least they were both now very clear on that last point.
Standing, she crossed to the basin and pitcher on her dresser; pouring water into the basin, she let her thoughts range ahead. As matters now stood
Setting down the pitcher, she stared at the settling water as the immediate future cleared in her mind.
Of necessity her liaison with Royce would be short-lived
he would marry soon, and soon after, she would leave. A few days, a week. Two weeks at most.
Too short a time to fall in love.
Slipping her hands into the bowl, she splashed water on her face, feeling increasingly bright. More alert and expectant, almost intrigued over what the day might bringreassured and confident that there was no reason she couldnt indulge with him again.
The risk wasnt significant. Her heart would be safe.
Safe enough so she could enjoy without a care.
By evening, expectation had turned to impatience. Minerva sat in the music room, ostensibly watching yet another of Shakespeares plays while she brooded on the shortcomings of her day.
A perfectly ordinary day, filled with nothing more than the customary eventswhich was the problem. Shed thought
but shed been wrong.
Royce had summoned her to his study for their usual morning meeting with Handley; other than a fleeting moment when shed walked into the room and their eyes had metand he and she had both paused, both, she suspected, suddenly reminded of how the others skin had felt against theirs
but then hed blinked, looked down, and shed walked forward and sat, and hed subsequently treated her exactly as he had the previous day.
Shed followed his lead, then and later, as theyd parted, then met again, throughout the day, confident that at some point they would meet privately
but she was no longer so sure that would happen. Shed never engaged in a liaison before; she didnt know the script.
He did, but he was seated two rows in front of her, chatting to Caroline Courtney, who had claimed the chair beside him.
Under cover of the dinner conversations, hed asked her if Cranny still kept stocks of the chicken essence shed used to administer to them when theyd suffered childhood chills. She hadnt been sure, but when hed suggested they send a
bottle to the Honeymans for their daughter, shed detoured to see the housekeeper before joining the company in the music room, thus missing her chance to sit next to him.
Narrowing her eyes on the back of his head, she wished she could see inside. What was he thinking? Specifically, what was he thinking about her?
Was
he thinking about her?
Or had one night been enough?
The more confident part of her brazenly scoffed, but a more vulnerable part wondered.
At the end of the play, she clapped politely, caught Royces eye for an instant, then excused herself and retired, leaving Margaret to manage the tea tray. She could do without spending the next half hour surrounded by the lascivious throng with him in the same room, aware of his gaze occasionally resting on her, fighting to keep hers from himwhile every inch of her skin prickled with anticipation.
Reaching her room, willing her mind from the question of Would he? she stripped off her clothes, donned her nightgown, shrugged on her robe, then rang for Lucy.
She had a set of faint marks at the top of one thigh that was beyond her ability to explain.
Seated at her dressing table, she was brushing out her hair when Lucy breezed in.
Youre early tonight, maam. Lucy bent to pick up her gown. Didnt you enjoy the play?
She pulled a face. Theyre becoming rather boringjust as well the fairs next week or Id have to devise some other entertainment. She glanced at Lucy as the maid bustled to the armoire. Did you learn anything?
Opening the armoire, Lucy shook her dark head. Mr. Handleys a quiet onehes kind and smiles, but hes not one to talk. And of course he sits at the top end of the table. Trevors closer to me, and hes a right chatterer, but although he natters on, he never really says anything, if you know what I mean.
I can imagine. She hadnt really thought Royce would employ staff who didnt keep his secrets.