Scandal And The Duchess
she’d lain awake most of the night, worried he’d gone and wouldn’t be back. Worried that he’d found another damsel in distress to help, one more interesting than Rose.
    When she’d heard Steven stumble in at a small hour in the morning, she’d let out a sigh of relief. She’d wanted to go to him, speak to him, make sure he was all right. It had taken all Rose’s strength of will to keep herself in her chamber and away from him.
    Now she eased her fingers over his temples, finding his close-cropped hair warm and sleek. She liked the way the shorn ends tickled her fingers.
    “Mmm,” Steven said. “That’s nice.”
    Steven
was nice, and Rose desired him—she knew what the heat flushing her body meant.
    “I’ve always been good at soothing away hurts,” Rose said.
    Steven’s eyes flicked open, his gaze seeking hers. “Have you now?” He finished with an upturn of lips, a wicked one. “Skilled with your hands, are you?”
    Her face went hot, but she kept her voice light. “Are you flirting with me, Captain McBride?”
    “With my own fiancée? Of course I am.” His smiled broadened. “I’m not a polite man, Rosie, I warn you.”
    Rose didn’t want to be polite. She wanted to sit here and drown in him, to let him smile at her like that all day long.
    She made herself ease away and rise to her feet. “We should get on.”
    Steven looked up at her from where he lay back on his elbows, his gaze taking in every inch of her. “You’re right, Rosie. We should carry on until we’re both satisfied.”
    Rose flushed and turned to the next half of the staircase. “You’re being naughty now.”
    “I’m naughty all the time, sweetest Rose.”
    He came off the steps and to his feet, moving swiftly for a man with a bad headache. Steven caught up to her and stopped her, Rose one step above him.
    The stair took away their difference in height, putting their faces on the same level. Steven’s breath touched Rose’s lips, reminding her of the all-too-brief kiss he’d given her on the staircase at the hotel.
    What was it about staircases? Rose couldn’t stop herself reaching out and touching his cheek.
    Steven’s guarded expression dropped. He looked at her with naked wanting, no disguising it, no holding back. As warmth swept through Rose, answering heat flared in his eyes.
    It was nothing to lean a small bit forward and kiss his lips.
    Steven’s eyes swept closed as his arm came around her, nothing gentle. He parted her lips with a strong mouth, pulling her close, binding her to him. He swept his tongue into her, no politeness, no reticence. This kiss was insistent and new, and the hot, wild friction of it swept away the rest of Rose’s reluctance.
    No man had ever kissed her like this before, not with this raw, desperate wanting. These weren’t the hesitant kisses of a man who feared to offend a respectable widow. Steven knew what he wanted, and he would take it, to hell with civility.
    Rose cupped the back of his neck, again finding the sleek fineness of his hair. Strength and heat came through his body, entering hers at every point of contact. She knew his hunger as his mouth worked. Every part of Rose went shaky—the only thing holding her up was Steven. Her legs had lost all strength.
    Steven’s mouth was fire. One hand came up between them, cupping her breast in his palm, hand tightening.
    She was going to fall. Rose clutched Steven’s back, fingers pressing through his coat to the hard strength of him.
    Steven pulled away a little, but only to smooth a lock of her hair. “My Scottish Rose.” His voice was low, uneven.
    Rose couldn’t speak, couldn’t answer. She wanted to kiss him again. Wanted it more than anything, more than she should, especially standing in this house.
    Steven brushed her cheek with the backs of his fingertips. His brows drew together, then he touched the corner of her mouth.
    Just as Rose thought he’d pulled away, he made a raw sound in his throat and kissed her

Similar Books

Kim

Rudyard Kipling

The Fear Trials

Lindsay Cummings

Herodias

Gustave Flaubert

The White Goddess

Robert Graves

The Furies of Rome

Robert Fabbri

The Grim Ghost

Terry Deary