Deck The Halls With Love: Lost Lords Of Pembrook Novella

Deck The Halls With Love: Lost Lords Of Pembrook Novella by Lorraine Heath Page A

Book: Deck The Halls With Love: Lost Lords Of Pembrook Novella by Lorraine Heath Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lorraine Heath
Tags: Romance, England, Historical Romance, Love Story, Regency Romance
for her, but I’ve a mind to examine her first and ensure she is a virgin as you claim.”
    A round of raucous laughter accompanied the ribald suggestion. Rafe suspected those who laughed the loudest were striving to cover the fact that they weren’t quite comfortable with the direction in which the evening was going.
    “By all means. Each of you may examine her,” Wortham said callously as though he were offering little more than a mare for purchase. “Then I shall entertain further bids.”
    “Excellent. I’ll go first, shall I?” He and Wortham headed for the door.
    Rafe envisioned Ekroth’s pudgy, sausage-like fingers traveling over her silky thighs, ripping at her undergarments, shoving into—
    “I’m taking her.” Rafe could hardly countenance the words that burst from his own mouth with such authority that Ekroth and Wortham stumbled in their tracks, while the other lords gaped at him. Obviously, he’d imbibed a bit more than he’d thought, but it didn’t matter now. The challenge had been spoken, and he never recanted his statements.
    Standing, he tugged on his black brocade waistcoat that suddenly felt far too tight. “If any of you touch her, I shall separate from you the particular part that touched her. Wortham has assured us that she is pure. I don’t want her soiled by your sweaty hands or anything else. Have I made myself clear?”
    “But you were only here to watch, to ascertain”—Wortham cut off his sentence and stepped nearer, lowering his voice—“to ascertain my ability to cover my debt.”
    “When have I ever confided my plans in you?”
    “Then you’ll pay me the five hundred quid that Ekroth was willing to pony up?”
    “I’ll allow you to continue to breathe. We’ll call it even, shall we?”
    “But the terms of this meeting were that she would go to the highest bidder.”
    “What value do you place on your life? Do you think anyone here can match it?” He waited a heartbeat. “I thought not.”
    He downed what remained of his Scotch before striding to the desk, lords leaping out of his way. If he were not a stranger to laughter, he might have at least chuckled at their antics. He found a scrap of paper, dipped a pen in the inkwell, and scratched out the address of his residence. Putting a blotter on it to keep it in place, he turned and headed toward the door. “My address. Have her there at four tomorrow. Good evening, gentlemen. As always, it’s been a pleasure to be in such esteemed company.”
    He was in his carriage, traveling through the London streets, before it resonated within him exactly what he’d done.
    “Good God,” he muttered, even though no one was about to hear. What the devil had he been thinking? Obviously, he hadn’t.
    He glared out the window at the fog-shrouded night. His taking her had nothing to do with the fact that she was in effect being abandoned, because she wasn’t. She was being given to someone to care for her. She wouldn’t go hungry, she wouldn’t be smacked about, she wouldn’t have to work until her fingers bled and the small of her back ached so hideously that she feared she might never be able to straighten. She would lie in silk on beds and fainting couches and wait for a man to part her thighs. She would eat chocolates and plump her lips. She would run her tongue around those lips and gaze at her benefactor through half-lowered lids.
    And he was her benefactor. Damnation.
    He should have allowed Ekroth to have her. His fingers weren’t all that pudgy. He could call on him in the morning, barter, let him take her.
    But then he’d appear to be a man who didn’t know his own mind.
    So he was stuck with her. For a time, anyway.
    Perhaps it wouldn’t be so awful. She’d never had a man. He could guide her toward pleasing him in the manner he required. She would have no other experience, so she would know nothing different, and therefore she would not be disappointed.
    The possibilities began to have merit. He didn’t

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