Oh, goodness. Oh, heavens.
This day was definitely not unfolding the way she
had pictured.
She had not expected the Domino to be a gentleman.
She had certainly not expected a tall, handsome, young
gentleman with such a winning smile.
She was not sure what she had anticipated instead. She
only knew that it was not this.
He seemed not at all concerned by her presence instead
of her father’s, or by her declaration of having a pistol.
His manner remained amiable while he warmed himself
in front of the fire. He kept flashing those brief, stunning
smiles of reassurance.
They did not reassure her at all. Instead he struck her
as very dangerous.
That could be due to the way the fire’s light turned him
into a collection of hard angles, or the way his eyes appeared much more intense and alert than his demeanor
required.
It could be the result of his wealth, evidenced in the cut
and make of that dark gray riding coat he had removed, and
the quality of the high boots and snug doeskin that encased
his legs. Even his dark hair was expensive, with the
short, wispy, flyaway cut that damp and wind enhanced
rather than ruined.
His appearance was the least of it, however. She could not
ignore the way the atmosphere in the room had altered with
his arrival, as if he gave off tiny, invisible lightning bolts
of power.
“Sir, I think that we should get on with the purpose of
this meeting.”
“With the weather, there is no hurry. Neither one of us
is going anywhere soon.”
She wished that she had not allowed him to come so
close. He stood no more than six feet away and towered
above her. She could not ignore his size, or the way he made
her feel small and vulnerable and at a bigger disadvantage
than was fair.
“I would still like to finish this in good time.”
One of those smiles half-formed, a private one that reflected
some thought in his head. “Who are you?” he asked.
“Does it matter?”
“It may matter a great deal. For all I know, you thought
I wanted to meet a different Kelmsleigh, and you will leave
here with facts that you should not have. That could cause
an innocent, unsuspecting man grief.”
“I should say that is unlikely.” Her voice sounded sharp
to her own ears. He spoke as if his information would not
be good news. “However, since you fear making revelations to a disinterested party, I will identify the Kelmsleigh
who interests me. He was employed by the Board
of Ordnance. I am hoping that your information relates to
his position there.”
His smile proved less amiable this time. A tad predatory,
if truth be told. It could be the harsh light, of course,
but— To her dismay, he stepped toward her with his attention
fixed on her face.
“I insist that you stay where you are.” She hated the
way her demand came out a fearful bleat.
He continued toward her.
She jumped to her feet. The shawl fell to the ground.
She did not aim the pistol but she gripped it soundly. “Do
not come any closer. I do know how to fire this.”
He halted an arm’s span away. Close enough that she
could see that his eyes were dark. Very dark. Close enough
that if she did fire, she could not miss. He ignored the
pistol and instead studied her face.
“Who are you?” he asked again.
“You call yourself something as silly as the Domino,
and you demand that I reveal my name? My identity is no
more important than yours.”
“What is your part in all of this? Are you an accomplice?
A lover? Perhaps you are a relative of one of the
soldiers who died? I would not want this meeting to start a
vendetta.”
His gaze all but skewered her and his scrutiny unsettled
her in the oddest way. For all his suspicions he kept flashing
that vague, appealing smile that offered . . . friendship
and . . . excitement and . . . things that she should not even
be thinking about at this moment. He had the kind of face
that made women silly, and it annoyed her that she was
proving more susceptible than this situation should ever
allow.
She raised the pistol just enough, so it did not point
down but instead out from her hip. He glanced at the
weapon, then his gaze was all for her face again. Only
now he looked like a man who had been challenged but
knew he would win the contest.
“What information do you have?” she demanded.
“How much money do you have?”
“Enough.”
“How much do you think is enough?”
“I am not so stupid as to bargain against myself. Name
your price.”
“And if you don’t have it?” He nodded to the pistol.
“Do you think to force me to reveal everything, no matter
what?”
Suddenly he was even closer. His body stood an inch
from the pistol’s barrel, and only a few more from her. She
looked up at him in surprise.
Her breath caught. He appeared very dangerous now,
in ways that had nothing to do with pistols. His gaze and
smile were intended to charm and seduce and he had released
something invisible to that end as well.
She doubted any woman would be immune to this man.
It was as if his masculinity spoke to her primitive self and
her mind had no say in the conversation.
She physically reacted even while she clung to a mental
shield. Wicked little arrows of stimulation shot around
her body. She valiantly fought to thwart his effect, but those
arrows just flashed along their exciting paths, ignoring her
ladylike dismay.
“It would be better if you put that gun down,” he said
quietly. “We met to be allies, not adversaries. Friends, not
enemies.”
He spoke the word friends in a velvet voice. She grasped
the pistol more firmly.
“Give the gun to me.” He spoke gently, but in a firm
command. His eyes reflected confidence that he would have
his way on this matter, or on any other that he chose.
In desperate rebellion, she cocked the hammer.
“Two clicks. You do know how to use it.” He scowled.
No longer a “friend,” he appeared hard and angry. “You
are being foolish. At least point it away from me. It might
go off accidentally now.”
“I will use it if I must. Do not test my resolve on that.”
“It is not resolve that I sense in you right now.”
“Then your senses fail you.”
“Where women are concerned, my senses never fail
me. Not this sense at least.”
He alluded to those stupid arrows and her breathless
fear and the shocking stimulation. He knew. Worse, he had
actually broached the matter out loud.
He studied her, weighing something. His gaze both
lured and frightened her.
That smile again, intended to put her at ease and to
flatter without words. “I dare not confide what I have unless
I know your role in this. You are an unexpected player.”
“If you are paid, what do you care who hears your story?”
“I doubt you have enough money to buy, even if I were
selling.”
She worried that he was correct. Everything about him
spoke of the very highest quality. A golden chain arced on
his tastefully embroidered waistcoat, no doubt attached to
a golden watch. The ten pounds and gold locket hiding in
her reticule would not impress such a man.
She may have come all this way, risked molestation and
ruin, only to fail because the Domino’s demands were too
expensive.
He watched her as if he heard the calculations in her
head. “How badly do you want this information? You are
so pretty that I may give it to you in exchange for a kiss.”
“A kiss! I am beginning to think that you are a charlatan
if you would accept such little payment.”
“You value your kisses so poorly?”
“The value of any kiss is fleeting, no matter what its
worth.”
“What a sad moral. Also an untrue one, I hope. The poets
say there are some kisses that can sustain a person’s soul
forever.”
“The poets are idiots.” This conversation had taken a
most peculiar turn.
“I fear you are correct, but I hope not. Hence my offer.
My soul tells me that you may be the one woman whose
kiss will be of eternal value.”
What ridiculous nonsense. They both knew he was flattering
to his own ends, and a kiss was not even the goal. His
expression admitted the game even while he shamelessly
played it.
She should put him in his place and let him know that
she was not some silly woman who swooned and gasped
just because a handsome man with stunning eyes and a seductive
smile flirted.
Except, despite her mental scolds, she did feel a little
light-headed and giddy, if truth be told. She was close to
gasping. The flattery made her blood hum and sparkle.
“I must find out if you are that woman, of course,” he
said. “Since you do not want to trade, I am forced to steal.”
His head angled and dipped. His lips brushed hers.
Shock paralyzed her. A thousand flutters beat in her chest.
The thrilling little arrows multiplied and aimed through
her entire body. Roger had kissed her a few times, and while
the kisses had been very nice, the effect had been nothing
like this. But then Roger had not been a stranger and the
kisses had not been scandalous, dangerous, and deliciously
forbidden.
His lips did not just rest on hers. They subtly teased
and moved and pressed. A wicked little nip made her heart
flip and rise.
A new touch distracted her. Astonished her. A new softness,
moist and devilish. Good heavens, the tip of his
tongue was tickling the sensitive underside of her lower
lip, evoking shivers that cascaded down her body.
Within her daze she felt him gently grasp her wrist. He
moved her arm aside so the pistol aimed at the wall to her
right.
The weapon no longer separated them or protected her.
His grasp controlled her and the weapon, but this kiss interested
her much more than the voice of caution in her
mind that gave one panicked protest.
He moved closer. Her heart rose to her throat.
His right hand slowly moved around her neck with a
stunning caress of physical connection. Careful, but controlling.
Warm, but not entirely soft. The sensation of his
skin on hers, and the slight roughness of his touch, mesmerized
her. His hand evoked wonderful chills, until it
cupped her nape. He kissed her again.
Harder this time. More demanding. More aggressive.
He toyed with her vulnerability and asserted a dominance
that, heaven help her, she did not begin to know how to
resist. She no longer even noticed that she was being wicked
to permit this, or note that she had inexplicably become
stupid. A chaos of pleasurable sensations obscured such
sensible thoughts.
His left hand moved and covered hers over the pistol
grip. With caressing, careful fingers, he seduced the weapon
from her hold.
Her suddenly empty hand caused one thread of sense
to reassert itself.
What was she doing?
She opened her eyes, literally and metaphorically. What
she saw jolted her out of her daze.
The door stood open. And they were not alone. Another
man stood behind the Domino.
Her seducer stopped the kiss. Frowning, he followed the
direction of her distraction and glanced over his shoulder.
Alarm crashed through him.
“What the—?”
The intruder saw the pistol and rushed forward. The
Domino pivoted and thrust her out of the way. She fell
with a thump back in the chair.
A turmoil of movement blurred in front of her. The
new man threw himself against the Domino, sending them
both onto the floor. Another hand grasped at the gun while
they tumbled and grappled in a heap.
A loud crack snapped through the chamber. Then the
intruder was up and running, and the dark threshold swallowed
him.