Excerpt from Chapter Three:
After waylaying Guy Devoran to demand his help in her
urgent quest, Sarah Callaway attends a masked costume ball the next
night at Blackdown House. She expects to meet Guy, but instead finds
herself at the mercy of his cousins: first, Lord Ryderbourne; then Wild
Lord Jack, who leads her into the orchid house . . .
A tall man in a crimson mask and silk turban walked up
to stand beside her. His Oriental robes were flamboyantly embroidered
with dragons.
Uncertainty fractured her perception for a moment, as if
she were thrust suddenly into a fantasy. Her heart had leaped in a shock
of recognition at his expressive mouth and the hint of perfect profile,
yet the gilt-brown gaze was most definitely not Mr. Devoran’s.
This man’s eyes were filled with a similar humor and
bright intelligence, yet she thought that grim determination—even
something of anger—also lurked just beneath the surface.
Sarah smiled with blind courage. “Do I know you, sir?”
“Lord Jonathan Devoran St. George, at your service,
ma’am.” He bowed his head. “Guy asked me to take care of you, should
Ryder be otherwise occupied. Come! You’ll like this.”
Ah! Lord Ryderbourne’s younger brother, Wild Lord Jack,
who had recently returned to England from India. Yet Lord Jonathan
enjoyed an oddly terrifying reputation in the popular accounts of his
adventures in the East.
Sarah dismissed her stab of apprehension and took his
proffered arm.
They ducked together beneath the palm fronds and through
a concealed doorway. Trees and vines clustered, some trailing long
sprays of blossom, their roots bound in enormous clay pots. The floor
disappeared beneath a thick layer of tanbark. Far above their heads,
night scattered dark reflections between the stone ribs of a glasshouse.
The music faded as her escort led Sarah ever deeper into
the rustling jade silence.
They stepped out into a small open space, dimly lit by a
scattering of paper lanterns. A moist eddy carried earthy, flowery
scents, with a strange undercurrent of danger, like air stirred by
dragon’s wings.
Lord Jonathan released her arm, stepped away, and
slipped off his crimson mask. “Well, Mrs. Callaway,” he said. “How do
you like our little domestic jungle?”
Her heart beat hard. Orchids she had never seen before
nestled among the other plants.
“It’s amazing,” she said. “Yet I wonder if a real jungle
is anything like this.”
“No, it’s not.” His eyes studied her as if he would peel
away her skin. “This fantasy is missing the darker scents, the
secrets—and the tigers, of course. The real jungle is neither so pretty,
nor so tame.”
Prickles danced down her spine as she looked back at
him. “It doesn’t feel particularly tame to me. It feels quite real,
though the water must be piped in from somewhere.”
He laughed, though he still seemed on edge. “What a very
practical mind you have, Mrs. Callaway! You must be a bluestocking.”
A sudden splashing started somewhere nearby, as if
someone had just turned on a fountain. Sarah’s unsteady pulse skipped a
beat.
“We’re not alone here, my lord,” she said quietly.
“No, but you’re quite safe with me, Mrs. Callaway.”
Lord Jonathan took her arm again to lead her deeper into
the trees. The plash of falling water grew louder. . . .
He stopped to pluck a blossom. Fragrant white petals
offset the golden-yellow heart—Coelogyne cristata, the Combed
Coelogyne.
“Beautiful, is it not?” His intense gaze fixed on her
face as he twirled the orchid in his fingers. “Yet this plant’s a
parasite, I believe.”
Her sense of threat deepened, as if suspicion or dread
underlay every casual comment. Perhaps all those lurid accounts about
this powerful aristocrat were true?
“That’s not a parasite, my lord,” she said. “It’s an
orchid. It feeds mostly on air.”
“The host plant isn’t harmed?”
“No, not at all.”
“Then I’m very glad to hear it. I hate to think that
something so apparently fragile might be dangerous.”
“Dangerous?” another man’s voice asked with a distinct
note of humor.
Sarah spun about as if she were cleaved to the heart.
One booted foot propped on a fern-covered stump, his
crossed forearms resting on that taut thigh, a masked corsair lounged
beneath a riotously flowering vine. A live parrot sat on his shoulder.
A wave of heat spread down Sarah’s spine, tingling into
every limb, as if her veins melted beneath the onslaught.
“Mr. Devoran!” She swallowed hard and bobbed a small
curtsy.
His open-necked shirt offered shocking glimpses of a
powerful male throat and chest, smooth and perilous. A scarlet belt
beset with daggers and pistols emphasized his trim waist.
The parrot flew off to perch on a branch several feet
away, where it began to preen its feathers.
Guy Devoran stripped off his black mask and bowed. “Good
evening, Mrs. Callaway.” His eyes held a wild glint, as if he often
spoke with angels or demons. “I see you’ve just had the misfortune to
meet my other cousin, Wild Lord Jack. I trust the experience was
entertaining, at least?”
Lord Jonathan laughed. The family resemblance was
striking, both in bone structure and intensity—and in that perilous
intelligence.
“Yes, indeed.” Though she was floundering to understand
the strange undercurrents, a little rush of rage straightened her spine.
“His Lordship was kind enough to show me a glimpse of the tigers in the
jungle.”
Lord Jonathan raised a brow. “That was hardly my
intention, ma’am.”
“Oh, I think that it was, my lord. After all, they say
that you can transform yourself into a tiger to kill with one blow.”
“Good God!” Lord Jonathan laughed with real gaiety. “Do
they?”
Her apprehension and anger almost evaporated. Perhaps
her nerves were so frayed that she read menace into everything?
“You’re a romantic figure in the penny circulars, my
lord. Stories about the St. Georges provide plenty of entertainment for
the masses.”
“Then may I reassure you, Mrs. Callaway,” Lord Jonathan
said. “There are no tigers here. Even the canaries are caged. See! Up
there!”
Sarah glanced up. Gilt cages swung from the ceiling. A
soft twittering trickled through the quiet, then several birds broke
into song.
Yet for a split second as she first looked up, Guy
Devoran had met his cousin’s gaze. Energy sizzled between the two men,
as if they shared some terrible, silent dread—and tigers stalked the
room as clearly as if they truly gazed out from the greenery.
Sarah sat down on the stump. Her pulse pounded, alarm
roaring in flood.
“The birds are charming,” she said. “Yet I fear that you
haven’t yet had a chance to exchange family news with your cousin, Lord
Jonathan. I’d be quite content to rest here for a moment.”
“Then if you would kindly excuse us, Mrs. Callaway?” Guy
Devoran said. “Jack?”
The two men strode away and stopped to talk at the edge
of the trees. Cloaked in green darkness, they glanced back at her once.
Without question, some gathering peril had become too strong to ignore.
Sarah took a deep breath. Alien orchids bloomed all
around her. Tantalizing scents wavered on the moist air. Water droplets
fell from mysterious leaves to patter onto her face.
Her ears burned, though the noise of falling water
drowned every word of that intense conversation. How could she possibly
understand these aristocrats? Men with such casual power—but with all
that restless energy dedicated, perhaps, only to hedonism?
She glanced back at the men. Concentration and concern
stamped each handsome face. Any idea that they were dedicated only to
pleasure fled instantly. Yet they strolled over to rejoin her at last
with no obvious sense of urgency.
Sarah stood up, her heart in her mouth, as Lord Jonathan
bowed over her hand.
He laughed up at her as if he had never known anything
but merriment. “I regret that I cannot further our acquaintance, Mrs.
Callaway. My wife, Anne, will bear our first child very soon, so I
return home immediately. However, you’ll be in equally safe hands with
my cousin.”
“Thank you, Jack,” Guy Devoran commented dryly. “After
all that talk of tigers, I’m sure that your personal recommendation will
go a long way with Mrs. Callaway.”
“I’m honestly not concerned for my safety,” Sarah said.
“Then the only question that remains, ma’am,” Wild Lord
Jack replied as he bowed, “is whether Guy is safe with you.”
The dragon robes rippled as he strode away through the
trees.
Mr. Devoran leaned one shoulder against a stone pillar.
The parrot flashed back to clutch its feet onto his shirt. Its bright yellow eyes surveyed Sarah.
“Safe with who?
Safe with who?”
Guy Devoran laughed and walked the parrot down his arm
onto his fist.
“There’s no distressing family news, I hope,” Sarah
said.
“You’re kind to ask, but no, not at all, though Jack and
I were glad to catch up. Thank you for allowing us the chance.”
“Yet I thought—”
“No,” he said. “Come, ma’am! I must adjust that loud
fountain.”
He carried the bird away. Her mouth dry, Sarah followed.
They brushed past some trees into an inner court.
Falling water shimmered in the glow of a handful of lanterns. No one
else was about.
His shirtsleeves stretched over taut muscles as Mr.
Devoran thrust the bird into a cage on a stand, then bent to adjust a
valve hidden behind some greenery. The water subsided into a quiet
ripple.
“You turned on this fountain to hide your voices?” she
asked.
He glanced up. “As a signal to Jack that I’d arrived,
that’s all. The guests won’t wander in here until they’ve all eaten
supper. Then several couples will take advantage of the seclusion to
indulge in a little naughtiness with other people’s spouses. Are you
hungry?”
“Only for some truth,” she said. “I don’t really like
being played with.”
“Played with?”
“There’s something important that you’re not telling me,
Mr. Devoran. Was Lord Jonathan truly concerned about my intentions? Did
he take me in dislike?”
He dropped a green cloth over the parrot’s cage. “Not at
all, though Jack certainly wondered if you might not be another orchid.”
“Difficult, dependent, and out of place?” She smiled,
though her heart felt raw. “Not many of these plants will survive here,
will they?”
“Torn as they are from their natural habitat? Probably
not.” He gazed at a Cattleya orchid, then glanced back at her. “But
perhaps Jack only meant that you’re exotic, lush, and enticingly
sensual?”
Surprise shocked her into laughter. “Good heavens! Is
that why he asked me if orchids are parasitic?”
Mr. Devoran plucked a hanging blossom and touched her
cheek with the cool petals. Transfixed, Sarah gazed up at him, her pulse
hammering. She was painfully—absurdly—aware of the beauty of his mouth:
the perfect white teeth and firm, expressive lips.
“You truly have no idea of your real effect on men, do
you, Mrs. Callaway?”
He trailed the flower past the curve of her ear to
stroke beneath her jaw. The petals lay soft and moist against her throat
. . .
A tiny spasm tightened the muscles around his mouth,
almost as if he’d received a small blow.
The silence sang, humming like a thin wire vibrating
just beyond the range of her hearing.
For the length of a heartbeat they stared at each other,
while streamers of heat unfurled in her veins.
Thick lashes rimmed his eyes. Each iris was a perfect
dark chocolate, rimmed in the thinnest of black circles. His gaze
smoldered—burning with power, and passion, and some dark, wicked
knowledge—as if he were willingly consumed for her, as if his very soul
were abandoned to desire.
No man had ever looked at her like this, as if he would
burn directly into her heart to plumb straight into those confused
depths. . .
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