Morgan and Archer: A Novella (7 page)

BOOK: Morgan and Archer: A Novella
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He envisioned her having to learn this skill to preserve herself from intimacies of a more forced nature, and the thought brought a lurching pause to his arousal. “You should not be giving me these attentions if they’re something the footmen required of you.”

She paused, her mouth about two inches from his cock, Archer’s sanity about two inches from expiring. “Nobody
required
anything of me. It’s something I’m learning with you, Archer. I’ve a mind to learn a few more things, too.”

She dipped her head and licked him, a long, wet swipe of her tongue up his shaft and then—God in heaven—a flourish around the tip.

“Let me get out of my breeches.” He was half-strangled with equal parts anticipation and self-restraint, but he managed to peel himself out of the last of his clothing and drag her over him onto the bed. “I
must
kiss you.”

Some desperate part of his brain tried to argue that what he
must
do was talk to her, explain to her that their clandestine trysting, and even their public waltzes, were going to have to stop for a time.

Only for a time.

She kissed him, kissed him as if in the next hour they were going away to separate wars. Without letting their mouths part, Archer got her nightgown off and anchored both hands on her hips.

Morgan straddled him, which was a fine, fine inspiration, but when her hand glided down between their bodies, Archer realized her intent. He caught her fingers before she could bring his engorged arousal into her body.

“Morgan, wait.”

“I have been waiting. I have waited night after night. I don’t want to wait.” She sounded not determined so much as… upset.

She’d used the vinegar and sponges, he was
almost
confident of that. He and she were going to have to separate for a time—he knew that too. With equal certainty, he knew he was naked in bed with the woman he intended to marry.

The woman he loved. The knowledge landed in the dark expanse of his thoughts like a sunbeam, gentle, inexorable, and sweet.

“Slowly, then. As slowly as we can.” He shifted his grip to stroke his fingers over her breasts. “I want to savor this, to wallow in the beauty of it. I want it to echo in my memory… forever.”

She closed her eyes, taking from him the only hints he could gather as to the desperation driving her, but she did not take him in her hand again.

“Morgan, shall I?” He flexed his hips, brushing his cock over her sex to complete the question. She nodded once and curled forward to brace herself over his chest on her hands.

“Kiss me, Morgan.”

Archer had always thought lust should be a merry thing, mostly pleasure and affection, generously shared and happily recalled. With Morgan, joining his body to hers became a
reverent
undertaking, the tenderness of it nearly eclipsing the arousal.

He leaned up to capture her mouth in a soft kiss, even as he used his hand to stroke the head of his cock along the damp crease of her sex. “Kiss me, Morgan James, and let me kiss you and love you in return.”

She touched her lips to his, her mouth open, and Archer began a gentle invasion of her every sense. Morgan smiled while he traced her lips with his tongue and her sex with his cock. By languorous degrees, he effected penetration above, then began to advance toward the same goal below.

Morgan lifted her mouth from his and went still, as if listening with her very body. Archer stopped teasing them both, stopped flirting with heaven, and let himself flex minutely into her heat.

He retreated and drove forward again, letting her body glove him by excruciating, ecstatic degrees. She was snug and hot, and so lovely, so unutterably lovely.

“Tell me this is what you want, Morgan. Tell me I am who you want.” The growling creature who’d spoken was a man at the limit of his control, and yet Archer forced himself to keep still as he posed the question.

She brushed a hand over his heart. “I want this, with
you
, Archer Portmaine. Now,
please
…” She curled down to his chest, and he wrapped his arms around her.

In the instant before desire wrested the reins from his discipline, Archer tried to name what he’d seen in her eyes. Tenderness and desperation, certainly, but not the sort of knowing arousal he might have expected.

Morgan shifted on him, anchored her body more snugly to his, and anything resembling cerebration flew from Archer’s grasp. Carefully, he pushed himself the smallest, most maddening increment into her body then retreated.

In the same careful manner, Morgan accepted him. Progress was slow at first, but after several moments, Archer was hilted inside her, his cock throbbing and his stones aching with urgency.

“Move, Morgan. I’m not going to last, and I want you—”

She shifted her hips, a slow, voluptuous sweep of pleasure and lust. Archer held still while she developed a rhythm, then moved in counterpoint to her when her breathing picked up. He managed to get a hand on her breast, and she lifted up enough that he could tease her nipple while their tempo gradually increased.

“Archer…” She was pleading, and then she was crying, and then she was coming hard, her body fisting around his cock while he drove himself into her in tight, sharp thrusts.

His own satisfaction was an afterthought, a blossoming of sensation when Morgan was again moving on him slowly, the occasional aftershock shuddering through her. He felt completion approaching but did not allow himself to return to the more emphatic passion of moments earlier. Instead, he kissed her, hilted himself in her body, and let the end come on a slow, unstoppable rush of pleasure that became more intense than if he’d been thrashing and pounding his way through it.

They would marry. They would marry and learn how to manage this great passion, learn how to be together like this and lose their souls to each other every night.

Hell, every night, most mornings, and even some afternoons.

All he had to do first was thwart a few enemies of the Crown, explain the situation to various Windham males who might think themselves Morgan’s protectors, and then convince the lady herself she belonged with him forever.

A short list, the last task being far more important than the other two.

“Archer?”

“My love?” He cradled her closer and stroked a hand over her hair, wondering if they’d still make love like this when their children were grown.

“I want you to leave, and I never want you to come back.”

As her words penetrated the fog of pleasure and sweetness in Archer’s brain, he realized what he’d seen in her eyes as he’d joined his body with hers: despair. Where there should have been passion and joy, what he’d seen in Morgan’s eyes had been despair.

***

“If my children have taught me nothing else, it’s that unsolicited advice is wasted air, at best, and bad will in the making, more often.” The roses were past their prime, but His Grace paused and feigned an interest in the surrounding flowers—while making sure Portmaine
was
listening. “Nonetheless, I feel compelled to warn you, Portmaine: You can’t go on like this.”

The younger man turned glacially blue eyes on the duke. “The royal family is the target, we’re sure of it. Higgins intercepted a note intended, we think, for somebody in the Foreign Office. I’m not about to let up now.”

His tone was as hard as the marble bench they occupied among the duchess’s flowers.

“Oh, the Foreign Office, as if that den of intrigue
wouldn’t
have something to do with this.” Moreland sat back and waited, having learned patience from his children as well.

“We’re close, Your Grace, and if I have to haunt every social function every night for the rest of the Season, and follow every damned lord to his mistress’s house, or every lady to her milliner’s shop, then I’ll do it.”

Something had shifted in Portmaine’s demeanor in recent days. He’d gone from dependable to dedicated, from careful to calculating. The transition was not pretty, like the blooming roses turning to bracken and thorns were not pretty.

“And how long do you think you can work at this pace without your opponents finding you in a weak moment? How long do you think to serve your Regent with exhaustion and carelessness?”

Portmaine’s head came up, a battle light in his eyes. “Carelessness, Your Grace?”

“Sooner or later, somebody will catch you falling asleep at keyholes, young man, or worse.”

Exhaustion was indeed taking a toll, because Portmaine’s gaze traveled over the gardens and up to a certain balcony, a silent admission if ever His Grace had seen one. “Somebody already has, Your Grace.”

Portmaine scrubbed a hand over handsome, drawn features and hunched forward, bracing his elbows on his spread knees. His posture was rife with weariness, perhaps even defeat.

“I have investigated you, Your Grace.”

The Papists had a name for this “Oh-my-God, I-am-heartily-sorry…” business. “Of course, you have. I have investigated you, too. Precautionary measures are what pass for the civilities in the dark business you’re engaged in now.”

Gratifying, to see he’d surprised such a clever young man. A bee went lazily inventorying the few flowers not yet budded out.

“I have been in your home without your leave, after dark, and I’m hoping others will think I was simply nosing about in your affairs.”

A chill slithered down the ducal spine. “Portmaine, explain yourself.”

“I have come and gone from your domicile by dark of night on more than few occasions, Your Grace. I am not proud to admit this.”

“You are not ashamed either, I daresay. Was your investigation so very thorough, then, Portmaine?”

“It was, but that took only a single visit. The rest of the time…”

Young people were given to dramatics, but Portmaine wasn’t being dramatic. Beneath his cool demeanor, something dark and desperate lurked.

“Her Grace saw you, my boy. She and I trusted to your honor and Morgan’s good sense. You are no longer committing felonies on my property, I hope.”

“I am not, Morgan’s
good
sense
having carried the day, but I fear it’s too late.”

Too late didn’t bode well at all. “Spell it out, man.”

“Somebody followed me the last time I visited Miss James, Your Grace. From the depth of the tracks left in the mud under the tree, I’m guessing they waited a good long time, until I left, then followed me home as well. I was distracted, exhausted, as you say, and careless. I hope I have not endangered you, or worse, endangered Miss James, with my folly.”

This was not good, but it explained Portmaine’s absence of a late night—also his desperation. A dozen plots might blossom against a monarch, and it was nothing more than a challenge for a good investigator, but a smitten swain could not abide danger stalking his lady.

“I would offer to thrash you, Portmaine, but your conscience has no doubt flagellated you ceaselessly. If you fear you’ve lead the enemy to my doorstep, then what in God’s name brought you here in the broad light of day? Nothing else would confirm my hand in this investigation as clearly as the conference we’re having right now.”

Something approaching a smile touched Portmaine’s lips, though it wasn’t a friendly sort of something. “I hope you’re wrong, Your Grace. I hope I can turn recent events into a way to solve the case, and sooner rather than later.”

“You have my undivided attention.”

***

To sit among the Moreland roses without staring at Morgan’s balcony, to make awkward confessions to His Grace, and to convince the duke to comply with an outlandish scheme had taken the last ounce of Archer’s resolve.

He was beyond tired, beyond exhausted, and into that state soldiers knew well, of curiously detached, deliberate functioning. He was no longer a man, he was a mechanical toy in human form, and he liked it that way.

Mechanical toys did not have broken hearts—they had no hearts at all.

As Moreland sauntered off toward the mews, Archer permitted himself one more glance at Morgan’s balcony. He saw her there as she’d been last week, her nightgown a pale splash against the moonlight when Archer had taken his leave.

She’d been crying silently and trying to ignore her own tears. Even in his anger at her rejection, he’d hurt for her.

Her explanation had been baffling: she could not marry him, and she could not trust herself to behave decorously around him in the future. She was sorry for having used him shamelessly, but further dealings would only put off an inevitable parting.

She had begged him to leave, and thus had begun a week of flitting from ball to musicale to wherever Morgan James was not. Archer listened at keyholes, drowsed in smoking rooms, lurked in gardens, and followed up every hint of a wisp of a ghost of a possible lead.

Until two things became clear to him.

First, he needed to dispatch the threat to the Crown.

Second, he had better execute that task with all possible haste, for if longing for Morgan didn’t kill him, his enemies well might.

Five

“If you call me poppet, I shall kill you.” Morgan surprised herself with both the sincerity of her threat and the fact that she’d made it to the man she’d once believed herself fated to love for all time—and in his own father’s library.

Valentine Windham lowered himself to a rocking chair at right angles to Morgan’s perch on the sofa. “I haven’t called you poppet for three years, but it’s generally considered a term of endearment. What are you reading?”

She didn’t know. She glanced at the book she’d been holding. “Byron, the silly twit.”

“Naughty twit, in any case. I might set his poetry to music one day.”

Which was relevant to the price of tea in China, how?

“I suspect you think of music at times most people can’t hold a coherent thought in their heads.” She hadn’t meant to glower at him, but really, how did Ellen stand him? When Archer Portmaine kissed a woman, he wasn’t humming some theme under his breath as Morgan suspected Valentine did. When Archer watched Morgan, his fingers weren’t twitching with a melody known only to him as Valentine’s had on many occasions.

“Your mood is off, my dear.”

The very words Archer had used. Morgan got up and shoved the book onto a random shelf.

Valentine’s dark eyebrow arched in a gesture that put Morgan in mind of His Grace, and he remained seated, the picture of calm, which was also a ploy favored by His Grace. “Are you in a taking because of Archer Portmaine’s absence from your dance card?”

She threatened murder, and her dearest friend said she was
in
a
taking
. “Mr. Portmaine is a very amiable fellow. I’m sure the other ladies are enjoying his attentions.”

Though given the stricken expression Morgan had seen on Archer’s face in her bedroom a week ago, she doubted Archer had mustered his Ballroom Bachelor Smile yet. His ability to dissemble was good, but not good enough to hide the terrible hurt Morgan had dealt him.

“Morgan, what’s wrong?”

Morgan whirled around to find Valentine Windham had silently crossed the room and stood staring down at her, his expression not the least distracted.

“Nothing is wrong, except certain men think they can drop in of a weekday afternoon and pry into my affairs at will.”

“Shall I call him out for you?” Valentine spoke softly, his green eyes lit with unholy determination. “Westhaven makes a decent second, though Hazelton might not approve. If Portmaine has offended you, Morgan, cast the slightest aspersion—”

Morgan stopped him with a hand over his fool mouth. “Nothing like that. Desist, Valentine, please. I sent him away in every sense.”

Morgan endured a long, silent scrutiny, and then another quiet question.

“From what or whom do you think you’re protecting him? You care for that handsome, skinny bastard, I know you do, and in some confounded, convoluted way, you think to set him from you for his own good. I suspect he’s mixed up in one of His Grace’s intrigues, which has nothing to say to anything. If he cares for you, you simply forbid his skulking about, and the man will come panting to your heels… Oh, for God’s sake.”

Morgan blinked furiously as Valentine dangled a monogrammed handkerchief before her eyes.

“It isn’t his fault, Valentine. He’s a good man, a dear man, and I thought—”

Damn and blast. She snatched the handkerchief from him, then let him lead her to the sofa.

“Archer Portmaine lurks about Mayfair, collecting secrets,” Val said from the sideboard. “He then darts in and out of the slums and stews to collect more. He is not dear, he is dangerous. If he broke your heart, he is also dead, or as good as.”

Morgan blotted her tears, the urge to scream now replaced by the urge to break something heavy over Valentine’s head—though a smack to his fingers would likely get his attention more effectively.

He passed her a glass with an inch of liquid in the bottom. “Drink this, and don’t argue. If you’re not going to let me draw Portmaine’s cork, then you will at least tell me what’s amiss.”

Morgan took a sip of aromatic brandy, the fruity, apple-rich fire of it easing something inside her. “No wonder your sisters are so formidable. They’ve had to contend with four more brothers in addition to you. You take after your father, you know.”

“Flattery, Miss James, will not spare you my interrogation.”

She turned a glower on him as he stood by the sofa, fists on his lean hips, a depth of concern in his eyes she had not anticipated. “I’m fine. I will be fine.”

He settled beside her when she’d intended that he take himself off. “Sometimes even when we’re fine, we could use a friend to help us sort out our difficulties. This is your good side, correct?”

The side she could hear better on. She took another sip of brandy and wondered if Her Grace, having raised nine more children like Valentine, cultivated a taste for spirits.

“I don’t have a good side. I have a less-bad side. Lord Fairly told me to think of it as having a good side and a better side, but the truth is I have a bad side and a worse side.”

She made this confession to her drink, while beside her, Valentine tossed pillows to the rug. “Are you losing your hearing again? Is that what this is about? You don’t want to saddle Portmaine with a deaf wife?”

Morgan set the drink down and tried to push some words past her lips. Damn Valentine for being so perceptive when he ought by rights to be off somewhere composing a sonata Morgan might never hear. Damn him for putting an arm around her shoulders, and damn him most of all for being her friend.

She wanted to curse at him, to curse at him roundly, as His Grace could do when the idiots in the Lords fiddled while Rome burned. She wanted to rant and bellow and carry on—to sound out her misery for all to hear—but instead, she pitched hard into her friend’s chest and silently cried into his handkerchief.

***

“Miss James, a pleasure.” Archer bowed over Morgan’s hand and held it in his when she tried to snatch it away. Under the guise of imparting some tidbit of gossip, he leaned closer. “Unless you want to spend the rest of the evening without one of your gloves, you will dance with me.”

She nodded, which was fortunate. Even holding her gloved hand had Archer’s vitals in an uproar. He winged his arm at her and led her to the middle of the dance floor.

He bowed. “You do not look rested, Miss James.”

She sank into a perfect curtsy and came up with a glorious smile. “You look exhausted, Mr. Portmaine, and as if you’re off your feed. Perhaps this is why you’re ignoring my request that you not approach me under any circumstance.”

They swayed into the rhythms of the waltz. “I’ve missed you, Morgan.” He made sure to look directly at her as he spoke, because the ballroom was noisy and they were turning down the side nearest the minstrel’s gallery.

She tramped on his foot, which didn’t hurt so much as it disturbed his rhythm.

“I cannot say the same, Mr. Portmaine. I am perfectly content without you bothering me at all hours.” Her usually steady alto bore a hint of tension and was pitched higher than normal.

Archer turned her through the first corner, and it seemed to him she might have clung to him a bit for balance.

Or something.

“You are going to marry me,” he said quietly, clearly, and very near her ear. “Though first, I have to get other matters tidied up.”

“I cannot marry you, no matter how many other matters you tidy up. Stop being absurd, or I’ll leave you here in the middle of the dance floor.”

“That would actually help matters, but before you stomp off in a rush, please be aware that things might get sticky before this night is through, and I want you well away from here.”

“You’re sending me home?”

She might have tried for indignation, but Archer heard worry in her voice. He leaned a bit closer, gathering the scent of roses and spices. “I am asking you to leave early, or if you must be stubborn, then at least do not believe what you see, Morgan. We’ll have His Grace home by dawn, even if the Home Office indulges in unnecessary dramatics.”

“But what—?”

He gave her the same slow wink he’d offered the first time she’d laid eyes on him, and then fell silent. As the music moved them along, he could see her mental mill wheel turning.

“Archer, are you in danger?”

Ah, to see the concern in her eyes and hear his name on her lips. “You would care if I were?”

Her eyes narrowed, and the worry vanished. “Of course, I would care.”

“One wondered. Not for very long, but one did wonder.”

“Whatever that means.”

If he said one more word, he’d be down on his knees before her, proposing publicly, and tonight of all nights he needed to focus on the task at hand rather than the woman in his arms. All too soon, the music drew to a close, and Morgan asked him to return her to Ellen’s side.

Except Lady Ellen was nowhere to be seen, which meant Archer would part with the woman he loved most in the whole world under the sternly watchful eye of Valentine Windham.

Archer hung about and chatted inanely until Ellen came swanning along from the card room and collected Morgan to make a fourth at whist.

“I need to talk to you.” Lord Valentine fairly spat the words.

“I most assuredly do not need to talk to you, my lord.”
Not
tonight, most especially not now, possibly not ever.

“Yes, you do.” Windham aimed a glower at the ladies’ retreating backs. “You’re going to marry Morgan James if I have to kick your sorry arse up the aisle at St. George’s.”

“That might suffice to motivate me and bruise your toes to a significant degree, but how do you propose to gain the young lady’s cooperation?”

Windham’s brows drew down, but before he said a word, the Duke of Moreland’s voice rang out over the din of dozens of conversations.

“You want to question
me
? You want His
Grace
, the Duke of Moreland, to voluntarily present him
self
at the Home Office? You, sir, are impertinent and a damned fool if you think a peer of the realm is going to submit to the tomfoolery that passes for state business at the Home Office. The secretary himself shall hear about this.”

“What in God’s name?” Windham started off in the direction of His Grace so quickly Archer barely managed to lay a hand on the taller man’s arm.

“Let it play out. His Grace’s liberty is not at risk.”

“Not at risk? You heard that imbecile,” Windham whispered furiously.

“You interfere now, and His Grace will not thank you.” Something of the truth of that sentiment must have penetrated Windham’s thick skull, because he turned an emerald glare on Archer.

“Mind you be right, Portmaine, or there won’t be enough of you left for Miss James to marry.”

Musicians were reported to be a flighty lot.

Windham fell silent as His Grace proceeded to dress down the Home Office functionary who’d been so foolish as to confront the Duke of Moreland in a public setting. Before His Grace concluded, the entire ballroom was listening to the exchange.

“…mine hostess will surely forgive me if I take premature leave of a gathering where such as yourself are permitted access to their betters.” His Grace turned to survey the ballroom with a gimlet gaze. “My lords, my ladies, I bid you good night.” He swept away from the dance floor, pausing only long enough to deliver a magnificent scowl and an audible sniff in Archer’s direction.

“Threat to the realm, indeed.”

Moreland brushed past both Archer and Lord Valentine, collected the duchess, and bellowed for his coach, while the ballroom erupted into a roar of conversations.

Windham shot Archer a look worthy of the duke himself, then stalked off in the direction of the card room. Pausing only long enough to be sure Lady Braithwaite was being watched by other eyes, Archer followed after Windham, not caring who saw or what they thought of his unseemly haste.

***

“Some commotion has interrupted the dancing.” Ellen craned her neck to look, but didn’t put down her cards. “The orchestra has fallen silent.”

Morgan couldn’t have heard much of the music at this distance, but she could see people crowding into the doorway to gawk in the direction of the dance floor.

“My dears, you’ll excuse us.” The two dowagers who had no doubt been cheating their way to a victory at whist hustled away, turbans huddled together in anticipation of some wonderful gossip.

“That’s His Grace,” Ellen said, putting her cards down. “He’s in a taking about something. Oh, I must find Valentine this instant. Will you be all right?”

Morgan waved her away with one hand and started collecting the abandoned cards. “I’ll find you.”

If being deaf spared one ballroom dramas, maybe losing her hearing again would not be such a terrible thing. What did gossip ever contribute to one’s life after all? Morgan stacked the deck tidily and caught sight of the only other people in the room who were not pressed in the doorway or trying to push through the crowd into the ballroom.

One was Lord Braithwaite, whose demeanor Morgan would have characterized as benign and avuncular. The other fellow would have been altogether nondescript—sandy hair, medium height, unremarkable evening attire—but for the grip he had on Lord Braithwaite’s arm and the fire in his eyes.

“It
must
be tonight!” Morgan did not hear the words, so much as she saw them forming on the man’s lips. “Now is the perfect opportunity, when suspicion has fallen on no less than the Duke of Moreland himself.”

Lord Braithwaite’s words were harder to discern, because he was in profile to Morgan, but his posture and the shake of his head suggested he was not agreeing with the other man’s importuning.

“My lord, we must act tonight. We could wait months for another chance like this. Suspicion will follow Moreland and his family, and the thing will be done. His Royal Highness will reward our quick thinking, mark me.”

Braithwaite’s indecision crumbled, as evidenced by the nod of his head and what might have been an admission that, “Now is the time.”

His
Royal
Highness
would reward them? The Regent was styled His Royal Highness, but what could George have to do with any underhanded business? While Morgan mentally sorted through the various monarchs and dignitaries who might be suborning treachery on English soil, the nondescript man spoke again, but try as she might, Morgan could not discern every word.

BOOK: Morgan and Archer: A Novella
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