Author's Note: Although this story can be read on its own, it directly follows "An Unconventional Arrangement."
Somerset, 1882
She should have known better than to expect a cottage. Sutcliffe Park, which Henry called his "little house in the country," was vast. Her steps echoed down the long hallways lined with portraits of aristocrats in elaborate wigs and marble-top tables festooned with fresh flowers. The floors shone with a fresh coat of beeswax.
"Who are these ladies, Henry?" She pointed to a huge oil painting of two young ladies gazing earnestly into middle distance. She guessed it to be at least a century old.
"Damned if I know," he answered. "They came with the property."
"This house, Henry—" Her voice trailed off as she caught a glimpse of the dining room. The chandelier glittered in the afternoon light.
"Do you like it?"
She laughed again. "It is magnificent, and I've scarcely seen a quarter of it."
"You'll see the whole damned place soon enough." He squeezed her arm. "I'll fuck you in every room."
Ada felt the blush wash over her cheeks. Then she gasped as Henry pressed her gently against his growing erection.
"Shall we start with the dining room?" he whispered before pressing a kiss against her neck. His hands wandered up and cupped her breasts; not even the thick wool of her traveling dress could keep her nipples from tightening under his touch.
"Henry, I have to get dressed!" she scolded, batting his hands away. But her breath had quickened, and she knew by his smirk that he had noticed. "You said the guests are due in a few hours."
"Yes, in a few hours," he said, reaching for her again.
Ada eluded him and turned on her heel. "I don't even know where my room is, but I'm going to find it and lock the door!" She laughed over her shoulder at him. Her heels clacked across the dining room floor as she scurried. The china rattled faintly in the cabinets as she passed.
Henry's arms locked around her waist; she squealed as she tried hopelessly to pry his hands loose. "Your room," he said in her ear, "is my room." His hands slid up the front of her dress and gripped her breasts again. Her head fell back against his chest. She moaned despite herself as his thumbs raked firmly across her nipples. "It's also the first room I'll fuck you in."
****
The servants had prepared the ballroom well in advance of Henry's arrival. The floor gleamed; the polished mirrors multiplied the light of the freshly dusted chandeliers. The supper room was redolent with ham, coffee, biscuits, and whatever else had struck Henry's fancy. Ada smoothed her hair with a white-gloved hand and looked for Henry. She was in dire need of champagne. There were too many guests to greet, too many ladies to find dance partners for, too many men to avoid.
The men were the worst. They looked at her as if she were one of the candied chestnuts on Henry's dessert table. Was this the way they looked at all gentlemen's mistresses, or were Henry Aldridge's mistresses an object of peculiar fascination? She ignored their lascivious gazes and greeted their wives perhaps more enthusiastically than was necessary.
And the room was stifling. The evening was unseasonably warm, and the press of people had made the ballroom positively balmy. Ada fanned herself with unladylike vigor.
A touch at her elbow made her jump. Lord, she really did need some champagne.
"Henry," she sighed as she turned to him.
Only it wasn't Henry.
Sir Anthony Weston lifted her gloved hand to his lips; she nearly pulled it away as she looked around, desperately hoping no guests had noticed. She hadn't seen Sir Anthony since the night he and Julian Hansard had brought her to climax for Henry's amusement. The memory seemed at once distant and shockingly vivid. And now he was standing before her and looking undeniably handsome—not so handsome as Henry, of course, but youthful and charming. Before that fateful night, she would have been happy to see a familiar face at the party; now, however, she only felt faintly embarrassed.
"Ada, you look beautiful."
"Sir Anthony, I—" she gingerly tugged her hand away. "Sir Anthony, how kind of you to come this evening." She cleared her throat. "Is Miss Wharburton with you?"
His lips quirked at the mention of his fiancée. "Yes, yes, she is indeed here somewhere."
Relief washed over her; with his American heiress in tow, Sir Anthony would have to keep himself in check. She hoped.
"Oh, I must meet her," she said, fanning herself almost violently. "How did I miss her earlier?"
"Are you quite all right, Ada?" He stepped closer.
"Perfectly," she said, looking once more for Henry. "It's just hot as blazes in here!"
Sir Anthony laughed aloud. "Is it? May I walk you out to the garden?"
She hoped no one had heard him. He was being—what was the word?—too familiar. Anyone would guess that he had been intimate with her or perhaps hoped to be before the evening was done.
Her smile was tight. "Sir Anthony, one cannot leave when one is playing hostess."
"Perhaps when the hosts are Henry Aldridge and his mistress, one need not follow the usual rules."
She blinked at him.
"I only mean," he said, his gaze trained on her mouth, "that any ball thrown by Aldridge is a horse of another color, is it not?"
She cocked her head at him. "You are positively speaking in riddles, Sir Anthony. Would you be so kind as to dance with—oh, I don't know her name, actually—this tall woman standing under the Corregio?" She nodded subtly toward a willowy, nervous-looking brunette. "She hasn't danced since the quadrille."
"Speaking in riddles, am I?" he said, moving closer still. "Shall I speak plainly then?"
"I don't know. What does Miss Wharburton prefer?" She snapped her fan shut.
His nostrils flared. "Miss Wharburton very nearly did not come this evening. She has never attended a ball hosted by"—he took a deep breath—"such colorful figures."
Ada felt her blood pressure rise and smiled deliriously at the first guest who made eye contact with her. She needed to flee Weston; she'd find the ancient Marquis of Barchester and spend the rest of the night shouting into his ear trumpet if she had to. "You find us disreputable, Sir Anthony. It would be most ungracious of me to keep you here any longer. Good evening."
"Ada, please, I—"
"Weston!"
Ada nearly jumped out of her skin as Henry's voice rumbled behind her.
She watched wide-eyed as he clapped Sir Anthony on the back and laughed. "I didn't think you were coming, you muck-snipe!"
"Beautiful property, Aldridge."
Ada smiled woodenly. Weston spoke breezily—as if he had not just insulted her not a moment before.