Read Miss Marianne's Disgrace Online
Authors: Georgie Lee
âI didn't think you one for riding,' she called out to him, summoning the old Marianne, the one adept at appearing aloof no matter what the situation. It was a much more difficult thing to accomplish today than in the past.
âI wouldn't be a proper baronet if I didn't.' He flipped the horse's reins over its head to dangle on the ground.
âDo you usually ride on the Menton lands?' She fingered the outline of the slim gold ring beneath her glove, as nervous as she was thrilled to see him.
âNo.' He climbed the steps to her while Lancelot wandered off, sniffing the ground as he went. âI did it to find you. Lady Ellington said you were here.'
He came for me.
She let go of her hands and let them drop to her sides. He hadn't told her what he wanted yet. âYou came to discuss the story in the
Morning Post
?'
âI'm sorry you had to find out about it from so dubious a source. I wanted to be the one to tell you.'
âWhy? So you could at last admit our arrangement was a mistake, that I'm costing you patrons?' She ducked away to follow the curve of the building. She hated hearing the words spoken aloud, but she'd said them to avoid him doing it first and crushing her already fretting heart.
Warren's footsteps echoed in the dome of the building behind her. âMarianne, wait.'
It was the same tone he'd used the day he'd burned his copy of
Lady Matilda's Trials.
He was asking her to listen to him, to let him make things right. She faced him, opening and closing her fists at her sides, willing to give him the chance.
He strode up to her, concern deepening the small furrow between his eyebrows. âI'd never choose them over you. You're worth more to me than any of their praises or support. I need you in my life more than I need them.'
âAs your muse.' Despite the earnestness in his voice, the doubt she'd carried for so long still haunted her.
âNo, as the wonderful woman you are.' He reached out and caught her hands, his solid grip spreading through her like ripples over the surface of the lake
âWhat are you saying?'
âYou captured me with the first note you played and every day we've been together since.' He raised his hands to her cheeks, cupping her face as his words did her heart. âBefore you'd played for me, I'd lost my talent and despaired of ever being the man and writer I was before my sister died. You've helped me to unlock the stories which were holed up inside of me and to reclaim my faith in myself. I love you and I want you to be with me for ever, to be my wife.'
Her gasp of surprise was smothered by the touch of his lips to hers. His defiance of her expectations made her head whirl as much as his mouth against hers. Warren loved and cherished her, more than patrons or stories or reputations. He wanted her with him, scandalous past and all, and she would be his, free and trusting as she'd never been with anyone before.
Lancelot's loud barks as he raced past the Grecian temple and up the path interrupted their bliss. Warren broke from her and she wavered on her feet before his tight arms steadied her.
âWill you marry me, Marianne?' he asked.
âYes.' She laid her cheek on his chest and played with the sloppily tied cravat beneath his chin. She didn't care who found them here. Let them see the two of them united against every trial and person determined to humble them. Their nastiness couldn't separate them.
âCome.' He took her by the hand to lead her to the horse.
âWhere are we going?'
âFor a ride.'
She resisted his gentle tug. âI can't leave my friend.'
âI think she'll understand.' He motioned to the woods.
Theresa stood petting Lancelot beneath one of the few evergreen trees. She wiggled her fingers in goodbye with a smile as mischievous as one of Lady Ellington's, then faded back into the tree line. Lancelot raced to them with excited barks before bolting off into the woods.
Theresa had been right about Warren and so had Lady Ellington. They'd never allow her to forget it and she didn't mind. It was the most glorious thing anyone could ever hold over her.
Marianne laughed when he caught her about the waist and lifted her to sit sideways across the saddle. He gripped the leather in front of her thighs, the height of the horse and the strength of Warren overwhelming as he pulled himself up behind her. His legs were strong against hers as he tightened the reins between his hands and clicked the animal into motion.
The wind slid around them, tugging a few of her curls out of their pins as the horse carried them around the curve of the lake. At the far end, the path turned to lead them deeper into the woods. Lancelot bounded past them before veering off into the trees to chase a bird.
âI've never seen Lancelot so active.' Marianna tucked her windswept hair behind one ear, but it refused to remain there.
âSometimes his instincts get the better of his laziness, especially when he's chasing something.'
Her instincts came alive under the pressure of Warren's chest against her shoulder, his thighs hard against her buttocks. She leaned against him, all the concerns of the last day, the Cartwrights, Lord Bolton and the past dissolving in his presence.
The path led out of the trees to follow the rolling hills. She'd never ridden this way across the Menton lands or even the edge of the Falconbridge estate. Her life was circumscribed by the dower house, Falconbridge Manor, Hallington Hall, the country families and the village. After today, she would at last break free of this small existence and its influence on her, but for now she was grateful for it. While they were here it was just the two of them, untarnished by anything or anyone.
They talked while they rode. She told him about the Protestant School and the jokes they used to play on Mrs Nichols at All Hollow's Eve. The darker memories of the lonely nights in the dormitory, or the lack of letters or gifts on her birthday or at Christmas didn't intrude to overwhelm her like they used to. The warmth of the spring sun on the flowers in the garden between the school walls and the house, and the friendship of two older girls who'd come to the school three years before she'd left were the most vivid memories today.
The same optimism filled Warren's description of his childhood at the vicarage. He laughed as he explained the pranks he and the other boys used to play on his father. His smile widened with his description of Christmas dinners with the boys who hadn't gone home for the holiday. In his words, Marianne could almost smell the excitement of the season, and the aroma of the chestnuts and spiced pudding which had filled the vicarage during their small celebrations.
âLeticia and I used to play in the ruins of the Norman keep behind the village. My mother made her a princess dress out of one of our grandmother's old gowns. She'd stand in it on the old stone parapet, calling across the field to her imaginary prince to save her.' He surveyed the rolling hills of brown grass, neither his memory nor his smile darkening with anguish over his sister's passing. Like her he was too elated to be pulled down by past sorrow.
âWhat did you do while you were there?' Marianne laid her head on his chest and revelled in the rumbling of his voice in her ear. His happy childhood didn't make hers seem so stark, nor did she ruminate on what she hadn't had. Instead, she imagined their future children and the care and happiness they'd enjoy. They'd never doubt her love for them, or their parents' love for one another.
âI had a rusty breastplate my father had found in the attic and a wooden sword he'd carved for me out of an old plank. I used to pretend the rocks were dragons and I'd slay them and then I'd seize their imaginary treasure hoards.' Warren guided the horse down the hill which skirted the woods above Falconbridge manor. âSome day, when the repairs to Priorton are done, I'll commission a dragon sculpture for the garden. It'll be a sleeping one I can lay between the shrubs so our children can pretend to wake it. Maybe I'll get a winged one too for near the cloister.'
âYou don't have to wait. I'll buy them for you as a wedding gift along with a stone treasure chest for them to guard.'
âNo, I won't take money from you to do it. I'll earn it myself, you'll see. In fact, I want your fortune placed in trust with Lord Falconbridge administering it. No funds are to be advanced from the trust unless you and he approve.'
âBut why?' She pushed up from his chest, surprised by the determined set of his chin and his green eyes fixed on the road ahead. âI want you to be able to use it for us, for Priorton. I don't want you to worry about patrons and sales.'
âNo. I won't have anyone thinking I married you for any other reason than love and I will continue to earn money with my talent just I always have, do you understand?'
âI do.' His success was important to him and she wouldn't undermine it.
âI love you, Marianne, you're the only treasure I need.' He swept his lips across hers, tempting her more than a dragon's stash of rubies or gold. He wasn't a fantasy or some imagined man hidden by the mist, but hard and hot flesh beneath her fingertips. Her insides melted under the pressure of his kiss and she reached up to lace her hands in his hair, to pull him closer and deeper into her.
The horse snorted and tossed its head, breaking their kiss.
âSo much for our mighty steed.' Warren laughed as he guided the animal to where the trail ambled down through another forest. It rose again to follow the ridge behind Falconbridge Manor. Their sweet conversation continued until the roof of Welton Place peaked above the orange and yellow treetops.
Warren tugged the horse to a stop. âI don't want to go back.'
Neither did Marianne. âWe don't have to. Turn here.'
He guided the horse to the path Marianne pointed to. It followed the slope of the hill beneath two sprawling oak trees until the red brick of the orangery came into view.
âWhat's this?' Warren asked, bringing the horse to a halt.
âSomewhere we won't be disturbed.'
He dismounted, then reached up for her. She held tight to his arms as he lifted her down, her skirt flaring out before his legs pinned the fabric against her thighs. She didn't let go, but studied him. The afternoon sunlight through the branches cut hard across his cheeks and played in the light hair at his temples. She ran her hand down the curve of his arm and entwined her fingers with his. She led Warren inside the orangery where the sun through the tall windows warded off the chill of the brick and the day. In this moment, she wanted to be more than his intended, but one with him.
âI see the Falconbridge family's taste in art extends to the decorative ones too.' He cleared his throat as he motioned to the gilded screen dividing the room.
Marianne closed the double doors and threw the lock. She didn't need any curious maids, or, heaven forbid, Darby, stumbling in on them. She came to stand in front of Warren and with her fingers turned his face from the erotic embroidered screen to her. âLady Ellington's brother used this place for trysts while keeping his regular mistress in the dower house. He was too cheap to pay for a London home.'
âAnd why are we here?' It was clear from his hard swallow he knew, but she appreciated him wanting her to make it clear. He wouldn't fall on her because of opportunity, but wait for her to guide them both. Today, she would be with Warren in all the ways a woman could be with a man without any interruptions. This wasn't wrong or licentious like her mother's old liaisons, but beautiful and made richer by his promise to love her for ever. âTo seal our betrothal.'
She unbuttoned her pelisse and dropped it to the floor as she slipped behind the tall screen to the windowless half of the orangery. Then she peered around the edge of it, cocking her finger at him to join her. He didn't hesitate, entering the shadows and embracing her with the same force as the embroidered Apollo taking Calliope. She followed his unrestrained passion, allowing it and hers to carry her beyond regrets, or second guesses. They couldn't wait, and she didn't want to. He loved her and the rest was all a formality.
Breaking from Warren's kiss but remaining within the circle of his arms, she leaned back and undid the small pearl buttons of her fichu. Slowly she slid it off her neck to reveal the tops of her breast before flicking it away to flutter to the floor. Warren's eyes were ablaze as he took in the length of her cleavage. He slipped his hand from around her waist and brought it up to cup one heavy mound through the fine muslin. Leaning down, he tasted her neck, his tongue making small circles on the skin as he worked his way to her décolletage. His breath against the moisture from his tongue made her shiver and her nipples peaked, the tightness of them increasing the desire for him building inside her. For the first time ever she understood what it was to want someone beyond reason and good sense. She'd never craved a man the way she did Warren, her legs weak with her need for him and the love he'd promised. It wasn't physical passion driving her forward, but the longing to finally end in his embrace the loneliness which had shadowed her for years.
As if hearing her desire, he placed his hands behind her and began to undo the long row of buttons. While his nimble fingers worked, she tasted the smooth skin of his neck, inhaling the rich cedar scent of him made more potent by the heat of the ride. His breath caressed her ear as he slipped each button free, exposing little by little the skin on her chest. There was too much between them, too many laces and linens, buttons and tapes. She wanted to feel his skin against hers, the weight of him on top of her, to be covered by his touch and his love.
When the last button finally came loose, the garment dropped before catching on the cups of the stays supporting her breasts. He shifted back from her and ran one finger along the edge of the cotton, across her skin to slip the dress free. She shivered as the muslin brushed her thighs as it dropped over her to puddle at her feet. He raised his eyebrows in admiration of her as he traced the curve of her hips and narrow waist beneath the stays. She didn't shrink from the wanting in his eyes, or knock his hand away, but stood strong in front of him. He didn't want her as some plaything to enjoy and toss away. He wanted her future, her talent and the friendship and support which had grown between them. She would give it and all of herself to him.