“No, I don’t,” she said, her voice wavering. “How dare you suggest that I’m some sort of . . . Last night was all your idea.”
“I know it.”
“And I can hardly be the first woman to pass an enjoyable night in your arms and want little to do with you the following day.”
“Of course not. You’re merely the most recent in a long, distinguished line. And don’t harbor any illusions you’ll be the last.”
“Then why are you so angry? Why am I singled out for such cruel retribution? What wound can I have possibly caused you, save a miniscule twinge to your pride?”
He stared at her for a long moment. “I don’t know.”
Then he reached up with both hands and pinched her cheeks. Hard.
“Ow!” Reeling, she clapped her hands over them. “What was that for?”
“You need a blush on those cheeks if you’re to play my trollop, and we haven’t any rouge.” One of his arms shot around her, gathering her close. He traced her bottom lip with his thumb. “And these lips are looking entirely too pursed and pale.”
Bending his head, he caught her mouth in a harsh, bruising kiss. His tongue thrust between her lips, making a thorough, claiming sweep of her mouth. Then he caught her bottom lip and gave it a teasing, puppyish tug with his teeth. He left her mouth swollen, stinging with pleasure and pain.
She dug an elbow into his side, using all the strength in her arm to lever some distance between them. He released her, and she stumbled a few steps back.
She touched her fingertips to her mouth, checking for blood. “Are you satisfied now?”
He released a long, frustrated breath. With some distance between them, she could better make out his expression. It was one of lean, wary hunger.
“Not even close, Min.” He bent to pick up the trunk. “Not even close.”
Chapter Eighteen
If Winterset Grange looked austere and forbidding from the outside, its interior resembled something out of Ancient Rome at its peak of debauchery and excess.
Being without her spectacles was both a hindrance and a blessing. Everywhere Minerva turned, she saw blurred depictions of flesh. Paintings of lascivious nudes covered the soaring walls, stacked bosom-to-backside three tiers high. Decadent sculptures winked out from alcoves. Some ambitious decorator had splashed gold leaf over everything.
The sculpture nearest Minerva appeared to be Pan, cavorting and twisting atop a Corinthian column. If she squinted, she could make out the fine silver and rosy veins of the stone. Italian, most definitely.
“Such lovely marble, to be so misused.” She ran her fingers over the cool, smooth stone. Then withdrew her hand immediately when she realized the cylindrical protuberance she’d grasped was not a horn, nor a pipe.
Casting about for a safe place to rest her gaze, she looked to the wallpaper. A traditional, pleasant gold-and-white toile pattern of couples dancing. Or were they?
She squinted and peered closer, forcing the pattern into focus.
No, the couples weren’t dancing.
“Payne! It is you.” A man sauntered across the hall to them, dressed in a lazily tied banyan. He seemed young—near to Colin’s age, she’d imagine—and he brought with him an air of cultivated dissipation and the vague scent of opium smoke. He was flanked by two women even more scantily clad than he—one smooth and fair, the other titian-haired. Minerva couldn’t make out the women’s expressions, but their sensuality was a palpable force. She felt their gaze on her, cool and prickling.
This mousy girl can’t be one of us, she imagined them thinking.
I’m not, she wanted to shout. She had this brief, vivid vision of giving Colin, his debauched friend, and these two loose women a good dressing down, smashing priapic Pan to the floor, whirling on her heel, and—
But she had no money. Nowhere to go, and no means of getting there. She didn’t even have her spectacles.
So Minerva lifted her chin and cocked her hip. She shuffled closer to Colin and moved to prop her arm on his shoulder. Of course, with her vision so hampered, she misjudged and propped her arm on air. She stumbled and fell into him instead, splaying one arm over his chest and trying for all the world to look as though she’d meant to do that.
She didn’t think anyone was fooled.
One woman began giggling. The other laughed out loud.
Minerva wanted to sink through the floor.
“Ladies,” the man she presumed to be the Duke of Halford said, “you remember my good friend Payne.”
“But of course,” one of them cooed. “We’re old friends, aren’t we?”
Now Minerva wanted to sink through the floor and die there. She understood Colin was angry, but how could he do this to her?