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Fletch’s mouth dropped open. For Christ’s sake. “Poppy, get back out here!” he bellowed, leaning down.

No answer.

Suddenly he thought that rabbits make a good meal for a bear—who might well live under a tree. He dropped to his knees and thrashed his way under the tree so fast that he bumped right into Poppy.

She was sitting, hugging her knees, as if she were in her own bedchamber. “Fletch!” Poppy said, sounding as delighted as if he’d decided to join her for a cup of tea.

“What the hell,” he growled, setting his lantern to the side. The light wavered and went out, leaving only Poppy’s thin flame.

“It’s like a little room,” she said. “Wait a minute, Fletch. Your eyes will get accustomed.”

“Are there any bears in here?”

But he took a breath.

“No rabbits and no bears. But it’s a little house.”

A minute later he saw what she meant. The snow had scoured around the fir tree, building little walls that came up to meet the bottom layer of fir. The ground was actually a soft mat of dried needles. The snow filtered light, somehow, so that it was a pearly gray under the tree, except for the shower of yellow light around her lantern. His head just brushed the bottom layer of fir branches.

“Very nice,” he said. “Let’s go, Poppy. Your skirts must be soaked through.”

“I’m not cold,” Poppy said. She was curled up against the fir tree, smiling at him. Her hair was escaping from a thick red wool hat the butler had given her. It was a world away from the elegant little bonnets she used to wear, tipped just so on top of elaborate nests of curls. She looked like a little girl.

Well, perhaps not so little. Not with that deep sensual lip and the way her eyes were watching him. She wasn’t wearing all the face paint of last night but she didn’t need it. Her lips were the dark plum color of ripe fruit.

Even as he watched her tongue stole out and wet her lips, and then she rolled out her bottom lip in that way she had and he was harder than the tree trunk.

There was hardly any room under there, so he crawled forward a bit. “Poppy,” he said slowly.

“It’s your turn,” she said.

“You’ll catch your death. We can’t—”

“In fact, it’s warm in here,” Poppy said. “This is a snow cave. I read about them in Gentleman’s Magazine. When Captain Sybil went to the mountains of Peru, they dug snow caves and described them as quite warm.”

“I am not warm,” Fletch said. “My knees are wet. And my feet are frozen.” He crawled forward again and stopped with his mouth just an inch from her lips. “I want my turn in a proper bed.”

But she reached out one little red-mittened hand, and before he knew it, he was on his back in a soft bed of needles. She was lying on top of him, and through layers of coat he could feel the soft curves of her body. Plus, she was kissing him. Rather clumsily, it was true. She kept clicking their teeth together.

But to Fletch’s mind, enthusiasm made up for everything. And when he managed to get his hands under her coat and started to rub her all over (for warmth, naturally), he found that he liked her kissing more and more.

She was kissing him and snuffling him, and licking his eyebrow and his eyelashes and then swooping down on his mouth whenever he said anything and kissing him into silence. He protested a bit when she started pulling his clothing apart, but by then they’d heated up the little cave. As she kissed her way down his chest, murmuring things about his turn, he felt his temperature go higher and higher.

“Poppy,” he gasped at one point, “I don’t think—”

She was playing, letting snow drift from her fingers onto his nipples and his more sensitive parts and then replacing the brief chill with her warm mouth. Being a naturalist, she accompanied her little experiments with a stream of commentary.

Fletch had never been very noisy in bed. He preferred to devote himself to his partner’s pleasure…but now he found himself helpless in Poppy’s curious hands, helpless under the ministrations of her sweet lips. Strange hoarse noises came from his lips as she played her games, laughing at him, licking him, finally driving him close to mindless pleasure—but not quite close enough.

Finally he managed to snatch her, wordlessly, wrench up her gown and hold her protesting, an inch from his body for a moment before letting her go. Her sweet wet warmth enveloped him.

She stopped protesting. Their clothes bunched up between them. He pulled his fur coat around both of them. Snow kept filtering down onto his face like a dusting of sugar…

It all faded away when he found the way home. The way to her.

He pulled her closer and closer until there was nothing, no end to her and no start to him, or that’s how it felt.

Then he arched up, and she cried out. So he did it again, and again, and there in that perfect little room, Poppy found her voice and cried again and again.

Then she pulled back, sat up so that her head brushed the branches and sent snow all over them, but it melted the moment it struck their bodies.

She was a natural. Found a rhythm that drove him mad, too slow, too fast, he didn’t know. All he knew was that pressure was building, and the pleasure was like pain, the way she kept slipping, sleek and tight and soft away from him and then coming back when the only thing he wanted was to grab her.

So finally he did that: grabbed her hips and held her where she had to be, and with a huge roar arched into her. Again and again, as fierce and as hard as he could.

She was panting and crying out, and he could feel the tension gathering in her body as if it were his own body.

And when the storm finally broke, it was the same moment for them, a shared moment, a shared tempest, a shared joy.

Chapter 53

When Villiers woke up, the bedroom was lit only by one candle. Charlotte was sleeping in a chair next to his bed. The Bible had fallen from her hand and lay half off his bed. He watched her for a bit. Dautry was sleeping in his chair, head awkwardly leaning against the wall.

It was later than he thought, because far away on the wind, he heard a jangle of church bells. They sounded like wild music, like the fairies that come in the night and steal souls, or children, or whoever it is that they steal.

The ringing meant that it was Christmas.

Another Christmas.

She woke up just then, like a cat from her sleep, and blinked at him.

He smiled at her.

“Leopold?” She pushed hair out of her eyes. “Oh my God, did I sleep here last night?”

“You’re ruined,” he said, hearing the cheer in his own voice. “Of course, no one in Jemma’s house hold will have noticed. I can still sue you for breach of promise if I have to.”

“Breach of promise?” She sat up and stretched and then stopped. Stared at him.Froze.

He felt as weak as a kitten, but he managed to push up on his pillows.

“Oh my God,” she whispered. “You—”

“You said that I put too much credence in the opinions of my doctors,” he reminded her. “Treglown said that if I survived the night, I was going to live. Do you think I shouldn’t believe him?”

“But he said—”

“I live to prove the man wrong. Merry Christmas, Charlotte.”

“Merry Christmas,” she whispered.


Tags: Eloisa James Desperate Duchesses Romance