Something long denied, crushed, unfamiliar, perturbing. Planning this reckless gamble, sheâd never factored in cravings of her own.
âLord Ashcroft?â she asked sharply when his attention didnât shift from her bosom.
The eyes he raised were opaque, like cloudy green ice. âMy dear lady, flattered as I am, I must decline your generous offer.â
Chapter Two
T he earlâs voice was wintry. He sounded as if he turned away an importuning tradesman. To Dianaâs chagrin, her color rose higher. Anger stirred. Anger and shock.
Wildly, she cast around for some inducement to convince him he wanted her in his bed. She looked into that handsome, implacable face and saw not a spark of attraction. Not even a spark of interest.
Mortification knotted her belly. She wanted to be proud and disdainful. Treat him with the contempt he obviously felt for her. Instead, one shaky word emerged from her lips. âWhy?â
Annoyance darkened his striking features. âMadam, there is no point inâ¦â
As she rose, her legs were unsteady. She had no idea what to do, she was lost, bewildered, embarrassed. She couldnât countenance defeat even though defeat stared her in the face. And so early in the game. âYour pardon.â
He stood as she did and rounded the desk in two or three powerful strides. Blindly she turned toward the door. She should stay, fight him. All she wanted right now was to leave.
The glittering, magnificent reward that lured her to prostitute herself sailed completely out of reach. She couldnât bear it.
âMadam. Dianaâ¦â
She made a gesture of denial although the sound of her Christian name in that deep, vibrant voice made every nerve buzz with awareness. Her trembling hand closed around the doorknob and turned it.
The door didnât budge.
A large masculine hand flattened on the mahogany panel in front of her. A large masculine hand attached to a long masculine arm.
Panic joined her whirling maelstrom of emotions.
They were alone. It was his house. Sheâd placed herself outside the protections society offered chaste women.
The breath jammed in her lungs. Slowly, she turned and looked up at him. Surprising really, how far up. She hadnât realized quite how tall he was. His body was so beautifully proportioned, his height hadnât seemed unusual when heâd stood for her entrance and exit.
Except she clearly wasnât making an exit anytime soon.
âWhat do you want?â she asked in a thready whisper, her eyes fastening on that remarkable face, with its intelligence and wickedness.
Â
âPerhaps I want you,â Ashcroft murmured. And watched her gray eyes darken with fear and a fascination she couldnât hide, much as he knew she tried to.
Which made no sense when sheâd boldly offered herself, cool as a drink of springwater on a summerâs day.
She had beautiful eyes. Large, clear, and brilliant, shadowed by thick dark gold lashes that matched her elegant brows but not her bright gold hair, just visible under the bonnet.
Ashcroft frowned down at the woman, the pores of his skin tightening with unwelcome arousal. And warning.
Nothing about her added up. He didnât trust her. Instincturged him to throw her out on her stylish rump and pray he never encountered her again.
Yet he wasnât entirely ready to let her go.
This close, his senses filled with her scent. Green apples. Disconcertingly innocent. And beneath that fresh perfume, a subtle female warmth.
Since sheâd raised her veils with that absurdly dramatic gesture, he hadnât been able to look away. She was exquisite. Slender and graceful, with a purity of feature heâd never seen before. She looked like a Madonna, yet hawked herself like a streetwalker.
Any man would pay a fortune for her favors. If she was a courtesan. He already knew she wasnât.
Perhaps she was the country widow she claimed. His intuition insisted she