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But she knew down to the marrow of her bones if—when—she carried out the seduction of Lord Percival Bretagne, it wouldn’t be for Montfort.

Chapter 13

Isabel wasn’t hiding her presence, but neither did she announce it.

Still, she was far enough away that she couldn’t hear the contents of his conversation with Michael, which suited Percy well. Part of him wished she would discreetly leave.

Another, possibly larger, part hoped she would stay.

“Razing it to the ground is your best option.” This from Michael.

Percy’s gaze swept over the jagged walls of the ruin, three quarters of which lacked a roof, then out to the sea, gray as the sky above. “I rather like it.”

Michael scoffed. His brother scoffed at least three times a day. “Romantic ideals still intact, little brother?”

Percy tried not to grind his jaw, and failed. Michael had delivered a direct hit by alluding to the frivolous young buck Percy had once been. But he’d be damned if he gave Michael the satisfaction of acknowledging it. “This place has history,” he said.

“A history best forgotten.” Michael gave his thigh a light slap with his riding crop. “It’s crumbling to bits. Better to get rid of it, but your choice.” Another slap of the crop. “And your responsibility.”

Percy held his brother’s gaze. “I take my responsibilities seriously.”

“See that you do. The old man can’t take another of your japes.” That bit of business concluded, half a smile twitched about Michael’s mouth, which was as much of a smile as one was ever to see from the perpetually serious Exeter. He pointed toward Percy’s left eye. “You might want to put a cut of beef on that.”

Percy touched gingerly fingertips to the bruise beneath his left eye. It had already faded to a muted reddish brown. “I ran into a door.”

Michael shook his head on a gusty chortle. “That must’ve been quite a massive door.”

“He was,” Percy replied, drawing another laugh from his brother.

Percy knew the instant Michael noticed Isabel. His smile fell and the humor in his eyes faded, replaced by a hardness. That hardness suggested Michael thought Isabel another of his brother’s japes. That he wasn’t wrong on that score sat at an uncomfortable angle inside Percy. Michael gave Percy a curt nod in parting as he strode from the area, dipping his head in passing acknowledgment as he swept past Isabel.

Percy and Isabel’s eyes met and held across the distance. His heart gave a ragged thump, and air became difficult to inhale. Her tongue gave her lips a nervous lick. His eyes dropped to her mouth. They couldn’t help themselves.

Into the hushed space entered last night.

His lips upon hers, insistent, demanding.

Her sway, her surrender.

“For my actions last night,” he found himself beginning, unsure where he would end, “I offer my sincere”—that was a stretch—“apology. It was a moment of madness.”

Isabel’s eyes narrowed into green slits, and Percy suddenly felt that he’d somehow stepped in quicksand. Once one set foot in it, one was sunk. A long moment drew out, her direct gaze never wavering. Percy shifted uncomfortably on his feet. At last, she spoke. “You speak of a one-sided desire.Yours.”

Soul-deep shock raced through Percy. Was she truly implying what he thought she was?

“But,” she continued.

“But?”

“Butwhat of my desire?”

She was.

Isabel pushed off the wall at her back and took a few steps forward. Percy’s insides did a little flip. “You think you had the only say in the matter? And who is to say whose desire was greater? Mayhap I should be apologizing to you?”

Percy’s breath refused to budge from his lungs as his wickedness surged, heady at the prospect of the myriad ways she could offer her apologies. But . . .

She was a virgin.