"If I might be so bold, Miss Cynster—"

"Dear lady, if you would do me the honor—" Mr. Morley, Lord Carmichael, and Sir Basil Swathe all broke off, glanced at each other, then looked at Amelia. She hesitated, waited — then lifted her chin. "I—" Luc pinched her fingers trapped under his hand. "My dear, I came to fetch you — Mama desires you to meet an old friend." She looked at him. "But the waltz…?" "I fear this old friend is quite elderly and must leave soon. He's rarely in London." He glanced at her four cavaliers. "If you'll excuse us."

No question, of course; he barely waited for her to murmur her good-byes before drawing her away. Not onto the dance floor, where she'd wanted to go — with him — but doggedly back into the house.

Inside the doors of the long reception room, she halted, refusing to be dragged farther. "Who is this old friend your mother wants me to meet?" Luc glanced at her. "A figment of my imagination." Before she could respond, he changed direction, urging her to a door. "This way." She was intrigued enough, hopeful enough, to let him steer her through, into a short passage that eventually joined a corridor running parallel to the reception room on the other side of the house. Rooms opened off it to both sides.

Her hand locked in his, Luc made for a door halfway along the corridor, on the side farthest from the reception room. Opening the door, he looked in, then stepped back and swept her before him — she had no real option but to enter the room. He followed on her heels.

She looked around. The room was a parlor boasting comfortable sofas, chairs, and low tables. Long curtains framed the windows, undrawn, allowing pale moonlight, faint but pervasive, to illuminate the scene.

One in which no other soul breathed, bar them.

She heard a muted click. She swung around in time to see Luc slide something into his waistcoat pocket. A glance at the door confirmed the lock was the sort that would normally have a key in it. It no longer did.

A most peculiar sensation flickered over her skin, slithered down her spine. She lifted her gaze to Luc's face as he closed the distance between them.

She was not going to let him fluster her, make her act like some mindless ninny he could manage with disgustingly arrogant ease. Folding her arms beneath her breasts, uncaring of the fact that pulled the ruffle forming her bodice tight, she lifted her chin. "What's this all about?"

He blinked, halted, apparently uncertain. Then she realized he wasn't looking at her face. A fact he quickly rectified, lifting his eyes to meet hers.

"This," he stated, through clenched teeth, "is about that."

She frowned. "That?"

His features grew grimmer; his eyes, so dark, burned. "We need to discuss our tactics. The steps we're going to take to manipulate the ton into believing our marriage is anything but arranged. We need to discuss the order in which we're going to take those steps. And we need — definitely need — to discuss the small matter of timing."

"Timing?" She widened her eyes. "Surely it's simply a matter of taking our agreed steps in their appropriate order, and if the opportunity presents to move faster—"

"No! That is where we disagree."

He was still speaking through his teeth. She frowned — pointedly — searching his face. "Whatever is the matter with you?"

Luc looked long and hard into her wide blue eyes, and couldn't tell if she was teasing. "Nothing," he ground out. "Nothing that any normal — no, never mind!" He raked back his hair, then realized what he was doing and let his hand fall. "The important thing we're going to discuss and agree on is the pace of our little charade."

"Pace? What—"

"It can't go too fast." "Why not?"

Because that risked revealing far too much. He locked his gaze on her stubborn face. "Because going too fast will raise questions — questions we'd rather weren't asked. Like is there any reason for my sudden pursuit of you — I've only known you for how long? Twenty something years? Too fast, and people will wonder what's behind it. And my possible motives are the least of it. I told you from the start, this needs to be convincing, and that means slow. Four weeks. No shortcuts."

"I thought you meant we could take up to four weeks, not that it had to take four weeks."

"People need to see a steady progression from mild interest, to awareness, to decision, to confirmation. If they don't see any motive — if we don't give them a good show — they won't accept it."

All nonsense, of course. If she had any more gowns in her armoire like the one she was wearing, no one would wonder at his sudden decision.

On the thought, his gaze lowered; he frowned at the offending article. "Have you any more gowns like that?"

She glared, then looked down at her gown, spread the skirts. "What is it about this gown that so irks you?"

He had wisdom enough to know to keep his lips shut; instead, he heard himself growl, "It's too damned inviting."

She seemed taken aback. "Is it?"

"Yes!" He'd thought the effect bad enough in his hall, and even worse under the chandeliers. Yet the worst, most dizzying effect was now, in half-light. He'd noticed it under the trees; it had been partly to blame for his unwise words. In poor light, the gown made her skin shimmer, too, as if her bare shoulders and breasts were part of a pearl, rising from the froth of the sea. Offered, waiting for the right hand to recognize and seize, take, reveal the rest that the gown concealed…

Small wonder he could barely think.

"It's…" He gestured, struggling to find the right words to talk his way out of this morass.

She was looking down, considering. "Inviting… but isn't that how I should look?"

It was the way she lifted her head and met his gaze — head-on, direct — that shook his laggard wits into place. His eyes slowly narrowed as he considered — her words, and her. "You know." He took a menacing step toward her. She dropped her skirts and straightened, but didn't step back. He halted and glared down into her eyes. "You know damned well how you — in that damned gown — affect men."

Her eyes widened. "Well of course." She tilted her head, as if wondering at his thought processes. "Whyever did you imagine I'd worn it?"

He made a strangled sound — the remnants of the roar he refused to let her hear. He never lost his temper — except, these days, with her! He pointed a finger at the tip of her nose. "If you wish me to marry you, you will not again wear this gown, or any like it, unless I give you leave."

She held his gaze, then drew herself up, folded her arms—

"For God's sake, don't do that!" He shut his eyes against the sight of her breasts rising even higher above the rippling edge of her bodice.

"I'm perfectly decent."

Her tone was clipped, distinctly acid. He risked lifting his lids the veriest fraction; his gaze, predictably, locked on the ivory mounds flauntingly displayed by the distracting gown. Her nipples had to be just—

"Anyone would think you've never seen a lady's breasts before — you can't expect me to believe that." Amelia kept her delight at his susceptibility firmly in check. Not hard; she didn't like the direction this discussion was taking.

His gaze was unabashedly locked on her breasts; beneath the thick fringe of his sooty lashes, his dark eyes glittered. "At this point, I don't much care what you believe." There was a quality in his voice, in the slowly and precisely enunciated words, that made her still, that alerted every instinct she possessed. His gaze slowly rose, and fixed on her eyes. "I repeat: if you want me to marry you, you will not again wear this gown, or any like it."

She lifted her chin. "I'll need to some time — toward the end—"

"No. You won't. Need to. Or do so." She felt her jaw lock, could almost feel her will and his collide, but while hers was like a wall, his was like a tide — it flowed all around, surged, tugged, weakened her foundations. She knew him too well, knew she couldn't push him and didn't dare defy him at this point.

It didn't happen easily, but she forced herself to nod. "Very well." She drew in a breath. "But on one condition."

He'd blinked, his gaze lowering; he jerked it back up to her face. "What condition?"

"I want you to kiss me again." He stared at her. A moment passed. "Now?" She spread her hands, widened her eyes. "We're here — completely private. You locked the door." She gestured to her gown. "I'm wearing this. Surely our charade suggests a certain script?"

Luc looked into her eyes — he was perfectly sure he'd never felt so torn in his life. Every instinct, every urge, every demon he possessed wanted nothing more than to seize the slender body so provocatively displayed and feast. Every instinct bar one. Self-preservation was the only naysayer, but it was screaming.

Increasingly hoarsely.

There was no way he could argue his way out of her suggestion. Aside from anything else, his mind baldly refused to be a party to that much deceit.

He lifted his shoulders, making it look like a shrug, in reality trying to ease the tension that had already locked every muscle. "Very well." His voice was even, his tone commendably nonchalant. "One kiss."

One rigidly controlled, absolutely finite kiss.

He reached for her; she stepped toward him. Before he could catch her and hold her back, she was in his arms, her distracting gown shushing against his coat, her supple figure stretching against him as she reached up and twined her arms about his neck.