Home > The Serpent Prince (Princes #3)(54)

The Serpent Prince (Princes #3)(54)
Author: Elizabeth Hoyt

She moaned. What was he doing to her?

“Do you want it, too?” He moved, not entering her but thrusting his erection through her wetness. He was rubbing against her bud.

She arched helplessly, whimpering.

“Do you?” he whispered into the hair at her temple. He thrust his hips again.

Pleasure. “I—”

“Do you?” He bit her earlobe.

“Ohhh.” She couldn’t think, couldn’t form the words that he wanted. She could only feel.

“Do you?” He cradled both her breasts in his hands and pinched the nipples as he thrust over her again.

And she came, grinding her hips against him, seeing stars in the darkness of her eyelids, moaning incoherently.

“God, you’re beautiful.” He positioned himself and pushed.

She felt a twinge, a slight ache, but she no longer cared. She wanted him inside, as close as possible to her. He wrapped his hand around her knee and hitched up one of her legs and pushed again. She was opening, parting, accepting him. She moaned, listening to his rough breathing. He pushed once more and his entire length came into her.

He groaned. “Do you hurt?”

She shook her head. Why wouldn’t he move?

His expression was strained. He bent his head and kissed her softly, brushing over her lips, barely making contact. “I won’t hurt you this time.”

He pulled her other knee up until she was sprawled open beneath him. Then he ground down on her. She moaned. His pelvis was exactly where it should be, and she was in heaven.

He circled his hips and grunted, “Is it good?”

“Um, yes.”

He grinned tightly. And ground down again. Then he kissed her with long, luscious strokes of his tongue, his mouth making love to hers, and always the pressure of his hips, hard and demanding. She was drifting in a sensual haze and didn’t know how long he made love to her. Time seemed to have stopped so they could be wrapped together in a cocoon of physical pleasure and emotional rapport. She held him tightly to her. This was her husband. This was her lover.

Then he stiffened and his movements became jerkier, faster.

She gasped and caught his face between her palms, wanting to be connected to him when it happened. He thrust hard against her and she felt his seed, hot inside her, right before her world started swirling. His mouth became slack on hers. She continued kissing him, licking along his bottom lip, tasting his mouth.

He pushed up from her, but she tightened her arms to hold him. “Stay.”

He looked at her.

“Stay with me. All night long. Please.”

His lips quirked in a small smile before he whispered, “Always.”

Chapter Thirteen

“It’s not a game for you, is it?” Christian asked several nights later. His voice was low, but Simon glanced uneasily around nonetheless.

Drury Lane Theater was as crowded as a corpse bloated with maggots. He’d procured a gilt-edged box on the second level for himself, Lucy, Rosalind, and Christian. The box was close enough to see the whites of the actors’ eyes, high enough that any stray vegetables couldn’t reach them, should the play turn sour. The rabble in the stalls below was relatively well behaved. The prostitutes working the floor kept their nipples covered—mostly. The noise was low enough that he could actually hear David Garrick, playing a rather elderly Hamlet, recite his lines. Of course, it helped that the actor had lungs like a fishwife’s.

“SBLOOD,” Garrick bawled, “do you think me easier played on than a PIPE?” Spittle glittered in the stage lights.

Simon winced. He much preferred reading Shakespeare to attending it. This was assuming he had to consume the bard at all. He glanced at Lucy. She was enthralled, his angel, her eyes half-closed, her lips parted as she watched the play. Behind her, the crimson velvet curtains lining the box framed her head, making a foil for her pale profile and her dark hair. She was almost unbearably beautiful.

He looked away. “What are you talking about?”

Christian scowled. “You know. The duels. Why are you killing these men?”

Simon arched an eyebrow. “Why do you think?”

The younger man shook his head. “At first I thought it was honor of some kind, that they had insulted a lady close to you.” His gaze skittered to Rosalind and away. “I’d heard rumors . . . Well, they were repeated everywhere a couple of years ago, before your brother died.”

Simon waited.

“And then I thought perhaps you wanted a reputation. The glory of having dueled and killed.”

Simon repressed a snort. Glory. God, what a thought.

“But after James”—Christian looked at him, puzzled—“you fought with such ferocity, such viciousness. It had to be personal. What did the man do to you?”

“He killed my brother.”

Christian’s jaw dropped open. “Ethan?”

“Hush.” Simon glanced at Rosalind. Although she was obviously less interested in the play than Lucy, her eyes were still on the stage. He turned back to Christian. “Yes.”

“How . . . ?”

“I’m not going to discuss this here.” He frowned impatiently. Why should he bother explaining himself at all?

“But you’re looking for another one.”

Simon rested his chin in his open hand, half covering his mouth. “How do you know?”

Christian shifted impatiently in his velvet and gilt chair.

Simon glanced at the stage. Hamlet was creeping up on his kneeling uncle. The Danish prince raised his sword, babbled verse, and then sheathed it again, another opportunity for vengeance lost. Simon sighed. He’d always found this particular play tedious. Why didn’t the prince just kill his uncle and have done?

“I’m not stupid, you know. I’ve followed you.”

“What?” Simon’s attention swung back to the man sitting beside him.

“The last couple of days,” Christian said. “To the Devil’s Playground and to other sordid places. You go in, don’t drink, roam around the room, question the staff—”

Simon interrupted this laundry list of activities. “Why are you following me?”

Christian ignored him. “You’re looking for a big man, a titled aristocrat. Someone who gambles, but not as compulsively as James, otherwise you would’ve found him already.”

“Why are you following me?” Simon grit his teeth.

“How could all these men, men of standing and good family, have killed your brother?”

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