The Promise in a Kiss

The Promise in a Kiss by Stephanie Laurens Page A

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Authors: Stephanie Laurens
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than her eyes.
    Earrings, each with a smaller emerald set above pearls, and a matching pair of bracelets—miniature versions of the necklace—completed the set.
    Of the king’s ransom she already owned, no piece appealed to her half as much.
    Helena dropped the necklace as if it had burned her. “We must send it back.” She pushed the case away from her.
    Louis had been examining the packaging; now he glanced at the case. “There is no card. Do you know who sent it?”
    â€œSt. Ives! It must be from him.” Helena pushed back her chair; some impulse was urging her to run, to flee from the necklace—from her wish to touch it, to run her fingers along the smooth strands. To imagine how it would feel around her throat, how it would look.
    Damn Sebastian!
    She stood. “Please arrange to have it returned to His Grace.”
    â€œBut, ma petite. ” Marjorie had searched the packaging for herself. “If there is no card, then we cannot be sure who sent it. What if it wasn’t monsieur le duc?”
    Helena looked down at Marjorie; she could almost see Sebastian’s smug smile. “You are right,” she eventually said. She sat again. After a moment of staring at the pearls lying like temptation on their velvet bed, she drew the case closer. “I will have to think what is best to be done.”
    â€œY ou sent me these, did you not?”
    The fingers of one hand caressing the pearls encircling her throat, Helena turned to face Sebastian. The silk of her pale green skirts swished sensuously; she let her fingers trail lovingly over the pearls, following the strands over her breasts.
    Lips lightly curved, Sebastian watched every move. She could tell nothing from his face or his eyes.
    â€œThey look very well on you, mignonne .”
    She refused to think how well, how they made her feel.
    As if she were dangereuse, too.
    Only he could have delivered the ultimate temptation to play his game. Never before had she felt so powerful—powerful enough to engage with a man such as he.
    A thrill of excitement, of insidious attraction flared; she turned, paced, unable to keep still.
    When he’d appeared by her side in Lady Carlyle’s ballroom, his eyes had gone straight to the necklace, then he’d quickly noted the other pieces she’d also donned. She’d acquiesced readily to his invitation to stroll the room. Sure enough, he had, as only he could, found an anteroom giving off the ballroom. An empty room, poorly lit by wall lamps, with a tiled floor and a small fountain splashing at its center.
    Her heels clicked on the tiles as she paced before the fountain; she threw him an openly considering glance. “If not you . . . perhaps it was Were? Perhaps he is missing me.”
    Sebastian said nothing, but even in the weak light she saw his face harden.
    â€œNo,” she said. “It was not Were—it was you. What do you expect to gain by it?”
    He watched her—whether considering his answer or merely stretching her nerves tight, she could not tell—then said, “ If I had sent such a gift, I would expect to receive . . . whatever response you would naturally give to one who had so indulged you.”
    She let her eyes flash, let her temper show. She’d grown accustomed, over the weeks, to letting him see it. Even now there seemed no reason to hide her feelings from him. With a swish of her skirts, she swung to face him and lifted her chin. “The thanks I would give to whoever had so indulged me . . . that I could give only if I knew who that gentleman was.”
    He smiled. With his usual prowling gait, he closed the distance between them. “ Mignonne, I care not, in truth, whether you judge me the one deserving of your gratitude.”
    Halting before her, he raised one hand and tangled his long fingers in the strands below her throat. He lifted the pearls; fingers sliding, he gathered the lengthy

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