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Books by Melissa MacNeal
ALL NIGHT LONG
HOT FOR IT
SEXUAL SECRETS
THE HAREM
(with Celia May Hart, Emma Leigh, and Noelle Mack)
NAUGHTY, NAUGHTY
(with P.J. Mellor and Valerie Martinez)
UNWRAP ME
(with Susan Lyons and Melissa Randall)
TEMPTED BY A COWBOY
(with Delilah Devlin and Vonna Harper)
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
Sexual Secrets
MELISSA MACNEAL
KENSINGTON BOOKS
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
1
London, 1898
“I see a time of cataclysmic change for you. A time of sexual upheaval so pronounced as to produce a whirlwind—no, a hurricane—of passion! You will feel like a volcano as you erupt with new sensations and delights!”
Camille Bentley gaped at the medium seated beside her and then burst out laughing. “Passion? Erupting like a volcano? Do you forget who I’m married to, Rubio?”
Rubio Palladino’s gaze didn’t waver. “Listen well, my dear. Sex isn’t about marriage, nor is marriage about sex. And you, Colette—you are not to be left behind as your sister revels in untold pleasures, for I sense the coming of a dark stranger…” His eyes went slightly out of focus as he gazed inward. “A charismatic foreign man…a mysterious woman veiled in white…betrayal and revenge—even a death, perhaps! And they will stem from the dissatisfactions you now find in the marriage bed.”
Colette Bentley glanced at her twin sister and then focused on the seer who sat between them. “How much opium did you smoke last night?” she teased, but then she turned deadly serious. “What’s this talk of betrayal and revenge? Someone’s death? And what gives you the right—the nerve—to insinuate such intimate knowledge of my so-called dissatisfaction?”
“Have I ever been wrong? Have I ever misled you?” Rubio’s eyes refocused and shone like jet-black diamonds. He swept his mane of chestnut hair back from a face accentuated by chiseled cheekbones and a nose pierced with a tiny gold ring, like a gypsy’s. “I have laid out the cards you both selected with your own hands, and, as I do each Monday, I interpret the wisdom the Tarot reveals. And I’m telling you,” he added with a furtive laugh, “your lives are about to be turned upside down.”
“When? And what shall we do?” Camille asked in a thin voice.
“Within the week.” The medium swept his cards into his hand with a quick, practiced movement. “Consider your situations with your husbands very carefully indeed, for all you have believed is about to be overturned. Things are not what they seem. Good day, ladies.” With that, the slender man rose from his chair and walked out of their shop, his purple duster aflutter. Only the exotic scent of his cologne lingered to torment them further.
Camille blinked. Every Monday morning before they opened the couturier they consulted with Rubio about the week to come, but this! Today’s reading made her head spin! “What on earth do you suppose he meant?” she whispered. “Rutledge is so old—so impaired—he shows his affection only when others are watching. Only to make his friends believe he’s quite the man, to be satisfying a woman young enough to be—”
“You think I don’t know that?” Colette stood suddenly, her cheeks flaring. “Rubio has his moments—his dramatic little habits—but betrayal! Death! Talk of dark, foreign strangers and women in white? I don’t believe a word of it! He’s toying with us.”
Camille watched her twin snatch up her ledger and pen as a signal that it was time to get to work. “We can’t deny Rubio’s predictions concerning world events,” she mused aloud, “and how all the Queen’s court hangs on every word he—”
“The court can believe as they choose! We have a shop to run. Alice!” she called out. “Alice, where are the gowns Lady Etheridge ordered? She’ll be here within the hour for her fitting!”
“On my way! Comin’, I am!” Their young seamstress bustled from the back room, her eyes widened as though she hadn’t been eavesdropping on Rubio’s reading. She quickly hung three basted gowns on pegs along the salon wall. “Here they be, ready and waitin’! You and your sister approved ’em Friday afternoon and said that if Lady Etheridge keeps eatin’ like a greedy pig at so many parties—”
“Alice Furling!” Camille waved a finger in warning. “She’ll be here any moment. Please fetch us some of those lemon curd tarts she prefers, and then set on the water for tea when you return. It’s in our best interest to provide our clients with everything they desire.”
“And if her mouth’s full she can’t complain about how you miscalculated her measurements, eh?” The seamstress giggled before ducking out the door, leaving the twin sisters in a strained silence.
“Cheeky chit,” Colette muttered as she took up her pen. “You know damn well she’ll come back late, looking like she’s just taken a tumble—”
“Because Rubio can’t keep his hands off her?”
“Because Rubio…” Colette raised an eyebrow, sensing her sister’s mockery. “Why do we tolerate Alice? She’s unpredictable and constantly eavesdropping and flighty and—”
“All the things you’re not, dear sister?” Camille felt her usual good humor returning now that their seamstress was the butt of her sister’s testy mood.
“And what do you mean by that?”
“I think Rubio’s predictions have struck too close to home. And you don’t like it one little bit,” Camille replied lightly.
“And