best confection.” Colette grabbed her sister’s slender hands, unable to contain her excitement. “While Alice is away—probably stopping to see Rubio before she returns—you and I will figure out how to switch husbands! You know you want to!”
3
Camille shook until her skirts quivered around her knees. As she gripped her sister’s strong yet delicate hands—such capable hands—she felt a surge of heat and energy and excitement. Excitement! How long since she’d felt this giddy? This open to the new possibilities: such a decadently delicious opportunity as switching husbands! And having that prodigious cock of Heath’s rammed up inside her…
“My stars! Is it me, or has it grown impossibly warm in here?”
Her twin giggled. “Isn’t this the most fabulous idea we’ve had since—well, since we married Rutledge and Heath Bentley? And the beauty of it is, we can change back if it doesn’t suit us! And who will be the wiser?”
Camille gulped air to keep the room from spinning. “Let’s not consider that, sister. Already that new footman—Charlie, isn’t it?—has listened in on our plan, and the driver—”
“Are we not the ladies of the manor? Do we not wield as much power, in our female ways, as Lord Bentley and his son?”
Her sister’s provocative question made her insides pulse, and Camille had to admit there was a certain wisdom to Colette’s assertion. Her bolder twin had always been the one who greased the proverbial wheels and cleared the way for whatever her heart desired.
And she wanted to swap son Heath for his father, Rutledge. Never in her life had Camille anticipated this surprise! This godsend of an opportunity to escape the gilded cage Lord Bentley displayed her in…to suit his own whims at the sacrifice of her own.
She released Colette’s hands. Inhaled the coolness that drifted down from the open windows, to focus on the ordinary sounds of horse-drawn carriages passing the shop…. cries of the street vendors…to anchor herself in reality as she contemplated Colette’s idea.
The reality was that she had four dresses to design in the next few days. But how could she concentrate on her drawing, or trust herself to cut the exquisite silk faille and crepe de chine her well-heeled client had chosen? These gowns, striking imitations of what Empress Eugenie and the Queen had recently worn to the theatre, would set the tone for the entire fashion season among London’s elite. The designs could be nothing less than stupendous.
She would entertain Colette’s fancy until Alice appeared with their custard tart. Then she would eat and get to work, fortified by their foray into this delicious deception.
“So you think no one will be the wiser? What about Daisy and Mrs. Douthit?” she queried as she led the way to the studio. “They’ve attended us since we first married into the Bentley household. They know our mannerisms and our preferences, when it comes to coifing us and choosing our day’s attire and—”
“Yes, indeed, dear sister, if you believe they can perceive differences in our idiosyncrasies, they will! And we’ll be caught before we start! So stop it!” Colette widened her eyes dramatically, teasing…yet not. “And if they do discover our dirty little secret, it’ll be your overcautious, overanxious frowns and questions that alert them! Not mine! Just last night the new cook called you by my name, and neither Daisy nor Mrs. Douthit corrected her.”
Camille began to unfasten her dress. When there were gowns to finish or garments awaiting their final inspection, she and her sister often tried them on. “All right then, when do you propose we do this? It’ll take time to prepare—”
“How soon do you want him inside you, sister?”
Her face flushed the same shade of cerise as her gown. “You make it sound as though we’re arranging stud service for one of Heath’s mares—”
“And aren’t we?” Colette now stood in her corset, camisole, and drawers with her hands on her hips, looking sassy. So damned sure of herself, considering the risks this switch presented. And so damned fetching, with her hair still mussed from her tumble with her husband. She was the picture of a cosseted, confident woman, and her fragrance was a mixture of Heath’s outdoorsy masculinity and a personal perfume Camille had known since before they were born.
“What about Heath? Even if Rutledge won’t become intimate enough to notice you aren’t his wife, your man pays attention to such details,” Camille pointed out. She was stalling, trying very hard to delay such a provocative experiment even as her body twitched in places she didn’t scratch even in front of her twin. “And if Heath figures out our trick, and tells his father, there’ll be hell to pay!”
Colette’s bow-shaped mouth puckered in a secretive smile. “Truth be told, Heath has hinted that he’d like to bed us both. At the same time.”
“He what?”
Her sister shrugged, seeming nonchalant despite the shocking nature of her revelation. “Heath is a man who craves variety—as many men do, sweet sister. If he surmises he’s claimed his father’s bride, he’ll play our game to see how long he can get away with it. What advantage would he have if he revealed our deception to his father?”
“All right then!” Camille rasped. “What about the masked ball next month at Lord Herrington’s? We can dress in identical costumes and—”
“Each return home with the other’s husband? A fine idea! I like it!” Colette clapped her hands gleefully.
“This gives us time to compare notes about our behaviors in the bedroom—”
“And our masks will hide any telltale facial expressions,” Colette added.
“And in the meantime we can also match our voices and gestures and—”
“You’re a genius, Camille. I knew you’d figure out a way, you naughty little thing!” Colette added in a low voice. Her gaze lingered below the waistline of Camille’s opera drawers. “I bet your puss is wet just from thinking about this! Isn’t it?”
Camille nipped her lip and stepped quickly into the dress she was trying on. She would not admit, even to her twin, that her drawers still felt clammy and clingy from watching Heath’s performance through the doorway. It didn’t help that the bedsprings above them, in Rubio Palladino’s apartment, groaned in a suggestive rhythm.
“See there! You want it again right now!” Colette crowed. “Why do I suspect you’ll come sneaking up to spy on us every morning?”
“Don’t be absurd! Daisy will catch on—” Camille stopped to ponder another aspect of this deception, while her sister smoothed the back of the completed gown and then came around in front of her to inspect its ruffled bodice. “And what benefit will you receive from this, Colette?” she asked quietly. “Rutledge is every bit the bore in the bedroom you’ve seen at the table each evening. And once his clothes come off, well…you’ll be missing Heath’s fit, muscled body, I assure you!”
Colette smirked. With practiced hands she tugged at each strip of lace, neck to bosom, to be sure it was stitched securely. “I’ll take my satisfaction from watching you scurry to get dressed and coifed before we come to the shop each morning, Camille. And I’ll eat my meals on time. And who knows?” she asked airily. “Perhaps I’ll catch up on my reading or even engage in intelligent conversation. I’ve done precious little to keep my mind alive these past three years. Why, if it weren’t for tallying the books here at the shop, my brain would’ve wasted away long ago!”
“Lucky for us our husbands don’t think we have brains! Or at least not enough to carry out a deception such as this one!”
They laughed together, a happy sound that rang in the rafters of the salon as they grasped hands. “It will be so much fun to—”
“And a good mornin’ to you, sir!” came Alice’s call from the sidewalk outside. “Might I help ya find somethin’?”
Camille