Portia Da Costa

Diamonds in the Rough


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“But let’s put that behind us, shall we? And start again... Perhaps we can investigate this ingenious toy of yours?” He nodded at the praxinoscope. “And then perhaps select a few exciting volumes from this hoard together? It seems a shame not to, now we’re here.”

      She was relenting. He was sure of it. Indecipherable emotions flickered in her gleaming eyes.

      Adela’s looks didn’t conform to fashionable standards of beauty, and he was only too aware that, though she wouldn’t admit it, certain imperfections troubled her. The slight crook in her nose troubled him, too, though not because it was unattractive. To him, it was piquant, almost provocative. It was only the little kink’s provenance that irked his soul.

      His fault. He couldn’t be blamed for her chicken pox scars, though, even if Adela would probably have liked to pin them on him, too. The little pink marks were like a dusting of stars scattered across the apples of her cheeks that only accentuated the otherwise porcelain perfection of her skin.

      But what female ever saw her flaws as assets? Adela was intelligent and pragmatic, but even the most sensible woman had vanity.

      Her next words only confirmed that. “Well, if you’d stop gaping at my bent nose and my pockmarks, I might consider staying. But I’m not one of your scientific studies, you know.”

      “I’m not staring.” More lies. He was staring. “It’s just that it’s, um, very pleasant to see you.”

      Good Lord, I sound like a gauche youth faced with his first woman.

      His heart turned over and his hand went limp, freeing her again. Adela was his first woman, and he her first man. And whatever difficulties and conflict arose, that simple truth would forever be a bond between them.

      “Well, it looks like staring to me.” But Adela was the one staring now. She was gaping at him as if he’d gone stark mad. “And I don’t care for it. I’m looking careworn and as washed out as whey at the moment.” Her mouth pursed in a little moue of displeasure. “Black is the most unflattering of colors, and even though I know Papa wouldn’t mind me abandoning it, thanks to the Old Curmudgeon and his grudges we don’t have funds for colorful gowns at the moment.” She fixed Wilson with an old-fashioned look, as if daring him to comment.

      Black did suit her. Couldn’t she see that? She looked superb in the inky hue, and was just trying to make him feel guilty. Again. “Don’t be stupid, Della, you look exceptionally fine in black. It gives you a regal and very intriguing quality.” It sounded fanciful and made-up, but by George it was the truth.

      “You have a strange way of trying to butter me up, Wilson. It won’t work.” She gave him a stiff look, narrow of eye, but surprisingly, she stayed where she was.

      “But I’m not trying to butter you up. It’s the truth. You’re a handsome woman.” Her gleaming walnut-colored eyes widened. He saw her wanting to believe. “You’re only being willful in denying it. If you don’t believe me, I’ll prove it to you.”

      Catching her again and spinning her toward him, he inclined his head and pressed his lips on hers. As hard as he could.

      3

      The Most Aggravating Man in the World

      The touch of Wilson’s lips rocked Adela in her shoes. Seven years ago he’d done exactly this. Grabbed her and kissed her. Now it felt as if barely a second had passed between that kiss and this one, and just as before, all her resolution melted, lost in a heightened perception so intense it almost pained her.

      Her cousin’s mouth was like warm velvet moving against hers, infinitely teasing and tantalizing, and she could smell his shaving lotion and his soap, the notes of each one quite separately distinct. On his lips there was a very faint flavor of something sweet and spicy, plum cake perhaps. It was on his tongue when it traced the seam of her lips.

      These impressions crowded into the space of a small, surprised fragment of a second, each one of them enough to rock her heart.

      I should push you away. I should push you away and run like the wind. This is all wrong and it will only lead to trouble, no matter what Mama thinks.

      Yet with this rationale in her mind, Adela still wound her arms around her outrageous cousin instead of thrusting him away. He was, and always had been, the most aggravating man in the world, but still she parted her lips for him, instead of clamping them shut and grabbing him by the ears to get him off her.

      Oh, how she’d yearned for Wilson once, yearned for him with all her young heart and soul. But until a moment or two ago, she’d believed the urge done and dead, crushed by circumstances and Wilson himself. Now, it was patently obvious she’d been completely wrong about that. Her feelings for him were as alive and rambunctious as ever. The taste of his mouth and tongue thrilled her just as it had all those years ago. Sliding her free hand boldly beneath his dressing gown, she clasped his strong, lean back and pressed her body close to his, metaphorically waving adieu to her wits.

      Ah! I’m not the only one with feelings alive and well, then....

      His cock was hard, and it pressed against the curve of her belly, just beneath her corset, as hot and ungovernable as it had been those seven years ago. In the frozen moment of time that they stood together, his eager flesh seemed to twitch, calling to hers. Even though there were layers and layers of clothing between them.

      Adela rocked her hips, the response like breathing. Wilson gasped, making a gruff sound in his throat, countering her action.

      What was she doing? This was absurd. Unthinkable. In the space of a few fractious exchanges, he’d unmasked her. Compelled her to reveal her secret self, just by...just by being Wilson! Trying to back away, Adela shoved hard, her hand spread against his chest to dislodge him. No more blindly clinging and cleaving like a hysterical trollop. It was madness.

      “Wilson! For heaven’s sake, what are you doing? You can’t just grab me and kiss me as if you own me!” He seemed reluctant to let her go. His grip even tightened. But then he succumbed, fingers relaxing their hold on her arms. “Have some decorum. You’re not a rutting dog!” Adela cried, jumping back a step.

      “Decorum, eh? I’m not the one who threw her arms around me just now.” Oh, that voice, that damned voice. It was familiar, thrilling, deep, its resonance playing across her senses like a bow across a violin. A narrow smirk curved her cousin’s beautiful mouth with its sharply defined upper lip. “All I was hoping for was a chaste and cousinly peck on the cheek. I didn’t expect to be manhandled.”

      You are an insufferable beast who should be thrashed and pummeled.

      “It was just shock, cousin dearest. You kissed first and it surprised me. I wasn’t quite in my right mind.” She darted back farther, still clutching her portfolio of sketches. She had to get out of here. But just looking at him made it difficult to leave.

      Her distant cousin Wilson Ruffington had always been an eccentric, and even his liaison with a notoriously fashionable French adventuress didn’t appear to have tidied him up very much. In fact, he was more a wild man now. His thick, wavy black hair was longer than when she’d last seen him, curling around his ears and on his collar, tousled and yet shiny and clean.

      Which summed him up, really. He was scruffy and fastidious. A puzzle in every possible respect.

      Adela compressed her lips. Why, when he was so annoying and often hurtful, did he still make her want to smile? Her fingers just itched for her pencil, and in her mind she was already drawing him. Aggravating or no, he was a sight for sore eyes, tall, wiry, intriguing and stylish in a way that other men just weren’t. Flagrantly bohemian, he still affected his dressing gown during the daytime, as he’d done seven years ago at Ruffington Hall. He’d swanned about in his robe then, much to the consternation of the Old Curmudgeon—who’d called him a nancy and told him to brace up—and it seemed he’d not broken the habit. Today’s example was a blue silk paisley confection, and beneath it he wore an equally absurd waistcoat in a different pattern entirely. His trousers were thankfully quite