because she was now entitled to touch him like this.
“Did you really give a man a nosebleed?” he asked. He had turned her hand over and studied the pink knuckles.
The smile faded from her lips. “Yes.”
She could feel the languor leaving his body.
“Why?” he asked.
“I suppose because the village lads I ran with as a girl didn’t teach me how to slap like a lady.”
He leaned over her, not a trace of humor in his eyes. “What did he do?”
She evaded his gaze. “He was . . . hurting a friend.”
Montgomery’s face set in harsh, unforgiving lines. “I see.”
“I won’t object if you dismantle the entire London Metropolitan Police,” she said softly, “but could it perhaps wait until tomorrow?”
Only when she dragged a wanton foot up his calf did his frown ease.
“Minx,” he muttered. He raised her hand to his lips and pressed a kiss to her palm, then carefully returned it to her. “This is a very capable hand,” he said. “Don’t ever hide it.”
She made a fist, to keep his kiss. How could she ever have thought of him as cold and severe—he could be that, but she also couldn’t feel more charmed and cherished if she tried.
And yet. There were a few heartless things he had done that were facts, and not just opinions.
“Montgomery. May I ask you something?”
“Sebastian.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Call me Sebastian.”
She hesitated. “Why?”
“It is my name.”
She knew. Sebastian Alexander Charles Avery, to be precise, followed by a lengthy array of grander and lesser titles. She had memorized it when she had first spied on him in the Annals of the Aristocracy. She was also fairly certain that only his oldest friends, and perhaps his wife, would ever call a man of his station by his Christian name.
“I’m afraid I don’t know you well enough for that,” she said.
An ironic smile curved his lips. “I have just been inside you. And I intend to do it again in about fifteen minutes’ time.”
She could feel her face turn rosy. “That’s different.”
“Hardly,” he said. “Indulge me. Then ask.”
She sighed. “Sebastian.”
His lashes lowered and he made a noise that sounded suspiciously like a purr.
“Sebastian,” she said huskily, just to see what he would do.
His eyes slitted open. “Am I amusing you?”
She giggled, she who never giggled. He slowly smiled back, crinkling the corners of his eyes and showing straight white teeth. Ah, but a smiling Sebastian was a devastating sight.
She almost regretted having to ask.
“Sebastian. Why did you divorce your wife?”
Chapter 25
There was a clock in his bedchamber. She could hear it now, loudly and clearly tick-tocking away another minute of uncomfortable silence as Sebastian lay still as stone. Sharing his bed evidently did not entitle her to ask nosy questions.
“I hadn’t much choice in the matter,” he finally said. He was staring up at the bed canopy, looking thoughtful rather than annoyed. “Six months into our marriage, she ran away with another man. A baronet’s youngest son, of the estate that bordered her father’s. It turned out she had fancied herself in love with him since childhood. I found them in an inn on the way to France.”
Oh.
“That’s dreadful,” she finally said.
He gave a shrug. “It is what it is.”
But the images came with startling clarity, of Sebastian taking a pair of creaky stairs, a distressed innkeeper hard on his heels . . . of him bursting into a dimly lit room to the shrieks of the terrified lovers . . .
“Why did you not . . .” Her throat became strangely tight.
Strong hands locked around her waist, and he pulled her on top of him. Her thoughts scattered at the feel of his hard, warm body beneath her. But his expression was pensive and wry; clearly lovemaking wasn’t on his mind.
“Why did I not shoot them when I found them?” he suggested.
She gave a tiny nod.
“Because it would not have been worth it, neither in this life nor the next.”
Oh, Sebastian. What did it take, to make him lose his head?
Her face warmed. Well, she now knew one thing that made him lose his head.
“Most men would not have thought that far,” she said. “Most wouldn’t have thought at all.”
He stroked her flanks, his palms pressing deliberately as if to draw comfort from the soft feel of her.
“I stood there at the foot of the bed, and they stared back at me with a look in their eyes that said they fully expected me to shoot them,” he said. “But in that moment, I felt nothing.