He moved his hand from beneath her touch. “I came to tell you that you cannot summon me.”
Her rich brown gaze did not waver. “I cannot come to you, and I cannot summon you to me.”
“No,” he said. “There’s no need for either.”
She shook her head and spoke softly, her voice low and lush like a promise. “I disagree.”
“You can’t,” he said, as though it meant something.
It didn’t. In fact, it meant so little that she changed the subject, her gaze tracking over his face as though she were attempting to memorize him. “Do you know, I’ve never seen you in the sunlight?”
“What?”
“I’ve seen you in candlelight, and in the eerie glow of your ice hold, in the dead of night outside and in the evening starlight on a ballroom balcony. But I’ve never seen you in the sunlight. You’re very handsome.”
She was so close. Close enough that he could track her gaze as she explored his face, taking in all the faults and angles. Close enough that he could explore hers—perfection to his flaw. And somehow, he couldn’t stop himself from saying, “It’s strange. All those times we’ve met in darkness, and I’ve only ever seen you in sunlight.”
Her breath caught, and it took all his energy not to touch her.
Which didn’t matter, as she reached up in that moment and touched him, her fingers like fire on his skin, coasting along his cheekbone and down to his jaw, where she traced the sharp angles of his face before finally reaching her goal—his scar. The tissue there was strange and sensitive, the nerves unable to distinguish pain from pleasure, and she seemed to know that, her touch remarkably gentle. “How did you get this?”
He did not move; he was too afraid that if he did, she might stop touching him. Too afraid, also, that she might touch him more. It was agony. He swallowed. “My brother.”
Her brow furrowed and her gaze flew to his. “Beast?”
He shook his head.
“I didn’t know you had another brother.”
“There are many things you don’t know about me.”
She nodded. “That’s true,” she said, softly. “Is it wrong that I would like to learn them all?”
Christ. She was going to kill him. He took a step back, and the loss of her touch threatened the same. He looked away, desperate for something to say. Something that did not involve kissing her until neither of them remembered all the reasons they could not be together.
Reasons that were legion.
He cleared his throat, focusing on the strange shape of the bench behind her. “Why is this bench curved?”
For a long moment, she seemed too busy watching him to reply, her focus making him curse the daylight and wish there were shadows in which he could hide.
He should leave.
Except she answered him. “It’s a whispering bench,” she said. “The acoustics of it are designed so that if someone is whispering at this end, the person on the other end can hear them. It’s said to have been gifted to one of the ladies of the house by her gardener. They were . . .” She blushed, beautiful and honest, then cleared her throat. “They were lovers.”
That blush nearly killed him.
He considered the bench, then moved to the far end, leaning back, his thighs wide, draping one arm over the back of it, forcing himself to seem casual. “So if I sit here . . .”
She moved on cue, resuming her spot on the opposite end. She looked down at her lap. And then she spoke, the words in his ear as though she were next to him. As though she were touching him. “No one would ever know what we are to each other.”
It was rare that Devil was surprised, but the bench surprised him. Or perhaps Felicity’s words surprised him. Perhaps it was the idea that they might hold weight—that the two of them might be something to each other. He immediately looked to her, but she remained transfixed by her embroidery hoop.
“No one would ever know we were speaking,” he said.
She shook her head. “The perfect meeting place for spies.”
His lips twitched at that. “Do you notice a great deal of clandestine visits to your gardens?”
She was not so hesitant with her smile. “There’s been an uptick in the use of my rose trellis recently.” She looked to him and whispered, “One must be prepared for anything.”
He was transfixed by the shape of her—by the straightness of her spine and the rise and fall of her breasts, the softness of her jaw and the swell of her torso. She was Rubens’s Delilah, making him wish he were Samson, at her feet, draped over her sun-kissed skirts.
Willing to give her anything, even his power. “Do you know the story of Janus?”
She tilted her head. “The Roman god?”
He leaned back, extending his legs far in front of him. “The god of doors and locks.”
“They have a god?”
“And a goddess, as a matter of fact.”
“Tell me.” The whisper was full of anticipation, and he turned to look at her, finding her warm brown gaze spellbound.
He couldn’t help his smile. “All the times I’ve tried to tempt you, Felicity Faircloth, and all I had to do was tell you about the god of locks.”
“You’ve done quite well tempting me without that, but I should like to hear anyway.”
Devil’s heart pounded at her honesty, and it was an exercise in control to stay where he was. “He had two faces. One always saw the future, the other always the past. There wasn’t a secret in the world that could be kept from him, because he knew the inside and the outside. The beginning and the end. His omniscience made him the most powerful of the gods, rivaling Jupiter himself.”
She was leaning toward him, and his gaze flickered to the place where her skin, freckled in the sun, rose up from the silk of her dress. The bodice was pulled tight with the angle of her body, and Devil was only a man, after all; he lingered there, watching her breasts strain for freedom. It was beautiful, but nothing like the look in her eyes as she repeated her request. “Tell me.”
The words made him feel like a king. He wanted to tell her stories for the rest of time, to entertain her, to linger in her presence and learn the ones that fascinated her . . . the ones that struck to the very core of who she was, his beautiful lockpick.
Not his.
He put the thought aside and continued. “But seeing the future and the past is as much curse as a gift, you see, and for every beautiful beginning, he also saw the painful end. And this was Janus’s devastation, because he could see death in life, and tragedy in love.”
“How awful,” Felicity whispered in his ear from too far away.
“He did not sleep. Did not eat. He found pleasure in no one and nothing, as he spent all his time—an eternity of time—guarding the past, warding against the inevitable future. Where other gods rivaled and battled for access to each others’ power, none warred with Janus . . . they saw the pain he suffered and steered far clear of it.”
She leaned forward, that dress pulling even more, tempting even more—like the future that could be seen and not warded against. “I imagine he was not a cheerful deity.”
He gave a little bark of laughter. “He was not.” Her eyes widened and she sat up. “What is it?”
“Nothing, only you laugh so rarely.” She paused. “And I like it.”
His cheeks warmed. Like he was a goddamn boy. He cleared his throat. “At any rate. Janus could see the future, and knew it brought only tragedy. Except there was one thing he could not see. A thing he could not predict.”
Her brown eyes twinkled. “A woman.”
“What makes you say that?”