husband is not conducive to a manâs health.â
âNever say you believe everything you hear about me.â
âWell, letâs see.â
He put the berry back in its box and began fiddling with one of the long, golden locks that draped alongside her neck and ended in a curl just below her bosom. Chloeâs French maid had advised her to leave a few strands dangling, in order to encourage this very behavior. When it came to matters sensual, the French were rarely wrong.
âStop me if I say something that is untrue.â Blackwood began her litany of misfortune. âThe first time you wed, the church where the ceremony was held burned to the ground within a week of your nuptials.â
âBut I was nowhere near the church whenââ
âTrue or false?â
Chloe huffed out a disgruntled breath. âTrue.â
âThat unfortunate event was seen as a harbinger of things to come. At least thatâs what the tongue-waggers claimed when your bridegroom failed to survive the honeymoon in Venice.â
âLucius fell off a gondola.â Chloe crossed her arms under her breasts knowing full well the gesture only accentuated her charms. âYou can hardly blame me if the man couldnât swim.â
True to form, Blackwoodâs gaze dipped to her décolletage. Men were so very easy to predict.
But Blackwood pressed gamely on, refusing to be distracted. âYour husband wasnât helped to fall off the gondola, was he?â
âOf course not,â she said in a properly scandalized tone. âWell, not unless one believes a bottle of amaretto could be guilty of such a crime. Poor Lucius did imbibe an overabundance of the liquor. I had no idea when I married him how fond he was of drink.â
âAnd the gondolier couldnât be bothered to fish him out of the canal?â
âDespite what you hear about how romantic Venice is, the water is terribly dirty. The gondolier couldnât see a thing in that murk.â She shrugged and then smiled. âDear Giovanni. He was such a comfort.â
âIâll just bet he was. Especially since your dearly departed Lucius left you a bequest large enough to make you a considerable heiress.â Blackwood smiled unpleasantly, as if he knew more than he was saying and could somehow prove it. âThen there was your second husband.â
âViscount Cavendish,â she supplied helpfully.
âIf memory serves, he lasted a scant six months before you were forced to don widowâs weeds again. True?â
âTrue,â she admitted. âBut you must realize, Cavendish was rather elderly to begin with.â
âForty years your senior, by all accounts.â This time Lord Blackwoodâs gaze held grudging admiration. âYou simply wore him out.â
She giggled and returned his wicked smile. âThatâs true. But believe me, he died a happy man.â
âIâm sure, but he didnât succumb amid the delights of your bed until after heâd redrafted his will, making you the sole heiress of his liquid assets,â Blackwood said. âI hear it left the son from his first marriage with a venerable title, a crumbling estate, and no funds with which to run it.â
âCavendish was never good at thinking things through.â
âBut you are, you delightful little hussy, you.â
She wished heâd call her worse. A bit of the vulgar tongue was just what she needed sometimes. Cavendish used to say she was his âdirty doxy,â and it made her feel deliciously wicked. âOh, Blackwood, you say the sweetest things.â
âWhich brings us to husband number three.â Blackwood used the end of her long curl to tease along the edge of her bodice. âYour third husband was a lawyer, I believe,â Blackwood said.
âHe was. Mr. Benedict Longbotham, Esquire.â
âAnd the only one of your husbands to be without a
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