Excerpt of Daisy in Scandal
in Spring:
Matthew Swift, the cool and self-possessed young man Daisy
Bowman's father wants her to marry, has just forcibly removed
Daisy from a scandalous parlor game. To save her reputation, Matthew
has just turned down the opportunity to kiss Daisy in front of
everyone. However, instead of thanking him, Daisy is furious .
. .
“Why did you do that?” Daisy demanded, rounding on
him immediately.
“Take you away from the games?” Disconcerted, Matthew
adopted a censorious tone. “You shouldn’t have been
there, and you know it.”
Daisy was so furious that her dark eyes seemed to be shooting
sparks. “Where should I have been, Mr. Swift? Reading alone
in the library?”
“That would have been preferable to causing a scandal.”
“No it wouldn’t have. I was exactly where I belonged,
doing exactly what everyone else was doing, and everything was
just fine until you ruined it!”
“I?” Matthew couldn’t believe his ears. “I
ruined the evening for you?”
“Yes.”
“How?”
She glared at him accusingly. “You didn’t kiss me.”
“I . . .” Caught off-guard, Matthew stared at her
in bewilderment. “I did kiss you.”
“On the hand,” Daisy said scornfully, “which
means absolutely nothing.”
Matthew wasn’t certain how he had been so abruptly derailed
from self-righteous superiority to affronted protest. “You
should be grateful.”
“For what?”
“Isn’t it obvious? I saved your reputation.”
“If you had kissed me,” Daisy retorted, “it
could only have improved my reputation. But you rejected me publicly,
which means Llandrindon and Mardling and all the rest know there
is something wrong with me.”
“I didn’t reject you.”
“It certainly felt like rejection, you cad!”
“I am not a cad. If I had kissed you in public, then I
would be a cad.” Matthew paused before adding in baffled
irritation, “And there is nothing wrong with you. Why the
devil would you say that?”
“I’m a wallflower. No one ever wants to kiss me.”
This was too much. Daisy Bowman was furious because he hadn’t
done the thing he had craved and dreamed of for years of his life.
He had behaved honorably, damn it all, and instead of being appreciative
she was angry.
“ . . . am I that undesirable?” Daisy was ranting.
“Would it have been so disagreeable?”
He wanted her for so long. He had reminded himself a thousand
times of all the reasons he could never have her. And it had been
a hell of a lot easier to bear knowing she detested him and there
was no reason to hope. But the possibility that her feelings might
have changed, that she might want him in return, filled him with
a dizzying thrill.
Another minute of this and he would become unhinged.
“ . . . don’t know how to do whatever it is women
are supposed to do to attract men,” Daisy was saying irately.
“And when I finally had a chance to gain a little experience,
you--” She broke off and frowned as she saw his face. “Why
do you look like that?”
“Like what?”
“As if you’re in pain.”
Pain. Yes. The kind of pain a man felt when he had lusted after
a certain woman for years and found himself alone with this woman
and then had to endure her complaints that he hadn’t kissed
her when all he wanted was to tear her clothes off and have her
right there on the floor.
She wanted experience? Matthew was ready to give her the experience
of a lifetime. His body had become so unbearably hard that the
brush of his trouser fabric was enough to make him wince. Struggling
to control himself, he concentrated on breathing. Breathing. But
there was only more arousal, until red mist had gathered at the
edges of his vision.
He wasn’t aware of reaching for her but suddenly his hands
were on her, hooked just beneath her arms where the yellow satin
was permeated with the warmth of her body. She was light and supple,
like a cat . . . he could lift her so easily, pin her against
the wall . . .
Daisy’s dark eyes were wide and startled. “What
are you doing?”
“I want the answer to one question,” Matthew managed
to say. “Why did you call my name in there?”
Emotions crossed her face in rapid succession . . . surprise,
guilt, embarrassment. Every inch of exposed skin turned pink.
“I don’t know what you mean. Your name was on the
paper. I had no choice but to--”
“You’re lying,” Matthew said tersely. His
heart stopped as she refused to reply. She wasn’t going
to deny it. Her flush deepened to crimson. “My name wasn’t
on that paper,” he continued with great effort. “But
you said it anyway. Why?”
They both knew there could only be one reason. Matthew closed
his eyes briefly. His pulse was so hot and fast that its reckless
momentum stung the insides of his veins.
He heard Daisy’s hesitant voice. “I just wanted
to know what you . . . how you . . . I just wanted . . .”
This was temptation at its most brutal. Matthew tried to make
himself let go of her, but his hands would not release the slim
curves encased in yellow satin. It felt too good to hold her.
He stared at her exquisite mouth, the subtle but delicious indentation
in the center of her lower lip. One kiss, he thought desperately.
Surely he could have at least that. But once he started
. . . he wasn’t certain he could stop.
“Daisy . . .” he tried to find words to defuse the
situation, but it was difficult to speak coherently. “I’m
going to tell your father . . . at the first opportunity . . .
I can’t marry you under any circumstances.”
She still wouldn’t look at him. “Why didn’t
you tell him so right away?”
Because he had wanted to make her notice him.
Because he had wanted to pretend, just for a little while, that
the thing he had never dared to dream about was just within reach.
“I wanted to annoy you,” he said.
“Well, you did!”
“But I never considered it seriously. I could never marry
you.”
“Because I’m a wallflower,” she said sullenly.
“No. That’s not--”
“I’m undesirable."
“Daisy, would you stop--”
“Not even worth a single kiss.”
“All right,” Matthew snapped, finally losing the
grip on his sanity. “Damn it, you win. I’ll kiss you.”
“Why?”
“Because if I don’t you’ll never stop complaining
about it.”
“It’s too late now! You should have kissed me back
there in the parlor but you didn’t, and now that you’ve
doomed any chance I’ll ever have of being kissed by anyone
else, I’m not going to settle for some half-rate consolation
prize.”
“Half-rate?”
That had been a mistake. Matthew could see that Daisy realized
it the instant she had said it.
She had just sealed her fate.
“I-I meant to say half-hearted,” she said breathlessly,
trying to wriggle away from him. “It’s obvious you
don’t want to kiss me and therefore--”
“You said half-rate.” He jerked her hard against
him. “Which means now I have something to prove.”
“No you don’t,” she said quickly. “Really.
You don’t--” She gave a little cry as he clamped one
hand behind her neck, and all sound was muffled as he tugged her
head to his.
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