MISSÂ CAMILLAÂ ANTONIUSÂ had very little patience for fools, even handsome ones.
And Lord Philip Atticus Vexleyâwith his golden hair, tanned skin, and roguish grinâwas among the finer specimens in both areas. Especially if he thought sheâd create forgery for him.
Which, as he swept into the art gallery just as the sun was settingâin his buffed riding boots, burgundy swallowtail jacket, and close-fitting camel breechesâCamilla knew was precisely the reason heâd come.
It was almost closing time, and the secretive glint in Vexleyâs eyes was most unwelcome; they were not friends or confidants. Nor were they lovers. In fact, if Camilla never saw him again, sheâd host a soirée fit for the crown to celebrate her good fortune.
âWorking on anything intriguing, Miss Antonius?â
âJust a landscape, Lord Vexley.â
It was not the truth, but Vexley didnât deserve to know that. Camillaâs art was deeply personal to her, drawn from her motherâs warnings, her fatherâs stories, and her own loneliness, which helped her see the world as it truly was.
Her art was often her soul laid bare, a part of her she hesitated to share with just anyone.
Thankfully the easel faced away from the door and Vexley would need to walk around to view it. He rarely put such great effort into anything but his own scandalous reputation.
Camilla pushed the stool back from her easel and quickly abandoned her painting as she moved to the old oak desk that acted as the register a wonderful partition to keep the irksome lord at bay.
âWas there anything I could assist you with, or are you simply admiring the art this evening?â
His attention dipped to her paint-splattered smock. She hadnât removed it upon his arrival, and the slight pressing of his lips indicated that he wished she would.
âDonât play coy, darling. You know why Iâve come.â
âAs weâve previously discussed, my lord, the debt has been paid. Iâve even secured a memory stone for you. All you have to do is feed that particular memory to it.â
Or so Camilla had been told by the dark-market dealer sheâd purchased the alleged magical stone from. She hadnât felt any buzz of magic, though that wasnât exactly a surprise, all things considered. Still, Vexley refused to accept the stone.
He gave Camilla a bemused look as if her denying him something he wanted were more outrageous than a magical stone that could withdraw any memory he chose to give it.
Lord Vexley wasnât quite a dandy, but he certainly spent money like one. He was the firstborn son of a viscount and as such had indulged in only the finest things for the whole of his spoiled thirty years.
Four years prior, after a rather scandalous theater incident that involved not one but two stage actresses and a very public display of drunken affection during what was now called âthe intermission of infamy,â his father had cut him off from his inheritance and named his brother the heir instead, a bold move that should have shocked all of Waverly Greenâs elite.
But much to his familyâs surprise, Vexleyâs antics hadnât disgraced him in the slightest. If anything, heâd become something of a rapscallion legend around the Green.
Society praised incorruptible morals above all, especially for women. But virtues never held the same appeal as sin. They werenât as thrilling to gossip about over tea, and no matter how prim and proper high society claimed to be, they all loved a good scandal, the more salacious, the better. Nothing in Waverly Green was ever as entertaining as watching someoneâs fall from grace.
Satire-sheet columnists often followed close on Vexleyâs heels now, desperate to be the first to report on his next potential scandal. Everyone knew heâd been disinherited, so the source of his income was a growing mystery most of the city wished to solve.
Vexley laughed it off, claiming he was a smart gambler and made wise investments, but people still whispered more nefarious stories about his growing fortune.
Some rumors claimed heâd made a deal with the devil, while others whispered about a bargain heâd struck with the Fae. Camilla alone knew the full truth.
Due to what she called the Great Mistake, now unwittingly funded his extravagant lifestyle and placed herself in danger of being caught by the press.
The last painting Camilla had created and sold for him had almost been discovered as the fraud it was, and if the collector hadnât imbibed too many glasses of claret, then promptly relieved himself on a priceless sculpture, in front of the entire party of lords, ladies, and even a duke, thus causing the stir as the duchess fainted right onto the foul mess, Camillaâs reputation would have been ruined.
A scandal of that magnitude would destroy her hard-won standing as Waverly Greenâs most sought-after art dealer. And the selfish scoundrel standing before herâwith his damnably charming smile and freshly pressed suitâknew it and clearly couldnât care less.
âHonestly, Camilla darlingââ
âMiss Antonius,â she corrected primly.
Camillaâs smile was nearly as tight as the grip on her paintbrush.
Vexley, or Vex the Hex, as sheâd taken to calling him in her head, had been blackmailing her for that one horrid mistake sheâd made eons ago, andâafter theyâd struck a bargain for his silenceâhe was to have purged the memory into the rare magical stone after she completed three forgeries to sell for him.
The trouble with scoundrels and blackguards was, they hadnât a modicum of honor.
They were now approaching forgeries, and Camilla needed this to end.
No matter how talented she was, if anyone found out what sheâd done, aside from possible arrest and facing the gallows, sheâd never sell another painting in Waverly Green. Or any of the surrounding towns or villages in Ironwood Kingdom, for that matter. Not that she ventured outside Waverly Green often.
Ironwood Kingdom was a small island nation that could be traversed by carriage in a handful of days, but everything she knew was in her city and at the country estate two hours north of it. If she were forced to leave Waverly Green, all Camillaâs hopes and dreams of having her gallery flourish to keep her fatherâs memory alive would wither and die.
Men like Vexley could thrive on scandal and ending up in the satire sheets, but womenâespecially of her stationâwerenât afforded the same status. Camilla needed to walk a fine line, showcasing the art she curated in scandalous ways but never becoming the subject of scrutiny herself.
Through personal experience with her fatherâs most famous painting, Camilla had learned early on that high society loved a bit of drama and a good showâas was evidenced by the soaring popularity of satire sheets and caricatures.
Luckily, for now, society couldnât stop talking about her unique exhibitions. Short of committing a heinous act of violence upon Vexleyâs person, Camilla would do nearly anything to keep her gallery and name free from the more vicious gossipmongers, who loved nothing more than to tear others down for a passing bit of drawing room entertainment.
She often read the gossip sheets just to remind herself what was at stake, to serve as a constant warning of how carefully she needed to tread as she fought to maintain her glittering reputation in society while also garnering respect as a gallery owner. Theyâd tolerated her taking over her fatherâs gallery because theyâd loved Pierre and his unconventional nature. But she knew the gossips were waiting like carrion vultures, hoping to swoop in and feast.
Camillaâs true hope was to one day win people to her gallery through her own paintings alone, and that would never happen if her reputation was in any way sullied.
She stole a quick glance out the window, relieved that no columnists were lurking, waiting to report on Vexleyâs current whereabouts. She could already imagine the unflattering headlines if they found the Angel of Art and the Devilish Deviant cavorting alone.
âI can no longer help you with that other matter,â Camilla said quietly. âIf youâd like to commission a custom work,â she added before Vexley could continue any paltry attempts at charming her, âIâm more than happy toââ
â
and are extremely different things, Miss Antonius.â
She seethed at his arrogant, dismissive tone. As if she were unaware of the difference between the two and heâd just shared earth-shattering news with her.
Vexley raked his ice-blue gaze over her face, taking liberties to admire her lips a bit longer than was considered polite. His attention shifted to her cool silver curls, her delicately upturned nose, and naturally golden skin.
Camillaâs deep silver eyes were always what drew a suitor in, though, and at the moment, Lord Vexley was seemingly transfixed by them.
Sheâd heard rumors that that half-lidded, come-hither look he was giving her now had worked in seducing several widows and even some women who werenât lacking a husband.
Lord Philip Vexley was an unrepentant rake, and rumor had it that his troublesome mouth was quite pleasing when he got someone between his silken sheets. He hadnât visited Camillaâs bedchamber, nor would she ever invite him there.
Blackmail, she found, dampened any thoughts of passion.
âCorrect me if Iâm wrong,â he drawled, ignoring the steam Camilla was almost certain billowed out from her ears whenever he adopted that condescending tone. âYou arenât in a position to turn down the work, are you? What with the information I have about that one little famous painting you sold me. You remember the one, donât you? I still have it.â
âVexley,â Camilla warned, glancing around the quiet room.
No columnist had showed up, and since it was the middle of the week and it was near closing, the gallery was blessedly empty. Due to her limited funds, sheâd had to dismiss her assistant this morning, a choice that broke her heart. And was now proving even more terrible as the opportunistic scoundrel closed in on her.
âIn fact, itâs such a fine painting I had to hide it from view,â he continued, pressing a hip against the large desk as if leaning in to share a secret. âLest anyone try to steal it from me.â
The famous painting was a forgery, the first and the last sheâd ever wanted to create. Two years priorâand nearly eight years to the day after Camillaâs mother abandoned themâher father had abruptly taken ill with a mysterious affliction and could no longer work.
Camilla had emptied their coffers in a desperate attempt to save him, and she would do it again. Sheâd had several physicians visit their home, had even ventured into the forbidden dark market in search of a magical elixir, convinced his illness was not of this realm.
All attempts to battle Death had been in vain.
It had hurt terribly when her mother disappeared, one bright morning the spring before Camilla came of age, but her fatherâs death had truly broken her heart.
Pierre had been fearless, as an artist sharing every part of his soul with his audience, as a father raising Camilla on his favorite tales of magic and adventure, of dark realms far beyond Ironwood Kingdomâs shores. Camilla still worried she wasnât living up to all heâd taught her.
After his death, sheâd painted the forgery only to raise funds. Sheâd hated being dishonest, had considered trying anything else, but both their town house and the gallery were set to be wrenched away by debt collectors, even after sheâd pawned all her jewels, and the silver, and rented their country estate for barely enough coin to maintain the staff and groundskeeperâs salaries. Camilla had had nothing left to sell. Save her art or her body.
Or the one thing she hadnât the heart to pawn. And that sentimentality had come back to haunt her. In more ways than one.
Somehow, though not utterly surprisingly, Vexley had been both cunning and sober enough to spot a minute difference between the forgery and the real painting, and instead of being enraged that sheâd attempted to cheat him, had immediately come up with a scheme to profit from her talent. It wasnât honest work he was requesting now.
Nor would he be paying for her services.
Camilla smothered the urge to knee him in the groin and plastered on another smile.
âA gentleman of your breeding is known to stick to his word, sir. We had a bargain and Iâve more than paid in full. Shall I fetch the memory stone?â
Vexley tossed his head back and laughed, the sound genuine yet somehow grating for that very reason. He found her amusing. Wonderful.
âMy darling, what if I were to propose marriage? Would you be more inclined to please your husband then? Surely youâd wish to ensure that we had a comfortable life with a roof over our heads and fine foods in our bellies.â
Now it was Camillaâs turn to laugh. Marriage. To Vex the Hex. And with it a lifetime of servitude and forever being a cheat and liar. Along with the string of lovers heâd not be discreet about and the whole thinking she was a plumb fool.
He eyed her speculatively, brows raised, and she realized he hadnât been jesting.
Camilla cleared her throat, searching for the most diplomatic response to soften the blow. The privileged men in their world did not take well to their whims and fancies being denied, and while she might loathe him, she needed to remain in his good graces until he purged that damning memory and set her free.
âUnfortunately, I am not in the market for a husband, my lord. My gallery keeps me quite thoroughly busy andââ
âYouâd continue with your gallery, my dear. With your talent and my connections, we could make more gold annually than the Crown.â
âWe were almost discovered!â she hissed. âThere will be no money if weâre hanged.â
âYou worry too much.â
Vexley waved off that most important detail as if it were nothing at all.
âAnd there wonât be another scare like that. I hadnât heard that Harrington already possessed that piece. It was easy enough to convince him that his original was the fraud and Waltersâs was the original, wasnât it? He handed it over to me just as I said he would. And anyway,â Vexley went on, âdo you really believe anyone would question my wife? If they did, all weâd need to do is update your wardrobe with some low-cut gowns and theyâd hardly care what you were saying or selling after that, my dear. I assure you their attention would be thoroughly diverted. Your bosom is quite impressive for someone of your stature. We can certainly work with that, use it to our advantage.â
âIââ
Camilla was at a loss. Vexley seemed entirely certain that sheâd be pleased to have her mind ignored in favor of her body being ogled to further their scheme.
A scheme she wanted no part in.
If he pressed the issue of marriage, it could become a true problem.
In fact, since they were alone and he was encroaching on her personal space, they were teetering near scandal now.
Camilla wasnât exactly middle-class, even if she operated a business. Her father, eccentric though he might have been, had been high-born and titled. Sheâd spent nearly all her inheritance trying to save him, so her earnings were critical for maintaining her home and staff. Her father used to say how proud he was of taking care of generations of staff. She did not want to let anyone else down by having to let them go.
All Vexley would need to do was come around to her side of the desk and give the impression that something untoward was happening; then if one columnist spied the action through the window and reported on it, Camillaâs life and all sheâd worked hard to achieve would be in total ruin.
An icy finger of dread trailed down her spine.
The lord standing before her had no qualms about blackmail and might very well be desperate enough to trap her in marriage. Then she would be his pawn for the rest of her days.
Vexley suddenly reached for her bare hand and brushed a chaste kiss across her knuckles, his cool lips causing a slight shudder of revulsion that he mistook for pleasure. His pupils dilated, mouth quirking upward. He thought too highly of his ability to seduce.
âI see youâre overcome by my charms. Letâs continue this discussion another time. Iâm hosting a lavish dinner party in two nights to show off my most recently acquired treasure; expect an invitation shortly.â
Before she could find a reasonable excuse to decline, Vexley turned on his buffed heel and exited the gallery.
The bell tinkling overhead was the only indication heâd truly been there and it hadnât been a wretched nightmare.
He wished to make her Lady Camilla Vexley. God save her.
She pushed that horror from her mind and glanced at the clock. Thankfully it was almost time for her weekly dinner with her best friend, Lady Katherine Edwards, and Camillaâs own beloved cat, Bunny, whom Katherine watched while Camilla worked at the gallery.
Kitty had been there during Camillaâs darkest hours, a guiding light and advocate for Camillaâs place in society who ensured that Camilla attended all the balls and social gatherings, regardless of her financial difficulties. She not only acted as Camillaâs chaperone when necessary, she was the truest friend Camilla had ever known, and Camilla was grateful for her in many ways. Without Kitty, Camilla wasnât sure what would have become of her.
To pass the last half hour before closing, Camilla returned to her painting. Getting lost in creation was precisely what she needed to do to forget Vexleyâs absurd proposal.
Sheâd been trying to paint a world she saw repeatedly in her dreams, one where winter reigned in all its stark, lethal beauty.
Camilla had just returned to her easel, plucked up her paintbrush, and sat when the bell over the door sounded again. This time she nearly snapped her brush in two.
How dare he come back and coerce her again.
She closed her eyes and prayed for some hidden well of strength to appear and save her from committing murder. At eight and twenty, she was far too young to be either locked in a cell or beheaded for strangling that scheming, arrogant rake right then and there.
âApologies for any insult it causes,â she said without peering out from around her easel, âbut I am in the market for a husband, my lord. Please just go.â
A beat of silence passed. With any luck, Vexley would be insulted by the bite in her tone and would turn right back around and leave for some faraway city at the edge of the world.
âWell, thatâs quite a relief, considering Iâm in want of a painting, not a wife.â
The deep, rumbling voice had Camilla immediately standing up from her stool to see who it belonged to, her lips parting in surprise.
The man who stood just inside the doorway was most decidedly Vexley.
For a moment, Camilla somehow lost the ability to speak as her attention roved over the dark stranger.
This man was tall, his hair black with the slightest hint of brown in the flickering candlelight, and while his frame was lean, she noticed the hardness of his body as he moved farther into the gallery, his clothes tailored to show off the definition.
Not moved but .
Camilla innately sensed that she was in the presence of a jaguarâa sleek apex predator one couldnât help but be fascinated by even as it drew close enough to bite.
His eyes, a unique, lovely shade of emerald, glittered as if he knew where her thoughts had traveled and he rather enjoyed the idea of sinking his teeth into her flesh.
Whether he would do so for pleasure or to cause a bit of pain, Camilla couldnât immediately discern. Though if the wicked gleam flaring to life was anything to go by, sheâd choose the latter. Which indicated he was dangerous, yet her heart wasnât pounding from fear as he stalked closer, his gaze lazily taking her in as if he had every right to do so.
This man owned every inch of space around him, including her attention. Camilla found she couldnât have looked away if sheâd tried. Not that she was trying very hard.
He wasnât simply handsome, he was his face a study of fine contradictions that made her fingers twitch with the urge to paint the hard, chiseled angles of his face, the soft curves of his lips, and those jewel-toned eyes that stood out against his bronze skin, forever capturing that devilish glint on canvas.
His beauty was cold ruthlessness with a regal edge. A polished blade meant to be admired even as it cut you down. Heâd make a fine portrait, one Camilla imagined would cause quite the stir among noblewomen.
Her cheeks pinked at what sheâd said about marriage, and she hoped it was too dim in the room for him to notice.
A hint of mirth curled the edge of his sensual mouth, indicating that he had indeed picked up on her embarrassment.
If he was a gentleman, heâd let it pass without comment.
âYou are Miss Camilla Elise Antonius, I presume.â
His knowing her middle name struck her as odd, but when he studied her appearance with quiet intensity once again, she could barely form a clear thought.
No one had ever looked at her with such singular focus beforeâlike she was both the most glorious answer and an exceptionally troubling riddle tied into one.
âCorrect, sir. How may I help you?â she asked, finally regaining her wits.
âI came to discuss details of a piece Iâd like to commission,â he began, his voice like warmed honey melting over her, âbut Iâm intrigued by you now, Miss Antonius. Is that how you welcome all patrons or just the ones you find incredibly handsome?â
she thought crossly as the spell sheâd initially felt broke.
Camilla bit her tongue to prevent herself from outwardly commenting on his arrogance.
Sheâd been wrong. He was no jaguar, he was a wolf.
Which meant he was just one more cocky aristocratic dog sheâd need to rid herself of this evening.
âAre those the specifications?â she asked, nodding to a crisp piece of hunter-green parchment he held.
Her tone was as cool as the autumn air outside, but the gentleman didnât seem at all put off. If anything, a flicker of intrigue ignited in those impenetrable, jewel-like eyes.
He silently held the parchment up for her, not moving from where he stood near her desk.
Camilla hesitated. He was making her come to .
It was either a subtle show that he could be trusted, or a calculated move to exert his will upon her. Given the dangerous curve of his mouth and the cold calculation in his eyes, it had everything to do with power.
Here stood a man who wanted to be in control. Camilla considered kicking him out to put him in his place and his wolfish smile grew wider, his gaze quietly mocking.
âUnlike asking for your hand, youâll find itâs a rather simple request.â His attention never wavered from hers. âCome. Look for yourself.â
Camilla highly doubted that this man wanted would be simple but made her way to him nonetheless. The faster she knew what he desired, the faster she could send his dark, mysterious arse on its way and be rid of himâand his wicked grinâfor good.