Love-thoughts, love-juice, love-odor, love-yielding,

love climbers, and the climbing sap,

Arms and hands of love, lips of love, phallic thumb of

love, bellies press'd and glued together with love…

She ached for his touch. She found herself rushing back to her bedroom in the afternoons for long, soaking baths and then dressing for dinner in her most attractive gowns. Before long, her clothes grew too tame. She cut off a dozen tiny silver buttons from the bodice of her cinnamon silk gown so that the neckline fell open to the middle of her breasts. Then she filled in the space with a string of glass beads the color of juniper berries. She replaced the belt on a pale yellow morning dress with a long swath of vermilion-and-indigo-striped taffeta. She wore bright pink slippers with a tangerine gown, then was unable to resist threading lime-colored ribbons through the sleeves. She was outrageous, enchanted. Sophronia said she was behaving like a peacock spreading its tail to attract a mate.

But Cain didn't seem to notice.

Veronica Gamble came to call on a rainy Monday afternoon nearly three months after Kit's wedding. Kit had volunteered to sift through the dusty clutter in the attic for a set of china no one could find, and once again she looked less than her best.

Other than exchanging a few courteous words when they saw each other at church or in town, Kit hadn't visited with Veronica since the disastrous dinner party. She'd sent her a polite thank-you note for the handsome, calf-bound copy of Madame Bovary that had been Veronica's wedding present-a most inappropriate gift, Kit had discovered as she was devouring every word. Veronica fascinated her, but she was also threatened by the older woman's self-assurance and cool beauty.

While Lucy served frosty glasses of lemonade and a plate of cucumber sandwiches, Kit dismally compared Veronica's well-cut biscuit-colored suit with her own soiled and rumpled cotton frock. Was it any wonder that her husband showed such obvious pleasure in Veronica's company? Not for the first time, Kit found herself wondering if all their meetings were taking place in public. The idea that they might be seeing each other privately made her ache.

"And how do you find married life?" Veronica asked after they'd exchanged pleasantries and Kit had consumed four cucumber sandwiches to the other woman's one.

"Compared to what?"

Veronica's laughter tinkled through the room like glass bells. "You're without doubt the most refreshing female in this decidedly tedious county."

"If it's so tedious, why do you stay here?"

Veronica fingered the cameo brooch at her throat. "I came here to heal my spirit. I'm certain that sounds melodramatic to someone as young as you, but my husband was very dear to me, and his death hasn't been easy for me to accept. In the end, though, I'm finding boredom almost as great an enemy as grief. When one has become accustomed to the company of a fascinating man, it's not easy to be alone."

Kit wasn't sure how to respond, especially since she sensed a subtle calculation behind the words, an impression that Veronica quickly reinforced.

"Enough! You cannot want to spend your afternoons listening to the maudlin reflections of a lonely widow when your own life is so new and young. Tell me how you're enjoying being married."

"I'm adjusting much like any other new bride," Kit answered carefully.

"What a conventional and proper response. I'm quite disappointed. I'd expected you to tell me with your customary bluntness to mind my own business, although I'm certain you shall do just that before I leave. I came here with the express purpose of prying into the intimacies of this most interesting marriage of yours."

"Really, Mrs. Gamble," Kit said weakly. "I'm sure I can't imagine why you'd care to do that."

"Because human mysteries make life amusing. And now I find one right in front of me." Veronica tapped her cheek with one oval fingernail. "Why, I ask myself, does the most attractive couple in South Carolina seem to be at loggerheads?"

"Mrs. Gamble, I-"

"Why do their eyes seldom meet in public? Why do they never touch each other in the casual way lovers do?"

"Really, I don't-"

"That, of course, is the most interesting question of all, because it makes me wonder if they truly are lovers."

Kit sucked in her breath, but Veronica waved her silent with a lazy flick of her hand. "Spare me any dramatics until you've heard me out. You may discover I'm doing you a favor."

A small, silent war took place inside Kit, with caution on one side and curiosity on the other. "Go on," she said as coolly as she could manage.

"There is something not quite right about this couple," Veronica continued. "The husband has a hungriness about him that is foreign to a well-satisfied man. While the wife… Ah, the wife! She is even more interesting than the husband. She watches him when he isn't looking, drinking in his body in the most immodest fashion, letting her eyes caress him. It's most puzzling. The man is virile, the wife sensuous, and yet I am convinced the two are not lovers."

Having had her say, Veronica was now content to wait. Kit felt as if she'd been stripped bare. It was humiliating. And yet… "You came here with a purpose, Mrs. Gamble. I'd like to know what it is."

Veronica looked surprised. "But isn't it obvious? You can't be so naive that you don't realize I'm attracted to your husband." She tilted her head. "I'm here to give you fair warning. If you don't intend to make use of him, I certainly do."

Kit found herself almost calm. "You came here today to warn me that you intend to have a liaison with my husband?"

"Only if you don't want him, my dear." Veronica picked up her lemonade and took a delicate sip. "Despite what you may think, I formed an exceptional fondness for you the first time I met you. You remind me so much of myself at your age, although I hid my feelings better. Still, fondness can extend only so far, and in the end it will be better for your marriage if I share your husband's bed, instead of some scheming hussy who'll try to come between the two of you permanently."

Up until that moment, she had been speaking lightly, but now her green eyes bore uncompromisingly into Kit's like small, polished emeralds. "Believe me when I tell you this, my dear. For some reason that I can't possibly fathom, you've left your husband ripe for the picking, and it's only a matter of time until someone does just that. I intend that someone to be me."

Kit knew she should sweep indignantly from the room, but there was something about Veronica Gamble's utter frankness that triggered the part of her that had so little patience with dissemblance. This woman knew the answers to secrets that Kit could only glimpse.

She managed to keep her face expressionless. "For the sake of conversation, suppose some of what you say is true. Suppose… that I have… no interest in my husband. Or suppose-again for the sake of conversation-that… my husband has no… interest in me." Color flushed her cheeks, but she plunged determinedly on. "How might you suggest I go about… getting him interested?"

"Seduce him, of course."

There was a long, painful silence.

"And how," Kit asked stonily, "might one do that?"

Veronica considered for a moment. "A woman seduces a man by following her instincts without giving the slightest thought to what she's heard is proper or improper. Seductive dress, a seductive manner, a willingness to tantalize by giving a glimpse of promises to come. You're an intelligent woman, Kit. I'm certain if you put your mind to it, you'll find a way. Just remember this. Pride has no place in the boudoir. It's a room devoted to giving, not holding back. Do I make myself clear?"

Kit nodded stiffly.

Having accomplished the purpose of her visit, Veronica gathered up her gloves and reticule and stood. "I warn you, my dear, you'd best learn your lessons quickly, for I shan't give you much time. You've had quite enough already."

She swept from the room.

A tew moments later, as she mounted the steps to her carriage, Veronica smiled to herself. How Francis would have enjoyed this afternoon. It wasn't often that she got the chance to play fairy godmother, but she had to admit that she'd performed splendidly.

As she settled back into the tufted leather seat, her brow knitted ever so slightly. Now she had to make up her mind whether or not she would actually carry out her threat.

Kit finally had the excuse to do what she'd been wanting to for so very long. Dinner was torture, made worse by the fact that Cain seemed to be in the mood to prolong it. He talked about the mill and asked her opinion on what the market for cotton would be like within the year. As always when the subject was cotton, he listened attentively to her response.

Horrible man. He was so achingly handsome that she could barely look away from him, and why did he have to be so charming to Miss Dolly?

She escaped to her room as soon as she could. For a while, she paced. Finally she slipped out of her clothes, donned a faded cotton wrapper, and sat in front of her mirror to take the pins out of her hair. She was brushing it into a soft midnight cloud when she heard Cain climbing the stairs to his bedroom.

Her reflection showed an unnaturally pale face. She pinched her cheeks, then replaced her moonstone eardrops with a small pair of pearl studs. Afterward, she dabbed a touch of jasmine scent to the hollow of her throat.

When she was satisfied, she abandoned her wrapper for the black silk peignoir set that had been a wedding present from Elsbeth. It slid like oil over her naked flesh. The garment was starkly simple, with small capped sleeves and a rounded bodice that dipped so low it barely covered the peaks of her breasts. The skirt clung to her body in long, soft folds that outlined the shape of her hips and legs when she moved. Over the gown she donned the peignoir, made entirely of sheer black lace. With trembling fingers, she fastened the single small button at the throat.