use would be invigorating and insightful and… She shifted in her chair, feeling an uncomfortable heat between her legs.
The research would not only be highly informative, she feared, but highly enflaming as well. Too enflaming, she mused, remembering the kiss of the previous night. She was treading in dangerous waters. She was becoming wild, uninhibited, wicked, wanton. Not a scientist. Who knew what she might do next? She might end up reading that scandalous Henry Fielding novel or dancing naked around her bedroom. She might start saying “legs” in public instead of “limbs.”
Although Lady Delia had often remarked that Clair didn’t have a romantic bone in her body, Clair knew herself better. Sometimes, late at night, she would dream of that one man who was made specially for her, like a gift for her birthday. He would love her mind, her body, and her pilgrim soul. He was a man who would cherish her and yet let her be her true self. He was a man to inspire her curiosity and enflame her senses. And when she went into his arms, it would be like coming home.
Licking her lips slightly, she faced facts. She was a closet romantic in an era when well-bred young ladies had two options: they either waited on the shelf for Prince Charming to ride up and take them down— even if they were almost twenty-five years of age—or they leapt off the shelf and made their own life. Of course, Clair’s great-aunt Abby in her more lucid moments was fond of saying that the leapfrog ladies ended up getting warts and too many little tadpoles, since they weren’t often content to sit on one lily pad but had to hop around the whole pond.
“I thank you for your sincere application, but I fear I am studying supernatural creatures, not super-sexual escapades.”
This time, the laugh did escape Ian. Here was a sad romp. “So again I ask, why me? I would have thought that it would be next to impossible to be a vampire and the holder of an ancestral title. It would be too dashed difficult to remain undetected.”
“Balderdash. Years ago, perhaps. But no longer,” Clair argued. “My uncle Tieck actually wrote the very first vampire novel ever published in England. He was fortunate in finding a real, live vampire. Some years later he befriended the vampire of whom he wrote. They became cronies, until the vampire’s death five years ago in a raging fire.”
Ian nodded. Yes, that would do it. Fire worked as well on a vampire as a stake through the heart.
Noting Ian’s nod, Clair continued with her explanation. “The vampire was a French count and a melancholy fellow, for every quarter century he would have to leave his estates and travel to far-off lands for another quarter century. He would leave so that people wouldn’t notice that he didn’t age. He stayed away so people would forget how he looked. After a few decades or more, he would come back, pretending to be a son or a cousin, and that would explain the family resemblance.”
“Yes, that is precisely what I meant when I spoke about vampires and titles,” Ian remarked. “And I certainly have not done this twenty-five-year thing. I have been in and out of London since I was in my early twenties.”
Clair held up a hand. “Precisely. You’ve come and gone. Also, most of the aristocracy goes to schools like Eton. You stayed at your estate in Wales, unseen. Then, like Athena, you sprang forth as an adult.”
“Easily explained. My ancestry is Welsh and English. My mother wished me to stay home to go to school. My father obliged her,” Ian said. Yet a bleak look came into his eyes. “My father died when I was fourteen, leaving me to grow up extremely fast. I had a barony to run. Unlike other young bucks, I had my duty to my estates and my heritage as well as my mother and my sister to take care of. Didn’t your research reveal these things?”
Ian schooled his expression. He had wandered lost in a vast world, struggling at a young age to understand who he was, what