Elizabeth Hoyt Quote

He smiled and pulled the ugly white fichu from her neck.She blinked and looked down at the simple, square neckline of her bodice as if she'd never seen it. Perhaps she hadn't. Perhaps she dressed in the dark like a nun. What are you doing?He sighed. I confess, I find your naïveté perplexing. have you arrived at the advanced age of six and twenty without having anyone attempt seduction upon yourself? I'm of two minds on the matter: One, utter astonishment at my sex and their deaf disregard for your siren call. Two, glee at the thought that your innocence might signal that you are indeed . Why this should excite me so, I don't know- virginity has never before been a particular whim of mine. I think perhaps it's the setting. Who knows how many virgins were deflowered here by my lusty ancestors? Or, he said as he deftly unpinned and tossed aside her apron, maybe it's simply you.I don't... Her words trailed off and then, interestingly, she blushed a deep rose. Well. question settled, then. His little maiden was really a maiden. What?I think it's you, he confided, pulling the strings tying her hideous mobcap beneath her chin.She made a wild grab for it, but he was faster, snatching the bloody thing off- , and with a great deal of satisfaction. She might've deprived him of a wife that it'd taken him half a year and a rather large sum of money to entangle, but by God, he'd taken off her awful cap.And underneath...Oh, , he breathed, enchanted, for her hair was as black as coal, as black as night, as black as his own soul, save for one white streak just over her left eye. But she'd twisted and braided and tortured the strands, binding them tight to her head, and his fingers itched to let them free.Don't! she said, as if she knew what he wanted, her hands flying up to cover her hair.He batted them aside, laughing, pulling a pin here, a pin there, dropping them carelessly to the carpet as she squealed like a little girl and backed away from him, trying frantically to ward off his fingers.He might've taken pity on her had he not just spent an hour on a freezing moor, wondering if he was going to find her dead, neck broken, at the bottom of a hill.Her hair came down all at once, a tumbling mass, tousled and heavy and nearly down to her waist.Wonderful, he murmured, taking it in both hands and lifting it.

Elizabeth Hoyt

He smiled and pulled the ugly white fichu from her neck.She blinked and looked down at the simple, square neckline of her bodice as if she'd never seen it. Perhaps she hadn't. Perhaps she dressed in the dark like a nun. What are you doing?He sighed. I confess, I find your naïveté perplexing. have you arrived at the advanced age of six and twenty without having anyone attempt seduction upon yourself? I'm of two minds on the matter: One, utter astonishment at my sex and their deaf disregard for your siren call. Two, glee at the thought that your innocence might signal that you are indeed . Why this should excite me so, I don't know- virginity has never before been a particular whim of mine. I think perhaps it's the setting. Who knows how many virgins were deflowered here by my lusty ancestors? Or, he said as he deftly unpinned and tossed aside her apron, maybe it's simply you.I don't... Her words trailed off and then, interestingly, she blushed a deep rose. Well. question settled, then. His little maiden was really a maiden. What?I think it's you, he confided, pulling the strings tying her hideous mobcap beneath her chin.She made a wild grab for it, but he was faster, snatching the bloody thing off- , and with a great deal of satisfaction. She might've deprived him of a wife that it'd taken him half a year and a rather large sum of money to entangle, but by God, he'd taken off her awful cap.And underneath...Oh, , he breathed, enchanted, for her hair was as black as coal, as black as night, as black as his own soul, save for one white streak just over her left eye. But she'd twisted and braided and tortured the strands, binding them tight to her head, and his fingers itched to let them free.Don't! she said, as if she knew what he wanted, her hands flying up to cover her hair.He batted them aside, laughing, pulling a pin here, a pin there, dropping them carelessly to the carpet as she squealed like a little girl and backed away from him, trying frantically to ward off his fingers.He might've taken pity on her had he not just spent an hour on a freezing moor, wondering if he was going to find her dead, neck broken, at the bottom of a hill.Her hair came down all at once, a tumbling mass, tousled and heavy and nearly down to her waist.Wonderful, he murmured, taking it in both hands and lifting it.

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About Elizabeth Hoyt

Elizabeth Hoyt is the pen name of Nancy M. Finney. Hoyt is a New York Times bestselling author of historical romance. She also writes contemporary romance under the name Julia Harper. She lives in central Illinois with her husband and two children.