"May I help you, sir," she
asked again, her silky words bewitching his tongue.
Maybe it was the soft lilt of
her voice that had scrambled his thoughts and mislaid his intentions, the
familiar scent of her nearness that had paralyzed him, that kept him from
dragging her into his arms and claiming his marital rights on the spot.
But she was looking up at him
patiently, as though he were simple, a frown of concern creasing her pale
brows, winging them above her blue, blue eyes.
"Are you all right, sir?
Perhaps you ought to sit down and rest." Now the enchanting woman had him
by the elbow, her hot little fingers slipping into private folds, his own
warm places, the woody scent of her propelling him wherever it was she was
leading him.
"Sit."
He felt the backs of his calves
against something low and cushy, watched as she spread her palm against
his chest and then gave a little push. It wasn't until his backside hit a
cushion that he realized he was sitting.
"Good god, woman!" Jared
stood, fully in control again, except for his breathing, and a tight
gripping in his belly, a callow erection that had him fully roused and
wanting.
Wanting his wife and that
moist, rosy mouth that pouted in thought as she peered up at him.
"Sir, you don't look at all
well." Her eyes were enormous, fringed in sable. So blue. The clear
blue of the Mediterranean, the Aegean, the Sandwiches.
Then he realized with a sudden,
unbalancing twinge that she was calling him sir.
Not Hawkesly.
Or Jared.
Or husband.
But, sir.
Sir!
As though he were an utter
stranger to her, a lunatic besides. A threat that kept McHugh hoovering
over them.
"Did he speak to you at all, McHugh?" She
lifted the hair at Jared's forehead with her fingertips, stunning him with
her gentle touch, stealing the words that he'd been about to speak.
Don't mock me, woman, I'm
your husband. But
the words didn't make it off his tongue.
"Sure he spoke well enough, my
lady. Spoke like regular toff, he did."
"I am a regular toff,"
Jared said, with a blustering sputter.
Bloody hell, he'd meant to say
a regular husband. Her regular husband, but his mouth still
wasn't working right and he was feeling like a regular fool.
A grin played at his wife's
mouth, the slightest dimples winking from her cheeks, teasing him, he was
sure. "Are you expected at Badger's Run, sir?"
"Expected?" He'd bellowed the
question, felt it burn its way down his throat and into his gut.
Was this another game of hers?
Like the lodge itself? Punishment because he'd been gone too long. This
dodge and parry instead of a proper, grateful greeting. Surely she was
expecting him home. . . . expecting her husband.
Sometime.
After all, he'd written to her
months ago that he would be arriving sometime this year.
"I'm sorry, sir. It's just
that if you haven't booked your lodging ahead of time, then I'm afraid you
won't be able to stay with us."
"Won't–" He choked on the rest
of his words. On the very idea that his bride was turning him away from
their bed on their wedding night.
Booked his lodging?
His lodging?
"We're full up for the entire
weekend."
He was watching her lips
instead of listening fully, consumed by the way they glistened as she
spoke her riddles. "Full up?"
"The fishing tournament, you
see."
"Tournament?"
"The second annual, I'm glad to
say." She crooked an index finger his way, and then strode off toward the
small office, just off the main room. "Very popular. Now, if you'll
simply tell me your name, I'll check my books for your reservation."
His name? A coldness settled
across his shoulders. The specter of a topsy world, where day was night
and strangers invaded his home.
Where his wife was pretending
not to know him.
Or truly didn't.
Confused and slowed by this
puzzle, Jared followed her into the little room. "Do you mean, madam,
that you don't know who I am?"
She stopped behind a tidy desk
and studied him earnestly for a short moment and then shook her head.
"I'm sorry, I can't say that I do."
"You're certain?"
He felt her studying him, the
hitch in her brow–a memory of some part of him that she must have
dismissed–and then her cutting question,
"Why, sir? Should I?"
Of course she shouldn't. Five
minutes in his company as she was rushed about in the hot, glaring sun on
the deck of a ship in the far away port of Alexandria, her foolish father
dead only a day.
And a marriage thrust upon her
from out nowhere.
Why the devil should she
remember him? Or care in the least. A reasonable possibility. And yet
what would make her turn his hunting lodge into a bloody sportsman's
retreat?
Something wasn't right here.
Not right at all.
"Then if you'll give me your
name, sir. . . "
For no other reason than a
lifetime of perilous intrigue and a deep need to think through this very
murky problem before taking another step, Jared looked his ravishing wife
straight in the eye and gave her the name of his factor in Montreal,
"My name is Huddleswell, madam,
Colonel Leland P. Huddleswell."
She blinked at him, then turned
away to the large book spread out across her desk blotter. She ran her
finger along the page, then looked up at him and said, just as plainly,
but with a sigh.
"As I feared, Colonel
Huddleswell, your name is not on our books anywhere. So, if you plan to
fish the tournament, you'll have to find a bed elsewhere."
Elsewhere but beside her? He
nearly laughed at her wayward notion, but held his reaction close. If his
beautiful, provoking bride thought that he would willingly spend another
night under a different roof than hers, she would soon learn otherwise.
But all in his own time. . . .
Meanwhile, he would investigate
her plans and uncover her strategies, her motives. Though revenge was the
most obvious. To repay his high-handedness with her father's shipping
business.
"Your pardon, Lady Hawkesly,
but I don't think you understand me." Jared took a few slow steps toward
her across the small office, stopping a foot from her, the rose of her
lips reminding him that he'd forgotten to kiss her after their wedding
ceremony. Not even a peck. "You'll find a suitable bed for me this
weekend at Badger's Run, else I'll see you closed down for good."
"And how do you plan to do
that, Colonel?" Her perfectly shaped breasts rose sharply and fell in her
sudden anger, the points of movement and shadow against the linen of her
shirtwaist sapping his concentration. The flick of her brow as riling to
his will as her fragrance.
"I have my ways, madam. And
more means than you could ever imagine. Now you'll give me a room, or
you'll soon know the reason why."
Kate could easily imagine a
great deal of mischief from this beastly-tempered colonel who'd come
marching into her lodge as if he owned her.
Though she'd never seen such a
handsome man, certainly never at this close range. Close enough to savor
his minty breath breaking across her forehead and the warm eddies riffling
her lashes, her hairline. Muscles flexing beneath the skin of his smooth
bronze jaw, the slight sheen of beard.
Ohhh, and all that bay and
leather scented, steamy heat pouring off his finely tailored coat, seeping
through her bodice, lifting the hair at her nape.
Distractingly handsome and
imperious and rude and far, far too close at the moment.
So, for the second time in the
same evening, Kate pressed the heel of her hand against his chest and gave
a shove.
This time the man didn't budge
an inch, beyond the taut bundle of muscles rippling beneath the wool and
linen.
So, he though he could frighten
her, did he? Well, just let him try!
"Listen here, Colonel
Huddleswell," she said, grabbing up a fistful of waistcoat and elegant,
gold-crested buttons, and pulling him even closer, "I've survived the
steaming jungles of Burma, three hurricanes, tigers, bears, pythons, a
month ice-bound on an Arctic whaler, and a two-hundred mile march through
the Persian desert, the prisoner of an angry warlord, sir, so if you're
thinking to frighten me, you have a long, long way to go."
The huge man had straightened
from her with every item on her list, his mouth drawing into a fury, his
dark eyes narrowing to dangerous slits, until he finally said,
"Say that again."
Taking the advantage of his
sudden distance, Kate slipped away from him to the opposite side of the
desk. "I'm only trying to explain to you, Colonel, that you can't
frighten me with your bullying. And even if you could, I wouldn't be able
to give you a room at Badger's Run."
The large man had followed her
around the desk. "What were you doing in Persia?"
"That's really none of your
business–"
"You were taken prisoner?" The
intensity of his question startled her into answering him.
"Years ago, if you must know.
I was eleven and my father's ship had been captured in port and, well,
it's really only a cautionary tale. Which changes nothing, Colonel."
Befuddled by the man's scent, by the possessive fire in his eyes, Kate
sidled away from him and again jabbed her finger into the registration
book. "Here. You can see for yourself that I have absolutely no
vacancies. Every room is filled for the next three days."
His smile turned sly and
ominous as he came toward her, as though he was testing her and the air
around her. "Then I'll take yours."
"That's quite enough, sir!" It
wasn't his audacious suggestion that made her heart stumble over itself,
it was the sullen darkness of his voice, the undermining rumble. She
pointed to the fiddleback in the corner. "You'll sit there and behave
yourself, Colonel, else I'll call McHugh in here."
Of course, he didn't sit, he
only steadied his pace toward her as she backed away, around to the front
of the desk. "You're a very beautiful woman."
The impertinent lout! She
blushed instantly, like a silly debutante confronting her first rouge.
"Thank you, Colonel, but I'm married."
That stopped the colonel
mid-stride. He raised a bemused brow, then smiled ever so slightly, as
though he were somehow pleased and trying to hide it.
"You don't look married." He
leaned back against the desk, folding his arms across his broad chest, as
though he had learned whatever he'd been after.
"Well, I am quite married.
Quite."
The colonel pretended to look
around her, as though he knew her sorry secret. "Where is he then? Your
husband?"
"I–" she hated more than
anything to admit that she was never quite sure where her husband was,
hated even more that she wouldn't recognize him even if she saw him. "My
husband is at sea, Colonel."
"He must be, to leave you here
to manage all alone. That doesn't seem wise."
"I'm perfectly capable, sir."
Capable of clouting the man on the head if need be. "But I can assure you
that if he were here, he would tell you the same thing. We are full up
and were not expecting you."
His face went stern and he
tugged on the front points of his elegant dove gray silk waistcoat. "But
I wrote to you, madam."
"You did? When?" She
certainly didn't recall the name Huddleswell. Or any kind of colonel at
all.
"Months ago. I'm a man of
careful planning."
"Why didn't you tell me that
earlier." Thoroughly flummoxed, Kate went to her filing drawer and opened
it wide, hoping that she wouldn't find a lost correspondence.
"You gave me no chance." She
could feel him watching her as she leafed through the drawer, a slow,
searing heat, from her nape, all the way down her spine, jangling her
nerves.
Must be all that talk about her
husband–wherever the blighter was.
"No use dancing about the bush,
Colonel Huddleswell." She turned to him, preferring to meet trouble with
her chin forward. "I'm sorry, but I found no correspondence here with
your name on it."
He shook his head
dramatically. "I wrote to you in good faith, months in advance. You
should have been expecting me."
Kate took a deep breath. "Then
there's obviously been a mix up between here and your home."
"There sure as hell has been."
"But to show my own good faith,
I'll be happy to arrange a room for you in Mereglass–"
"I'll be staying here, madam,
at Badger's Run."
"But the Cloak and Gander has
rooms that--"
"Here." His surly frown
loosened suddenly. "Because this is where you are holding your fishing
tournament. And I want to be close to the fishing."
Kate couldn't help but laugh,
though the man was being a right royal pain. "That's hard to imagine,
sir. You're not the type."
He lifted a dark, defiant
eyebrow. "Oh, and what type am I?"
"A regular toff. You said so
yourself. Doubtless from a grand part of London. A paid-up member of at
least three gentlemen's clubs–"
"Yes, madam, and with enough
influence among powerful people to make sure that the Badger's Run closes
tomorrow, on rumor alone."
Powerful people like her
husband if he were ever to hear of such a rumor. Hawkesly would never
understand what she was doing here. But money was tighter than ever and
she had so many expenses these days. And there was next month's shooting
parties already scheduled, the money already spent on–
"Your decision, Lady Hawkesly?"
The blackguard looked ready and
was doubtless able to do most anything in order to have his way. Not a
man to cross. And, truth be told, she did have a spare room . . . of
sorts.