Read Stormswept Online

Authors: Sabrina Jeffries

Stormswept (34 page)

My breast is pained with passion,

Pining for love of a girl.

—SION PHYLIP, “THE SEAGULL”

T
he celebration at the field ended an hour later when the rain came down in a torrent. Amid laughter and shouting, Rhys grabbed Juliana and dashed to the cart. With rain half-blinding them, he drove home, and by the time he pulled up under the eaves of the stable they were soaked to the skin.

But he didn’t feel the least bit cold, having drunk enough ale to fend off the chill. He jumped down and helped Juliana out, hands lingering on her waist as the groom emerged to pull the cart into the stables. They stood where it was warm and dry under the eaves, and Rhys kissed her hair, damp and rich with the scent of rain and lavender.

“Thank you again for what you did for Evan,” she said. “You’ve saved him from a cruel father.”

He hesitated, wondering if he should tell her that life at Eton would probably be harder for Evan than it had been at home. Canings and other harsh punishments were still
routinely given, although it wasn’t as bad as it had been in his day.

But it was still better for a brilliant child like Evan to be at Eton than serving a wasted life as farm help.

“Also,” she continued, “thank you for taking me tonight. I enjoyed it very much.”

“You’re welcome.” He dropped a kiss on her forehead.

She toyed with the buttons on his waistcoat. “I only hope I didn’t make a complete fool of myself, dancing out there with the others like a ten-year-old girl.”

He thought of how she’d looked whirling in the circle, her hair a nimbus of fire and her green eyes glowing like cut jade, and desire uncurled in him. “Nay, you were wonderful.” He coaxed her lips open with a finger. “Only one thing could make this night more enjoyable.”

“And what might that be?” She caught his finger in her teeth, swirling her tongue around it with a mischievous smile.

He pressed her against the stable wall to let her feel the hard ridge of flesh in his breeches. “I’ll give you three guesses.” He drew his finger from her mouth to run it down her collarbone into the hollow between her breasts.

“Hmm,” she said. “A nice hot cup of tea by the fireplace?”

“No.” He slid his finger beneath her sodden bodice until he found her nipple.

As he rubbed the hard tip, her breath quickened. “Perhaps a . . . quiet game of chess?”

“Definitely not.” He pushed the wet gingham material of her bodice down to free her breast, then lowered his head to suck at the damp skin.

“Rhys! ” she protested, pushing his head away. “What if someone should come along?”

His eyes gleamed. “Wouldn’t they get a show?”

She drew up her bodice and shoved him away. “Not here, my lusty husband.”

The rain still came down in sheets, but she ran out into it laughing. She raced toward the house and danced up the wide steps as he followed at a more leisurely pace, letting the rain beat the grime of a day’s work from him. At the top she paused to blow him a kiss, then opened the door and slipped inside, giggling as she closed it.

“God save me from teasing wenches.” Shoving the wet hair from his face, he hurried up the stairs. If it was a game she wanted, she’d best make it quick. That one taste of her hadn’t been near enough.

But when he opened the door and walked in, she was standing stock-still in the hall, holding a sealed envelope, with Mrs. Roberts at her side.

Mrs. Roberts glanced over. “Oh, there you are, sir. Don’t you look a sight, the two of you. I was telling milady that you’d best get out of those wet clothes before you—”

“Who’s the letter from?” Rhys interrupted, alarmed by Juliana’s pale cheeks.

“Oh,” said Mrs. Roberts. “It came from Northcliffe Hall while you were at the harvest.”

A sudden vise clamped down on his heart. The last time someone had brought a message from Northcliffe Hall—

“Darcy sent it,” Juliana whispered.

The vise tightened. “How do you know?”

“ ’Tis his handwriting.” She stared at it a moment longer,
then ripped it open to draw out a letter. She read it quickly, then gazed off into space.

Rhys fought the urge to snatch the letter and toss it into the nearest fire. “What does it say?”

She stiffened and nodded at the housekeeper. “Thank you, Mrs. Roberts. That will be all this evening.”

As the woman left, her eyes bright with curiosity, Juliana handed him the letter, then headed for the stairs.

He started reading. It was indeed from Northcliffe. Apparently her brother and Devon had been involved in some investment together, and now Devon was threatening to back out if Northcliffe or St. Albans didn’t arrange a meeting between him and Juliana. “One final meeting,” it said, “to satisfy Lord Devon that Vaughan is not holding you in the marriage against your will.”

Against your will.
Damn them all! How dared they!

Worse yet, Northcliffe had apparently responded to Devon’s blackmail by setting up the meeting. The marquess was invited for dinner at Northcliffe Hall two days hence, and Northcliffe was
commanding
his sister to attend.

It didn’t help that the bastard included Rhys in the invitation. Not one bit.

Rhys shoved the letter into his pocket. The audacity of the man!

Juliana was already halfway up the stairs, and he hurried up to fall into step at her side. “Where are you going? We must talk about this.”

“Yes, but not here.”

He gritted his teeth as he followed her to their bedchamber. She was right. This was definitely not something
to be discussed in front of the servants. Because he suspected that she planned to go.

And there was no way in hell he’d allow it.

As soon as they were inside their bedchamber, he closed the door and tore off his drenched coat. “You want to attend, don’t you?”

“No. But I have to.” She undressed, letting her wet clothes fall into a puddle, then donned a shift and her silk wrapper. “I must settle this matter once and for all.”

“It was settled when I told Devon you were married and he bowed out of the engagement. He has no damned right to come back asking for you.”

She sat down on the bed. “Are you ordering me not to go?”

He clenched his fists, fighting down the fear twisting inside him. “I don’t think it’s a good idea.” He held his breath, waiting for her to explode. He could deal with anger. He could fight her when she was shouting at him much better than he could battle this quiet acquiescence that increased his fear.

But she stared calmly at him, as if she knew his weakness. “Why? What are you afraid will happen?”

The rational question took him aback. He raked his fingers through his hair. “That should be obvious. I don’t want you anywhere near that damned marquess.”

“That’s not what I asked. What do you think will happen if I go ‘near that damned marquess’?”

You’ll leave me. You’ll realize what you’re missing and you’ll run away, as you did before.

He concentrated on peeling off his wet clothes to keep from saying things he’d regret.

As he jerked on his drawers and dressing gown, Juliana rose and came toward him. “Are you afraid Stephen will kidnap me and carry me off to his estate? I hardly think even my brothers would allow that. Do you fear he’ll pre-sent proof of a legal claim to me? There is none. So what is turning you into a beast at the very idea of my meeting him over dinner? There will be other guests present—you, for one, since you were invited.”

“I was present at your engagement party, too, yet that didn’t keep you from choosing him over me. If I’d released you from your vows that night, you’d have gone with him. You wanted a divorce then. You said so.”

“That’s true. I was very angry.” She tilted her chin up. “And I think I had a right to be. But a great deal has changed between us. Surely you realize I’ve been more than content to be your wife these past two weeks.”

“Then why must you see Devon again?” he snapped.

She laid her hand on his chest. “Can’t you understand how he must feel? To have his betrothed leave him at his own engagement party, and not know what has happened to her?”

“He can’t feel any worse than I did to have my wife leave me on my wedding night.”

Paling, she dropped her hand. “You still believe I betrayed you. You’re afraid I’ll run off with Lord Devon, and betray you again.”

The terror churned in him more fiercely. “Nay,” he protested.

Thunder cracked the air outside, as if to echo his fears.

She gazed steadily at him. “If you trusted me, you
wouldn’t be afraid to let me go to this. You’d have faith in me to handle whatever Lord Devon requests.”

She didn’t understand the irrational clutch of fear in his heart at the very thought of her speaking with Devon. He’d nearly lost her to the bastard, and only by force had he gained her back. How could he ever endure losing her for good?

Or . . . would he lose her if he refused to trust her?

“It’s not that simple.” He turned away, unable to bear the look in her eyes.

“Oh, but it is.” She came up behind him to encircle his waist and lay her head against his back. “It’s as simple as deciding to trust me or not.”

He could feel the damp from her hair soaking through his dressing gown, could see her hands linked over his belly. Two weeks ago she wouldn’t have held him so easily, nor touched him with the casual intimacy of a wife.

He didn’t want to lose that. “It’s not you I don’t trust,” he said, striving for a calm tone. “It’s those treacherous brothers of yours . . . and Devon.”

She sighed. “What are they going to do? Have me impressed? If you’re so worried about what will happen, come with me. The invitation included you.”

He twisted around to face her. “Aye, doesn’t that surprise you? Your brother is furious over what I did at the council meeting, so why invite me to his home? This could be a trap. Perhaps your brother is doing this on purpose, to lure you—and me—to Northcliffe Hall, so he can . . . can . . .”

“Can
what
? He can’t have you impressed again, for your
powerful friends would protest and he’d find himself in trouble. He can’t kill you. If he’d wanted to, he’d have done it before now. These are all just excuses, and you know it.”

He did, but how else could he keep her away from her
former betrothed
and her devious brothers?

“Rhys, listen to me.” She lifted her hand to stroke his cheek with a tenderness that made him ache. “I told you I didn’t love Lord Devon.” She dragged in a deep breath. “I love
you
. So why would I toss aside a marriage with the man I love for a man I don’t?”

He froze.
I love you.
He’d waited so long for her to say those words again, even though he’d been unwilling to say them himself and allow her that hold on his heart. But what if she were saying them only because she wanted him to give in?

He caught her hand. “If you love me, you’ll stay here and not give those bastards the chance to separate us again.”

He knew he’d said the wrong thing when the blood drained from her face. “I bare my heart to you, and that’s all you can do? Use my love as a lever to get what you want?”

He closed his hands on her shoulders. “You don’t know what you’re asking.”

“I do know.” Her face was drawn now. “I’m asking you to trust me. And it’s clear that you can’t.”

The air in the room grew arctic, despite the closed window and the fire blazing in the hearth. Juliana’s expression of pain drove icicles through his heart. Damn it, he was losing her—he could feel it. Despite everything, he was losing her.

And he simply couldn’t. “I do trust you,
cariad
. I do.”

Her silence spoke her disbelief.

He stumbled for words and could only come up with the ones he’d spoken years before. “And . . . and I love you.”

Her gaze shot to his, wild and luminous in the firelight, but her expression was skeptical.

As it should be. He could scarcely believe he’d said the words himself. Yet he felt them. In the past two weeks, the beauty of what they’d had before had echoed in what they had now. He loved her now as much as he’d loved her then; perhaps more. It didn’t matter if she’d betrayed him. Nothing mattered but her.

“Yes, I do love you,” he said. This was even more important to him than the first time he’d declared his heart to her. “I’ve loved you from the day I first saw you. I never stopped.”

When she said nothing, he sucked in a harsh breath. “That’s why it nearly killed me to think you’d betrayed me. And then to see you with that damned English lord—”

“He doesn’t mean anything to me, I swear.” There was frustration in her voice. “ ’Tis
you
I love.”

“Then show me.” He hauled her into his arms. “Make love to me, darling.”

“But Rhys—”

He kissed her hard, urging her to respond. At first she resisted, but when he swept her lips with his tongue, she moaned and her mouth opened like a flower. He drove into her mouth, wanting to strike deep into the heart of her, to find that place she held separate from him and make it his.

She pulled away. “This won’t solve anything . . . we have to talk about—”

“I need you.” The savage need to make her forget everything but him clawed at him. “I love you more than breath, more than life. I have to know you need me, that you love me. Show me that Devon means nothing to you.”

He drew her hands to the sash of his dressing gown. “Please,” he whispered through a throat taut with fear. “Make love to me.” If she rejected him now . . .

Her eyes met his—then she undid the knot and peeled off his dressing gown.

He reached for her, but she shook her head. “I’m making love to
you,
remember?” Keeping her eyes fixed on him, she shed her wrapper. When she shimmied out of her shift he caught his breath, drinking in the sight of her finely sculpted form—all feminine lines and curves and smooth, tempting surfaces.

With a sensuous look, she drew his hands to her waist, then stretched up on tiptoe to fit her mouth to his. He reveled in the way her hard nipples pressed into his bare chest. Wrapping his arms about her, he opened his mouth over hers. His flesh strained against his too-snug drawers, wanting to be inside her.

Other books

In Good Hands by Kathy Lyons
Game Six by Mark Frost
Marked by the Alpha by Adaline Raine
French Kids Eat Everything by Karen Le Billon
For a Roman's Heart by Agnew, Denise A.
The Forgotten Girl by Kerry Barrett
Scenes of Passion by Suzanne Brockmann
On the Road by Jack Kerouac