Chapter 11

CHAPTER ELEVEN

ELEANOR’S ANXIETY increased. Sean had been gone for well over an hour.

It could not take that long to go to the chandler on the corner for food and some other supplies.

She stood barefoot at the room’s single window, having changed into the breeches and ruffled shirt, so that she could watch for him.

From where she stood, she could see down the wide cobbled street that ended at the Custom House, where both channels of the river met.

There, numerous vessels were at berth. Most seemed to be fishing boats and barges.

However, staring south where the river widened, heading toward Great Island, she saw the three larger masts of a frigate.

Eleanor knew enough about ships to know that this was a fighting vessel with guns.

As there was a naval base in Cobh, she assumed the battleship belonged to His Majesty’s Royal Navy.

The sight of the forbidding ship was more cause for concern.

Eleanor turned to glance down at the street where the cobbler had his shop.

Sean was nowhere in sight. Like most Irish cities, Cork dated back to medieval times, if not beyond, but the quay was wide and lined with stucco buildings, some yellow, some green, all two stories high.

Clotheslines had been passed back and forth from window to window, as if the street were decorated with flags and pennants, not shirts and stockings.

Shops lined the street, and a few pedestrians were passing by, in no apparent hurry.

Eleanor saw a miller’s, an apothecary shop, a tailor’s, another cobbler shop and a chairmaker’s.

From where she stood, she could not see the farthest corner, where the chandler was.

What was taking him so long?

Just as she became convinced that he was in trouble, she saw him coming up the street. Her heart leaped wildly, a response she refused to consider. But she was terribly relieved.

He was carrying several parcels. He was bringing food and more importantly, he was neither hurt nor captured. She almost smiled, but the expression never formed. He was not alone.

A small woman with a cap on her long, curly dark hair was walking alongside him, and they were clearly conversing.

And in that moment, every tryst he’d had while they were growing up came rushing to mind.

Sean had been a rake as a young man, and only Cliff would have been able to compete for the honor of unabashed cad, had he not left home at fourteen.

She also recalled his uncontrollable and explosive passion of the other night.

He had been caged up in prison for two years—and now, some lightskirt was pursuing him.

She didn’t have to hear what the woman was saying or even see her face to know that. Every instinct she had told her so.

They had paused on the street below, outside of the cobbler’s shop and the entrance to the flat where Eleanor watched.

The woman was plump and pretty and as she conversed, she kept touching Sean’s arm.

Eleanor could recognize a flirtation when she saw one.

She knew exactly what was transpiring below her.

If Sean hadn’t taken this woman into his bed already, he would do so soon.

Eleanor gripped the sill, finding it hard to breathe.

She could not possibly be jealous. She was returning home to marry Sinclair—she wanted to go home and marry him, because the man she really loved had changed so much that she simply could not be sure who was standing on the street below.

But her reasoning did not ease her frantic emotions.

Feeling ill, she turned away from the scene, but only after Sean and the woman had parted company; the door below stairs thudding as it slammed closed.

“Elle.”

Eleanor strode to the door. She paused there to take a deep breath, form a smile and calmly throw both bolts.

She didn’t care if he’d taken that woman to bed or intended to.

The only thing that remained between them was an awkward friendship and an inescapable past. There was no future.

She would ignore how saddened that comprehension made her, because it was a belief she must cling to at all costs.

He looked at her and started. “Are you all right?”

She smiled again. It felt brittle. “You were gone so long. I couldn’t help but worry.”

He gave her a guarded look and entered the flat. Eleanor closed the door, bolting it. He placed the paper sacks on the table while she watched. He cautiously said, “Come sit down. I’ll bandage your feet.”

“My feet are fine. You are the one who needs bandages. Who is your lady friend?” The words popped out and she was aghast. She felt her cheeks heat.

He straightened and their gazes clashed. “I beg your pardon?”

She bit her lip, wishing she could take the words back.

“Do you mean Kate?”

Eleanor hesitated and then shrugged as indifferently as possible.

“She’s the cobbler’s daughter,” he said, turning and placing some items on the table. “I told her you are my sister.” He seemed to avoid her gaze now.

“How convenient,” she sniped unhappily.

He turned again, his gaze very hard to read. “I do not understand. She saw us come in. She is a bit…of a snoop. I had to tell her…something. I said your name was Jane.” He added, “She thinks I am John Collins. Could you please sit down?”

Eleanor wanted to know if they had shared a bed. If they had been in that bed, she wasn’t sleeping there ever again. It was not her affair, but she was hurt.

She turned away, restlessly pacing the room. How could she continue to have these feelings for Sean when he was such an enigma? It was one thing to want to help him heal his wounds and escape the authorities, but it was another to remain half in love with him—or the man he had become.

Sean’s cheeks were flushed. “I didn’t take her to bed…if that is what you are thinking.”

He could still read her mind! “I’m not!” She smiled widely and sat down. “I didn’t give it a thought.” She shrugged as flippantly as possible.

Eleanor felt her color increasing. Finally, she dared to look up, and her breath became suspended. In that moment, she had not a doubt as to what he was thinking.

She forgot about Kate. Her stomach vanished into thin air, leaving a huge space inside that would so eagerly accept him.

Sean’s gaze slipped down her ruffled shirt just once before he turned away.

He lifted a wrapped roll of linen. “Why don’t…

” He stopped. His voice was raw, but not from two years of disuse or any accident.

Eleanor was dismayed. She had no right to such a terrible hunger herself, and she understood. “I’ll do it.”

He nodded, handing her the linen without looking at her.

Eleanor took in the rigid lines of his body, and she unrolled the linen as he began to unpack their few groceries.

The irony of the situation struck her, hard.

She had been waiting for him to notice her as a woman for years, and now that he had, she was determined to fight his attraction and hers.

It was beyond ironic, she realized. It was tragic.

Eleanor bandaged her other foot, feeling very self-conscious. The air in the room had become humid and thick. Now she began to think about the long night ahead of them and the fact that the flat had one bed.

“I bought a roast turkey dinner from the innkeeper…around the block.”

Finished, Eleanor straightened in her chair.

No wonder he had been so long. He was careful not to look at her as he opened the small cupboard over the sink.

Sean removed two plates, two tin mugs and some utensils.

Eleanor saw a bottle of red wine on the table.

The aromas wafting from the paper parcel, tied with string, were very enticing, but the tension in her body remained.

She was in despair. She did not want to feel this way, not now and not ever.

He brought everything to the table. Eleanor stood and untied the parcel while Sean uncorked the wine. “Did you see any soldiers?” she asked, hoping to break the tension.

“No. There’s a frigate in the island harbor…the HMS Gallatine.”

They were almost on safer ground, Eleanor thought. “Do you know the ship?” She served herself, not daring to look up at him.

The cork popped loudly in the too—small, too—silent flat. “Devlin engaged it years ago…captured her from the French. I asked…she’s got thirty-two cannon. Tomorrow I may go look at her.”

She was startled and not pleasantly so. “How does that affect you? What difference does it make if she has nine cannon or thirty?”

His gaze met hers, then danced away. “It only affects me…if she is chasing me when I set sail.”

A new, different tension afflicted her. “Did you book a passage for yourself?”

“How can I do that?” He stared at her in some surprise. “You will return home first.” Abruptly he reached for the wine and poured two glasses, then stopped. “I forgot. You don’t drink.”

“That’s all right.” She had never needed the effects of a glass of wine as badly as she did then.

He handed it to her; their hands brushed.

Eleanor felt as if he had pulled her into his arms, as if he had covered her mouth with his, and it was a moment before she could breathe. Her skin was on fire, and her flesh throbbed.

He turned his back to her, drinking from his own mug. She thought she saw a tremor pass through him, but she couldn’t be sure. His back and shoulders were stiff with tension. She put her mug down, untouched. “I have been thinking about it.”

Very warily, he faced her. “You’ve been thinking…about what?” His tone was as cautious.

“I think you should leave the country before I return home. I want to know that you have escaped safely, with your life.”

“Absolutely not!” he responded firmly without pause. She searched his silver eyes and saw sheer determination there.

He turned away, tossing the rest of his wine down with visible anger.

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