Chapter 17 #3
“Don’t cry for me,” he said, wishing he could have somehow spared her this. “Come here.” He pulled her against his chest again.
She didn’t press her cheek there; she strained upward, seeking his mouth, her lips urgent, frantic.
And it crossed his mind that this was the end for them.
He was going to walk away from Elle in order to avenge her, and then he would hang—if Reed’s troops didn’t slaughter him on the spot.
In that moment, his body stiffened with a huge, desperate, consuming hunger.
She felt the change in him. Elle pulled her mouth from his and met his gaze, hers wide, surprised.
He took her hand. “Come.” He pulled her behind the house, into his arms and to the ground. She cried out, her response filled with the same desperate need.
Their mouths mated and quickly, so did their bodies.
Thrusting his tongue deep, he moved her skirts aside, reaching for her.
She gasped with pleasure, reaching for the buttons on his breeches.
Sean hesitated, overcome as her hands skidded over his length, his thickness.
And his last thoughts of revenge vanished.
He lay back, gasping for air, and she pulled the breeches apart. Her long hair fell over him, entwining there. He could not stand it and he was prepared to beg, but he did not have to. She slid her tongue over him and he found her face, holding it, whispering her name. “Elle.”
And then he moved, reversing their positions, their gazes briefly meeting. Instantly he pushed his body between her legs and he slid deeply into her.
She threw her arms around him, clinging, as he rode her. “Don’t let me go,” he said. “Ever.”
FOR ONE MOMENT, Eleanor lay in Sean’s arms, realizing that she remained as deeply in love with him as ever.
She was so afraid now, not just of Reed, but of what Sean planned.
Still breathless, she sat up, arranging her skirts.
“We have to go. Sean, is Cliff’s ship nearby?
Even if it is being watched, The Fair Lady is our best chance to escape. ”
“I want you aboard that ship,” he said decisively. “You’re right. We have to go.” He stood, turning his back and quickly fastening his breeches.
She leaped to her feet, realizing what he intended. “Damn it! You think to drop me with Cliff while you commit suicide?” She began to bargain desperately. “Don’t do this, Sean. If you insist that I go home—to Sinclair—I will. You can go to America and I will go home.”
He faced her, sadness in his eyes. “It’s too late for negotiations. Let’s go. We’ll ride double.”
Eleanor balked. “No. I am not leaving you so that you can destroy yourself and your life.”
He stared at her, his expression stone cold. “Don’t make me force you onto that horse.”
Eleanor had never seen anyone so determined, but she could not give up. “If you love me at all, you will choose to live—and not go after Colonel Reed.”
He stiffened. Anguish flickered in his eyes. “That is not fair.”
“Nothing is fair!” She thought she sounded hysterical.
He shook his head, anger darkening his expression, and started for the other side of the house where she had left the cavalry mount grazing. And Eleanor heard the riders.
So did Sean. He whirled, eyes wide. “Get in the house,” he said tersely. “There’s a trap door by the bedstead. Use it.”
She had only an instant to decide. “I’m not leaving you. You don’t even have a weapon!”
“I have my hands,” he said, giving her a furious look. He started around the house.
Eleanor ran after him, expecting to see Reed and his men riding into the yard. Already envisioning Sean’s attack on the officer and the consequences, she could almost see his slain body on the ground. But Sean halted and she collided into his back. Then she saw Devlin, Tyrell and Rex.
They had halted their horses on the other side of the front yard. For one moment, the men stared at each other. A huge silence had fallen—and then Eleanor saw the three of them look at her.
She didn’t care if their recent lovemaking was obvious. She ran past Sean. “You have to stop him!” She turned to Devlin, because he was Sean’s older brother and Sean had always deferred to him. “He intends to murder Colonel Reed!”
Devlin leaped from his mount, as did Tyrell.
Rex still rode astride, a superior horseman in spite of his handicap.
Devlin reached her first. His gaze moved over her features and then he went to Sean.
The brothers stared and Devlin cursed. “Bloody fool!” Then he embraced Sean as if he were a child, holding him for a long moment.
Eleanor had never been more relieved. She now faced Tyrell, as Rex limped toward them, leaning on his crutch. “You have to stop him, Ty.”
“I intend to do my best. You are hurt.”
“Barely!”
He tilted up her chin and stared into her eyes. “You have a choice to make, Eleanor. You must choose between Sean, who may never survive these events, and Sinclair, who remains at Adare, waiting for your return. And there is little time.”
Eleanor turned to look at Sean.
Devlin had released him and Sean was staring at her, his gaze wide and intense.
“There is no choice to make,” she whispered. Nothing had changed. Sean was her life.
Sean was grim as he moved toward them. “She chooses Sinclair,” he said.
Eleanor cried out. And she saw tears forming in his silver eyes.
Tyrell said, the weight of authority and danger in his tone, “Do you care to explain yourself to her?”
Sean didn’t even look at him. “Elle.” He stopped as if he could not speak.
She was crying, and she shook her head, her silent way of begging him one last time to change his mind.
He had become pale. “I must do this. I could never bear the burden of what has happened…if I allowed Reed to get away with what he has done.”
“I am fine,” she whispered, the lie now solidly etched in her mind.
“You are not fine! And he will pay for his monstrous behavior! We both know…I will not survive this day.”
She went to him. She was sobbing now and could not get a single word out.
But he smiled at her. “If things were different, if I could redo my entire life, I would have never left Askeaton four years ago. If I were not a fugitive…I would marry you. Elle, I love you.”
Eleanor lost her ability to stand. It wasn’t Sean who caught her, it was Tyrell.
“I am going to take you to Cliff,” Tyrell said softly. “Rex and Devlin will stay with Sean.”
She shook her head, wanting to tell him that she would stay until the very end. She was not leaving Sean’s side now.
Hoofbeats thundered.
And Eleanor knew it was Reed and his troops. She staggered upright, turning, Tyrell keeping his arm around her as a dozen soldiers galloped into the front yard, blue coats and white shoulder belts gleaming. The troops halted, Reed at their forefront.
A terrible silence fell, punctuated only by the blowing horses and their jangling bits.
Sean was smiling.
Eleanor could not look away, sick with fear.
He glanced at Devlin. Devlin unsheathed his sword, the same long saber he had worn as a captain in the royal navy, and tossed it to him. Eleanor felt her heart lurch with dread as Sean caught it easily by the hilt. His gaze returned to Reed.
Reed smiled. “A viper’s nest—or should I amend my choice of words?” His saber rang as it appeared in his hand.
Sean did not answer. He strode past Eleanor and Tyrell, past Rex, toward Reed.
Reed spurred his mount forward. “An entire nest of Irish traitors,” Reed murmured, sounding pleased. “O’Neill, you are under arrest.”
“Dismount.” Sean spoke softly, so softly his words were almost inaudible; yet somehow, everyone in the yard knew exactly what he wanted.
“Arrest him,” Reed said, dancing his horse aside and just out of Sean’s reach.
“Coward.” Sean’s cold smile never wavered.
Reed’s smile vanished. He promptly leaped from his horse and he was far too agile. Eleanor’s dismay increased.
The two men faced one another like fencing masters, swords poised high to strike. Sean’s eyes glittered—and so did Reed’s.
“En garde,” Reed murmured.
And Sean struck—but Reed parried the blow.
Eleanor knew that all of her brothers were superior swordsmen, but Sean had not held a sword in two years—if not more.
He was at a terrible disadvantage. Her heart slammed as she watched the two men swiftly engage.
Their swords rang and clashed, blow after blow, stalemated.
Sean advanced; Reed retreated. Reed advanced, Sean retreated.
The seconds turned into agonizing minutes; Sean’s face was gleaming with sweat.
Reed’s face was as wet, but now both men were fiercely focused and determined.
Someone was going to die that day. Their swords clashed and rang again.
Sean feinted and thrust—suddenly the tip of his blade was in Reed’s blue jacket, in his shoulder. Sean pulled it back and the tip was bright red with blood.
Grunting, Reed thrust back and their swords braced and locked.
Eleanor began to have hope.
Sean thrust viciously again and in disbelief, Eleanor saw Reed’s sword clatter to the ground. Reed froze, as did Sean. And then Sean laid the tip of his blade against Reed’s heart. He smiled.
“No!” Eleanor screamed. “Sean, do not!”
Sean visibly stiffened.
“Apprehend him,” Reed ordered.
A dozen swords rang. A dozen troops surrounded them and a dozen blades were instantly aimed at Sean’s head and body, inches from his flesh.
Eleanor knew it was over. She could feel Sean now, with her, inside her, a part of her very being, and she could read his every thought, feel his every desire. He wanted to kill. He was about to kill. And the troops would slaughter him in return.
A shot rang out.
Sean’s sword was blasted out of his hand.
Stunned, Eleanor saw Rex standing in a firing position, his entire weight balanced on his crutch and left leg, a pistol pointing directly at Sean and Reed.
The yard came to life. Even before Reed spoke, Sean was seized by several soldiers.
“Shackle him,” Reed spat.
“No!” Eleanor cried.
Sean was dragged toward the milling horses and troops.
Eleanor started to pull away from Tyrell.
“Eleanor!” He gripped her hard, not allowing her to go after Sean.
And she hated him. “Let me go!” she shouted. “Let me say goodbye! Ty, let me go!”
He pulled her close. “No.”
“Mount up and move out,” Reed snapped, already on his charger. He rode his bay toward them. “I have no quarrel here, especially not with you, Sir Captain—” he looked at Devlin, and then at Rex “—or you, Sir Major.” He wheeled the bay, lifting his arm and flagging his troops onward.
Sean was in their midst, astride, his hands manacled in front of him, as the mass of men moved out.
Eleanor fought Tyrell now. She kicked and scratched and he suddenly let her go. “Eleanor, don’t.”
But she lifted her skirts and ran up to the cavalcade. She ran past one huge horse and another and then darted between the chargers. “Sean! Sean!” She reached his mount’s side and seized his leg.
He stared straight ahead as if he could not hear her.
“Sean!”
His jaw was clenched, his temples throbbed. He refused to acknowledge her in any way.
She could no longer keep up with the trotting horses. Her steps slowed. On each side, the horses jogged past her. She stumbled, not caring if she fell and was trampled. The last troops had passed and she stared after them as they disappeared around a bend in the road.
Someone paused beside her; it was Tyrell. “Come, Eleanor, it is time to go home.”