Chapter 10
T he tall man’s eyes narrowed on Favor. In a rush of relief she realized that he couldn’t possibly recognize her disguised as she—
“Are you thanking me for my current services or the ones you made such good use of in Dieppe?” he asked.
So much for anonymity.
His voice was rough-smooth, his gaze shuttered, the light refracting off the clear, wild honey of his irises. Only the slight curl of his upper lip indicated his current disposition. It was not a pleasant one.
“It is you,” he said. “What sort of perfidy had you planned for that poor sot?” He jerked his chin in the direction of the motionless Orville. “Damned if I oughtn’t dust him off and apologize, for any man entangled with you, Milady Treachery, deserves at the very least his fellow man’s pity and most probably his aid.”
Favor only half-attended this biting denunciation. She was too busy staring. Lud, he was big. Far taller and wider than she remembered. He wore tight black breeches that had seen better days and the white lawn shirt he wore was untied and loose, revealing his muscular bronzed chest.
He was darker than she recalled, too. The angularly rough features were tanned now, the square jaw blue-black with an incipient beard. His rumpled sable-colored hair fell in loose curls about a strong, broad throat.
But there was some other difference. Something elemental. Something important.
She tilted her head, trying to identify it. She had it. The man who had been shackled spread-eagle to that prison wall had been desperate, pushed to the crisis point. This man owned himself completely.
It put him at a distinct advantage. Now she was the one controlled by fate and others’ fortunes. She disliked the reversal in their positions.
He’d moved closer to her, agile and light-footed for so large a man. She shrank against the wall, suddenly realizing that one danger had supplanted another. Her heels beat a tattoo as she struggled to rise. He reached down, grabbed her upper arm, and lifted her to her feet.
She attempted to dart past him but his hand flashed up, circling her throat in a warm, tight grip, keeping her where she stood. She forced herself to meet his gaze. With one large thumb, he tilted her chin back. Her pulse thudded heavily against his palm.
“Well,” he murmured, his gaze slipping over her cheeks and mouth and throat like a caress, “what say you, Madame Noir, or Widow Lambett, or whoever the hell you are?”
“Favor,” she said. “Favor Mc—Favor Donne.”
He went utterly still, his gaze scoured her features.
“Damn you, what trick is this?” He dropped his hand to her upper arm, this time his grip not merely restraining but hurtful. “I don’t know what game you’re playing now, but I will have the truth.”
She winced. His teeth snapped together. “The truth before I … the truth!”
“’Tis the truth, I swear it!” she cried. “My brother is Lord Thomas Donne. He owns the manor house five miles inland on the north highway. You’ve but to ask anyone here to receive that same answer. I am Favor Donne.”
He eyed her derisively. “And what is a nobleman’s sister doing in France, masquerading as a licentious bawd?”
She hesitated a heartbeat, searching for a likely explanation. He shook her. “Out with it!”
“My brother … He is also La Bête , the smuggler,” she whispered. “’Twas he the French sought in Dieppe. ’Twas he I protected by giving you over to the soldiers in his stead.”
He thrust his face closer to hers. His eyes no longer looked cool, but torrid. He looked older than he had in France—harder, too. Certainly more dangerous. Silently she prayed that he would believe her.
“I swear it,” she rasped.
Slowly, his grip loosened, became less punishing.
“Damn,” he finally said but he seemed to be replying to some internal avowal, and not to anything she’d done. “You haven’t answered my question yet. What were you doing in Dieppe, little falcon? And why the new plummage?”
“What?” she asked in confusion.
“Your fierce brows are gone and you’ve dyed your hair. Why?”
“Because”—she cast about for a plausible answer—“because the English gentlemen are partial to dark hair.”
“I never heard it was so.”
“And where would you have heard anything about the current modes?” she asked, praying he wouldn’t punish her impertinence. “Or did you have the Gentleman’s Quarterly delivered to your cell?”
Appreciation flickered through his expression. “Touché.”
“And what are you doing here?” she asked haughtily, pressing her momentary advantage. Had he found out her identity and followed her here to extract some sort of revenge? The concept sent a shiver through her. Let that be a lesson to her never to heed the urgings of a guilty conscience. She should have let the French soldiers take him.
“Oh, no, pretty peregrine.” He shook his head. “A decent attempt at diversion, but I’m no callow youth to be distracted by a lush mouth uttering haughty demands. We were discussing you .
“Why were you in Dieppe? ’Twas it your job to mind the smuggling ship’s rudder?” he asked sarcastically.
“Of course not!” she said quickly, examining and discarding evasions with lightning speed. “I was with relatives who’d had the care of me for years. It was safer for me in France than here. Because of Tom.” She glanced up, gauging his reaction. Impossible to tell. “You know about Tom, of course.”
“Do I?” He abruptly released her, and stood back, crossing his arms over his broad chest. She backed away, rubbing the marks he’d left on her upper arm. His gaze touched dispassionately on the reddened area.
“Tom left the country just after Culloden. Followed by the price the rest of the clan chieftains had put on his head.”
“Why?”
She lowered her eyelashes, bit her lip in feigned humiliation. “He was at Culloden but he was just a boy. He saw how outnumbered and outarmed the Highlanders were. Tom”—she paused for effect—“Tom has never been much for a fight. The sight of blood curls his toes. He left the moor when the fighting began.”
His sudden laughter made her eyes snap open. She scowled. He was grinning at her hugely, his white teeth flashing in the semidarkness. “God preserve me, you could convince a cat to bark, you little liar.”
“Have you no delicacy?” she demanded, brazening it out. “I’ve just confessed my brother’s disgrace.”
“That being that he ran away from the battlefield because he’s an aversion to blood?” He shook his head. “You’ll have to do better than that, love, especially if you’re going to chase that fable with one about the same cowardly brother becoming a notorious smuggler. Unless of course, ‘La Bête’ hides belowdeck whenever there’s a spot of bloodshed.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” she snapped, chagrin supplanting fear.
“No need, as you’re being ridiculous enough for both of us.”
“I don’t care if you do believe me—”
“Oh, you’d better,” he broke in quietly, returning her fear to her.
She swallowed. “Thomas orchestrates the smuggling so that there will be no blood-letting. Last year the French started closing in on him. They offered a reward for any information leading to his arrest.
“It was only a matter of time before someone told the authorities about me. We would not bring trouble to those who’d fostered me for so long. So, Tom devised a plan whereby I could escape. It needed a decoy.”
“Me. And here I’d thought I owed the inestimable Jacques a visit. Where is your gargantuan friend?”
“He’s here and his name is Jamie and he’s my … my brother’s driver.”
“How delightful to have so multitalented a driver.”
“He had nothing to do with your … situation. He simply followed orders,” she said, envisioning Jamie and this huge, lean man closed in mortal combat.
“Don’t worry, sweetling, I won’t hurt your tame bull.”
She breathed a sigh of relief. His expression flattened. “But tell me, where is your clever brother? I’m all agog to make his acquaintance.”
“He’s abroad.”
“Avoiding more unpleasant things? So why are you here without him?”
If she stuck close to the truth perhaps she could convince him to leave her alone, to go away and do … what was he doing here? “My brother may appear to be a wealthy man, but he’s not. We’re not. And neither is our clan. In fact, my whole family is quite, quite poor.”
“Yes?” he prodded.
“I’m here to … to repair the clan’s fortune.” She skirted closer to the truth than she would have liked.
“Fortune? Do you mean by that you are casting nets in the matrimonial waters, Miss Donne? Here?” His voice revealed his skepticism. “At Wanton’s Blush? Well, I give you high marks for originality. Not many a blushing debutante would think to come here to seek a mate.”
“Where else would such as I go? A Scottish nobody without lands, family, or connections to recommend myself?” she demanded hotly, for he’d pressed too close to a truth she’d never allowed herself to inspect. Even if she could call her future her own, where would someone like her find a “happily-ever-after”?
“Only at Wanton’s Blush could someone like me find a suitor who would not look too closely at my antecedents or, even if he did discover them, care who they were. As long as I am richly gowned, bedecked and bejeweled, here I am accepted as the eligible heiress I appear to be.”
“You mean the smuggling business isn’t all it’s cracked up to be? And here I thought it one of the more profitable occupations open to an ambitious young man.”
“Nay,” she said harshly. “’Tisn’t. Not nearly profitable enough to repair a fortune stolen by English ba—”
“Be careful, Miss Donne,” he interjected dryly. “Your future husband may just be one of those English ba’s.”
“I understand that,” she answered tightly. “But you see, I don’t have any choice. Your English didn’t leave any Scottish men to choose from—rich, poor, or anywhere in between. They killed them all.”
She had the impression her words had struck a chord and that he was growing sympathetic to her tale.
“Aye. That has the ring of truth to it,” he said after a moment. “But then, I have a certain history with your bell-toned lies.”
She’d been wrong. He cared nothing for her people’s slaughter. “Ridicule me all you like,” she snapped.
“Tuck your lower lip in, sweetling, ’tis too tempting by half pouting thus. But I’m sure you know that full well.”
She stamped her foot in annoyance and then stared at the offending limb in consternation. She hadn’t stamped her foot since she was a child.
“What a fine tale and what a fine heroine you make, Favor, me love,” he said in a light, mocking tone. “So brave and passionate. How noble of you to sacrifice yourself for your clan.” His expression flattened. “If only I could believe in that nobility. But you were very willing to exploit me.”
“I’d do the same again today. You were already condemned. What did you have to lose? Besides”—she stared defiantly at him—“you escaped, did you not? Well, then you got more than the bargain called for.”
“Oh, no,” he murmured, “I didn’t get any of what the bargain called for.”
He stepped forward, intent, predatory, his concentration focused to a rapier sharpness. She stepped back. Her shoulders collided with the wall. He smiled, one side of his mouth turning up and carving a deep line beneath his high, broad cheekbone. A wicked smile, that. A devil’s smile.
He lifted his hand toward her face. She flinched but he only reached past her, placed his palm flat against the wall next to her head and leaned in. His stance emphasized his much greater height. He eclipsed her with his breadth. His gaze drifted down her face and throat and lingered where her breasts swelled in agitation above the low, square décolletage.
“I’d been purchased from jail to provide sport for you.”
“Not for me!” she denied. “For Madame Noir.”
“Who you pretended to be,” he reasoned, his voice low and seductive. He angled his head and inhaled, his mouth inches above her flesh. She shrank down; there was nowhere left to retreat. The wall behind her bare shoulders was cool. Every inch of her skin seemed suddenly heated.
“You shouldn’t have dyed your hair,” he mused. He picked up a lock, his knuckles brushing her collarbone. Sensation danced over her skin in response. He rubbed the tress lightly between thumb and forefinger, testing the texture. “It was prettier before. Plundered gold. Now it’s funereal, like a dead raven’s eye.”
“Flatterer,” she whispered.
His gaze shot up to meet hers. His dimple deepened in surprised humor, then dissolved. The wide mouth relaxed, became pensive. His brows dipped, as if in puzzlement.
“Who would have ever thought you … of all the women in the world … you,” he whispered in a voice so low she barely heard him.
Watching him studying her body made her feel ripe and lush, liquid and uncomfortable. She couldn’t have looked away if she’d tried.
“Please.”
“Please what? Please myself? What would that take, do you imagine?” he asked. “I had a kiss from you once and I still remember your taste. Isn’t that odd?” He lay the artificially darkened tress on her shoulder, arranging the curl with patient care. “Isn’t it?”
“Yes.”
“I’d been in jail for four years, you know,” he said. “Four years is a long time to remember those carnal pleasures I was just learning to appreciate when I was captured. After I escaped—with your aid—it took me a few days to realize I was safe. But then … then I sought out those pleasures—when it didn’t mean risking my life.”
His face hardened. “And do you know what? Do you want to know something very odd?” His face was very close, his mouth looked very soft, the only soft thing in that hard visage. “Do you?”
She nodded, mesmerized by his low hypnotic voice, the heat of his hand playing just above her collarbone.
“Even in the blistering heat of the most powerful climax, I still tasted you.”
She tried to hold back her gasp. Failed. Earned another one-sided smile.
“What’s this? A blush, little peregrine? Too raw? By God, I believe I’ve embarrassed the wench.” He gave a humorless laugh. “And to think I mistook you for Madame Noir. I really had lost the knack of reading a woman.”
“She was my relative,” she said.
“Allow a modicum of respect for my intelligence. I doubt you’ve ever even met the lady—No!” He lay a callused fingertip against her lower lip. “Your mouth begins to form a lie before it’s even half thought. Spare us both yet another of your fictions.” Hesitantly, as though compelled, he grazed his fingertip back and forth along her lower lip.
“I can’t help what you believe or disbelieve,” she answered, a sense of panic unlike any she’d ever experienced rising in tandem with the electric feeling suffusing her mouth, her cheeks and throat, her breasts and thighs.
“Damn me, lady hawk, is there any truth in you at all?”
Her voice wouldn’t work. She stared in mute appeal.
“Christ’s blood,” he murmured with that wicked, Satan-inspired darkness flooding his voice, “I can’t decide if God is punishing me or you. Let’s find out, shall we?”
He closed the short distance between their mouths. His lips touched hers with deliberate delicacy, clung. Her eyelids drifted shut.
Warm breath. Velvet mouth, firm and testing. Just a kiss, just the softest brush of his lips and yet her knees weakened and her head spun. He moved closer. She sensed it, felt his breadth surround her, above her … Threatening? Protecting? By the Virgin, she couldn’t tell.
Her head fell back against the wall. His fingertips branded one side of her throat with gossamer fire, skated down and across the top of her breasts, found the edge of her décolletage and slipped along it, moving with lingering deftness beneath—
A jolt of molten sensation electrified her. Her eyes flew open, her startled gaze leaping to meet his unreadable one.
“Let me go,” she pleaded. “Please. I am not rich and I have no name with which others might seek to align themselves. All I own is my virtue. Please don’t take that from me.”
Was his breathing staggered? She couldn’t say. Her own thoughts were in too great a turmoil to heed another’s state, her own breath too ragged.
“Let me go,” she repeated. “Please! I don’t even know your name.”
“’Tis Ra—Rafe,” he said, but his hand dropped to his side and he moved back. “Though I’ve had far more intimate discourse with women who’ve had far less knowledge of me than that”
“How dare you speak to me like this?” The words broke from her rising panic. “I’m not one of your women of the streets taking money to lift my skirts.”
“Oh, rest assured, I did not find all of them on the streets,” he said. “And I had no money to offer.”
Fire swept over her chest and throat and burned in her cheeks. “So that’s what this is about”
She had known this game she and the rest of the McClairens played would extract an ever-stiffening price. She had not foreseen this, though.
“What’s that?” he asked, a smile loitering in his dark gaze.
“You’ve sought me in order to penalize me for my actions in Dieppe. To take your revenge in … in having me against my will,” she ended brokenly.
When she finished, he snorted in disgust “Rest easy. Your virtue is not at risk. Odd as it must seem to you, I would like to hold on to the notion—no doubt a self-deluding one—that I might find pleasure with a woman without resorting to rape.”
At her wide-eyed amazement, he broke out laughing, shaking his head. “And as for your idea that after four long years in a hellish hole I had naught better to do with my newfound freedom than hunt you down in order to toss you on your backside … By all the saints, Madame, your conceit outstrips even my own!”
Put thus, it did seem improbable. Only someone unhinged would set himself on such a course. She felt another blush rise to her cheeks.
“What are you doing here, then?” she asked.
He regarded her thoughtfully a second before answering. “Have you ever heard of McClairen’s Trust?”
“Aye,” she answered. Every McClairen knew the legend of the lost jewels. “It’s a parure of rubies and diamonds; a necklace, earbobs, brooch, and circlet. ’Twas said to be a gift that Queen Mary gave a McClairen lady in gratitude for her aid in discovering Darnley’s treachery.”
“Aye,” he said. “That’s the one.”
She frowned. “’Twas lost. Probably sold to finance yet another glorious return.”
“Ah! A cynic and a Scot?” He laughed. “Who’d have thought the two could coexist in one body. As for the Trust, some say that the McClairens hid it at Wanton’s Blush and here it remains.”
“And that’s why you’re here? I don’t believe you.”
“Have you a better explanation? Besides the irresistible lure of breaching your own maidenhead, of course. Assuming that you aren’t lying and it’s unbroken yet.”
“Knave!” she said, more from embarrassment at his reminder of her foolishness than at his crudity.
His gaze mocked her. “I’ve been here a week already. Tis been an easy enough venture thus far. Carr keeps most of the east rooms empty, using them as a warehouse. So here is where my search has begun.” He swept his arm over the room.
“The McClairen Trust is naught but a child’s night-time story,” she said gruffly. “If there were any rubies and diamonds they’ve long since disappeared. I am surprised you know the tale, though. It’s only a local legend. How do you know about it?”
“I had a cellmate named Ashton Merrick. He told me.
Her eyes widened. Of course. ’Twas common knowledge that Carr’s sons had been captured by some Scots seeking revenge against Carr. They’d sold them to the French as political prisoners and the French kept them for ransom. Just as everyone knew Carr had refused to pay for their return until last year—or so she was told—when Ash Merrick had briefly reappeared.
Mayhap Rafe had met Raine Merrick, the source of all her grief. Mayhap this man even knew something of that thrice-damned rapist’s fate. “Ashton Merrick had a brother,” she said.
“Aye.”
“Did he share your cell, too?”
“No. Raine Merrick was kept in a different city. A different prison. I doubt he even knows if Ashton lives or is dead. I don’t.”
Favor closed her eyes. “God keep Raine Merrick from that knowledge if it were to provide him a dram of comfort,” she muttered.
“You hate this Raine Merrick?” he asked.
She didn’t want to discuss that black-souled demon. Not now. Not ever.
Behind them Orville stirred, groaned, and rolled over. She needed to leave. Once more she drew on the Abbess’s wisdom: Act a queen and you don’t need a crown. She squared her shoulders.
“Orville will shortly awake. Unless you plan to murder him—which,” she hastily continued on seeing the thoughtful manner in which Rafe regarded Orville, “will only cause a search of the premises—I suggest you leave here.
“Now, my thanks for your aid. In return, I promise I shall not tell anyone of your presence here.” She started past him but he stepped in front of her.
“Oh, no,” he said. “I haven’t given you leave to go yet. I have been thinking.”
Alarm danced up her spine. His expression had grown wolfish. She mustn’t let him see her fear. She raised one perfectly arched brow. “Thinking? Ah. I trust this is not a novel experience?”
His mouth quirked appreciatively. “I don’t want anyone to know about me. It’s been a bit venturesome having to steal food from the kitchen at night. And if I don’t find my jewels in this wing, I’ll have to search the occupied parts of the castle. I’ll need to blend in to do that. That means I’ll need clothes. Nice clothes.”
“So?”
“So, you will bring me both food and clothes. Unless, that is, you want your host, Lord Carr, to find out that his heiress and her brother are not so flush as he’d assumed.”
“You wouldn’t dare tell him. You couldn’t afford to confront him. He’d have you hanged as a thief.”
“I don’t need to confront him at all. I have only to write a letter.”
“That’s blackmail!”
“Yes,” he replied easily. “I know. But though it doesn’t look to be nearly so interesting a revenge as the one you envisioned, it will have to do.”