Read Daniel and the Angel Online

Authors: Jill Barnett

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Humor & Satire, #Humorous, #Romance, #Historical, #Holidays, #Romantic Comedy, #Two Hours or More (65-100 Pages), #General Humor, #Historical Romance

Daniel and the Angel (5 page)

BOOK: Daniel and the Angel
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"What's the matter?" he asked in that deep voice.

She stared at the ground for a long moment, then finally admitted, "I was wrong. There's a fee to skate."

A second later she heard the sound of coins and looked up.

He held out a hand filled with gold pieces.

She shook her head. "No."

He turned to the official. "How much does this booth take in on a good day?"

The man shrugged. "Fifty dollars. Maybe sixty.'

He gave him three twenty-dollar gold pieces, then added a fourth. "Consider this a good day and close the booth."

She started to say something, but he grabbed her arm and was pulling her along. A second later his hands were on her waist, and with a gentle shove he propelled her onto the ice.

Lillian would have protested, loudly, that he'd paid for something she had planned to be free, that they didn't have to do this, that she would find something else they could do.

Except that she'd forgotten one .. . little ... itsy-bitsy thing.

She had never ice-skated.

5

 

If I have freedom in my love,

And in my soul am free,

Angels alone that soar above

Enjoy such liberty.

—Richard Lovelace

 

 

 

For the second time in two days
D.L.
stared down
at Lillian. Only this time she was sprawled facedown on the hard ice.

She turned her head and looked up at him. "I've discovered something. Without wings, you can't hang on to thin air."

D.L. squatted next to her. "Are you hurt?"

"Only my pride." She pushed herself up on her hands and knees.

He straightened, grabbed her waist again, and picked her up. He set her carefully on the ice and kept his hands on her waist because it felt right. "I assumed that you could skate."

"So did I." Her blades slipped and she squealed, then wrapped her arms in a death grip around his waist. She peered up at him, her face sheepish. "It looks so easy."

"Turn around."

"I can't without letting go."

"Let go and turn slowly."

"I don't do miracles," she muttered.

He braced his skates and spun her around so her back was to him. He still held her waist.

She blinked at him for a second.

"Keep your ankles together and your back straight. I'll help you."

"You can skate," she said flatly.

His answer was to tighten his hands on her small waist and push off, skating smoothly and keeping her in front of him. He moved them both swiftly around the pond. "You're wobbling, Lilli. Keep your shoulders back."

She placed her hands over his and straightened. "You're right! It is easier."

She looked back over her shoulder as he picked up speed. Her cheeks were flushed pink and she was grinning. "This is fun!" Then she giggled.

He skated faster, until he could feel the cold air on his face. She laughed louder and clearer.

Before long the subtle scent of lemons drifted back to him, and her laughter—well, the sound of it did something queer to him. It made him want more. 'Round and 'round he skated, just to hear that joy.

He looked down at her at the same moment that she looked up. And it was strangely humbling to look into her face and see such honest emotion.

Over time he had come to accept that he was an outsider in a world where, no matter how much he spent or how much he made, he never felt as if he belonged.

For thirty years there had been an emptiness in him somewhere.

And now, for this one brief instant, skating on the
ice with her looking at him as she did—as if he had given her the whole world—he thought that perhaps that emptiness inside him could be filled.

It was astonishing to think he might have seen in her, this odd woman who claimed to be fallen, a small glimpse of that part of him he had thought was lost—the part that could make him complete.

He forced himself to break contact. "Now you try." He gave her a small push, and she screamed for help. He stood there watching her wobble and shuffle her feet, occasionally swinging her arms when she lost her tenuous balance. He cupped his hands around his mouth and yelled, "Keep your back straight!"

She didn't straighten, exactly. She went as stiff as a streetlamp.

In the next few minutes she must have called his name with every breath, half screaming and half laughing, until she was coming toward him at too fast a speed, her arms out and her mouth wide open.

He reached for her. But she whipped past him.

A tree trunk stopped her. She hit it hard, hard enough to make her grunt. Hard enough to shake the tree. Hard enough for the snow to fall in giant globs from the branches.

Onto her.

He laughed. He could do little else. She had snow on her hat, snow on her clothes, in her face. Snow was everywhere.

She let go of the tree and turned, her eyes—what one could see of them through all the snow—were sparkling like new coins.

He turned around but couldn't stop laughing.

After a moment, during which he had found his control, she called out, "Hey Daniel!"

He turned, his Christian name still sounding strange to him even though she had screamed it at least ten times.

"Here's something money can't buy!" She flung a snowball at him. It knocked his hat right from his head.

It was her turn to laugh.

He turned and looked at his hat, then turned back just as another wad of loose snow sped past his nose. He skated toward her, slowly, with purpose. He didn't know he was still smiling.

She stood in the deep fresh snow that edged the pond. "Isn't this fun!" she said and flung another wad of snow.

He had to dodge this one.

She stepped back a few steps and bent down to scoop up more but chanced to look up.

His purpose and his intent hadn't changed.

"Uh-oh ..." she said, apparently catching the vengeful gleam in his eyes. A second later she ran like hell through the snow.

He shouted her name and chased her into the deeper snow. Her hat fell back and her hair came loose, drifting behind her like the snow she kicked up, like her laughter and her joy.

He tackled her and they rolled in the snow, down a short embankment and under a cluster of low trees. She was still laughing when they stopped rolling, him on top, pinning her to the ground.

Snow sparkled from her face like Tiffany's diamonds. Her hat was crushed behind her and her hair was again spread out as if it were the glow of a halo. Her chest rose and fell with each warm breath that changed to mist in the small space of air between them.

And she smiled at him. For him.

It felt perfectly natural to cup her head in his hands. Natural to lower his mouth to hers. And natural to
taste her when she gasped. But what happened after that was as unnatural as she was unconventional. Daniel Lincoln Stewart heard bells.

 

She dreamed that night that he hadn't stopped kissing her in the park. She dreamed that he hadn't looked at her so strangely. She knew that look. The archangels had looked at her with the same dazed and befuddled eyes when she had knocked them off that ladder. It was as if they couldn't believe she was real.

And she almost had to wonder if that kiss was real. It was the closest thing to Heaven she'd found on Earth. She stretched and threw back the covers, swinging her bare legs over the side and dangling them.

She still slept in the silk shirt, with the tails that barely brushed her knees. But she wasn't cold, even if frost did edge the windows. There was a fire in the fireplace, compliments of Peg, the same maid who had brought her hot chocolate and loaned her the skates.

Morning light streamed through the bedroom windows. She stood up and pulled back the drape. On the street below carriages moved past—a world outside where yesterday's snow was fast becoming today's pile of gray-brown ice.

She wondered what Daniel was doing now. Probably off to make more money. She shook her head. The man knew how much money he made by the minute.

From this same window she had watched him leave early this morning, before she crawled back into bed and had some odd dream of Daniel, dressed as a nursery rhyme king, sitting in an office in some city tower and counting all his gold. Four and twenty blackbirds wearing hats that looked like giant pie crusts were guarding the doors.

She frowned, then shook her head slightly.

A sharp rap rattled the door. She jumped back in the bed and pulled up the covers. "Yes?"

The door opened slowly and Peg smiled. "Miss Lillian. Your trunks have arrived."

"My trunks?" she repeated stupidly.

Peg nodded.

Lilli leaned to the left of the bed and peered past Peg and out into the hall where trunks and bandboxes, hatboxes, and cases sat in what appeared to be legions.

Peg stepped back. "Your things. Mr. Stewart said they would arrive this morning."

"He did?"

Peg crossed the room toward the dressing room. "I'll run your bath, Miss Lillian, and you can relax while Gage and I bring everything inside."

Lilli took the fastest bath in history. She asked Peg for some time alone, and as soon as the girl had left, she flew into the bedroom, rebuttoning her shirt. She just stood there looking at the incredible number of boxes and trunks, the stacks of packages. She was certain there was enough in this room to clothe all of New York City.

A little while later she was convinced he had bought out all of New York City. Inside a trunk marked
redfern
were walking suits in the finest cashmere, some trimmed with curly lamb or fur, day suits in figured silk with trims of imported lace and bead-work. Boxes wrapped in silver tissue held tea and dinner dresses of silk grosgrain and brocade, sateen and nun's veiling.

Another huge trunk that opened like a closet held cloaks with matching fur hats and muffs, drawers with silk and kid gloves in every color of nature's palette, and more corsets and underwear than she ever cared to see.

There were at least thirty hatboxes stacked along the wall and almost as many shoeboxes next to velvet drawstring bags with purses to match each pair of shoes. In another corner was a tower of large lace and ribbon-trimmed boxes stamped
the house of worth.

Lilli grabbed the top one and carried it over to the bed, then crawled up and sat crosslegged. She untied the ribbon and lifted the lid, then broke the seal and pushed the tissue aside.

Her heart stopped for just one precious breath.

Inside was an evening gown of snow-white velvet with a skirt of matching cobweb lace. The velvet was soft and white as a cloud, and the lace on the skirt had a pattern more intricate than the stars in the sky. It was the loveliest thing she had ever seen.

Holding her breath, she pulled out the gown and held it up, looking at it for the longest time. There were little silver threads in the lace that caught the light from the fire and sparkled as bright as the silver lining of a cloud.

The gown was like a little part of Heaven. Her Heaven. Her only memories.

She hugged it to her chest and just sat there for the longest time, misty-eyed and unaware that she wasn't alone.

"I had thought you'd be pleased by this." Daniel stood in the doorway, watching with an edged look that said he didn't understand her.

"They're lovely."

"So lovely you're crying again."

She shook her head and said wistfully, "I was just remembering something I've lost."

Almost immediately he tensed. He looked angry. "Get dressed." His voice was tight.

She didn't understand his anger.

His face had turned hard, and the look in his eyes was as black as his features. "Come downstairs. Quickly."

"We're going out?"

"Yes." He paused for a moment, his hand on the door handle. He turned around. "I don't know who did this to you," he gritted. "But I'd like to get my hands on him." And before she could say a word, he shut the door.

She stared at it, completely baffled. She had done this to herself. If he wanted to get his hands on the person who had created her situation, she was right here.

She dropped the white dress and crawled down from the bed, grabbing a navy blue silk brocade suit—there were certainly plenty—as she went to the dressing room.

Once inside, she paused in front of the mirror and stared at her mouth—seeing it differently now that it had been kissed.

Her lips looked fuller. Did one's lips grow after a kiss? She touched them for a moment, then a silly smile spread slowly across her face.

After the kiss in the park, she knew she would be perfectly happy if he wanted to put his hands on her.

 

D.L. handed Karl the papers and stood up. They left the library and went into the foyer, where he leaned against the newel post and watched Karl stuff papers into his case. He had rushed through his meeting with no mention of Lilli to his attorney and friend.

He had no good explanation why he had wanted her here. No acceptable explanation. Entertainment, challenges, companionship—they all sounded weak and illogical.

What it boiled down to was that he didn't want to explain his motives for keeping a woman who claimed to be homeless, keeping for himself a woman who was fallen. Now, he knew one thing: He didn't care who or what she was. And that wasn't something he could analyze, at least not comfortably. As for the release, it annoyed him. In his mind it reduced her to nothing but a signature on a piece of paper.

Karl paused at the front doors. "I forgot to ask. Did you get that release signed?"

"No."

"I thought you said you had found her."

D.L. felt his hand tighten on the newel post. "I'll take care of it."

"This is important. You need to find that woman."

BOOK: Daniel and the Angel
13.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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