Make Me Love You (18 page)

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Authors: Johanna Lindsey

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“My hearing was only mildly impaired, but, yes, I have recovered,” she replied without blushing.

“Priscilla is quite sympathetic to my plight,” he remarked casually.

Did he really think she wanted to hear about his mistress? “So am I, though I do pity myself more’n you. You’ll just go on as you did before, doing whatever it is you do. What is that, actually?”

He began unwrapping his bandage for her. “Aside from
meeting with my managers who handle the many enterprises my ancestors dabbled in, I breed horses for the continental army, for officers to be precise.”

“So no thoroughbreds for the common solders?”

“Your tone implies you don’t like discrimination?”

“I don’t.”

“And I don’t stipulate who can ride the animals I send to the army. I’m even tasked occasionally with purchasing larger herds for special units. But the common soldiers aren’t given mounts of any sort. They walk. That’s one of the reasons why it’s taking us so bloody long to wrap up the war.”

Brooke was pleased to see that a scab had formed over his wound and there were no signs of inflammation. Alfreda’s treatment had worked. He had to be feeling much better now. So why hadn’t he said so? Because he didn’t want her to stop visiting him? More likely he didn’t want to have to thank her and Alfreda for helping him.

She probably wouldn’t have used this herbal salve today if his damn mistress hadn’t shown up. She heard the hiss of his breath as she applied the extra-strong mixture, but he said nothing and she refused to glance up at his face as she gently rubbed the salve over and around his wound. She wished she hadn’t been so thin-skinned and pretended to have an earache the last two days, because although she was spending so much time in proximity to him, they were no closer to getting along than they had been the day she’d arrived. Now, more than ever, after reading those few lines in Ella’s diary, she wanted to talk to him about Robert and Ella, and the baby, and find out how Ella had died. But knowing how the subject of his sister enraged him, she decided to start out with a less offensive line of conversation.

Before she could do so and not realizing she’d absentmindedly applied more salve than was necessary, he asked, “Will you miss rubbing my thigh once I’ve healed? You seem to be enjoying it today.”

Brooke snatched her hand away. “My mind was wandering for a moment.”

“Thinking of other parts of my body you’d like to soothe?”

Brooke gritted her teeth, forcing herself not to take the bait and get angry. “I was wondering about what sorts of family enterprises you were referring to earlier.”

“Of course you were,” he scoffed, but he deigned to answer her. “Coal mines, but after my grandfather expanded those, competition got rather fierce, so he built a fleet of ships, which enabled him to sell the coal abroad. The shipping business turned out to be quite profitable and now transports other commodities besides coal. And then there are tenant issues that I usually handle personally.”

“No sheep farms?” she asked, curious. “I saw so many sheep as we traveled through Yorkshire. I bet sheep love the heather, which grows here so abundantly. And wool is probably just as profitable as coal.”

“How would you know about sheep?”

“I don’t know much about them. My father owns sheep farms, but he certainly doesn’t run them.”

“I don’t want to hear about your family.”

She sighed to herself before she handed him the new bandage and went to wash the salve off her fingers. She had intended to offer to read to him today after discovering a wonderful collection of books in the library. But he would probably rather spend time with his harlot while she was here. Then Brooke blanched when it occurred to her that the woman
might have been his fiancée instead of his mistress, in which case Brooke’s behavior went beyond the pale.

“Were you otherwise engaged?” she blurted out as she came back to his bedside.

“Engaged in what?”

“To marry someone else? Is that why you’re so dead set against us?”

“There is no ‘us.’ ”

If he prevaricated once more, she might growl in frustration. Being absolutely direct this time, she said, “
Were
you engaged to marry Lady Highley?”

“No, Priscilla likes London society too much to be a good wife for me. She’s just one of my many mistresses.”

“Many? How many do you keep at one time?”

He shrugged offhandedly. “However many it takes to satisfy me—usually two or three.”

Her mouth dropped open, but only for a moment. This was obviously just another of his attempts to scare her off—it
better
just be that. She decided to play along instead, pretending to be curious. “One at a time or all at once?”

He looked surprised, and also as if he might laugh, but didn’t. “That’s an interesting notion. But as to your original question, I wasn’t committed, but once I put your brother in the ground, I intended to begin courting my neighbor Elspeth Shaw.”

The sound of truth in that statement made Brooke feel horrible. She remembered that it had occurred to her in Leicestershire that he might be in love with someone else. Yet she remembered Gabriel’s telling her, too, that Dominic was the last Wolfe to carry the name and wanted to keep it that way. Which didn’t mean he wouldn’t marry, only that he didn’t want to sire
children. But if that was so, she had a right to know, didn’t she? Especially since she
did
want children eventually.

“So you intended to marry, but never to touch your wife?”

His brows snapped together. “Where the devil do you get such ideas?”

Her cheeks went a little pink. Had Gabriel lied to her? But she shouldn’t have asked! It implied that the thought of their never sharing a bed might worry her for reasons other than children.

She quickly explained, “It was a logical question. Gabriel told me that you wanted to be the last of your line.”

Dominic snorted. “That was a notion I shared with him one night long ago when I was deep in my cups. I wasn’t aware he thought I was serious.”

“Then you weren’t?”

“I was, but for barely a week. It was a silly notion, wrought from—”

She wondered why he didn’t finish, but guessed, “Because of the curse?”

He gave her a calculating look for a moment. “No, because of the ridicule those rumors generated after they reached London. The young bucks in that town found it amusing to howl like wolves whenever they passed me on the street. Didn’t know what you were actually marrying into, did you?”

He seemed pleased to be able to add that. She felt like snorting. One day she would laugh at the way he was drawing every card from the deck to push her away. She didn’t doubt he’d just told her an absurd whopper and decided to call him on it.

“No one would dare do that to you, as feral as you look when you’re angry. They’d be terrified you’d kill them on the
spot. So what really made you want to end your line, even if you only felt that way for a mere week?”

He stared at her for a long moment. She
did
just call him a liar, she realized belatedly. Maybe she should be running from the room . . .

But then he admitted, “Because my sister had just died and I was full of despair, with no hope for the future. But now revenge against your brother brightens my future.”

Now that she could believe. She waited for him to ask her to leave again, because that would complete his revenge, stripping her family of everything. Or would only Robert’s death satisfy him?

But he didn’t say that, instead he fessed up. “The howling incidents did happen, but only twice and over the course of a few years, and it was just college pranks. Not that I wasn’t angry the first time it happened. But I caught one of the lads that day, and he was so terrified he blurted out that it was a dare that would have gotten him into a brotherhood at school—if I had just ignored them. The second and last time there was a larger group of young bucks, courage in numbers, I suppose, but I had two school friends with me that day, Benton Seamons and Archer Hamilton. Benton chased four of them down the street. The two remaining just stood there laughing at how quickly their friends were trying to get away—until Archer punched one and slapped his glove across the face of the other, getting the response ‘Don’t be a bloody ass,’ before that chap ran away, too. Archer wouldn’t really challenge the young buck to a duel over such nonsense, but it did give me a good laugh at the time.”

She was incredulous that he’d just shared that with her. There was a different man inside the wolf, one that she hadn’t
met yet, one that she might be able to laugh with someday—one that she might be able to love. But then it occurred to her again that he’d had plans for his life, specific plans that were now ruined because of her—no, because of her
brother.
She could still only guess at what Robert had done to set these events in motion.

She was about to ask again, but bit the words back. That subject provoked nothing but rage in him. She’d pressed him enough for now. And he had a guest he’d probably rather spend time with.

“Don’t let your lady friend tire you today. Rest is your friend just now. I will return in the morning to check your wound.”

“You will return for dinner tonight as is your habit.”

She wasn’t going to argue
or
join him for dinner tonight if Priscilla Highley was still in the house. As if she didn’t know what he was up to, rubbing it in her face that he had and would continue to have mistresses, marriage or no.

“Unless you’ve finally decided to leave? In which case, you can give the salve to Cilla. She will take care of me tonight.”

Brooke didn’t answer, but she did slam the door shut on the way out.

Chapter Twenty-Three

L
ADY HIGHLEY WAS SPENDING
the afternoon in Dominic’s room. Brooke was spending the afternoon in hers, pacing close to the wall that separated her room from his, trying to hear what they were saying. After taking care of Dominic all week, it annoyed her that he could so quickly turn his attentions to another woman. Now she understood why her brother had told her parents in that conversation she’d eavesdropped on that “the wolf won’t accept her.” It was because Dominic was used to being with beautiful, sophisticated women.

She
was neither beautiful nor sophisticated, just a constant, blatant reminder of his sister’s death and always would be. It was still possible that he would fail to comply with the Regent’s demand and simply tell her to get out. He could probably do so and manage to hold on to a least one of those family enterprises he’d mentioned. The coal mines or the shipping business alone would still make him a rich man. Maybe he’d already sent off a missive to the Prince to suggest it? Or that harlot might put the idea in his head today . . .

Brooke glanced down at her fingernails and pictured what she’d like to do with them right now. Then she pressed her ear to the wall again. Still no sounds in his room. They might as well be whispering—or doing something that didn’t require words. That thought sent her out for a good gallop before the dinner hour.

When she got to the stable, she found that Wolf had finally got around to searching for the cat he’d smelled on her. He was standing in front of the door barking, his hair bristled straight up, while Raston sat just inside calmly grooming a paw—or sharpening his nails.

Arnold’s approach shooed the cat back up to the rafters. The dog charged in, trying to give chase, but that wasn’t going to happen. Brooke said a few commiserating words as she stopped beside the dog and tried to rub him behind his ears, but he wasn’t interested.

“He’ll give up shortly, so don’t be worrying about the cat,” Arnold said.

Brooke grinned slightly. “I’m more worried about Wolf. Raston can be nasty in a fight.”

“I’ll send for Gabe to take the dog back to the house.” Then Arnold surprised her with a request. “Royal fancies your Rebel, m’lady. But no one fancies giving that brute the exercise he needs while his lordship recovers. Royal barely tolerates me grooming and saddling him and lets no one on his back except Lord Dominic. Would you mind if Peter rides your mare along the fence between the pastures? We’re hoping Royal will give chase or at least keep pace.”

“I could try to ride him.” The elderly groom looked so appalled, she quickly amended, “Never mind. Go ahead and give it a try when I get back from my ride today.”

“Don’t be gone too long, m’lady. My wife saw two rings around the moon last night, which foretells the coming of a wicked storm. It was just such a stormy day some hundred years ago that the eldest Wolfe daughter met her death. Whether it was the curse or just an accident that her carriage slid off an embankment in a rainstorm, no one knows.”

She stared at Arnold. Was he that superstitious? Were all the villagers? That would explain why rumors of that silly curse had persisted for hundreds of years, and why the wolf-man rumor had started, too.

Brooke smiled politely, though she was skeptical that it would rain today since the sun was shining and the clouds weren’t at all dark. Alfreda also often predicted rain that never came.

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