Authors: Connie Brockway
Tags: #Romance, #Regency, #Fiction, #Historical, #General
She had never imagined such a thing!
She forgot everything: her reason for being there, the fear that someone was following her, the appointed meeting at the end of the lane, and the terrible sensation of being watched by malevolent eyes.
He wrapped his arm around her waist, pressing her closer. One hand slid up her throat and framed her jaw, the supplication inherent in that light touch transfixing her. Her careful defenses began to crumble, and there, on the point of collapsing utterly, something deep inside her awoke from a lifetime of slumber and recognized danger.
She tried to right herself, but he tipped her even further back and she clung, light-headed and weak-limbed. He took her breath away. He stole her modesty. He broke through her barricades. His kiss brought to life sensations only half-remembered from dark, heated dreams: erotic, eager, hungry.
She trembled and, in answer, for one brief instant, his arm lashed her more tightly against him. Then he was lifting her to her feet, and she knew that he was about to end the kiss, and God help her! Her fingers dug deeper into rock-solid muscle beneath his coat as she helplessly pursued his retreating lips.
“Jesu!” The ragged oath escaped his lips, and he crushed her to his body. His mouth opened over hers, and this time his focus was absolute, excluding everything outside of this kiss. His unchecked hunger poured over her, through her, a fiery ardor that eclipsed her own awakening desires, demanding and—
Around them, coarse laughter erupted.
His head lifted. Whatever the others saw in his bright eyes killed their laughter. She’d forgotten their audience.
“’Pon my rep,” someone snickered, “I didn’t realize you meant to teach her about that sword!”
He lowered his mouth to hers. “If you wish to leave here unmolested, follow my lead.”
And then she was on her feet, her head spinning, her heart thundering. Why was he doing this? Why trouble himself over the fate of an unknown woman? Because he couldn’t possibly know who she was! She’d purposely kept her voice low and rid it of the Yorkish accents.
It was absurd. How could Munro possibly conceive that he was kissing Colonel Nash’s preternaturally serene daughter, one of three daughters he’d sworn to protect (quite possibly from such insult as he had just offered) as repayment for her father’s ransoming Ramsey’s life with his own? It was a notion she could scarce believe herself! Though she did not, in truth, feel as insulted as she did…disturbed.
“’Bout time, Munro! There’s a wager at stake!”
“Quite right,” he was saying. “Now the lesson. The
other
lesson.”
More male laughter erupted, returning her to this appalling situation, the ridiculous wager, and her part in it. She couldn’t do this. She had never even held a sword. The drunken boys surrounding them would have to find some other amusement. “I cannot—”
Munro’s gaze cut to hers and she bit back her protest. Seemingly, matters were a bit more complicated than she understood them to be.
The bullish young man in the bright pink skirts and curling wig crossed his arms over his corseted chest and stepped in front of her, barring the path ahead, while the one dressed like some rajah and whose features were obscured by black paint smiled nastily.
“Thank you.” Munro took the center of the gravel path. “Pray, heed well what I am about to show you, miss. I will demonstrate a few simple maneuvers, which you will later emulate. Do you understand? Good.
“Now, if one of you lads would be so kind as to offer yourself for the purposes of a demonstration?”
“What is this about?” the turbaned youth, Figgy, protested. “You said you were going to teach her to disarm me!”
“And so I am. But the best way of learning a thing is to see it done first. Fear not, young valiant, you’ll have your match.” Munro looked around. “Who will aid me? Come now, you will be the one armed with a sword. All I ask is that you attack me. Is that so difficult?”
“No.” A youngster staggered to his feet, tossing down the skin of wine he’d been drinking from. “No. I’ll do it.”
Munro hooked the toe of his boot beneath the blade of Figgy’s abandoned sword and casually flicked it up into the air, catching it neatly and presenting it to the gape-mouthed lad. “Here. Now, present and attack.”
“Huh?”
Ramsey sighed. “Present…and…attack.”
“Huh?”
“For God’s sake, stab him!” Figgy yelled.
“Oh!” With a blaze of speed, if not grace, the youth lunged, driving the foil forward. Only, its target was not there. And the sword the boy had held was now in Munro’s hand.
The lad stared in amazement. “What happened?”
“I disarmed you. That was the point, was it not?” Munro asked, holding out the foil. “If one finds oneself in a duel, a real duel, and his life depends upon his skill and he has none to speak of, then he ought to make certain he knows at least one thing very well and that, for such as you, young sir, would be to disarm your opponent.”
“Ha!” the youngster blustered, snatching back his foil. “Well, we shall see about—Aha!”
He plunged forward again, but this time Helena was prepared to watch for what happened.
A slight adjustment of weight, a movement of Munro’s outside arm, and the boy’s foil shot beneath it. Munro caught the blade against his ribs and, with a serpent’s striking speed, wrapped his forearm under it and over, curling his finger over the top of the bellguard and effortlessly plucking the weapon out of the young man’s hand.
“Like so. Do you see, miss?” He turned his head, quizzing her calmly.
She nodded gravely, trying to look sanguine.
“Of course, this is simply the easiest way to disarm someone. There are other methods that require a bit more strength.” He held up the confiscated foil. “Anyone else care to have a go?”
With a growl, the hairy man in the skirt and wig, the one they’d called Thom, stomped forward. “Me.”
Munro shook his head. “Your skirts render you too easy to overcome.” He turned to Figgy. “How about you, young sir? Here.” Munro tossed him the sword. “For this, I require a weapon. Ah!” He’d spied Thom’s shepherdess’s crook. With a smile he lifted it up, testing its balance. “This will do nicely.”
Figgy snickered. “Oh, aye. I would be able to disarm a man, too, if I’d a staff twice as long as his gut pricker.”
Crack! Munro broke the stave against his knee, halving its length, thus making it a good deal shorter than the rajah’s sword. “Present.”
At the sharp command, the youth fell automatically into the proper stance.
“Your move,” Munro said, resting nonchalantly against the crook, the broken tip buried in the ground.
Figgy licked his lips and made a tentative parry. With a faint expression of disgust, Munro slapped it aside with his hand.
“Come now,” he admonished. “I have a piece of
wood
. You have steel.”
The provocation worked. With a grunt, Figgy extended and lunged. The broken tip of Munro’s crook flew up, whirled once around the gleaming steel blade, flashed towards the hilt, and suddenly the foil was flying into the night and the boy was shaking out his hand, cursing.
“Would you care to see that again, miss?” This time Munro didn’t even bother to pretend to be addressing her. His eyes—lazy, amused, unutterably dangerous—stayed on the group of young bloods.
What good would it do for him to demonstrate it again? There was no possible way she could re-create that, and he knew it. “No. I think I have it.”
“As I thought. However, you may want to try a more subtle means of disarming your oppon—”
“No!” Figgy interjected angrily, nursing his stinging fingers. “No more demonstrations! You’ve given enough instruction. The wager is that you could teach her to disarm me in fifteen minutes. Well, let her try.”
Munro smiled. “Certainly. Retrieve your weapon.”
One of the lads tossed Figgy his weapon. The rajah grabbed it out of the air and whipped it savagely about.
The tall Scotsman’s expression changed to one of utterly unconvincing amazement. “But…this will never do.”
“What?” demanded Figgy, still slashing at the air.
Munro lifted his hands, palms up. “She has no sword. No weapon. You can hardly ask her to use this stick.”
The air left Helena’s lungs in a rush of relief. So
that
was his plan.
Figgy’s lips thinned in a nasty smile. “Not at all. Ed, give her your weapon.”
A boy stepped forward, having produced a small sword from somewhere, and held it out.
Oh, no. She edged backward, but before she could retreat any farther, Munro clasped her wrist and slapped the handle of the sword against her palm. His gloved hand covered hers, curling her fingers around the satin-wrapped hilt and pressing them closed.
This was insane. She felt like a character in an overwrought gothic novel, incapable of moving, incapable of retreat, swept along by dangerous currents.
Panic set needles in her thoughts. The sound of her own breathing filled her ears. She, Helena Nash, who never panicked, panicked. All she could think was that as drunk as the boy undoubtedly was, he would likely pierce her straight through the heart. Whether or not he meant to do so, the result would be the same—she would be dead. It would be so stupid to die thus, here,now.
“As soon as I say ‘present,’ drop the sword and fall back a step. Do you understand?” Munro said in a voice pitched for her ears alone.
Understand? She couldn’t breathe. “No.”
“You will be fine.”
“Oh, yes. I’m certain the boy is well able to judge the depth at which he might impale me without pricking something vital!” she whispered back in a shaking voice. A shimmery ring had begun collecting at the edges of her vision.
Munro’s hand clamped more tightly around hers, bringing her back to the present in a rush of pain. Her gaze flew to meet his, startled and injured. His bright eyes had darkened beneath the lush banks of sooty lashes. “You will be fine. I swear it on my honor.”
Amazingly, she believed him. He’d sworn. She recalled that other vow he’d made three and a half years ago. He’d stood before her family, beautiful and graceful, like sin itself come to make amends, and promised to come to their aid should it ever be required. And she’d believed him then just as she believed him now. Which was not, she supposed, saying much for her powers of discrimination. Still, she nodded.
He turned away, and she found herself facing a very drunk, very surly young buck, his turban askew above a black-painted face. With a mocking sneer, he raised his foil and saluted her. Awkwardly, she hefted her own blade and attempted to duplicate his action.
“Are you ready?” she heard Munro ask.
“Yes, yes,” Figgy replied. “’Twill be the easiest hundred pounds I have ever made. I almost feel guilty.”
“Present.”
It was easy to do as Munro had directed. The heavy blade tumbled from her nerveless fingers at the same time as his tall form glided between her and the young man. There was a shout, and she stumbled backward just as Munro grabbed her opponent’s blade, blocking its flight. Casually, he wrested it from the youngster’s grip.
She wasn’t going to die. She wasn’t going to die! The pure delight of not dying swept through her, making her giddy.
“That ain’t fair!” the boy bleated. “She didn’t even try.”
“I did so!” she claimed, grinning idiotically.
Munro looked at her with exaggerated disappointment and shook his head. “No, miss. You did not. You disarmed yourself.”
She hung her head, trying to look contrite. “I did. I disarmed myself. Terribly sorry.”
Munro looked back at the boys and sighed heavily. “I am sorely disappointed that my initial assessment was correct. She is, after all, just a woman. Impossible to teach.”
“I can barely read,” she confessed dolefully.
Figgy’s mouth opened and shut like a beached fish. Once. Twice. “But you—”
“Owe you a hundred pounds? Quite right.” Munro reached into his pocket and peeled off several notes from the small roll he withdrew. Smiling, he pushed them into Figgy’s hand.
“Fairly won,” he said, and then, while the others were still staring at them in confusion, he took Helena’s arm.
His smile found Figgy. “The only advantage you might have in a duel, young sir, is your apparent unfamiliarity with your weapon. No one who sees you with it could take you seriously. Now, should you ever decide to pursue the sport seriously, do look me up. White Friars.”
“But…but…the
girl
!” Thom cried plaintively, ignoring the insult to his friend.
Munro shook his head sadly at the forlorn-looking group of youngsters. “Gentlemen—and you are, I presume,
gentlemen
?”
They glanced at each other to see what the group’s current stand on that particular issue was before they all reluctantly nodded.
“You would not take the money and the girl, now would you?” Munro didn’t wait for an answer. He turned, pulling Helena after him. “I thought not.”
OPPOSITION PARRY:
defensive action with blade that deflects opponent’s offensive action without roughness but while maintaining contact
THEY LEFT LOVERS WALK and entered the broader, though still dimly lit, South Walk. Here, finally removed from the boys’ reproachful glares, Helena stopped, intent on thanking Munro for his aid.
She stared up into his eyes. They were hypnotic, the color of some fabled sea, too deeply blue to be fathomed.
“Yes?”
Or like the blue in a peacock’s feathers, rich and exotic and regal.
“You were going to say something?”
“Yes.” She blinked. “I was going to assure you that I was not going to provoke them further or say anything that would incite them to violence. I’m not a fool.” With a wince, she realized that anxiety had allowed some round Yorkish syllables to creep into her voice. She must remember to keep her voice husky and London-accented.
It would be too, too lowering for Ramsey Munro to realize that the man he’d idolized as his savior had a daughter who haunted Vauxhall dressed like a boy. She couldn’t do that to her father’s memory, and she could not explain her presence.